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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Clue of the Silken Ladder, 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: Clue of the Silken Ladder
+
+Author: Mildred A. Wirt
+
+Release Date: December 7, 2010 [EBook #34591]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CLUE OF THE SILKEN LADDER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Brenda Lewis and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Clue of
+ the Silken
+ Ladder
+
+
+ _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, 1941, BY CUPPLES AND LEON CO.
+
+ Clue of the Silken Ladder
+
+ PRINTED IN U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ _CONTENTS_
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ 1 DOUBLE TROUBLE _1_
+ 2 A ROPE OF SILK _12_
+ 3 SOCIETY ROUTINE _23_
+ 4 A TURN OF FORTUNE _32_
+ 5 THE MAN IN GRAY _42_
+ 6 AN APARTMENT BURGLARY _49_
+ 7 MARK OF THE IRON HOOK _59_
+ 8 PSYCHIC SIGNS _67_
+ 9 MRS. WEEMS' INHERITANCE _75_
+ 10 OUIJA BOARD WISDOM _85_
+ 11 THE CELESTIAL TEMPLE _94_
+ 12 A MESSAGE FOR MRS. WEEMS _102_
+ 13 COUSIN DAVID'S GHOST _111_
+ 14 WET PAINT _118_
+ 15 HIDDEN MONEY _125_
+ 16 OVER THE WINDOW LEDGE _135_
+ 17 KANO'S CURIO SHOP _142_
+ 18 THE BELL TOWER _151_
+ 19 PENNY INVESTIGATES _157_
+ 20 INSIDE THE CABINET _163_
+ 21 STARTLING INFORMATION _168_
+ 22 SCALING THE WALL _174_
+ 23 A PRISONER IN THE BELFRY _181_
+ 24 THE WOODEN BOX _188_
+ 25 EXTRA! _200_
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 1
+ _DOUBLE TROUBLE_
+
+
+"Now I ask you, Lou, what have I done to deserve such a fate?"
+
+Jerking a yellow card from beneath the windshield of the shiny new
+maroon-colored sedan, Penny Parker turned flashing blue eyes upon her
+companion, Louise Sidell.
+
+"Well, Penny," responded her chum dryly, "in Riverview persons who park
+their cars beside fire hydrants usually expect to get parking tickets."
+
+"But we were only inside the drugstore five minutes. Wouldn't you think a
+policeman could find something else to do?"
+
+"Oh, the ticket won't cost you more than five or ten dollars," teased
+Louise wickedly. "Your father should pay it."
+
+"He should but he won't," Penny answered gloomily. "Dad expects his one
+and only daughter to assume her own car expense. I ask you, what's the
+good of having a weekly allowance when you never get to use it yourself?"
+
+"You _are_ in a mood today. Why, I think you're lucky to have a grand new
+car."
+
+Louise's glance caressed the highly polished chrome plate, the sleek,
+streamlined body which shone in the sunlight. The automobile had been
+presented to Penny by her father, Anthony Parker, largely in gratitude
+because she had saved his newspaper, _The Riverview Star_, from a
+disastrous law suit.
+
+"Yes, I am lucky," Penny agreed without enthusiasm. "All the same, I'm
+lonesome for my old coupe, Leaping Lena. I wish I could have kept her.
+She was traded in on this model."
+
+"What would you do with that old wreck now, Penny? Nearly every time we
+went around a corner it broke down."
+
+"All the same, we had marvelous times with her. This car takes twice as
+much gasoline. Another thing, all the policemen knew Lena. They never
+gave her a ticket for anything."
+
+Penny sighed deeply. Pocketing the yellow card, she squeezed behind the
+steering wheel.
+
+"By the way, whatever became of Lena?" Louise asked curiously, slamming
+the car door. She glanced sharply at Penny.
+
+"Oh, she's changed hands twice. Now she's at Jake Harriman's lot,
+advertised for fifty dollars. Want to drive past there?"
+
+"Not particularly. But I'll do it for your sake, pet."
+
+As the car started toward the Harriman Car Lot, Louise stole an amused
+glance at her chum. Penny was not unattractive, even when submerged in
+gloom. Upon the slightest provocation, her blue eyes sparkled; her smile
+when she chose to turn it on, would melt a man of stone. She dressed
+carelessly, brushed a mop of curly, golden hair only if it suited her
+fancy, yet somehow achieved an appearance envied by her friends.
+
+The automobile drew up at the curb.
+
+"There's Lena." Penny pointed to an ancient blue coupe with battered
+fenders which stood on the crowded second-hand lot. A _For Sale_ sign on
+the windshield informed the public that the auto might be bought for
+forty dollars.
+
+"Lena's value seems to have dropped ten dollars," commented Louise. "My,
+I had forgotten how wrecky the old thing looks!"
+
+"Don't speak of her so disrespectfully, Lou. All she needs is a good
+waxing and a little paint."
+
+The girls crossed the lot to inspect the coupe. As they were gazing at
+it, Jake, the lot owner, sidled toward them, beaming ingratiatingly.
+
+"Good afternoon, young ladies. May I interest you in a car?"
+
+"No, thank you," replied Penny. "We're just looking."
+
+"Now here is a fine car," went on the dealer, indicating the coupe. "A
+1934 model--good mechanical condition; nice rubber; a lively battery and
+fair paint. You can't go wrong, ladies, not at a price of forty dollars."
+
+"But will it run?" asked Louise, smothering a giggle.
+
+"There's thousands of miles of good service left in this little car,
+ladies. And the price is only fifteen dollars above the junk value."
+
+The thought of Leaping Lena coming to an inglorious end in a junk yard
+was disconcerting to Penny. She walked slowly about the car, inspecting
+it from every angle.
+
+"Forty dollars is too much for this old wreck," she said firmly.
+
+"Why, Penny, such disrespect!" mocked Louise.
+
+Penny frowned down her chum. Sentiment and business were two different
+matters.
+
+"What _will_ you give?" inquired the car owner alertly.
+
+"Not a cent over twenty-five."
+
+Louise clutched Penny's arm, trying to pull her away.
+
+"Have you lost your mind?" she demanded. "What could you do with this old
+car when you already have a new one?"
+
+Penny did not listen. She kept gazing at the coupe as one who had been
+hypnotized.
+
+"I'd take it in a minute, only I don't have twenty-five dollars in cash."
+
+"How much can you raise?" asked the dealer.
+
+"Not more than five dollars, I'm afraid. But my father is publisher of
+the _Riverview Star_."
+
+Jake Harriman's brows unknitted as if by magic.
+
+"Anthony Parker's daughter," he said, smiling. "That's plenty good enough
+for me. I'll sell you the best car on the lot for nothing down. Just come
+inside the office and sign a note for the amount. Will that be okay?"
+
+Disregarding Louise's whispered protests, Penny assured the dealer that
+the arrangement would be perfectly satisfactory. The note was signed, and
+five dollars in cash given to bind the bargain.
+
+"I'll throw in a few gallons of gas," the man offered.
+
+However, Jake Harriman's gasoline did not seem suited to Leaping Lena's
+dyspeptic ignition. She coughed feebly once or twice and then died for
+the day.
+
+"You have acquired a bargain, I must say!" exclaimed Louise. "You can't
+even get the car home."
+
+"Yes, I can," Penny insisted. "I'll tow her. A little tinkering and
+she'll be as good as new."
+
+"You're optimistic, to say the least," laughed Louise.
+
+Penny produced a steel cable from the tool kit of the maroon sedan, and
+Jake Harriman coupled the two cars together.
+
+"Penny, what will your father say when he learns of this?" Louise
+inquired dubiously. "On top of a parking ticket, too!"
+
+"Oh, I'll meet that problem when I come to it," Penny answered
+carelessly. "Louise, you steer Lena. I'll drive the sedan."
+
+Shaking her head sadly, Louise climbed into the old car. Although Penny
+was her dearest friend she was forced to admit that the girl often did
+bewildering things. Penny's mother was dead and for many years she had
+been raised by a housekeeper, Mrs. Maud Weems. Secretly Louise wondered
+if it were not the housekeeper who had been trained. At any rate, Penny
+enjoyed unusual freedom for a high school girl, and her philosophy of
+life was summed up in one headline: ACTION.
+
+Penny put the sedan in gear, towing the coupe slowly down the street. The
+two vehicles traveled several blocks before a hill loomed ahead. Penny
+considered turning back, and then decided that the cars could make the
+steep climb easily.
+
+However, midway up the hill the sedan suddenly leaped forward as if
+released from a heavy burden. At the same instant Lena's horn gave a
+sharp warning blast.
+
+Glancing into the mirror, Penny was horrified to see Leaping Lena
+careening backwards down the steep slope. The tow rope had unfastened.
+
+Bringing the sedan to the curb, she jerked on the hand brake, and sprang
+to the pavement. Louise, bewildered and frightened, was trying
+desperately to control the coupe. The car gathered speed, wobbling
+crazily toward the line of traffic.
+
+"Guide it! Guide it!" shouted Penny. "Put on the brakes!"
+
+So confused was Louise that she lost her head completely. Straight toward
+a long black limousine rolled the coupe. The chauffeur spun his wheel,
+but too late. There was a loud crash as the two cars came together.
+
+Penny raced down the hill to help her chum from the coupe.
+
+"Are you hurt?" she asked anxiously.
+
+Louise shook her head, wailing: "Penny Parker, just see what has happened
+now! You never should have bought this stupid old wreck!"
+
+Both the chauffeur and an elderly gentleman who carried a cane, alighted
+from the limousine. With grim faces they surveyed the fender which had
+been crushed.
+
+"The owner is Mr. Kohl," Louise whispered nervously. "You know, president
+of the First National Bank."
+
+The banker did not recognize either of the girls. Addressing them both,
+he made several pointed remarks to the effect that irresponsible young
+people were very thoughtless to endanger the property of others with
+their ancient "jalopies."
+
+"It was entirely my fault, Mr. Kohl," acknowledged Penny meekly. "Of
+course, I'll pay for the fender."
+
+The banker softened somewhat, gazing at the girls in a thoughtful, more
+friendly way.
+
+"Haven't I seen you somewhere before?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, yes, Mr. Kohl." Penny was quick to press for an advantage. "Why, I
+am one of your best customers. Ever since I was six years old I've
+trusted your bank with my savings!"
+
+"I remember you now," said Mr. Kohl, smiling. "You're the Parker girl."
+
+Adding a mental note that Anthony Parker actually was one of the bank's
+largest depositors, he decided it would be excellent policy to make light
+of the accident. A moment later as a policeman came to investigate, he
+insisted that the incident had been unavoidable and that it would be a
+mistake to arrest the girls.
+
+"Mr. Kohl, you were noble, absolutely noble," declared Penny gratefully
+after the policeman had gone. "The least I can do is to pay for the
+damage."
+
+"I'll stop at Sherman's Garage and have a new fender put on," the banker
+responded. "The bill can be sent to your father."
+
+After Mr. Kohl had driven away, Louise helped Penny hook the coupe to the
+sedan once more. She remarked cuttingly:
+
+"You've done right well today. One parking ticket, a bill for twenty-five
+dollars, and another one coming up. Just what _will_ your father say?"
+
+"Plenty," sighed Penny. "I wonder if it might not be a good idea to break
+the news by easy stages? Perhaps he'll take it more calmly if I
+telephone."
+
+"Don't be too sure."
+
+The street was a narrow, dingy one with few business houses. Noticing a
+Japanese store which bore a sign, "Kano's Curio Shop," she started toward
+it, intending to seek a public telephone.
+
+Louise seized her arm. "Penny, you're not going in there!"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"This is Dorr Street--one of the worst places in Riverview."
+
+"Oh, don't be silly," chuckled Penny. "It's perfectly safe by daylight.
+I'll go alone if you're afraid."
+
+Thus challenged, Louise indignantly denied that she was afraid, and
+accompanied her chum.
+
+The door of Mr. Kano's shop stood invitingly open. Pausing on the
+threshold, the girls caught a pleasant aroma of sandalwood.
+
+So quietly did Louise and Penny enter that the elderly, white-haired shop
+owner did not immediately see them. He sat behind a high counter,
+engrossed in something he was sewing.
+
+"Good afternoon," said Penny pleasantly.
+
+The Japanese glanced up quickly and as quickly thrust his work beneath
+the counter. Recovering poise, he bowed to the girls.
+
+"May we use your telephone if you have one?" Penny requested.
+
+"So very sorry, Miss," the Japanese responded, bowing again. "Have no
+telephone."
+
+Penny nodded, absently fingering a tray of tiny ivory figures. The
+Japanese watched her, and mistaking curiosity for buying interest,
+brought additional pieces for her to inspect. The curios were all too
+expensive for Penny's purse, but after endless debate she bought a pair
+of wooden clogs. The shop owner padded away into a back room, intending
+to wrap the package for her.
+
+Scarcely had he vanished when Penny turned excitedly to her chum.
+
+"Lou, did you notice how funny he acted when we came in here?"
+
+"Yes, he didn't want us to see what he was making evidently."
+
+"Exactly what I thought! But we'll fool Mr. Kano!"
+
+Giving Louise no opportunity to protest, Penny boldly peered behind the
+counter.
+
+"Here it is," she whispered. "But _what_ is it?"
+
+Hidden in a pasteboard box lay coil upon coil of what appeared to be
+fine, black silk rope. Curiously, she lifted it up, exposing a network of
+crossbars.
+
+"Well, of all things!" she exclaimed. "It's a ladder, Lou! A ladder made
+of silk!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 2
+ _A ROPE OF SILK_
+
+
+Even as Penny spoke, she felt a hard, warning tug on her skirt. Quickly
+she turned around.
+
+In the doorway stood the old Japanese. His smile was not pleasant to
+behold.
+
+"We-we were just looking at this rope," Penny stammered, trying to carry
+off the situation with dignity. "I hope you don't mind."
+
+The Japanese shopkeeper gazed steadily at the girl, his face an
+emotionless mask. Since he spoke no word, it became increasingly evident
+that he regarded her with anger and suspicion.
+
+"May I ask what use is made of this silk rope?" Penny inquired. "Do you
+sell it for a special purpose?"
+
+The Japanese coldly ignored the direct questions.
+
+"So very sorry to have kept you waiting," he said softly. "Your change
+please."
+
+Penny knew that she deserved the rebuke. Accepting the package and coins,
+she and Louise hastily left the shop. Not until they were some distance
+away did the latter speak.
+
+"Penny, you would do a trick like that! One of these days your curiosity
+will get us into serious trouble."
+
+"At least I learned what was hidden behind the counter," chuckled Penny.
+"But that Jap didn't seem very eager to answer my questions."
+
+"Can you blame him? It certainly was none of our affair what he kept
+inside the box."
+
+"Perhaps not, Lou, but you must admit he acted strangely when we first
+entered the shop. You know--as if we had surprised him in a questionable
+act."
+
+"He naturally was startled. We came in so quietly."
+
+"All the same, I'm not one bit sorry I looked behind the counter," Penny
+maintained. "I like to learn about things."
+
+"I agree with you there!"
+
+"Lou, what purpose do you suppose silk ladders serve? Who uses them and
+why?"
+
+"Now, how should I know? Penny, you ask enough questions to be master of
+ceremonies on a radio quiz program."
+
+"I can't recall ever having seen a silk ladder before," Penny resumed,
+undisturbed by her chum's quip. "Would acrobats use them, do you think?"
+
+"Not to my knowledge," Louise answered. "If I were in your shoes I should
+worry about more serious matters than those connected with a mere silk
+ladder."
+
+"The world is filled with serious things," sighed Penny. "But mystery!
+One doesn't run into it every day."
+
+"You do," said Louise brutally. "If a stranger twitches his ears twice
+you immediately suspect him of villainy."
+
+"Nevertheless, being of a suspicious nature won me a new car," Penny
+defended herself. "Don't forget Dad gave it to me for solving a mystery,
+for telling his newspaper readers what was going on _Behind the Green
+Door_."
+
+"Oh, your curiosity has paid dividends," Louise admitted with a laugh.
+"Take for instance the time you trailed the _Vanishing Houseboat_, and
+again when you lowered the Kippenberg drawbridge to capture a boatload of
+crooks! Those were the days!"
+
+"Why dwell in the past, Lou? Now take this affair of the silk ladder--"
+
+"I'm afraid _you'll_ have to take it," Louise interrupted. "Do you
+realize it's nearly four o'clock? In exactly ten minutes I am supposed to
+be at the auditorium for orchestra practice."
+
+"Lou, you can't desert me now," Penny protested quickly. "How will I get
+Lena home? I need you to steer her."
+
+"Thanks, but I don't trust your tow rope."
+
+"At least go as far as the _Star_ office with me. Once there, maybe I can
+get one of the reporters to help me the rest of the way."
+
+"Oh, all right," Louise consented. "But the _Star_ office is my absolute
+limit."
+
+Deciding not to take time to telephone her father, Penny once more
+climbed into the maroon sedan, posting Louise behind the wheel of the
+coupe. At a cautious speed the two cars proceeded along the street,
+coming presently to a large corner building which housed the _Riverview
+Star_. No parking space being available on the street, Penny pulled into
+the newspaper plant's loading dock.
+
+"Say, you!" shouted a man who was tossing stacks of freshly inked papers
+into a truck. "You can't park that caravan in here!"
+
+Penny's eyes danced mischievously.
+
+"Oh, it's quite all right," she said. "I guess you don't know who I am."
+
+"Sure, I do," the trucker grinned. "But your dad gave orders that the
+next time you tried to pull that daughter-of-the-publisher stuff we were
+to bounce you! This dock is for _Star_ trucks."
+
+"Why, the very idea," said Penny, with pretended injury. "The night
+edition doesn't roll for an hour and I'll be away from here before then!
+Besides, this is a great emergency! When Dad hears about all the trouble
+I'm in, a little matter such as this won't even ruffle him."
+
+"Okay, chase along," the trucker returned good-naturedly. "But see to it
+that you're out of here within an hour."
+
+Penny bade Louise good-bye, and with plaid skirt swinging jauntily,
+crossed the cement runway to the rear elevator entrance. Without waiting
+for the cage to descend, she took the steps two at a time, arriving at
+the editorial floor gasping for breath.
+
+"What's your rush?" inquired an amused voice. "Going to a fire?"
+
+Jerry Livingston, ace reporter for the _Star_, leaned indolently against
+the grillwork of the elevator shaft, his finger pressed on the signal
+button. He and Penny were friends of long standing.
+
+"Oh, hello, Jerry!" Penny greeted him breathlessly. "Guess what? I've
+just come from Dorr Street--Kano's Curio Shop--and I had the most amazing
+adventure!"
+
+"I can imagine," grinned Jerry. "If you breezed through the place the way
+you do this building, you must have left it in ruins."
+
+"Just for that, I won't tell you a thing, not a thing," retorted Penny.
+"What sort of a mood is Dad in today?"
+
+"Well, I heard him tell DeWitt that unless the news output improves on
+this sheet, he aims to fire half the force."
+
+"Sounds like Dad on one of his bad days," Penny sighed. "Maybe I should
+skip home without seeing him."
+
+"Trouble with the old allowance again?" Jerry asked sympathetically.
+
+"You don't know the half of it. I'm submerged so deeply in debt that I'll
+be an old lady before I get out, unless Dad comes to my rescue."
+
+"Well, good luck," chuckled Jerry. "You'll need it!"
+
+Walking through the newsroom, between aisles of desks where busy
+reporters tapped on their typewriters, Penny paused before a door marked:
+_Anthony Parker, Editor_.
+
+Listening a moment and hearing no voices within, she knocked and entered.
+Her father, a lean, dignified man with tired lines about his eyes and
+mouth, sat working at his desk. He smiled as he saw his daughter, and
+waved her toward a chair.
+
+Instead, Penny perched herself on a corner of the desk.
+
+"Dad, I have a splendid surprise for you," she began brightly. "I've just
+accomplished a wonderful stroke of business!"
+
+"Never mind beating about the bush," interrupted Mr. Parker. "Shoot me
+the facts straight. What have you done this time?"
+
+"Dad, your tone! I've bought back my old car, Leaping Lena. And it only
+cost me a trifling sum."
+
+Mr. Parker's chair squeaked as he whirled around.
+
+"You've done _what_?"
+
+"It's a long story, Dad. Now don't think that I fail to appreciate the
+grand new car you gave me last winter. I love it. But between Lena and me
+there exists a deep bond of affection. Today when I saw her on Jake
+Harriman's lot looking so weather-beaten and unhappy--why, a little voice
+inside me whispered: 'Penny, why don't you buy her back?' So I did."
+
+"Never mind the sentimental touches. When I gave you the new car I
+thought we were well rid of Lena. How much did you pay for it?"
+
+"Oh, Lena was a marvelous bargain. Five dollars cash and a note for
+twenty more. The man said you could pay for it at your convenience."
+
+"Very considerate of him," Mr. Parker remarked ironically. "Now that we
+have three cars, and a double garage, where do you propose to keep Lena?"
+
+"Oh, anywhere. In the back yard."
+
+"Not on the lawn, young lady. And what do you plan to do with two cars?"
+
+"The maroon one for style, and Lena when I want a good time. Why, Dad,
+she bears the autographs of nearly all my school friends! I should keep
+her as a souvenir, if for no other reason."
+
+"Penny, it's high time you learned a few lessons in finance." Mr. Parker
+spoke sternly although his mouth twitched slightly. "I regret that I
+cannot assume your debts."
+
+"But Dad! I'm a minor--under legal age. Isn't it a law that a father has
+to support his child?"
+
+"A child, but not two cars. If you decide to take the case to court, I
+think any reasonable judge will understand my viewpoint. I repeat, the
+debt is yours, not mine."
+
+"How will I pay?" asked Penny gloomily. "I've already borrowed on my
+allowance for a month ahead."
+
+"I know," said her father. "However, with your ingenuity I am sure you
+can manage."
+
+Penny drew a deep breath. Argument, she realized, would be utterly
+useless. While her father might be mildly amused by her predicament, he
+never would change his decision.
+
+"Since you won't pay for Lena, I suppose it's useless to mention Mr.
+Kohl's fender," she said despairingly.
+
+"Does he have one?"
+
+"Please don't try to be funny, Dad. This is tragic. While I was towing
+Lena, the rope broke and smash went the fender of Mr. Kohl's slinky black
+limousine."
+
+"Interesting."
+
+"I had to promise to pay for it to keep from being arrested. Oh, yes, and
+before that I acquired this little thing."
+
+Penny tossed the yellow card across the desk.
+
+"A parking ticket! Penny, how many times--" Mr. Parker checked himself,
+finishing in a calm voice: "This, too, is your debt. It may cost you five
+dollars."
+
+"Dad, you know I can't pay. Think how your reputation will be tarnished
+if I am sent to jail."
+
+Mr. Parker smiled and reached as if to take money from his pocket.
+Reconsidering, he shook his head.
+
+"I know the warden well," he said. "I'll arrange for you to be assigned
+to one of the better cells."
+
+"Is there nothing which will move you to generosity?" pleaded Penny.
+
+"Nothing."
+
+Retrieving the parking ticket, Penny jammed it into her pocket. Before
+she could leave there came a rap on the door. In response to Mr. Parker's
+"Come in," Mr. DeWitt, the city editor, entered.
+
+"Sorry to bother you, Chief."
+
+"What's wrong now, DeWitt?" the publisher inquired.
+
+"Miss Hilderman was taken sick a few minutes ago. We had to send her home
+in a cab."
+
+"It's nothing serious I hope," said Mr. Parker with concern.
+
+"A mild heart attack. She'll be out a week, if not longer."
+
+"I see. Be sure to have the treasurer give her full pay. You have someone
+to take her place?"
+
+"That's the problem," moaned DeWitt. "Her assistant is on vacation. I
+don't know where we can get a trained society editor on short notice."
+
+"Well, do the best you can."
+
+DeWitt lingered, fingering a paper weight.
+
+"The society page for the Sunday paper is only half finished," he
+explained. "Deadline's in less than an hour. Not a chance we can pick up
+anyone in time to meet it."
+
+Penny spoke unexpectedly. "Mr. DeWitt, perhaps I can help you. I'm a whiz
+when it comes to writing society. Remember the Kippenberg wedding I
+covered?"
+
+"Do I?" DeWitt's face relaxed into a broad grin. "That was a real
+write-up. Say, maybe you could take over Miss Hilderman's job until we
+can replace her."
+
+"Service is my motto." Penny eyed her father questioningly. "It might
+save the _Star_ from going to press minus a society page. How about it,
+Dad?"
+
+"It certainly would solve our problem," contributed DeWitt. "Of course
+the undertaking might be too great a one for your daughter." He winked at
+Penny.
+
+"She'll have no difficulty in taking over," said Mr. Parker stiffly.
+"None whatsoever."
+
+"Then I'll start her in at once," DeWitt replied. "Come with me, Miss
+Parker."
+
+At the door Penny paused and discreetly allowed the city editor to get
+beyond hearing. Then, turning to her father she remarked innocently:
+
+"Oh, by the way, we overlooked one trifling detail. The salary!"
+
+The editor made a grimace. "I might have expected this. Very well, I'll
+pay you the same as I do Miss Hilderman. Twenty-five a week."
+
+"Why, that would just take care of my debt to Jake Harriman," protested
+Penny. "I simply can't do high pressure work without high pay. Shall we
+make it fifty a week?"
+
+"So you're holding me up?"
+
+"Certainly not," chuckled Penny. "Merely using my ingenuity. Am I hired?"
+
+"Yes, you win," answered Mr. Parker grimly. "But see to it that you turn
+out good work. Otherwise, you soon may find yourself on the _Star's_
+inactive list."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 3
+ _SOCIETY ROUTINE_
+
+
+Penny followed City Editor DeWitt to a small, glass-enclosed office along
+the left hand wall of the newsroom. Miss Hilderman's desk was cluttered
+with sheets of copy paper which bore scribbled notations, items
+telephoned to the _Star_ but not yet type-written.
+
+"There should be a date book around here somewhere," DeWitt remarked.
+
+Finally he found it in one of the desk drawers. Penny drew a deep breath
+as she scanned the long list of social events which must be covered for
+the Sunday page.
+
+"Do the best you can," DeWitt said encouragingly. "Work fast, but be
+careful of names."
+
+The telephone bell rang. As Penny reached for the receiver, DeWitt
+retreated to his own domain.
+
+"Hello, Miss Hilderman?" a feminine voice cooed, "I wish to report a
+meeting, please."
+
+"Miss Hilderman isn't here this afternoon," replied Penny politely. "I
+will take the item."
+
+Gathering up paper and pencil, she slid into the revolving chair behind
+the telephone, poised for action.
+
+"Yes," she urged, "I am ready."
+
+There was a lengthy pause, and then the woman at the other end of the
+line recited as if she were reading from a paper:
+
+"'A meeting of the Mystical Society of Celestial Thought, Order of Amar,
+67, will be held Tuesday night at eight o'clock in the Temple, 426
+Butternut Lane. The public is cordially invited.'"
+
+"What sort of society is the Order of Amar?" Penny inquired curiously,
+taking notes. "I never heard of it before."
+
+"Why, my dear, the society is very well known," the woman replied. "We
+hold our meetings regularly, communing with the spirits. I do hope that
+the item appears in print. So often Miss Hilderman has been careless
+about it."
+
+"I'll see that the item is printed under club notices," Penny promised.
+"Your name, please?"
+
+The woman had hung up the receiver, so with a shrug, Penny typed the item
+and speared it on a wire spindle. For the next hour she was kept busy
+with other telephone calls and the more important stories which had to be
+rushed through. Copy flowed steadily from her office by way of the
+pneumatic tube to the composing room.
+
+Shortly after five o'clock, DeWitt dropped in for a moment to praise her
+for her speed and accuracy.
+
+"You're doing all right," he said. "So far I've only caught you in one
+mistake. Mignonette is spelled with a double t."
+
+"This job wouldn't be half bad if only brides could learn to carry
+flowers with easy names," laughed Penny. "When I get married I'll have
+violets and sweet peas!"
+
+DeWitt reached for the copy on the spindle. "What's this?" he asked.
+"More to go?"
+
+"Club notices."
+
+The editor tore the sheet from the wire, reading it as he walked toward
+the door. Abruptly, he paused and turned toward her.
+
+"Miss Parker, this can't go through."
+
+"Why, what is wrong?" Penny asked in surprise. "Have I made another error
+in spelling?"
+
+DeWitt tore off the lead item and tossed it on her desk.
+
+"It's this meeting of the so-called Mystical Society of Celestial
+Thought. The _Star_ never runs stuff like that, not even as a paid
+advertisement."
+
+"I thought it was a regular lodge meeting, Mr. DeWitt."
+
+"Nothing of the sort. Merely a free advertisement for a group of mediums
+and charlatans."
+
+"Oh, I didn't know," murmured Penny.
+
+"These meetings have only one purpose," Mr. DeWitt resumed. "To lure
+victims who later may be fleeced of their money."
+
+"But if that is so, why don't police close up the place?" Penny demanded.
+"Why doesn't the _Star_ run an exposé story?"
+
+"Because evidence isn't easy to get. The meetings usually are well within
+the law. Whenever a police detective or a reporter attends, the services
+are decorous. But they provide the mediums with a list of suckers."
+
+Penny would have asked DeWitt for additional information had not the city
+editor walked hurriedly away. Scrambling the item into a ball, she tossed
+it into the waste paper basket. Then upon second thought she retrieved it
+and carefully smoothed the paper.
+
+"Perhaps, I'll drop around at the Temple sometime just to see what it is
+like," she decided, placing the item in her pocket. "It would be
+interesting to learn what is going on there."
+
+For the next half hour Penny had no time to think of the Celestial
+Temple. However, at twenty minutes before six, when her father came into
+the office, she was well ahead of her work.
+
+"Hello, Penny," he greeted her. "How do you like your new job?"
+
+"Fine and dandy. Only routine items rather cramp one's style. Now if I
+were a regular reporter instead of a society editor, I know several
+stories which would be my dish!"
+
+"For instance?" inquired Mr. Parker, smiling.
+
+"First, there's an Oriental Shop on Dorr Street that I should
+investigate. The Japanese owner acted very mysteriously today when I went
+there. Louise and I saw him making a silk ladder, and he refused to
+reveal its purpose."
+
+"A silk ladder?" repeated Mr. Parker. "Odd perhaps, but hardly worthy of
+a news story."
+
+"Dad, I only wish you had _seen_ that old Japanese--the sinister way he
+looked at me. Oh, he's guilty of some crime. I feel it."
+
+"The _Star_ requires facts, not fancy or emotion," Mr. Parker rejoined.
+"Better devote your talents to routine society items if you expect to
+remain on my payroll."
+
+Penny took the announcement of the Celestial Thought meeting from her
+pocket and offered it to the publisher.
+
+"Here's one which might be interesting," she said. "How about assigning
+me to it after I get this society job in hand?"
+
+Mr. Parker read the item and his eyes blazed with anger.
+
+"Do you know what this means, Penny?"
+
+"Mr. DeWitt told me a little about the Celestial Temple society. He said
+the paper never ran such items."
+
+"Certainly not! Why, I should like nothing better than to see the entire
+outfit driven out of town! Riverview is honeycombed with mediums, fortune
+tellers and faith healers!"
+
+"Perhaps they mean no harm, Dad."
+
+"I'll grant there may be a small number of persons who honestly try to
+communicate with the spirit world," Mr. Parker replied. "My concern is
+not with them, but with a group of professional mediums who lately have
+invaded the city. Charlatans, crooks--the entire lot!"
+
+"Why don't you write an editorial about it?" Penny suggested.
+
+"An editorial! I am seriously tempted to start a vigorous campaign, but
+the trouble is, the police cannot be depended upon to cooperate
+actively."
+
+"Why, Dad?"
+
+"Because experience has proven that such campaigns are not often
+successful. Evidence is hard to gain. If one place is closed up, others
+open in different sections of the city. The mediums and seers operate
+from dozens of private homes. When the police stage raids they acquire no
+evidence, and only succeed in making the department look ridiculous."
+
+"Yet the mediums continue to fleece the public?"
+
+"The more gullible strata of it. Until recent months the situation here
+has been no worse than in other cities of comparable size. Lately an
+increasing number of charlatans has moved in on us."
+
+"Why don't you start a campaign, Dad?" Penny urged. "You would be doing
+the public a worthwhile service."
+
+"Well, I hesitate to start something which I may be unable to finish."
+
+"At least the public deserves to be warned."
+
+"Unfortunately, Penny, many persons would take the attitude that the
+_Star_ was persecuting sincere spiritualists. A campaign must be based on
+absolute evidence."
+
+"Can't it be obtained?"
+
+"Not without great difficulty. These mediums are a clever lot, Penny.
+They prey upon the superstitions of their intended victims."
+
+"I wish you would let me work on the story, Dad."
+
+"No, Penny," responded her father. "You attend to your society and allow
+DeWitt to worry about the Celestial Temple crowd. Even if I should launch
+a campaign, I couldn't allow you to become mixed up in the affair."
+
+The telephone bell jingled. With a tired sigh, Penny reached for the
+receiver.
+
+"Society desk," she said mechanically.
+
+"I am trying to trace Mr. Parker," informed the office exchange operator.
+"Is he with you, Miss Parker?"
+
+"Telephone, Dad," said Penny, offering him the receiver.
+
+Mr. Parker waited a moment for another connection to be made. Then Penny
+heard him say:
+
+"Oh, it's you, Mrs. Weems? What's that? Repeat it, please."
+
+From her father's tone, Penny felt certain that something had gone wrong
+at home. She arose, waiting anxiously.
+
+Mr. Parker clicked the receiver several times. "Apparently, Mrs. Weems
+hung up," he commented.
+
+"Is anything the matter, Dad?"
+
+"I don't know," Mr. Parker admitted, his face troubled. "Mrs. Weems
+seemed very excited. She requested me to come home as soon as possible.
+Then the connection was broken."
+
+"Why don't you try to reach her again?"
+
+Mr. Parker placed an out-going call, but after ten minutes the operator
+reported that she was unable to contact the housekeeper.
+
+"Mrs. Weems never would have telephoned if something unusual hadn't
+happened," Penny declared uneasily. "Perhaps, she's injured herself."
+
+"You think of such unpleasant things."
+
+"Something dreadful must have happened," Penny insisted. "Otherwise, why
+doesn't she answer?"
+
+"We're only wasting time in idle speculation," Mr. Parker said crisply.
+"Get your things, Penny. We'll start home at once!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 4
+ _A TURN OF FORTUNE_
+
+
+Penny immediately locked her desk and gathered up hat and gloves. She was
+hard pressed to keep pace with her father as they hastened to the
+elevator.
+
+"By the way, you have your car downstairs?" the publisher inquired
+absently. He seldom drove his own automobile to the office.
+
+"What a memory you have, Dad!" chuckled Penny. "Yes, I have all two of
+them! Parked in the loading dock for convenience."
+
+"Penny, haven't I told you a dozen times--" Mr. Parker began, only to
+check himself. "Well, it will save us time now. However, we may discuss a
+few matters when we get home."
+
+The elevator shot them down to the first floor. Leaping Lena and the
+maroon sedan remained in the loading dock with a string of _Star_ paper
+trucks blocking a portion of the street.
+
+"Hey, sister," a trucker called angrily to Penny. "It's time you're
+getting these cars out of here." He broke off as he recognized Mr. Parker
+and faded behind one of the trucks.
+
+"Dad, do you mind steering Lena?" Penny asked demurely. "We can't leave
+her here. You can see for yourself that she seems to be blocking
+traffic."
+
+"Yes, I see," Mr. Parker responded grimly.
+
+"Of course, if you would feel more dignified driving the sedan--"
+
+"Let me have the keys," the publisher interrupted. "The important thing
+is to get home without delay."
+
+Penny became sober, and slid into her place at the wheel of Leaping Lena.
+Amid the smiles of the truckers, Mr. Parker drove the two cars out of the
+dock.
+
+Once underway, the caravan made reckless progress through rush-hour
+traffic. More than once Penny whispered a prayer as Lena swayed around a
+corner, missing other cars by scant inches.
+
+Presently the two automobiles drew up before a pleasant, tree-shaded home
+built upon a high terrace overlooking a winding river. Penny and her
+father alighted, walking hurriedly toward the front porch.
+
+The door stood open and from within came the reassuring howl of a radio
+turned too high.
+
+"Nothing so very serious can have happened," remarked Penny. "Otherwise,
+Mrs. Weems wouldn't have that thing going full blast."
+
+At the sound of footsteps, the housekeeper herself came into the living
+room from the kitchen. Her plump face was unusually animated.
+
+"I hope you didn't mind because I telephoned the office, Mr. Parker," she
+began apologetically. "I was so excited, I just did it before I stopped
+to think."
+
+"Penny and I were nearly ready to start home in any case, Mrs. Weems. Has
+anything gone wrong here?"
+
+"Oh, no, Mr. Parker. It was the telegram."
+
+"Telegram? One for me, you mean?"
+
+"No, my own." The housekeeper drew a yellow paper from the pocket of her
+apron, offering it to the publisher. "My Cousin David died out in
+Montana," she explained. "The funeral was last Saturday."
+
+"That's too bad," remarked Penny sympathetically. And then she added:
+"Only you don't look particularly sad, Mrs. Weems. How much did he leave
+you?"
+
+"Penny! You say such shocking things! I never met Cousin David but once
+in my life. He was a kind, good man and I only wish I had written to him
+more often. I never dreamed he would remember me in his will."
+
+"Then he did leave you money!" exclaimed Penny triumphantly. "How much
+does the telegram say, Dad?"
+
+"You may as well tell her, Mr. Parker," sighed the housekeeper. "She'll
+give me no peace until she learns every detail."
+
+"This message which is from a Montana lawyer mentions six thousand
+dollars," returned the publisher. "Apparently, the money is to be turned
+over without legal delay."
+
+"Why, Mrs. Weems, you're an heiress!" cried Penny admiringly.
+
+"I can't believe it's true," murmured Mrs. Weems. "You don't think
+there's any mistake, Mr. Parker? It would be too cruel if someone had
+sent the message as a joke."
+
+Before returning the telegram to the housekeeper, Mr. Parker switched off
+the radio.
+
+"This message appears to be authentic," he declared. "My congratulations
+upon your good fortune."
+
+"What will you do with all your money?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Oh, I don't know." The housekeeper sank into a chair, her eyes fastening
+dreamily on a far wall. "I've always wanted to travel."
+
+Penny and her father exchanged a quick, alarmed glance. Mrs. Weems had
+been in charge of the household for so many years that they could not
+imagine living without her, should she decide to leave. During her brief,
+infrequent vacations, the house always degenerated into a disgrace of
+dust and misplaced furniture, and meals were never served at regular
+hours.
+
+"The oceans are very unsafe, Mrs. Weems," discouraged Penny. "Wars and
+submarines and things. Surely you wouldn't dare travel now."
+
+"Oh, I mean in the United States," replied the housekeeper. "I've always
+wanted to go out West. They say the Grand Canyon is so pretty it takes
+your breath away."
+
+"Mrs. Weems, you have worked for us long and faithfully and deserve a
+rest," said Mr. Parker, trying to speak heartily. "Now if you would enjoy
+a trip, Penny and I will get along somehow for two or three weeks."
+
+"Oh, if I go, I'll stay the entire summer." The housekeeper hesitated,
+then added: "I've enjoyed working here, Mr. Parker, but doing the same
+thing year after year gets tiresome. Often I've said to myself that if I
+had a little money I would retire and take life easy for the rest of my
+days."
+
+"Why, Mrs. Weems, you're only forty-eight!" protested Penny. "You would
+be unhappy if you didn't have any work to do."
+
+"At least, I wouldn't mind trying it."
+
+"Such a change as you contemplate should be considered carefully,"
+contributed Mr. Parker. "While six thousand seems a large sum it would
+not last long if one had no other income."
+
+Before Mrs. Weems could reply, a strong odor of burning food permeated
+the room.
+
+"The roast!" exclaimed the housekeeper. "I forgot it!"
+
+Penny rushed ahead of her to the kitchen. As she jerked open the oven
+door, out poured a great cloud of smoke. Seizing a holder, she rescued
+the meat, and seeing at a glance that it was burned to a crisp, carried
+the pan outdoors.
+
+"What will the neighbors say?" Mrs. Weems moaned. "I never did a thing
+like that before. It's just that I am so excited I can't think what I am
+doing."
+
+"Don't you mind," laughed Penny. "I'll get dinner tonight. You entertain
+Dad."
+
+With difficulty she persuaded the housekeeper to abandon the kitchen.
+Left to herself, she opened a can of cold meat, a can of corn, a can of
+peaches, and with a salad already prepared, speedily announced the meal.
+
+"Mr. Parker, I truly am ashamed--" Mrs. Weems began.
+
+"Now don't apologize for my cooking," broke in Penny. "Quantity before
+quality is my motto. Anyway, if you are leaving, Dad will have to
+accustom himself to it."
+
+"I'll hide the can opener," said Mr. Parker.
+
+"That's a good idea, Dad."
+
+"Before I go, I'll try to teach Penny a little more about cooking," Mrs.
+Weems said uncomfortably. "Of course, you'll have no difficulty in
+getting someone efficient to take my place."
+
+"No one can take your place," declared Penny. "If you leave, Dad and I
+will go to wrack and ruin."
+
+"You are a pair when you're left to yourselves," Mrs. Weems sighed.
+"That's the one thing which makes me hesitate. Penny needs someone to
+keep her in check."
+
+"An inexperienced person would be putty in my hands," declared Penny.
+"You may as well decide to stay, Mrs. Weems."
+
+"I don't know what to do. I've planned on this trip for years. Now that
+it is possible, I feel I can't give it up."
+
+Penny and Mr. Parker regarded each other across the table, and
+immediately changed the subject. Not until that moment had they actually
+believed that the housekeeper was serious about leaving Riverview.
+Somehow they had never contemplated a future without Mrs. Weems.
+
+"I happen to have two complimentary tickets to a show at the Rialto," Mr.
+Parker said offhand. "I'll be tied up with a meeting tonight, but you
+folks might enjoy going."
+
+"Shall we, Mrs. Weems?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Thank you," responded the housekeeper, "but I doubt if I could sit still
+tonight. I thought I would run over to see Mrs. Hodges after dinner.
+She'll be pleased to learn about my inheritance, I know."
+
+"A friend of yours?" asked Mr. Parker.
+
+"Yes, Penny and I have been acquainted with her for years. She lives on
+Christopher Street."
+
+"Perhaps this is none of my affair, Mrs. Weems. However, my advice to you
+is not to tell many persons about your inheritance."
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Hodges is to be trusted."
+
+"I am sure of it, Mrs. Weems. I refer to strangers."
+
+"I'll be careful," the housekeeper promised. "No one ever will get that
+money away from me once I have it!"
+
+Penny helped with the dishes, and then as her father was leaving the
+house, asked him if she might have the two theatre tickets.
+
+"Since Mrs. Weems doesn't care to go, I'll invite Louise," she explained.
+
+Mr. Parker gave her the tickets. Making certain that the housekeeper was
+upstairs, he spoke in a low tone.
+
+"Penny, Mrs. Weems is serious about leaving us. You must try to dissuade
+her."
+
+"What can I do, Dad?"
+
+"Well, you usually have a few ideas in the old filing cabinet. Can't you
+think of something?"
+
+"I'll do my best," Penny said with a twinkle. "We can't let an
+inheritance take Mrs. Weems from us, that's certain."
+
+After her father had gone, Penny telephoned Louise, agreeing to meet her
+chum at the entrance of the Rialto. Arriving a few minutes early, she
+idly watched various cars unloading their passengers at the theatre.
+
+Presently a long black limousine which Penny recognized drew up at the
+curb. The chauffeur opened the door. Mr. Kohl and his wife stepped to the
+pavement. Observing the girl, they paused to chat with her.
+
+"I see you have the new fender installed on your car, Mr. Kohl," Penny
+remarked with a grin. "May I ask how much I owe the garageman?"
+
+"The sum was trifling," responded the banker. "Twelve dollars and forty
+cents to be exact. I may as well take care of it myself."
+
+"No, I insist," said Penny, wincing inwardly. "You see, I am one of the
+_Star's_ highly paid executives now. I write society in Miss Hilderman's
+absence and Dad gives me a salary."
+
+"Oh, really," remarked Mrs. Kohl with interest. "We are giving a dinner
+for eight tomorrow night. You might like to mention it."
+
+"Indeed, yes," said Penny eagerly.
+
+Obtaining complete details, she jotted notes on the back of an envelope.
+Mrs. Kohl, at Penny's request, was able to recall several important
+parties which had been held that week, providing material for nearly a
+half-column of society.
+
+After the Kohls had entered the theatre, Penny turned to glance at the
+black limousine which was pulling away from the curb. A short distance
+away stood a young man who likewise appeared to be watching the car. He
+wore a gray suit and a gray felt hat pulled unnaturally low over his eyes
+as if to shield his face.
+
+As Penny watched, the young man jotted something down on a piece of
+paper. His gaze remained fixed upon the Kohl limousine which was moving
+slowly down the street toward a parking lot.
+
+"Why, that's odd!" thought Penny. "I do believe he noted down the car
+license number! And perhaps for no good purpose."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 5
+ _THE MAN IN GRAY_
+
+
+Deciding that the matter should be brought to Mr. Kohl's attention, Penny
+looked quickly into the crowded theatre lobby. The banker and his wife no
+longer were to be seen.
+
+Turning once more, the girl saw that the young man in gray had also
+disappeared.
+
+"Now where did he go?" thought Penny. "He must have slipped into the
+alley. I wish I knew who he was and why he wrote down that car license
+number."
+
+Curious to learn what had become of the man, she walked to the entrance
+of the alley. At its far end she could barely distinguish a shadowy
+figure which soon merged into the black of the starless night.
+
+Penny was lost in thought when someone touched her arm. Whirling, she
+found herself facing Louise Sidell.
+
+"Oh, hello, Lou," she laughed. "You startled me."
+
+"Sorry to have kept you waiting," apologized Louise. "I missed my bus.
+May I ask what you find of such interest in this alley?"
+
+"I was looking for a man. He's disappeared now."
+
+Penny told Louise what she had observed, mentioning that in her opinion
+the man might be a car thief.
+
+"I've heard that crooks spot cars ahead of time and then steal them," she
+declared. "I think I should have Mr. Kohl paged in the theatre, and tell
+him about it."
+
+"You'll make yourself appear ridiculous if you do," Louise discouraged
+her. "The man may not have taken down the license number at all. Even if
+he did, his purpose could have been a legitimate one."
+
+"Then why did he slip down the alley?"
+
+"It's merely a short-cut to another street, isn't it? Penny, your
+imagination simply works at high speed twenty-four hours of the day."
+
+"Oh, all right," said Penny with a shrug. "But if Mr. Kohl's car is
+stolen, don't blame me."
+
+"It won't be," laughed Louise, linking arms with her chum. "Not with a
+chauffeur at the wheel."
+
+Entering the theatre, the girls were escorted to their seats only a few
+minutes before the lights were lowered. Penny glanced over the audience
+but failed to see either Mr. Kohl or his wife. The curtain went up, and
+as the entertainment began, she dismissed all else from her mind.
+
+The show ended shortly before eleven and the girls mingled with the crowd
+which filed from the theatre. Penny watched for Mr. and Mrs. Kohl but did
+not see them. As she walked with Louise toward the bus stop she spoke of
+her new duties as society editor of the _Star_.
+
+"Lou," she asked abruptly, "do you mind going home alone?"
+
+"Why, no. Where are you taking yourself?"
+
+"To the _Star_ office, if you don't mind."
+
+"At this time of night?"
+
+"I have a few notes I should type. Unfinished work always makes me
+nervous."
+
+"You, nervous!" Louise scoffed. "I'll bet you want to see Jerry
+Livingston!"
+
+"No such thing," denied Penny indignantly. "Jerry doesn't work on the
+night force unless he's assigned to extra duty."
+
+"Well, you have something besides work on your mind."
+
+"Come along with me, Suspicious, and I'll prove it."
+
+"No, thanks," declined Louise. "It's home and bed for me. You run along."
+
+The girls separated, Penny walking three blocks to the _Star_ building.
+The advertising office was dark, but blue-white lights glowed weirdly
+from the composing room. Only a skeleton night staff occupied the
+newsroom.
+
+Without attracting attention, Penny entered her own office. For an hour
+she worked steadily, writing copy, and experimenting with various types
+of make-up to be used on Monday's page.
+
+The door creaked. Glancing up, Penny momentarily was startled to see a
+large, grotesque shadow of a man moving across the glass panel. However,
+before she actually could be afraid, Jerry Livingston stepped into the
+room.
+
+"Oh, it's you!" she laughed in relief. "I thought it was against your
+principles to work overtime."
+
+The reporter slumped into a chair, and picking up a sheet of copy paper,
+began to read what Penny had composed.
+
+"I'm not working," he replied absently. "Just killing time." With a yawn
+he tossed the paper on the desk again.
+
+"Is my stuff that bad?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Not bad at all. Better than Miss Hilderman writes. But society always
+gives me a pain. Not worthy of your talents, Penny."
+
+"I wish you would tell Dad that, Jerry. I'd love to work on a big story
+again--one that would rock Riverview on its foundation!"
+
+"I could bear up under a little excitement myself, Penny. Ever since you
+broke the Green Door yarn, this sheet has been as dead as an Egyptian
+tomb."
+
+"Things may pick up soon."
+
+"Meaning--?"
+
+"Dad is thinking rather seriously of launching a drive against an
+organized group of mediums."
+
+"So I hear," nodded Jerry. "You know, for a long while I've thought that
+a clever reporter might be able to dig up some evidence at the Celestial
+Temple."
+
+"Then you know about the place?"
+
+"I've been there several times."
+
+"What are the meetings like, Jerry?" Penny asked eagerly.
+
+"Similar to a church musical service. At least everything was dignified
+when I was there. But I sure had a feeling that the lid was about to blow
+off."
+
+"Perhaps you were suspected of being a _Star_ reporter, Jerry."
+
+"Oh, undoubtedly. I could tell that by the way folks stared at me. The
+only person who would have a chance to get real evidence would be someone
+unknown as a reporter."
+
+"I wish Dad would let me try it."
+
+"I don't," said Jerry flatly. "The Celestial Temple is no place for a
+little girl like you."
+
+Penny did not reply as she lowered her typewriter into the cavity of the
+desk. She was thinking, however, that if Louise could be persuaded to
+accompany her, she would investigate the Celestial Temple at the first
+opportunity.
+
+"I'll take you home," Jerry offered as Penny reached for her hat.
+
+The night was a warm, mellow one in early June, marred only by dark
+clouds which scudded overhead, threatening rain. Deciding to walk, Penny
+and Jerry crossed the park to Oakdale Drive where many of Riverview's
+most expensive homes had been built.
+
+"Doesn't Mr. Kohl live on this street?" Penny presently asked her escort.
+
+"Yes," he answered, "in a large stone apartment building. I'll point it
+out when we get there."
+
+They walked for a time in silence. Then Penny found herself telling about
+the afternoon meeting with Mr. Kohl which had led her to Kano's Curio
+Shop. She spoke, too, of the silken ladder which had so aroused her
+speculation. Jerry listened with polite interest.
+
+"You and Louise shouldn't have chased around Dorr Street alone," he said
+severely. "It's a bad district."
+
+"Oh, it was safe enough, Jerry. I'd like to go back there. I can't help
+being curious about that strange ladder which the old Japanese man was
+sewing."
+
+"I doubt if there's a story connected with it. The Japanese make any
+number of curious articles of silk, you know."
+
+"But a ladder, Jerry! What purpose could it serve?"
+
+"For one thing it would be more convenient to carry than the ordinary
+type."
+
+"One couldn't stand it against a wall or use it in the ordinary way,
+Jerry. I asked the Japanese about it but he refused to answer."
+
+"He may not have understood you."
+
+"Oh, he understood, all right. Do you know what I think? He was afraid I
+might discover something which would involve him with the police!"
+
+"Better forget the Kano Curio Shop," Jerry said tolerantly. "I repeat,
+Dorr Street is no place for you."
+
+"And I'm supposed to forget the Celestial Temple, too," grumbled Penny.
+"Oh, I see you grinned behind your hand! Well, Mr. Livingston, let me
+tell you--"
+
+She paused, and Jerry's hand tightened on her own. Unmistakably, both had
+heard a muffled scream. The cry seemed to have come from one of several
+large brick and stone buildings only a short distance ahead.
+
+"What was that?" Penny asked in a low tone. "Someone calling for help?"
+
+"It sure sounded like it!" exclaimed Jerry. "Come on, Penny! Let's find
+out what's going on here!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 6
+ _AN APARTMENT BURGLARY_
+
+
+Together Penny and Jerry ran down the street, their eyes raised to the
+unevenly lighted windows of the separate apartment houses. They were
+uncertain as to the building from which the cry had come.
+
+Suddenly the front door of the corner dwelling swung open, and a young
+woman in a maid's uniform ran toward them.
+
+Jerry, ever alert for a story of interest to the _Star_, neatly blocked
+the sidewalk. Of necessity the girl halted.
+
+"Get a policeman, quick!" she gasped. "Mr. Kohl's apartment has been
+robbed!"
+
+"Mr. Kohl--the banker?" demanded Penny, scarcely believing her ears.
+
+"Yes, yes," the maid said in agitation. "Jewels, silverware, everything
+has been taken! The telephone wire was cut, too! Oh, tell me where I'll
+find a policeman!"
+
+"I'll get one for you," offered Jerry.
+
+The information that it was Mr. Kohl's house which had been burglarized
+dumbfounded Penny. As the reporter darted away to summon help, she
+showered questions upon the distraught maid.
+
+"I don't know yet how much has been taken," the girl told her excitedly.
+"The rooms look as if a cyclone had swept through them! Oh, what will the
+Kohls say when they learn about it?"
+
+"Mr. and Mrs. Kohl aren't home yet?"
+
+"No, they went to the theatre. They must have stopped at a restaurant
+afterwards. When they hear of this, I'll lose my job."
+
+"Perhaps not," said Penny kindly. "Surely you weren't to blame for the
+burglary."
+
+"They'll think so," the maid responded gloomily.
+
+"I am acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Kohl. Perhaps, if I speak a good word
+for you it may help."
+
+"I doubt it," the girl responded. "I was supposed to have stayed at the
+apartment the entire evening."
+
+"And you didn't?"
+
+"No, I went to a picture show."
+
+"That does throw a different light on the matter," commented Penny.
+
+"I didn't think it would make any difference. I intended to get here
+ahead of the Kohls."
+
+"The robbery occurred while you were away?"
+
+"Yes. As soon as I opened the door I knew what had happened! Oh, I'll
+lose my job all right unless I can think up a good story."
+
+"I wouldn't lie if I were you," advised Penny. "The police are certain to
+break down your story. In any case, you owe it to yourself and your
+employers to tell the truth."
+
+A misty rain had started to fall. The maid, who was without a wrap,
+shivered, yet made no move to re-enter the building. Overhead, all along
+the dark expanse of apartment wall, lights were being turned on.
+
+"I am afraid your scream aroused nearly everyone in the building," said
+Penny. "If I were in your place I would return to the Kohl apartment and
+not answer many questions until the police arrive."
+
+"Will you stay with me?"
+
+"Gladly."
+
+The apartment door had slammed shut and locked with the night latch.
+Fortunately the maid had a key with her so it was not necessary to ring
+for the janitor. Ignoring the persons who had gathered in the hall, they
+took an automatic lift to the third floor, letting themselves into the
+Kohl suite.
+
+"This is the way I found it," said the maid.
+
+She switched on a light, revealing a living room entirely bare of rugs.
+Where three small Oriental rugs had been placed, only rectangular rims of
+dirt remained to mark their outlines.
+
+Beyond, in the dining room with its massive carved furniture, the
+contents of a buffet had been emptied on the floor. Several pieces of
+china lay in fragments. A corner cupboard had been stripped, save for a
+vase and an ebony elephant with a broken tusk.
+
+"The wall cabinet was filled with rare antiques," disclosed the maid.
+"Mrs. Kohl has collected Early American silver for many years. Some of
+the pieces she considered priceless."
+
+The bedrooms were in less disorder. However, bureau drawers had been
+overturned, and jewel cases looted of everything save the most trivial
+articles.
+
+"Mrs. Kohl's pearls are gone, and her diamond bracelet," the maid
+informed, picking up the empty jewel box. "I am pretty sure she didn't
+wear them to the theatre."
+
+"I wouldn't touch anything if I were you," advised Penny. "Fingerprints."
+
+The maid dropped the case. "Oh!" she gasped. "I never thought of that! Do
+you think the police will blame me for the robbery?"
+
+"Not if you tell them the truth. It surely will be unwise to try to hide
+anything."
+
+"I won't hold anything back," the maid promised. "It happened just like I
+said. After Mr. and Mrs. Kohl left I went to a picture show."
+
+"Alone?"
+
+"With my girl friend. After the show we had a soda together, and then she
+went home."
+
+"What time did you get here?"
+
+"Only a minute or two before I called for help. I tried the telephone
+first."
+
+"Why didn't you summon the janitor?"
+
+"I never thought of that. I was so excited I ran outside hoping to find a
+policeman."
+
+Penny nodded and, returning to the living room, satisfied herself that
+the telephone wires actually had been cut.
+
+"You didn't notice anyone in the halls as you went downstairs."
+
+"No one. Old Mr. Veely was on the lower floor when I came from the show,
+but he's lived here for seven years. I don't see how the burglar got into
+the apartment."
+
+"I was wondering about that myself. You're quite sure you locked the
+suite door?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I know I did," the maid said emphatically. "And it isn't
+possible to get into the building without a key. Otherwise, the janitor
+must be called."
+
+Penny walked thoughtfully to the living room window. The apartment stood
+fully thirty-five feet from a neighboring building, with the space
+between much too wide to be spanned. Below, the alley was deserted, and
+no fire escape ascended from it.
+
+"The burglar couldn't have entered that way," declared the maid. "He must
+have had his own key."
+
+Before Penny could respond, a sharp knock sounded on the door. The
+servant girl turned to open it. However, instead of the anticipated
+police, the apartment janitor, George Bailey, peered into the disordered
+room.
+
+"I heard someone scream a minute or so ago," he said. "Some of the
+tenants thought it came from this apartment. Maybe they were mistaken."
+
+"There's no mistake," spoke Penny from across the room. "The Kohls have
+been robbed. Will you please come inside and close the door?"
+
+"Robbed! You don't say!" The janitor stared with alarmed interest. "When
+did it happen?"
+
+Penny allowed the maid to tell what had occurred, adding no information
+of her own. When there came a lull in the excited flow of words, she said
+quietly:
+
+"Mr. Bailey, do you mind answering a few questions?"
+
+"Why should I?" the janitor countered. "I'll tell you right now I know
+nothing about this. I've attended strictly to my duties. It's not my
+lookout if tenants leave their suite doors unlocked."
+
+"No one is blaming you," Penny assured him. "I merely thought you might
+contribute to a solution of the burglary."
+
+"I don't know a thing about it."
+
+"You didn't let anyone into the apartment building tonight?"
+
+"Not a soul. I locked the service door at six o'clock, too. Now let me
+ask this: Who are you, and how did you get in here?"
+
+"That's fair enough," smiled Penny. She told her name, explained that she
+was an acquaintance of the Kohls, and had been summoned by the maid.
+
+"Please don't think that I am trying to play detective," she added. "I
+ask these questions in the hope of gaining information for my father's
+paper, the _Star_."
+
+"Well, it looks to me as if it was an inside job," the janitor replied,
+mollified. "Come to think of it though, I've seen a suspicious-acting
+fellow hanging around the building."
+
+"You mean tonight?"
+
+"No, several days ago. He stayed on the other side of the street and kept
+watching the doorway."
+
+"What did he look like, Mr. Bailey?"
+
+"Oh, I don't remember. He was just an average young man in a gray
+overcoat and hat."
+
+"Gray?" repeated Penny alertly.
+
+"It may have been light blue. I didn't pay much attention. At the time I
+sized up the fellow as a detective."
+
+Penny had no opportunity to ask additional questions for just then voices
+were heard in the hallway. As she opened the door, Jerry Livingston,
+followed by a policeman, came toward her.
+
+"Learn anything?" the reporter asked softly in her ear.
+
+"A little," answered Penny. "Let's see how much the officer turns up
+before I go into my song and dance."
+
+Making a routine inspection of the rooms, the police questioned both the
+maid and the janitor. From an elderly lady who occupied the adjoining
+suite he gleaned information that the Kohls' telephone had rung steadily
+for fifteen minutes during the early evening hours.
+
+"What time was that?" interposed Penny.
+
+The policeman gazed at her with sharp disapproval. "Please," he requested
+with exaggerated politeness.
+
+"Sorry," apologized Penny, fading into the background.
+
+"It rang about eight o'clock," the old lady revealed.
+
+"The information is not significant," said the officer, glancing again at
+Penny.
+
+She started to speak, then bit her lip, remaining silent.
+
+"Well, sister, what's on your mind?" he demanded abruptly.
+
+"Excuse me, officer, but I think the information does have importance.
+Couldn't it mean that the crooks, whoever they were, telephoned the
+apartment to make certain it was deserted before breaking in?"
+
+"Possibly," conceded the policeman. His frown discouraged her. "Any other
+theories?"
+
+"No," said Penny shortly.
+
+The policeman began to herd the tenants into the hall. For a moment he
+paid no attention to Penny and Jerry, who with the maid were permitted to
+remain.
+
+"Never try to show up a policeman, even if he is a stuffed shirt,"
+remarked the reporter softly. "It gets you nowhere."
+
+The door closed and the officer faced the pair.
+
+"Now young lady," he said, quite pleasantly. "What do you know about this
+burglary? I'll be very glad to listen."
+
+"I don't really know a thing," admitted Penny. "But here's a little clue
+which you may be able to interpret. I can't."
+
+Leading the policeman to the window, she started to raise the sash. The
+officer stopped her, performing the act himself, his hand protected by a
+handkerchief.
+
+"There is your clue," said Penny.
+
+She indicated two freshly made gashes on the window ledge. Separated by
+possibly a foot of space, they clearly had been made by a hook or sharp
+instrument which had dug deeply into the wood.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 7
+ _MARK OF THE IRON HOOK_
+
+
+"What do you think of it?" Penny asked as the officer studied the marks
+in silence.
+
+"I'd say they were made by something which hooked over the ledge," the
+policeman replied. "Possibly a ladder with curving irons."
+
+Jerry gazed down over the window ledge into the dark alley.
+
+"No ordinary ladder could reach this high," he commented. "Raising an
+extension would be quite a problem, too."
+
+The Kohl maid timidly approached the window, gazing at the two deep
+gashes with interest. Asked by the policeman if she ever had noticed them
+before, she shook her head.
+
+"Oh, no, sir. They must have been made tonight. I know they weren't there
+this afternoon when I dusted the window sills."
+
+"Incredible as it seems, the thief came through this window," decided the
+policeman. "How he did it is for the detectives at Central Station to
+figure out."
+
+Explaining that the rooms must not be disturbed until Identification
+Bureau men had made complete fingerprint records, the officer locked
+Penny, Jerry and the maid outside the suite. He then went to a nearby
+apartment to telephone his report.
+
+"Maybe this is an ordinary burglary, but it doesn't look that way to me,"
+remarked Jerry as he and Penny went down the stairway.
+
+"In any case, the story should be front page copy. Anything the Kohls do
+is news in Riverview."
+
+"How high would you estimate the loss?"
+
+"Oh, I couldn't guess, Jerry. Thousands of dollars."
+
+Passing groups of tenants who cluttered the hallway excitedly discussing
+the burglary, they evaded questioners and reached the street.
+
+"Jerry," said Penny suddenly, "I didn't mention this to the policeman
+because he seemed to resent my opinions. But it occurred to me that I may
+have seen the man who robbed the Kohls--or at least had something to do
+with it."
+
+"How could you have seen him, Penny? We were together when the Kohl maid
+yelled for help."
+
+"Earlier than that. It was while I was at the theatre."
+
+Half expecting that Jerry would laugh, Penny told how she had observed
+the man in gray note down the license number of the Kohl limousine.
+
+"It came to me like a flash! That fellow may have telephoned the Kohl
+apartment after seeing the car at the theatre. Making sure no one was at
+home, he then looted the place at his leisure."
+
+"Wait a minute," interrupted Jerry. "The Motor Vehicle Department closes
+at six o'clock. How could your man have obtained Kohl's name and address
+from the license number?"
+
+"I never thought about the department being closed," confessed Penny.
+"How you do love to shoot shrapnel into my little ideas!"
+
+"At least you have original theories, which is more than I do," comforted
+Jerry. "Before we leave, shall we take a look at the alley?"
+
+Penny brightened instantly and accompanied the reporter to the rear of
+the building. The alley was deserted. Without a light they were unable to
+examine the ground beneath the Kohl's apartment window.
+
+Suddenly, both straightened as they heard a sound behind them. The
+brilliant beam of a flashlight focused on their faces, blinding them.
+
+"Oh, it's you again," said a gruff voice.
+
+The beam was lowered, and behind it they saw the policeman.
+
+"You young cubs are a pest," he said irritably.
+
+Ignoring them, he moved his light over the ground. There were no
+footprints or other marks visible beneath the window.
+
+"If a ladder had stood here it would show," remarked Jerry. "The thief
+must have used some other means of getting into the building."
+
+While the policeman was inspecting the ground, the janitor stepped from a
+rear basement door, joining the group.
+
+"Officer, I have some more information for you," he volunteered.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"I was talking with my wife. She says that about two hours ago she
+noticed a man walking through the alley. He carried a suitcase, and kept
+looking at the upstairs windows."
+
+"No ladder?"
+
+"Only a suitcase."
+
+"I'll have the detectives talk with your wife," the policeman promised.
+"They'll be here any minute now."
+
+Penny and Jerry lingered until the two men arrived, bringing a
+photographer with them. No new evidence being made available, it seemed a
+waste of time to remain longer.
+
+"Don't bother to take me home," Penny insisted. "Dash straight to the
+office and write your story. The other papers won't have a word about the
+robbery until the police report is made."
+
+"I don't like to abandon you."
+
+"Don't be silly, Jerry. It's only a few blocks farther."
+
+Thus urged, the reporter bade Penny good-bye. As she hastened on alone,
+it began to rain and the air turned colder. To save her clothing, she ran
+the last block, reaching the porch quite breathless.
+
+The house was dark, the front door locked. Penny let herself in with a
+key, switched on the lights, and after getting a snack from the
+refrigerator, started upstairs.
+
+From her father's room issued loud snores. However, Mrs. Weems' door
+stood open, and as Penny glanced in she was surprised to see that the bed
+had not been disturbed.
+
+"Mrs. Weems must still be at the Hodges'," she thought. "Perhaps I should
+go after her. She'll have a long walk in this rain."
+
+Penny went to a window and looked out. The downpour showed no sighs of
+slackening. With a sigh she found her raincoat and started for the
+garage.
+
+During her absence, Mr. Parker had towed Leaping Lena to a vacant lot
+adjoining the property. The maroon car awaited her beneath shelter, and
+she drove it through dark streets to the Hodges' modest home.
+
+Lights glowed cheerily from the lower floor windows. In response to
+Penny's knock, a bent old man, his hands gnarled by hard labor, opened
+the door.
+
+"Is it Penelope?" he asked, squinting at her through the rain. "Come in!
+Come in!"
+
+"Good evening, Mr. Hodges. Is Mrs. Weems still here?"
+
+"Yes, I am, Penny," called the housekeeper. "Goodness, what time is it
+anyway?"
+
+"Nearly midnight."
+
+Penny shook water from her coat and stepped into the spic and span living
+room. An unshaded electric light disclosed a rug too bright, wallpaper
+too glaring, furniture stiff and old fashioned. Yet one felt at once
+welcome, for the seamstress and her husband were simple, friendly people.
+
+"Have a chair, Penelope," invited Mrs. Hodges. She was short like her
+husband, with graying hair and an untroubled countenance.
+
+"Thank you, but I can't stay," replied Penny. "I came to drive Mrs. Weems
+home."
+
+"I had no idea it was so late," the housekeeper said, getting to her
+feet. "Mrs. Hodges and I have been planning my traveling outfit."
+
+"I'll try to have the dresses for you within the next two weeks,"
+promised the seamstress. "Your good fortune makes me very happy, Maud.
+Isn't the news of her inheritance wonderful, Penelope?"
+
+"Oh, yes, yes, of course," stammered Penny. "Only I hope Mrs. Weems isn't
+leaving us within two weeks. What's this about a traveling outfit?"
+
+"I've always wanted fine clothing," said Mrs. Weems dreamily. "Mrs.
+Hodges is making me a suit, three silk dresses, a tissue velvet evening
+gown--"
+
+"An evening gown!" Penny gasped. "Where will you wear it?"
+
+"I'll find places."
+
+"Maybe she aims to catch a husband while she's galavantin' around out
+there in Californy," contributed Mr. Hodges with a sly wink.
+
+"The very idea!" laughed Mrs. Weems, yet with no displeasure.
+
+Penny sagged into the nearest rocking chair. The conversation was paced
+too fast for her.
+
+"Evening gowns--husbands--California," she murmured weakly. "Wait until
+Dad hears about this."
+
+"Mr. Hodges was only joking," declared Mrs. Weems, reaching for her hat.
+"I wouldn't marry the best man on earth. But I definitely am going west
+this summer."
+
+"I envy you, Maud," said the seamstress, her eyes shining. "Pa and I want
+to go out there and buy a little orange grove someday. But with taxes
+what they are, we can't seem to save a penny."
+
+Mrs. Weems squeezed her friend's hand.
+
+"I wish I could take you along, Jenny," she said. "All these years you've
+sewed your poor fingers almost to the bone. You deserve an easier life."
+
+"Oh, Pa and I don't complain," the seamstress answered brightly. "And
+things are going to look up."
+
+"Sure they are," agreed Mr. Hodges. "I'll get a job any day now."
+
+Penny, who was watching the seamstress' face was amazed to see it
+suddenly transformed. Losing her usual calm, Mrs. Hodges exclaimed:
+
+"Pa! It just this minute came to me! Maud getting her inheritance is
+another psychic sign!"
+
+Penny rocked violently and even Mrs. Weems looked startled.
+
+"I don't know what you mean, Jenny," she said.
+
+"We said we wouldn't tell anybody, Ma," protested Mr. Hodges mildly.
+
+"Mrs. Weems is my best friend, and Penelope won't tell. Will you,
+Penelope?"
+
+"Not what I don't know," replied Penny in bewilderment. "How can Mrs.
+Weems' inheritance have anything to do with a psychic sign?"
+
+"You may as well tell 'em," grinned Mr. Hodges, "If you keep the news
+much longer you'll bust."
+
+"The strangest thing happened three nights ago," Mrs. Hodges began, her
+voice quivering with excitement. "But wait! First I'll show you the
+letter!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 8
+ _PSYCHIC SIGNS_
+
+
+As Penny and Mrs. Weems waited, the seamstress went to another room,
+returning with a stamped, slit envelope.
+
+"Notice the postmark," she requested, thrusting the letter into Penny's
+hand.
+
+"It was mailed from New York," the girl observed.
+
+"I mean the hour at which the envelope was stamped by the postmaster."
+
+"I make it 11:30 P.M. June fifteenth," Penny read aloud. "Does the time
+and date have special significance?"
+
+"Indeed, it does," the seamstress replied impressively. "You tell them,
+Pa."
+
+"It happened three nights ago," began Mr. Hodges. "Ma worked late
+stitchin' up some playsuits for Mrs. Hudson's little girl. Afterwards we
+had bread and milk like we always do, and then we went to bed."
+
+"At the time, I said to Pa that something queer was going to happen,"
+broke in the seamstress. "I could feel it in my bones. It was as if
+something was hovering over us."
+
+"A feeling of impending trouble?" questioned Penny.
+
+"Nothing like that," said Mr. Hodges.
+
+"No, it was as if one almost could feel a foreign presence in the room,"
+Mrs. Hodges declared, lowering her voice. "A supernatural being."
+
+"Surely you don't believe in ghosts...?" Penny began, but the seamstress
+did not hear. Unheeding, she resumed:
+
+"Pa rubbed my back to ease the pain I get from working too long at the
+machine. Then we went to bed. Neither of us had gone to sleep when
+suddenly we heard it!"
+
+"Six sharp raps on the outside bedroom wall," supplied Mr. Hodges. "It
+was like this." He demonstrated on the table.
+
+"We both heard it," added Mrs. Hodges. "It scared me nearly out of my
+wits."
+
+"Possibly it was someone at the door," suggested Penny.
+
+"No, it wasn't that. Pa got up and went to see."
+
+"Could it have been a tree bough brushing against the wall?"
+
+"It wasn't that," said Mr. Hodges. "The maple is too far off to strike
+our bedroom."
+
+"There's only one explanation," declared the seamstress with conviction.
+"It was a psychic sign--the first."
+
+"I don't believe in such things myself," announced Penny. "Surely there
+must be another explanation."
+
+"That's what I told Jenny," nodded Mr. Hodges. "But since the letter
+came, doggoned if I don't think maybe she's right."
+
+"What has the letter to do with it?" inquired Mrs. Weems.
+
+The seamstress pointed to the postmark on the envelope.
+
+"The hour at which we heard the strange tappings was eleven-thirty! Pa
+looked at the clock. And it was three days ago, June fifteenth."
+
+"Corresponding to the marking on this envelope," commented Penny. "That
+is a coincidence."
+
+Mrs. Hodges shook her head impatiently.
+
+"You surely don't think it just happened by _accident_?" she asked. "It
+must have been intended as a sign--an omen."
+
+"What did the letter say?" Penny inquired, without answering Mrs. Hodges'
+question. She knew that her true opinion would not please the woman.
+
+"It wasn't rightly a letter," the seamstress returned. "The envelope
+contained six silver dollars fitted into a stiff piece of cardboard."
+
+"We figured it was another sign," contributed Mr. Hodges. "Six raps on
+the wall--six dollars."
+
+"I wish some ghost would come and pound all night long on my bedroom
+door," remarked Penny lightly.
+
+"Penelope, you shouldn't speak so disrespectfully," Mrs. Weems reproved
+in a mild voice.
+
+"Excuse me, I didn't mean to," said Penny, composing her face. "What else
+has happened of a supernatural nature?"
+
+"Why, nothing yet," Mrs. Hodges admitted. "But Pa and I have had a
+feeling as if something important were about to take place. And now Maud
+inherits six thousand dollars!"
+
+"There was nothing psychic about that," said Mrs. Weems. "Cousin David
+had no close relatives so he left the money to me."
+
+The seamstress shook her head, and an ethereal light shone in her eyes.
+
+"Night before last when I went to bed I was thinking that I wished with
+all my heart something nice would happen to you, Maud. Now it's come to
+pass!"
+
+Even Mrs. Weems was somewhat startled by the seamstress' calm assumption
+that her thoughts had been responsible for the inheritance.
+
+"Don't you see," Mrs. Hodges resumed patiently. "It must mean that I have
+great psychic powers. I confess I am rather frightened."
+
+Penny arose and began to button her raincoat.
+
+"Excuse me for saying it," she remarked, "but if I were you, Mrs. Hodges,
+I'd spend the six dollars and forget the entire affair. Someone must have
+played a joke on you!"
+
+"A joke!" The seamstress was offended. "People don't give away money as a
+joke."
+
+"No, these days they squeeze the eagles until they holler," chuckled Mr.
+Hodges.
+
+"The letter was postmarked New York City," went on his wife. "We don't
+know a soul there. Oh, no one ever can make me believe that it was done
+as a joke. The letter was mailed at exactly the hour we heard the six
+raps!"
+
+"And there wasn't a sign of anyone near the house," added Mr. Hodges.
+
+"Well, at least you're six dollars ahead," said Penny. "Shall we go, Mrs.
+Weems? It's after midnight."
+
+The seamstress walked to the door with the callers.
+
+"I'll get busy tomorrow on those new dresses," she promised Mrs. Weems.
+"Drop in again whenever you can. And you, too, Penelope."
+
+Driving home through the rain, Penny stole a quick glance at the
+housekeeper who seemed unusually quiet.
+
+"Do you suppose Jenny could be right?" Mrs. Weems presently ventured. "I
+mean about Cousin David and the inheritance?"
+
+"Of course not!" laughed Penny. "Why, your cousin died a long while
+before Mrs. Hodges discovered that she was psychic. It's all the bunk!"
+
+"I wish I really knew."
+
+"Why, Mrs. Weems!" Penny prepared to launch into a violent argument. "I
+never heard of such nonsense! How could Mrs. Hodges have psychic powers?
+Everyone realizes that communication with the spirit world is
+impossible!"
+
+"You are entitled to your opinion, Penny, but others may differ with you.
+Who can know about The Life Beyond? Isn't it in the realm of possibility
+that Mrs. Hodges may have had a message from Cousin David?"
+
+"She didn't speak of it."
+
+"Not in words, Penny. But those strange rappings, the arrival of the
+letter--it was all very strange and unexplainable."
+
+"I'll admit it was queer, Mrs. Weems. However, I'll never agree that
+there's anything supernatural connected with it."
+
+"You close your mind to things you do not wish to believe," the
+housekeeper reproved. "What can any of us know of the spirit world?"
+
+Penny gazed at Mrs. Weems in alarm. She realized that the seamstress'
+story had deeply impressed her.
+
+"I'll stake my knowledge against Mrs. Hodges' any old day," she declared
+lightly. "I met one ghost-maker--Osandra--remember him?"
+
+"Why remind me of that man, Penny?" asked the housekeeper wearily.
+
+"Because you once paid him good money for the privilege of attending his
+séances. You were convinced he was in communication with the world
+beyond. He proved to be an outrageous fraud."
+
+"I was taken in by him as were many other persons," Mrs. Weems
+acknowledged. "Mrs. Hodges' case is different. We have been friends for
+ten years. She would not misrepresent the facts."
+
+"No, Mrs. Hodges is honest. I believe that the money was sent to her. But
+not by a ghost!"
+
+"Let's not discuss it," said Mrs. Weems with finality. "I never did enjoy
+an argument."
+
+Penny lapsed into silence and a moment later the car swung into the
+Parker driveway. The housekeeper hurried into the house, leaving the girl
+to close the garage doors.
+
+Penny snapped the padlock shut. Unmindful of the rain, she stood for a
+moment, staring into the night. Nothing had gone exactly right that day,
+and her disagreement with Mrs. Weems, minor though it was, bothered her.
+
+"There's more to this psychic business than appears on the surface," she
+thought grimly. "A great deal more! Maybe I am stubborn and opinionated.
+But I know one thing! No trickster is going to take advantage of the
+Hodges or of Mrs. Weems either--not if I can prevent it."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 9
+ _MRS. WEEMS' INHERITANCE_
+
+
+The clock chimed seven-thirty the next morning as Penny came downstairs.
+She dropped a kiss on her father's forehead and slid into a chair at the
+opposite side of the breakfast table.
+
+"Good morning, Daddykins," she greeted him cheerfully. "Any news in the
+old scandal sheet?"
+
+Mr. Parker lowered the newspaper.
+
+"Please don't call me Daddykins," he requested. "You know I hate it.
+Here's something which may interest you. Your friends the Kohls were
+robbed last night."
+
+"You're eight hours late," grinned Penny, reaching for the front page. "I
+was there."
+
+"I suppose you lifted the pearls and the diamond bracelet on your way to
+the theatre."
+
+"No," said Penny, rapidly scanning the story which Jerry had written,
+"but I think I may have seen the man who did do it."
+
+She then told her father of having observed a stranger note the license
+number of the Kohl car, and mentioned the events which had followed.
+
+"You may have been mistaken about what the man wrote down," commented her
+father.
+
+"That's possible, but he was staring straight at the car."
+
+"I doubt if the incident had any connection with the burglary, Penny.
+With the Motor Vehicle Department closed, he would have had no means of
+quickly learning who the Kohls were or where they lived."
+
+"Couldn't he have recognized them?"
+
+"In that case he would have no need for the license number. You didn't
+see the man note down the plates of other cars?"
+
+"No, but he may have done it before I noticed him standing by the
+theatre."
+
+Turning idly through the morning paper, Penny's attention was drawn to
+another news story. Reading it rapidly, she thrust the page into her
+father's hand.
+
+"Dad, look at this! There were two other burglaries last night! Apartment
+houses on Drexel Boulevard and Fenmore Street were entered."
+
+"H-m, interesting. The Kohls occupy an apartment also. That rather
+suggests that the same thief ransacked the three places."
+
+"And it says here that the families were away for the evening!" Penny
+resumed with increasing excitement. "I'll bet a cent they were at the
+theatre! Oh, Dad, that man in gray must have been the one who did it!"
+
+"If all the persons you suspect of crime were arrested, our jails
+couldn't hold them," remarked Mr. Parker calmly. "Eat your breakfast,
+Penny, before it gets cold."
+
+Mrs. Weems entered through the kitchen door, bearing reenforcements of
+hot waffles and crisp bacon. Her appearance reminded Penny to launch into
+a highly entertaining account of all that had transpired at the Hodges'
+the previous night.
+
+"Penny!" protested the housekeeper. "You promised Mrs. Hodges to say
+nothing about the letter."
+
+"Oh, no, I didn't promise," corrected Penny. "I was careful to say that I
+couldn't tell what I didn't know. Years ago Dad taught me that a good
+reporter never agrees to accept a confidence. Isn't that so, Dad?"
+
+"A wise reporter never ties his own hands," replied Mr. Parker. "If he
+promises, and then obtains the same story from another source, he's
+morally bound not to use it. His paper may be scooped by the opposition."
+
+"You two are a pair," sighed Mrs. Weems. "Scoops and front page stories
+are all either of you think about. I declare, it distresses me to realize
+how Penny may be trained after I leave."
+
+"The way to solve that problem is not to leave," said Penny. "You know we
+can't get along without you."
+
+Mrs. Weems shook her head.
+
+"It cuts me almost in two to leave," she declared sadly, "but my mind's
+made up. Mrs. Hodges says I am doing the right thing."
+
+"And I suppose a ghost advised her," muttered Penny.
+
+Mr. Parker glanced sternly at his daughter and she subsided into silence.
+But not for long. Soon she was trying to reopen the subject of the
+mysterious letter received by the Hodges. For a reason she could not
+understand, her father was loath to discuss it.
+
+"Come, Penny," he said. "If we're having that game of tennis this
+morning, it's time we start."
+
+En route to the park, the publisher explained why he had not chosen to
+express an opinion in the housekeeper's presence.
+
+"I quite agree with you that Mrs. Hodges has no psychic powers, Penny.
+She's been the victim of a hoax. However, Mrs. Weems is intensely loyal
+to her friend, and any disparaging remarks made by us will only serve to
+antagonize her."
+
+"I'll try to be more careful, Dad. But it's so silly!"
+
+Monday morning found Penny busy once more with her duties at the society
+desk. No new information had developed regarding the Kohl burglary, and
+she did not have time to accompany Mrs. Weems who went frequently to the
+Hodges' cottage.
+
+Secretly Penny held an opinion that the housekeeper's inheritance might
+be the work of a prankster. Therefore, upon returning from the office one
+afternoon and learning that the money actually had been delivered, she
+was very glad she had kept her thoughts to herself.
+
+"The lawyer came this morning and had me sign a paper," Mrs. Weems
+revealed to the Parkers. "Then he turned the money over to me--six
+thousand dollars."
+
+"I hope the cheque is good," remarked Penny.
+
+"It was. I had the lawyer accompany me to the bank. They gave me the
+money without asking a single question. I have it here."
+
+"You have six thousand dollars cash in the house!"
+
+"Yes, I had the cashier give it to me in hundred dollar bills."
+
+"Do you consider it safe to keep such a large sum?" Mr. Parker inquired
+mildly. "I should advise returning it to the bank, or better still, why
+not invest it in sound securities?"
+
+Mrs. Weems shook her head. "It gives me a nice rich feeling to have the
+cash. I've hidden it in a good place."
+
+"Where?" demanded Penny.
+
+"I won't tell," laughed Mrs. Weems.
+
+Again later in the evening, Mr. Parker tried without success to convince
+the housekeeper that she should return the money to a bank. Never one to
+force his opinions upon another, he then dropped the subject.
+
+"When will you be leaving us, Mrs. Weems?" he inquired.
+
+"Whenever you can spare me. Now that I have the money, I should like to
+leave within ten days or two weeks."
+
+"Since we can't persuade you to remain, I'll try to find someone to take
+your place," Mr. Parker promised.
+
+Both he and Penny were gloomy at the prospect of replacing the
+housekeeper. Not only would they miss Mrs. Weems but they honestly
+believed that she would never be happy without two incorrigibles and a
+home to manage.
+
+"Dad," Penny ventured when they were alone, "just supposing that Mrs.
+Weems' money should mysteriously disappear--"
+
+"Don't allow your mind to dwell on that idea," cut in her father sternly.
+"We'll play fair."
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't do it," said Penny hastily. "I was only joking. But if
+something _should_ happen to the money, it would solve all our problems."
+
+"Mrs. Weems has earned her vacation. Even though it will be hard to lose
+her, we mustn't stand in her way."
+
+"I guess you're right," sighed Penny.
+
+The following day Miss Hilderman resumed her duties at the _Star_, and
+Penny once more found herself a person of leisure. To her annoyance, Mrs.
+Weems insisted that she spend many hours in the kitchen, learning how to
+bake pies and cakes. A particularly distasteful lesson came to an end
+only when Penny, with brilliant inspiration, remembered that the
+housekeeper had an appointment with the seamstress.
+
+"Dear me, I had forgotten it!" exclaimed Mrs. Weems. "Yes, I must try on
+my new dresses!"
+
+"I'll drive you over," offered Penny.
+
+Not in recent days had the girl called upon the Hodges. As she and Mrs.
+Weems alighted from the car, they both noticed freshly ironed curtains at
+the windows. Mr. Hodges was pounding dust from a carpet on the line.
+
+"Housecleaning?" inquired Penny, pausing to chat with the old man.
+
+"Yes, Jenny's got me hard at it," he grinned. "She's been tearin' the
+house upside down gettin' ready for the new roomer."
+
+"Oh, have you taken one?"
+
+Penny was surprised, knowing that in past years the Hodges had been too
+proud to rent rooms.
+
+"There's a young feller moving in today," Mr. Hodges said, picking up the
+carpet beater. "Go on inside. Jenny'll tell you about it."
+
+Penny and Mrs. Weems entered the cottage where the seamstress was running
+a dust mop over the floors. She was somewhat dismayed to see the
+housekeeper.
+
+"Oh, Maud, I've been so busy I didn't get your dresses ready to be tried
+on."
+
+"It doesn't matter," replied Mrs. Weems. "What's this about a new
+roomer?"
+
+"I always said I wouldn't have one cluttering up the place. But this
+young man is different. His coming here--well, I interpret it as another
+sign."
+
+"A sign of what?" inquired Penny with her usual directness.
+
+"Well, it seemed as if I had a direct message from the spirit world to
+take him into our home. He came here last night. Instead of knocking in
+the usual way, he rapped six times in succession!"
+
+"Probably he was the one who sent the letter," said Penny alertly.
+
+"Oh, no! He didn't know anything about it. I asked him."
+
+"What is his name, Mrs. Hodges?"
+
+"Al Gepper. He's such a nice young man and he talks so refined. I am
+letting him have the entire floor upstairs."
+
+"That should bring you a nice income," remarked Mrs. Weems.
+
+"I am asking only two dollars a week," admitted the seamstress. "He said
+he couldn't pay more than that."
+
+"Why, Jenny," protested Mrs. Weems, "such a small amount hardly will
+cover the lights and various extras."
+
+"I know, Maud, but I couldn't turn him away. He moved his apparatus in
+last night and will bring his personal belongings sometime today."
+
+"His apparatus?" echoed Penny. "What is he, a chemist?"
+
+"No," replied the seamstress, smiling mysteriously. "I'll show you the
+rooms."
+
+Penny and Mrs. Weems followed the woman upstairs. The upper floor was
+divided into two small bedrooms with a wide, old-fashioned sliding door
+between which could be opened to make one large chamber. The larger of
+the rooms had been cleared of its usual furniture. Where a bed previously
+had stood was a circular table with six or eight chairs, and behind it a
+tall cabinet with a black curtain across the front.
+
+"Mr. Gepper plans to use this room for his studio," explained Mrs.
+Hodges.
+
+Penny's gaze had fastened upon the cabinet. She crossed to it and pulled
+aside the curtain. Inside were several unpacked boxes and a suitcase.
+
+"Mrs. Hodges, to what purpose does your young man expect to put this
+studio?" she asked.
+
+"I don't know. He didn't tell me. But I think he intends to carry on
+psychic experiments. He's a student, he said."
+
+"Mr. Gepper was afraid to tell you the truth lest you refuse to rent the
+rooms," declared Penny. "Mrs. Hodges, your roomer is a medium."
+
+"Why do you think so?"
+
+"Because I've seen trappings such as these before at other séance
+chambers," replied Penny. "Mrs. Hodges, you must send him away before he
+involves you with the police."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 10
+ _OUIJA BOARD WISDOM_
+
+
+"Trouble with the police!" Mrs. Hodges echoed, regarding Penny with
+unconcealed dismay. "How can it be illegal to rent Mr. Gepper these
+rooms?"
+
+"Renting the rooms isn't illegal," Penny corrected. "But if the young man
+conducts public séances here--filches money from people--then you may be
+considered a party to the scheme. This city has a local ordinance
+prohibiting fortune telling, mind reading and the like."
+
+"I am sure the young man means no wrong."
+
+"Penny," commented Mrs. Weems, "it seems to me that you are overly
+concerned. Why are you convinced that Mr. Gepper is a medium?"
+
+"Doesn't this cabinet indicate it?"
+
+"I thought it was some sort of wardrobe closet," Mrs. Hodges admitted.
+
+"Al Gepper is a medium, or pretends to have spiritualistic powers," Penny
+repeated. "In my opinion you'll be very unwise to allow him to start an
+illegal business here."
+
+"Oh, dear, I don't know what to do now," declared the seamstress. "I'll
+have to ask Pa about it."
+
+She and Mrs. Weems started downstairs, expecting that Penny would follow.
+Instead, the girl lingered to inspect the cabinet.
+
+On the lower floor a door slammed, and there were footsteps ascending the
+stairway. She paid no heed, assuming that it was either Mr. Hodges or his
+wife who approached.
+
+The door swung open. Turning, Penny saw a young man, possibly thirty
+years of age, standing on the threshold. His dark eyes were sharp and
+appraising.
+
+"Hello," he said, without smiling. "Aren't you afraid a monkey may jump
+out of that cabinet?"
+
+Penny, who seldom blushed, felt a wave of heat creeping over her cheeks.
+
+"Hello," she stammered. "You must be Mrs. Hodges' new roomer."
+
+"Al Gepper, at your service. Who are you, girlie?"
+
+"You guessed it," said Penny shortly, edging away from the cabinet.
+
+Al Gepper remained in the doorway, blocking the exit with his arm. He did
+not move as the girl attempted to move past him.
+
+"What's your hurry?" he drawled. "Stick around and let's get acquainted.
+I'll show you some neat card tricks."
+
+"Thanks, but I haven't time, Mr. Gepper."
+
+"What's your name anyhow?" he persisted. "You're not Mrs. Hodges'
+daughter."
+
+"No, only a friend."
+
+"You needn't be so icy about it," he rebuked. "Any friend of Mrs. Hodges'
+is a friend of mine."
+
+"I never make friends easily," Penny replied. "For that matter, I don't
+mind telling you that I have advised Mrs. Hodges not to rent you these
+rooms."
+
+"Oh, you have?" inquired the man, his eyes hardening. "And what business
+is it of yours?"
+
+"None, perhaps. I merely am not going to allow her to be taken in if I
+can prevent it!"
+
+"Oh, indeed. Do you mind explaining?"
+
+"It's perfectly obvious that you're one of these fake spiritualists,"
+Penny accused bluntly. "Your nickname should be Six-Raps Al!"
+
+"A little spit-fire, aren't you?" the man retorted. "But you have style.
+Now I may be able to use you in my business."
+
+"You admit that you're a medium?"
+
+"I am a spiritualist. Not a fake, as you so crudely accuse. And I assure
+you I have no intention of deceiving or taking advantage of your dear
+friends, the Hodges."
+
+"You expect to use these rooms for public séances?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Then you are certain to get the Hodges into trouble with the police."
+
+"Not unless you start squawking." Al Gepper's manner changed abruptly. He
+grasped Penny's wrist and pushed a leering face close to hers. "I'm not
+looking for any trouble from you or anyone else--see! If you try to make
+it, you'll wake up with a headache!"
+
+Penny jerked free and, shouldering through the door, raced downstairs.
+
+Glancing back, she saw that Al Gepper was following, though at a more
+leisurely pace. Instantly she divined that he intended to make sure no
+report of the incident was given to the Hodges, save in his presence.
+
+Mrs. Weems and the old couple were talking in the kitchen.
+
+"Well, Ma, it's for you to decide," Mr. Hodges was saying. "We gave our
+word to the young feller, and it's kinda mean to turn him out so sudden
+like."
+
+"I regret Penny said anything about the matter." apologized Mrs. Weems.
+"You know how out-spoken and impulsive she is. Of course, she has no
+information about Mr. Gepper."
+
+"Oh, but I do have information," spoke Penny from the doorway. "Mr.
+Gepper has just admitted that he intends to use the room for public
+séances. Isn't that true?"
+
+Defiantly, she turned to face the young man who had followed her.
+
+"Quite true," he acknowledged loftily. "One who has a great psychic gift
+is duty-bound to allow the world to benefit from one's talents. The
+selection of this house as a Temple for Celestial Communication was not
+mine, but the bidding of the Spirits. In a dream I was instructed to come
+here and take up residence."
+
+"What night did you have the dream?" questioned Mrs. Hodges, deeply
+impressed.
+
+"It was June fifteenth."
+
+"The very night we heard the strange rappings on our bedroom wall, Pa."
+
+"Dogonned if it wasn't!"
+
+"Mr. Gepper, do you truly believe it is possible to communicate with the
+spiritual world?" Mrs. Weems inquired politely.
+
+"My dear madam, I can best answer by offering a demonstration. Have you a
+ouija board in the house?"
+
+"Yes, we have," spoke Mrs. Hodges eagerly. "Pa and I got it from a mail
+order house years ago, but it never worked for us. You fetch it, Pa."
+
+Mr. Hodges brought a large, flat board which bore letters and figures.
+Upon it he placed a small, triangular piece with cushioned legs.
+
+"This do-dad is supposed to spell out messages, ain't it?" he asked. "Ma
+and I could never make it work right."
+
+Al Gepper smiled in a superior way, and placing the board on his lap,
+motioned for Mrs. Weems to sit opposite him. However, before the
+housekeeper could obey, Penny slid into the vacant chair. The medium
+frowned.
+
+"Place your hands lightly on the triangular piece," he instructed.
+"Concentrate with me as we await a message from the spiritual world."
+
+Penny fastened her eyes on the distant wall with a blank stare.
+
+A minute passed. The ouija board made several convulsive struggles, but
+seemed unable to move.
+
+"The Spirits encounter resistance," the medium said testily. "They can
+send no message when one's attitude is antagonistic."
+
+"Shall I take off the brakes?" asked Penny.
+
+Even as she spoke the pointer of the triangle began moving, rapidly
+spelling a message.
+
+"AL GEPPER IS A FRAUD," it wrote.
+
+The medium sprang to his feet, allowing the board to fall from his lap.
+
+"You pushed it!" he accused. "The test was unfair."
+
+"Why, the very idea," chuckled Penny.
+
+"Penny, please allow Mr. Gepper to conduct a true test," reproved Mrs.
+Weems severely. "Let me try."
+
+Al Gepper, however, would have no more of the ouija board. Instead, he
+took a pad of white paper from his pocket. Seating Mrs. Weems at the
+kitchen table he requested her to write a message, which, without being
+shown to anyone in the room, was sealed in an envelope.
+
+The medium pointedly requested Penny to examine the envelope to assure
+herself the writing could not be seen through the paper.
+
+"You are satisfied that I have not read the message?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," Penny admitted reluctantly.
+
+The medium took the envelope, ran his fingers lightly over it, and
+returned it still sealed to Mrs. Weems.
+
+"If I am not mistaken, Madam, you wrote, 'Is the spirit of my cousin in
+this room?'"
+
+"Why, I did!" exclaimed Mrs. Weems. "Those were the exact words! How did
+you know?"
+
+Al Gepper smiled mysteriously.
+
+"You have seen nothing, Madam," he said. "Now if conditions are right, it
+may be possible for us to learn if a Spirit has joined our group. Lower
+the blinds, please."
+
+Mr. Hodges hastened to obey. With the kitchen in semi-darkness, the
+medium motioned for his audience to move a few paces away. Taking his own
+position behind the kitchen table, he intoned:
+
+"Oh, Spirit, if you are with us in the room, signal by lifting this piece
+of furniture."
+
+Slowly the man moved his hands above the table. At first nothing
+happened, then to the astonishment of his audience, it lifted a few
+inches from the floor. There it hung suspended a moment before dropping
+into place again.
+
+"You see?" With a triumphant ring to his voice, the medium crossed the
+room to raise the window shades. "Now do you doubt me?"
+
+"No! No!" cried Mrs. Hodges tremulously. "Only a Spirit could have moved
+that table. Maud, perhaps it _was_ your Cousin David."
+
+The medium gazed at Mrs. Weems with sympathetic interest.
+
+"You have lost a loved one recently?" he inquired.
+
+"Cousin David and I never were well acquainted," replied the housekeeper.
+"That was why I was so surprised when he left me an inheritance."
+
+"Mrs. Weems!" remonstrated Penny. She was dismayed by the revelation so
+casually offered.
+
+"No doubt you would like to communicate with your departed cousin at some
+later time," the medium said smoothly. "Allow me to offer my services as
+an intermediary. No charge, of course."
+
+"Why, that's very generous of you, Mr. Gepper."
+
+"Not at all. Friends of the Hodges are my friends. Shall we set a
+definite date--say tomorrow at two o'clock?"
+
+"Yes, I'll come. That is, if the Hodges are to be present."
+
+"Assuredly. Mrs. Hodges is definitely psychic and should contribute to
+our séance."
+
+It was with the greatest of difficulty that Penny finally induced the
+housekeeper to leave the cottage. Al Gepper accompanied them to the door.
+
+"Tomorrow at two," he repeated, smiling slyly at Penny. "And you may come
+also, my little doubter. I assure you it will be well worth your time."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 11
+ _THE CELESTIAL TEMPLE_
+
+
+"Penny, tell me the truth," Mrs. Weems urged as they drove home together.
+"Didn't you push the ouija board?"
+
+"Of course," laughed Penny. "But if I hadn't, Al Gepper would have. He
+was trying hard enough!"
+
+"He said you were resisting the spirits."
+
+"That was the worst sort of nonsense," Penny returned impatiently.
+"Gepper is a fraud, and I wish you hadn't told him about your
+inheritance."
+
+"How can you accuse him of being a fraud after you saw his marvelous
+demonstration? The table actually rose from the floor."
+
+"I know it did," Penny acknowledged unwillingly. "But it must have been
+trickery."
+
+"How could it have been? The table was an ordinary one. Mrs. Hodges uses
+it every day of her life."
+
+"I don't know how he did it," Penny responded. "All the same, I am sure
+he's a trickster. Promise me you won't tell him anything more about
+yourself or the inheritance."
+
+"Very well, I'll promise if it gives you satisfaction," the housekeeper
+replied. "However, I do intend to keep my appointment."
+
+Penny had no opportunity to relate to her father what had occurred at the
+Hodges home, for Mr. Parker was absent on a two-day business trip to a
+distant town. Feeling that she must tell someone, she sought Louise
+Sidell, and they discussed every angle of the affair.
+
+"Will you attend the séance with Mrs. Weems?" Louise asked her curiously.
+
+"Will I?" Penny repeated. "I'll be right there with bells! I intend to
+expose Mr. Al Gepper if it's the last act of my life!"
+
+Returning home later in the afternoon, she found Mrs. Weems sitting on
+the living room floor, sorting a drawer of old photographs.
+
+"You're not packing your things already?" Penny asked in alarm.
+
+"Only these photographs," the housekeeper responded. "I wouldn't have
+started the task, only I got into it when the agent came."
+
+"Agent?"
+
+"A man from the Clamont Photograph Studio."
+
+"Never heard of the place."
+
+"It's opening this week. They're having a special offer--three old
+photographs enlarged for only twenty-five cents. I gave the man Cousin
+David's picture and two others."
+
+"That is a bargain," remarked Penny. "I wish I had been here."
+
+The evening meal was served, and afterwards Mrs. Weems devoted herself to
+the reading of travel books borrowed from the library. Penny could find
+no occupation to satisfy her. She turned the radio on, switched it off
+again, and wandered restlessly from room to room. Finally she went to the
+telephone and called Louise.
+
+"How about a little adventure?" she proposed. "And don't ask for
+explanations."
+
+"Will we be home by ten o'clock? That's the parental deadline."
+
+"Oh, yes, we'll make it easily. Meet me at the corner of Carabel and
+Clinton Streets."
+
+Mrs. Weems was so engrossed in her book that she merely nodded as Penny
+explained that she and Louise were going for a walk. Reaching the
+appointed corner the girl found her chum awaiting her.
+
+"Tell me about this so-called adventure," she commanded. "Where are we
+going?"
+
+"To the Celestial Temple, Lou. At least, we'll look at it from the
+outside. Meetings are held there nearly every night at eight o'clock."
+
+"Penny, I don't think I care to go."
+
+"Nonsense! The meetings are open to the public, aren't they? We'll have a
+very interesting time."
+
+"Oh, all right," Louise consented reluctantly. "But I can't understand
+why you're so interested in the place."
+
+The girls took a bus to the end of the line, then walked three blocks
+until they came to Butternut Lane. For long stretches there were only
+scattered houses and the street lamps were far between. Becoming
+increasingly uneasy, Louise urged her chum to turn back.
+
+"Why, we're at our destination now," Penny protested. "I am sure that
+must be the building."
+
+She pointed to an old, rectangular brick structure only a few yards
+ahead. Obviously it once had been a church for there was a high bell
+tower, and behind the building a cluster of neglected tombstones gleamed
+in the moonlight.
+
+The evenly spaced windows were illuminated, and music could be heard.
+
+"Are you sure this is the place?" Louise inquired dubiously. "It looks
+like a church to me, and they're holding a service."
+
+"Oh, the building hasn't been used for such purposes in over fifteen
+years," Penny explained. "I investigated, so I know its history. Until
+three years ago it was used as a county fire station. Only recently it
+was reclaimed by this Omar Society of Celestial Thought."
+
+The girls moved closer. Through an open window they were able to see
+fifteen or twenty people seated in the pews. A woman played a wheezing
+organ while a man led the off-key singing.
+
+"Let's go inside," Penny proposed.
+
+Louise held back. "Oh, no, we can see everything from here. It looks as
+if it were a very stupid sort of meeting."
+
+"Appearances are often deceiving. I want a ringside seat."
+
+Penny pulled her chum toward the entrance door. There they hesitated,
+reading a large placard which bore the invitation:
+
+_The Public Is Invited. Services at eight p.m. daily._
+
+"We're part of the public, Lou," urged Penny. "Come along."
+
+She boldly opened the door, and there was no retreat.
+
+Heads turned slightly as the girls entered the rear of the Temple. As
+quickly they turned forward again, but not before Penny had gained an
+impression, of sharp, appraising faces.
+
+A man arose, bowed, and offered the girls his bench, although many others
+were available. They slipped into the pew, accepting a song book which
+was placed in Louise's hand.
+
+While her chum sang in a thin, squeaky voice, Penny allowed her gaze to
+wander over the room. At the far end she saw a door which apparently
+opened into the bell tower. On a slightly raised platform where the
+leader stood, were two black-draped cabinets somewhat similar to the one
+she had seen at Mrs. Hodges' cottage. Otherwise, there was nothing of
+unusual interest.
+
+The services were decorous to the point of being boring. Yet as the
+meeting went on, Penny and Louise both felt that they were being studied.
+More than once they surprised persons gazing at them.
+
+At the conclusion of the session which lasted no longer than thirty
+minutes, the leader asked the audience if any "brother" were present who
+wished to attempt a spirit communication. Immediately, Penny sat up a bit
+straighter, anticipating that interesting demonstrations were in store.
+
+Nor was she mistaken. A thin, hard-faced man went to the rostrum, and in
+a loud voice began to call upon the spirits to make known their presence.
+Signs were at once forthcoming. The empty pews began to dance as if
+alive. The speaker's table lifted a foot from the floor and a pitcher of
+water fell from it, smashing into a dozen pieces.
+
+Louise, her eyes dilated with fear, edged closer to Penny.
+
+"Let's go," she pleaded.
+
+Penny shook her head.
+
+A woman dressed in blue silk glided down the aisle, stopping beside the
+girls. She held a tray upon which were a number of objects, an opal ring,
+a knife, and several pins.
+
+"Dearie," she said to Penny, "if you would care to have a message from a
+departed soul, place a trinket in this collection. Any personal object.
+Our leader will then exhort the spirit to appear."
+
+"No, thank you," replied Louise, without giving her chum a chance to
+speak.
+
+"Perhaps, you would prefer a private reading," the woman murmured. "I
+give them at my home, and the fee is trivial. Only a dollar."
+
+"Thank you, no," Louise repeated firmly. "I'm not interested."
+
+The woman shrugged and moved on down the aisle, pausing beside an elderly
+man to whom she addressed herself.
+
+"Lou, why did you discourage her?" Penny whispered. "We might have
+learned something."
+
+"I've learned quite enough. I'm leaving."
+
+Louise squeezed past her chum, heading for the exit. Penny had no choice
+but to follow.
+
+Before they could reach the door, it suddenly opened from the outside. A
+young man who had not bothered to remove his hat, entered. Seeing the
+girls, he abruptly halted, then turned and retreated.
+
+Penny quickened her step. Taking Louise's hand she pulled her along at a
+faster pace. They reached the vestibule. It was deserted. Penny peered up
+and down the dark street.
+
+"Well, he's gone," she remarked.
+
+"Who?" Louise questioned in a puzzled voice. "You mean that man who
+entered the Temple and then left so suddenly?"
+
+"I do," responded Penny. "Unless my eyes tricked me, he was none other
+than Al Gepper!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 12
+ _A MESSAGE FOR MRS. WEEMS_
+
+
+"I don't know anyone answering to that name," remarked Louise. "However,
+the fellow did act as if he were retreating from us."
+
+Penny glanced up and down the dark street. No one was to be seen, and
+since so little time had elapsed, she reasoned that the man had taken
+refuge either in the high weeds or the nearby cemetery.
+
+"It must have been Gepper," she declared. "Naturally he wouldn't care to
+meet me here." Quickly Penny recounted the events of the afternoon.
+
+"Then you think he may be connected with the Temple, Penny?"
+
+"That would be my guess. Lou, this place is nothing but a blind. The
+members of the society pretend to be honest spiritualists, while in
+reality they're charlatans. They hold services for one purpose only--to
+solicit persons for private readings."
+
+"Isn't that illegal?"
+
+"Of course it is. The police should raid the place."
+
+"Then why don't they, Penny?"
+
+"Dad says it's because they've been unable to obtain sufficient evidence.
+But they'll have it after we report what we've seen tonight!"
+
+"How do you suppose they made things jump around as if they were alive?"
+Louise remarked as the girls walked slowly toward home. "It frightened
+me."
+
+"Everything was done by trickery. I'm sure of that, Lou. Just as soon as
+Dad returns I shall make a full report to him. We'll see what he can do
+about it."
+
+By the time Penny arrived home, Mrs. Weems had retired to her room.
+However, the light still burned and the door was open a crack. Rapping,
+the girl entered, for she was eager to tell the housekeeper about her
+visit to the Celestial Temple.
+
+Mrs. Weems sat at the desk. Hastily she closed one of the drawers, and
+turned the key.
+
+"You startled me, Penny!" she exclaimed. "I do wish you would give more
+warning before you descend upon one."
+
+"Sorry," apologized Penny, glancing curiously toward the desk. "Oh, I
+see!"
+
+"You see what?" demanded the housekeeper.
+
+"Six thousand dollars reposing in a desk drawer!"
+
+Mrs. Weems' look of consternation betrayed her. She glanced at the locked
+drawer, and then laughed.
+
+"For an instant I thought you actually could see the money, Penny."
+
+"Then my guess was right?"
+
+"I keep the money in the drawer," Mrs. Weems admitted.
+
+Penny sat down on the edge of the bed, drawing up her knees for a chin
+rest.
+
+"Mrs. Weems, don't you think it's risky keeping so much money here?"
+
+"It will only be for a few days, Penny. I'll have it converted into
+traveler's cheques as soon as I am ready to start west."
+
+"The desk doesn't seem a safe place to me."
+
+"You're the only person who knows where I keep the money, Penny. Oh, yes,
+I told Mrs. Hodges, but she is to be trusted. No one can steal it as long
+as I have the key."
+
+Mrs. Weems tapped a black velvet ribbon which she wore about her neck.
+
+"I keep this on me day and night," she declared. "No thief ever will get
+it way from me."
+
+Penny said nothing more about the matter. Instead, she launched into a
+highly colored account of her visit to the Celestial Temple. The
+housekeeper expressed disapproval, remarking that she never would have
+granted permission had she known in advance where the girls were going.
+Nevertheless, her eager questions made it evident that she was deeply
+interested in the demonstration which had been witnessed.
+
+"I don't see how you can call it trickery," she protested. "You have no
+proof, Penny."
+
+"Never in the world will I believe that spirits can make tables do a
+dance, Mrs. Weems! Probably the furniture had special wiring or something
+of the sort."
+
+"You can't say that about the table at Mrs. Hodges', Penny."
+
+"No, it seemed to be just an ordinary piece of furniture," the girl
+admitted reluctantly. "All the same, Al Gepper is a fraud, and I wish you
+wouldn't attend his old séance tomorrow."
+
+"But Penny, I gave my promise."
+
+"I can run over to the house and tell him you've changed your mind."
+
+Mrs. Weems shook her head. "No, Penny, I am curious to learn if he will
+be able to communicate with the spirits. Tomorrow's séance should provide
+a genuine test. The man knows nothing about me or my ancestors."
+
+"Mrs. Hodges probably has provided all the information he'll require."
+
+"I telephoned her yesterday and requested her not to tell Mr. Gepper
+anything about me. She'll respect my wishes. The test should prove a true
+one."
+
+Penny sighed and arose from the bed. Knowing Mrs. Weems as she did, she
+realized that her opinion could not be changed by argument. It was her
+hope that Al Gepper would discredit himself by failing in the séance.
+
+"Penny, please promise that you'll do nothing outrageous tomorrow," Mrs.
+Weems begged as the girl started to leave. "I am sure Mr. Gepper feels
+that you are antagonistic."
+
+"I'll try to behave myself," Penny laughed. "Yes, we'll give Mr. Gepper a
+chance to prove what he can do."
+
+At two the following afternoon she and Mrs. Weems presented themselves at
+the Hodges' cottage. Both Mr. Hodges and his wife, who were to sit in at
+the séance, were trembling with anticipation.
+
+"Mr. Gepper is simply wonderful," the seamstress confided to Mrs. Weems.
+"He tells me that I have great healing powers as well as a psychic
+personality."
+
+"Jenny, I hope you haven't told him anything about me," the housekeeper
+mentioned.
+
+"Oh, no, Maud. For that matter, he's said nothing about you since you
+were here."
+
+Mrs. Weems cast Penny an "I-told-you-so" glance which was not lost upon
+Al Gepper who entered the room at that moment.
+
+"I am ready for you, ladies," he said. "Kindly follow me."
+
+In the upstairs room blinds had been drawn. Al Gepper indicated that his
+audience was to occupy the chairs around the circular table.
+
+"Before we attempt to communicate with the departed souls, I wish to
+assure you that I employ no trickery," he announced, looking hard at
+Penny. "You may examine the table or the cabinet if you wish."
+
+"Oh, no, Mr. Gepper," murmured Mrs. Hodges. "We trust you."
+
+"I'll look, if you don't mind," said Penny.
+
+She peered beneath the table, thumped it several times, and pulled aside
+the curtain of the cabinet. It was empty.
+
+"Now if you are quite satisfied, shall we begin?" purred Mr. Gepper. "It
+will make it much easier, if each one of you will give me a personal
+object."
+
+"A la the Celestial Temple method," muttered Penny beneath her breath.
+
+"What was that?" questioned the medium sharply.
+
+"Nothing. I was merely thinking to myself."
+
+"Then please think more quietly. I must warn you that this séance cannot
+be successful unless each person present concentrates, entering into the
+occasion with the deepest of sincerity."
+
+"I assure you, I am as sincere as yourself," Penny responded gravely.
+
+Mr. Hodges deposited his gold watch on the table. His wife offered a pin
+and Mrs. Weems a plain band ring. Penny parted with a handkerchief.
+
+After everyone was seated about the table, Al Gepper played several
+phonograph records, all the while exhorting the Spirits to appear.
+
+Taking Mrs. Weems' ring from the tray before him, he pressed it to his
+forehead. A convulsive shudder wracked his body.
+
+"Someone comes to me--" he mumbled. "Someone comes, giving the name of
+David--David Swester."
+
+"My cousin," breathed Mrs. Weems in awe.
+
+"He is tall and dark with a scar over his left eye," resumed the medium.
+"I see him plainly now."
+
+"That _is_ David!" cried the housekeeper, leaning forward in her
+eagerness.
+
+"David, have you a message for us?" the medium intoned.
+
+There was a long silence, during which the man could be seen writhing and
+twisting in the semi-darkness. Then his voice began again:
+
+"David has a message for a person called Maud."
+
+"I am Maud," said Mrs. Weems tremulously. "Oh, what does he say?"
+
+"That he is well and happy in the Spirit World, but he is worried about
+Maud."
+
+"Worried about me? Why?"
+
+The medium again seemed to undergo physical suffering, but presently the
+message "came through," although not in an entirely clear form.
+
+"David's voice has faded. I am not certain, but it has something to do
+with six thousand dollars."
+
+"The exact amount he left to me!" Mrs. Weems murmured.
+
+"David is afraid that you will not have the wisdom to invest the money
+wisely. He warns you that the present place where you have it deposited
+is not safe. He will tell you what to do with it. Now the voice is fading
+again. David has gone."
+
+With another convulsive shudder, Al Gepper straightened from the position
+into which he had slumped. Resuming his normal tone he said:
+
+"That is all. The connection with Cousin David has been broken."
+
+"Can't we contact him again?" Mrs. Weems asked in disappointment.
+
+"Not today. Possibly tomorrow at this same hour."
+
+"Couldn't you call up another Spirit by using my pin or Pa's watch?" Mrs.
+Hodges suggested wistfully.
+
+Al Gepper raised one of the window blinds. "I am very, very tired," he
+said. "This séance was particularly exhausting due to the presence of
+someone antagonistic. Tomorrow if conditions are right, I hope actually
+to materialize Cousin David. The poor soul is trying so hard to get a
+message through to the one he calls Maud."
+
+"You mean I'll be able to see him?" the housekeeper asked incredulously.
+
+"I hope and believe so. I must rest now. After a séance I should refresh
+myself with sleep."
+
+"Of course," agreed Mrs. Hodges. "We are selfish to overtax you."
+
+Recovering their trinkets, the elderly couple and Mrs. Weems went from
+the room. Penny was the last to leave.
+
+"Well, sister?" inquired the medium in a low voice. "Were you convinced,
+or do you still think that you can show up Al Gepper?"
+
+"I think," said Penny softly, "that you are a very clever man. But clever
+as you are, one of your well-trained ghosts may yet lead you to the city
+jail!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 13
+ _COUSIN DAVID'S GHOST_
+
+
+When Penny reached the lower floor she found Mrs. Weems and the Hodges
+excitedly discussing the séance. The seamstress and her husband
+emphatically declared that they had given the medium no information
+regarding either the housekeeper or the deceased Cousin David.
+
+"Then there can be only one explanation," Mrs. Weems said. "We were truly
+in communication with a departed spirit."
+
+"Don't you agree, Penny?" inquired Mrs. Hodges.
+
+"I am afraid I can't," she replied.
+
+"The test was a fair one," Mrs. Weems insisted. "Mr. Gepper couldn't have
+described Cousin David so accurately if he hadn't actually seen him as he
+materialized from the spirit world."
+
+"Al Gepper could have obtained much of his information from persons in
+Riverview," Penny responded.
+
+"About me, perhaps," the housekeeper conceded. "But not about Cousin
+David. Why, I doubt if anyone save myself knew he had a scar over his
+eye. He received it in an automobile accident twelve or thirteen years
+ago."
+
+"Just think!" murmured Mrs. Hodges. "Tomorrow you may actually be able to
+see your departed cousin!"
+
+In vain Penny argued that Al Gepper was a trickster. She was unable to
+offer the slightest evidence to support her contention while, on the
+other hand, the Hodges reminded her that the medium had never asked one
+penny for his services.
+
+From the cottage Penny went directly to the _Star_ office, feeling
+certain that her father would have returned there from his trip. Nor was
+she mistaken. Gaining admittance to the private office, she wasted no
+words in relating everything which had transpired during his absence. Her
+father's attention was flattering.
+
+"Penny, you actually saw all this?" he questioned when she had finished.
+
+"Oh, yes! At the Celestial Temple Louise was with me, too. We thought you
+might take up the matter with the police."
+
+"That's exactly what I will do," decided Mr. Parker. "I've turned the
+matter over in my mind for several days. The _Star_ will take the
+initiative in driving these mediums, character readers and the like out
+of Riverview!"
+
+"Oh, Dad, I was hoping you'd say that!"
+
+Mr. Parker pressed a desk buzzer. Summoning DeWitt, he told of his plan
+to launch an active campaign.
+
+"Nothing will please me better, Chief," responded the city editor. "Where
+do we start?"
+
+"We'll tip the police to what is going on at the Celestial Temple. Have
+them send detectives there for tonight's meeting. Then when the usual
+hocus-pocus starts, arrests can be made. Have photographers and a good
+reporter on hand."
+
+"That should start the ball rolling," agreed DeWitt. "I'll assign Jerry
+Livingston to the story. Salt Sommers is my best photographer."
+
+"Get busy right away," Mr. Parker ordered. "We'll play the story big
+tomorrow--give it a spread."
+
+"How about Al Gepper?" Penny inquired after DeWitt had gone. "Could he be
+arrested without involving the Hodges?"
+
+"Not very easily if he lives at their place. Has he accepted money for
+the séances he conducts there?"
+
+"He hasn't taken any yet from Mrs. Weems. I am sure he must have other
+customers."
+
+"You have no proof of it?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Suppose we forget Al Gepper for the time being, and concentrate on the
+Celestial Temple," Mr. Parker proposed. "In the meantime, learn
+everything you can about the man's methods."
+
+"No assignment would please me more, Dad. I've the same as promised Mr.
+Gepper he'll land in jail, and I want to make good."
+
+Mr. Parker began to pace the floor. "I'll write a scorching editorial,"
+he said. "We'll fight ignorance with information. Our reporters must
+learn how these mediums do their tricks, and expose them to the gullible
+public."
+
+"I'll do everything I can to help," Penny promised eagerly. "May I have
+Al Gepper for my particular fish bait?"
+
+"He's your assignment. And I'm depending upon you to see that he doesn't
+work any of his trickery on Mrs. Weems. If she can't be persuaded to
+remain away from the Hodges', then we must protect her as best we can."
+
+"I'll try to accompany her every time she goes there, Dad. I am afraid he
+may be after her money."
+
+"Gepper doesn't know she inherited six thousand dollars?" Mr. Parker
+asked in alarm.
+
+"Yes, she dropped the information that she had come into money. He
+supplied figures himself."
+
+"I wonder how?"
+
+"I haven't the slightest idea, Dad. Gepper is as clever a man as ever I
+met. Honestly, it wouldn't surprise me if he does produce Cousin David at
+tomorrow's séance."
+
+Mr. Parker snorted in disgust.
+
+"Tommyrot! The man will make an excuse about the conditions not being
+right, and fail."
+
+"Perhaps, but he seems pretty confident."
+
+"You expect to attend the séance?"
+
+"Oh, definitely. Jungle beasts couldn't keep me away."
+
+"Then be alert every instant--without appearing too suspicious, of
+course. Try to learn how the man accomplishes his tricks."
+
+"Leave it to me," chuckled Penny. "Mr. Al Gepper is due for his first
+shock when he wakes up tomorrow and reads that the Celestial Temple has
+been raided. Unless I am much mistaken, that place is one of his favorite
+haunts."
+
+Leaving the newspaper office, Penny went directly home. She longed to
+stop at the Sidell home, but she had promised her father to say nothing
+about the planned raid until it was an accomplished fact. Feeling the
+need of work to occupy her time, she washed the maroon car and waxed the
+fading paint of Leaping Lena.
+
+At six o'clock her father came home for dinner.
+
+"Any news?" Penny asked, running to meet him.
+
+"Everything's set," he answered. "DeWitt laid your information before the
+police. Tonight three detectives will attend the meeting at the Temple.
+If anything out of the way happens, the raid will be staged."
+
+Penny was so tense with expectation that she was unable to do justice to
+the delicious dinner which Mrs. Weems had prepared. Her father, too,
+seemed unusually restless. After dinner he made a pretense of reading the
+paper, but actually his eyes did not see the print.
+
+The hands of the clock scarcely appeared to move, so slowly did time
+pass. Eight o'clock came, then nine. Suddenly the telephone rang.
+
+Penny was away in an instant to answer it. From the next room she called
+to her father:
+
+"It's for you, Dad! DeWitt, I think."
+
+"I told him to telephone me as soon as the raid was staged." Mr. Parker
+arose and went quickly to take the receiver. Penny hovered at his elbow.
+
+"Hello! DeWitt?" the publisher asked, and after a slight pause: "Oh, I
+see. No, I don't think Penny was mistaken. It's more likely there was a
+tip-off."
+
+He hung up the receiver and turned toward Penny who anticipated the news.
+
+"The raid was a failure?"
+
+"Yes, Penny. Detectives spent two hours at the meeting. Nothing happened.
+It was impossible to make arrests."
+
+"They must have been recognized as detectives."
+
+"Undoubtedly."
+
+"Others will be assigned to the case?"
+
+"I doubt it, Penny. DeWitt reports that the police have become convinced
+that the spiritualists who use the Temple are not operating for profit."
+
+"Louise and I know better because she was approached." Penny anxiously
+regarded her father. "Dad, even if the police do give up, we won't, will
+we?"
+
+"No, we're in this fight and we'll stay in it," he answered grimly.
+"We'll put some new teeth in our trap. And the next time it's sprung, I
+warrant you we'll catch a crook."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 14
+ _WET PAINT_
+
+
+Promptly at two o'clock the following afternoon, Penny and Mrs. Weems
+presented themselves at the Hodges' cottage for the appointed séance.
+Already Mr. Gepper awaited them in the darkened apartment on the second
+floor.
+
+Penny's glance about the room found everything in the same order as upon
+the previous visit, save that an easel with a large black sheet of
+artist's paper stood beside the cabinet.
+
+She moved as if to examine it. Al Gepper intercepted her by saying:
+
+"Sit here, if you please. Beside Mrs. Weems. I'll call the Hodges and
+we'll start at once."
+
+The medium went to the door and shouted down the stairway. Penny noticed
+that he remained where he could watch her every move in a mirror which
+hung on the wall. She shrewdly guessed that he was afraid she might
+attempt to examine either the cabinet or the easel.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Hodges came in response to the call, taking chairs about the
+circular table. The gaze which they fastened upon Al Gepper was almost
+worshipful.
+
+"Now today I hope to materialize the Spirit of Cousin David," announced
+the medium. "The task will be difficult, as you must realize. After the
+séance begins I am compelled to request absolute quiet. The slightest
+movement may frighten away the Spirits."
+
+"Why are spirits so timid?" asked Penny.
+
+"Because their beings are so sensitive that they instantly feel an
+unfriendly presence," the man responded glibly. "Please hold hands, and
+use every precaution that contact is not broken."
+
+Mrs. Weems took one of Penny's hands and Mr. Hodges the other. Mrs.
+Hodges sat next to her husband.
+
+After lowering black curtains over the window blinds to further darken
+the room, the medium returned to his chair. Those at the table were
+unable to distinguish his form, and for a time there was no sound save
+the scratching music of a phonograph record.
+
+Presently the medium exhorted the Spirit of Cousin David to appear. For
+at least ten minutes there was no indication that communication was to be
+established. Then a cowbell tinkled, causing Mrs. Weems to shake and
+tremble.
+
+"Are you there, David?" called the medium.
+
+The bell jingled violently.
+
+"We are ready, David," intoned the medium. "Have you a message for us?"
+
+To Penny's amazement, a pair of shapely white hands slowly materialized,
+apparently pulling aside the curtain of the cabinet above the medium's
+head. In the darkness they glowed with a weird phosphorescent light.
+
+Next appeared a white-rimmed slate, upon which luminous words were
+written: "I am the Spirit of Cousin David. Is Maud here?"
+
+"Yes, yes," responded Mrs. Weems, quivering with excitement. "Have you a
+message for me?"
+
+Again the hand wrote: "My happiness in this world beyond is disturbed.
+Maud, do not squander the money which I gave to you."
+
+"Squander it?" the housekeeper said aloud. "Why, I've scarcely spent a
+penny!"
+
+"A trip to California is ill-advised," wrote the hand. "Invest your money
+in good eight per cent securities. There are many excellent
+companies--the Brantwell Corporation, White and Edwards, the Bierkamp
+Company."
+
+The slate vanished and once more the jingling of the cowbell denoted that
+the spirit was moving away.
+
+The medium spoke. "Contact has been broken. Shall we try to reach Cousin
+David again?"
+
+"Oh, please!" pleaded Mrs. Weems. "I don't know what to do now. I've
+planned on the western trip and I can't understand why Cousin David
+should advise me to give it up."
+
+"I wouldn't go agin' the Spirits if I was you," advised Mr. Hodges. "You
+better change your plans, Maud."
+
+"But how can I be certain that the message came from Cousin David?" the
+housekeeper quavered. "Oh, dear, I am so upset! If only I could be
+certain."
+
+"Madam, I hope you do not distrust me," said Al Gepper reprovingly.
+
+"Oh, no, it's not that. I'm just upset."
+
+"Perhaps, if you actually saw your cousin it would set your mind at
+rest."
+
+"Is it possible to see him?"
+
+"I cannot promise, but we will try. Hold hands again please, and everyone
+concentrate."
+
+There followed an interval during which the medium pleaded with the
+Spirit of Cousin David to return and show himself. Suddenly the group was
+startled to see a luminous banjo move high through the air, unsupported
+by any hand. It began to play "Down upon the Swanee River."
+
+Midway through the selection, the music broke off and the banjo
+disappeared. An instant later Mrs. Hodges uttered a choked cry.
+
+"The easel! Look at it, Maud!"
+
+All eyes turned toward the painter's canvas. As the medium focused a
+flashlight upon it, the face of an elderly man slowly materialized on the
+blank surface, the picture appearing in red, blue and finally black oil
+paint.
+
+"It _is_ Cousin David!" whispered Mrs. Weems, gripping Penny's hand so
+tightly that it hurt. "He looks exactly as he did when last I saw him!"
+
+The medium extinguished his light and again the room was dark. Mrs.
+Weems' chair creaked as she stirred restlessly. Mr. Hodges' heavy
+breathing could be plainly heard. There was no other sound. Everyone
+waited in tense expectancy, sensing that the climax of the séance was at
+hand.
+
+Suddenly, behind Al Gepper's chair a spot of ethereal light appeared. As
+Penny watched, it grew in size until the figure had assumed the
+proportions of a man. Then, to her further amazement, it slowly rose
+toward the ceiling, hovering above Mrs. Weems' chair.
+
+Throughout the séance Penny had remained firm in her conviction that the
+medium had resorted to trickery to produce his startling effects.
+Although she could not be sure, she thought that several times he had
+slipped from his chair to enter the conveniently placed cabinet. She also
+believed that the only way he could have materialized the ghost was by
+donning luminous robes.
+
+"I'll end his little game once and for all," she thought.
+
+Deliberately she waited until the ghostly figure floated close to her own
+chair. Then with a sudden upward spring, she snatched at it.
+
+Greatly to her chagrin, her hand encountered nothing solid. With the
+speed of lightning, the figure streaked toward the cabinet behind Al
+Gepper's chair and was seen no more.
+
+Arising, the medium switched on the room lights. His face was white with
+anger.
+
+"I warned you to make no move," he said harshly to Penny. "You
+deliberately disobeyed me."
+
+"Oh, Penny, why did you do it?" wailed Mrs. Weems. "I was so eager to get
+another message from Cousin David."
+
+"His Spirit has been frightened away," announced the medium. "It will be
+impossible ever to recall him. For that matter, I shall never again
+conduct a séance with this young person present. She is a disturbing
+element."
+
+"Oh, Penny, you've ruined everything," said Mrs. Weems accusingly. "Why
+do you act so outrageously?"
+
+Penny started to speak and then changed her mind. Mrs. Weems, the
+seamstress and her husband, all were gazing at her with deep reproach.
+She realized that there was nothing she could say which would make them
+understand.
+
+She arose and walked to the easel. The painting of Cousin David remained
+clearly visible. She touched it and then glanced at her finger which bore
+a streak of red.
+
+The paint was still wet.
+
+Penny stared at her finger a moment. Lifting her eyes she met the
+triumphant gaze of Al Gepper.
+
+"Not even a skillful artist could have painted a picture so quickly," he
+said with a smirk. "Only a spirit would have the ability. You are
+dumbfounded, my little one?"
+
+"No, just plain dumb," answered Penny. "I salute you, Mr. Gepper."
+
+Without waiting for Mrs. Weems, she turned and went from the house.
+
+"Now how _did_ he do it?" she muttered. "I saw everything and yet I am
+more in the dark than ever. But I am sure of one thing. Unless I work
+fast, Al Gepper is almost certain to obtain Mrs. Weems' inheritance."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 15
+ _HIDDEN MONEY_
+
+
+One of Penny's first acts upon arriving home was to scan the telephone
+directory under the heading, Investment Firms. The three companies
+mentioned during the séance, White and Edwards, Brantwell, and Bierkamp,
+were unlisted.
+
+"Evidently there are no such firms in Riverview," she reflected. "But why
+was Mrs. Weems advised to invest her money with one of them? It looks
+very suspicious to me!"
+
+Not until after five o'clock did Mrs. Weems return from the Hodges'. She
+seemed rather upset, and when Penny tried to bring up the subject of the
+séance, said distantly:
+
+"Please, Penny, I prefer not to discuss it. Your conduct was
+disgraceful."
+
+"I apologize for grabbing at the ghost, Mrs. Weems. I only did it to
+prove that Al Gepper is a fraud."
+
+"Your motives were quite apparent. One could not blame Mr. Gepper for
+being angry."
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Weems," said Penny in desperation. "How can you be taken in by
+his smooth line? His one purpose is to obtain your money."
+
+"You are very unjust," the housekeeper responded. "Today I tried to pay
+Mr. Gepper for the séance and he would not accept one penny."
+
+"That's because he is playing for higher stakes."
+
+"It's no use discussing the matter with you," Mrs. Weems shrugged. "You
+are prejudiced and will give the man credit for nothing."
+
+"I give him credit for being very clever. Mrs. Weems, please promise that
+you'll not allow him to invest your money for you."
+
+"I have no intention of doing so, Penny. It does seem to me that I should
+consider Cousin David's wishes in the matter. Very likely I shall abandon
+my plans for the western trip."
+
+"And stay here with us?" Penny cried eagerly.
+
+"No, I am thinking of going to a larger city and taking an apartment.
+With my money invested in eight per cent securities, I should have a
+comfortable little income."
+
+"Mrs. Weems, I've heard Dad say over and over that sound securities will
+not pay such a high rate of interest. Promise you won't invest your money
+until you've talked with him."
+
+"You're always asking me to promise something or other," the housekeeper
+sighed. "This time I shall use my own judgment."
+
+Realizing that further argument was only a waste of breath, Penny
+wandered outside to await her father. When he came, they sat together on
+the front porch steps, discussing the situation.
+
+"I'll drop a word of advice to Mrs. Weems at the first opportunity,"
+offered Mr. Parker. "If she is in the mood you describe, it would not be
+wise to bring up the subject tonight. She merely would resent my
+interference."
+
+"What worries me is that I am afraid she may have told Al Gepper where
+the money is kept."
+
+"Tomorrow I'll urge her again to deposit it in a bank. We'll do our best
+to protect her from these sharpers."
+
+The publisher had been very much interested in Penny's account of the
+séance. However, he was unable to explain how the various tricks had been
+accomplished.
+
+"Dad," Penny said thoughtfully, "you don't suppose there's any chance it
+wasn't trickery?"
+
+"Certainly not! I hope you're not falling under this fellow's spell?"
+
+"No, but it gave me a real shock when I saw Cousin David's face
+materialize on the canvas. It was the absolute image of him--or rather of
+a picture Mrs. Weems once showed me."
+
+A startled expression came over Penny's face. Without explanation, she
+sprang to her feet and ran to the kitchen.
+
+"Mrs. Weems," she cried, "did you ever get it back? Your picture!"
+
+"What picture, Penny?" The housekeeper scarcely glanced up as she
+vigorously scrubbed carrots.
+
+"I mean the one of Cousin David. You allowed a photographer to take it
+for enlargement."
+
+"It hasn't been returned," Mrs. Weems admitted. "I can't imagine why the
+work takes so long."
+
+"I think I can," announced Penny. "But you never would believe me if I
+told you, so I won't."
+
+Racing to the porch, she revealed to her father what she thought had
+occurred. It was her theory that the agent who had called at the Parker
+home days earlier had in actuality been one of Al Gepper's assistants.
+
+"Don't you see, Dad!" she cried. "The man obtained a picture of Cousin
+David, and probably turned it over to the medium." Her face fell
+slightly. "Of course, that still doesn't explain how the painting slowly
+materialized."
+
+"Nor does it explain the ghost or the banjo. Penny, couldn't Gepper have
+painted the picture himself in the darkness?"
+
+"There wasn't time, Dad. Besides, he held a flashlight on the painting.
+No human hand touched it."
+
+"You say, too, that the banjo was high overhead when it played?"
+
+"That's right, Dad. Gepper couldn't have reached the strings. The
+instrument floated free in the air."
+
+"Sounds fantastic."
+
+"Believe me, it was, Dad. It's no wonder Gepper is gaining such influence
+over Mrs. Weems. He's as slick as a greased fox!"
+
+"I'll have Jerry go to the house and try to learn how the fellow
+operates," declared Mr. Parker. "We can't break the story until we have
+absolute evidence that Gepper has obtained money under false pretenses."
+
+The next day Penny remained close at home. Mrs. Weems still treated her
+somewhat distantly, leaving the house immediately after lunch and
+declining to explain where she was going. Penny was quite certain that
+her destination was the Hodges' cottage.
+
+"Guess I'll run over and see Louise," she thought restlessly. "Nothing to
+do here."
+
+Before she could leave the house, the doorbell rang. A man of perhaps
+thirty, well dressed, with a leather briefcase tucked under his arm,
+stood on the front porch. He bowed politely to Penny.
+
+"This is where Mrs. Weems resides, I believe?"
+
+"Yes, but she isn't here now."
+
+"When will she be home?"
+
+"I can't say," replied Penny. "Are you an agent?"
+
+The man's appearance displeased her although she could not have said
+exactly why. His smile was too ingratiating, his eyes calculating and
+hard.
+
+"My name is Bierkamp," he explained. "I represent the Harold G. Bierkamp
+Investment Company."
+
+Penny stiffened. She glared at the agent. "You mean you represent the Al
+Gepper Spookus Company," she said in a cutting voice. "Well, Mrs. Weems
+doesn't want any of your wonderful eight per cent stocks! She'll not see
+you, so don't come here again!"
+
+"And who are you to speak for her?" the man retorted.
+
+"If you come here again, I'll call the police," Penny threatened. "Now
+get out!"
+
+Without another word, the man retreated down the street. Penny watched
+until he turned a corner and was lost to view. She was a trifle worried
+as to what she had done.
+
+"If Mrs. Weems learns about this she'll never forgive me," she thought
+uneasily. "But he was a crook sent by Al Gepper. I know it."
+
+Wandering upstairs, she entered the bathroom, intending to wash before
+going to Louise's home. On the tiled floor lay a velvet ribbon with a key
+attached. At once, Penny realized that Mrs. Weems had left it there
+inadvertently.
+
+"It's the key to her desk," she reflected, picking it up. "And she
+insists that her money is kept in a safe place! I have a notion to play a
+joke on her."
+
+The longer Penny considered the idea, the more it pleased her.
+Jubilantly, she set forth for the Sidell home. Taking Louise into her
+confidence, she visited a novelty shop and purchased a supply of fake
+money.
+
+Returning home, she then unlocked the drawer of Mrs. Weems' desk and,
+removing the six thousand dollars, replaced it with neat stacks of
+imitation bills. Louise watched her with misgiving.
+
+"Penny, this joke of yours isn't likely to strike Mrs. Weems as very
+funny," she warned. "You're always doing things which get you into
+trouble."
+
+"This is in a good cause, Lou. I am protecting Mrs. Weems from her own
+folly."
+
+"What will you do with the money?"
+
+"Deposit it in a bank."
+
+"You are taking matters into your hands with a vengeance! Suppose you're
+robbed on the way downtown?"
+
+"That would complicate my life. Upon second thought, I'll send for an
+armored truck."
+
+To Louise's amazement, Penny actually carried through her plan. A heavily
+guarded express truck presently drew up before the Parker residence, and
+Mrs. Weems' money was turned over to the two armed men who promised that
+it would be delivered safely to the First National Bank.
+
+"There, that's a load off my mind," said Penny. "Just let Al Gepper try
+to steal Mrs. Weems' money now!"
+
+Louise shook her head sadly. "You may be accused of stealing yourself. I
+wouldn't be in your slippers when Mrs. Weems learns about this."
+
+"Oh, I'll be able to explain," laughed Penny.
+
+The joke she had played did not seem quite so funny an hour later. Mrs.
+Weems returned home and without comment recovered the key which had been
+replaced on the lavatory floor. She did not open her desk or mention the
+money.
+
+At dinner Penny was so subdued that the housekeeper inquired if she were
+ill.
+
+"Not yet," the girl answered. "I'm just thinking about the future. It's
+so depressing."
+
+"Perhaps a picture show would cheer us all," proposed Mr. Parker.
+
+Mrs. Weems displayed interest, and Penny, without enthusiasm, agreed to
+go. Eight o'clock found them at the Avalon, a neighborhood theatre. The
+show was not to Penny's liking, although her father and the housekeeper
+seemed to enjoy it. She squirmed restlessly, and finally whispered to her
+father that she was returning home.
+
+In truth, as Penny well knew, she was suffering from an acute case of
+"conscience." Now that it was too late, she regretted having meddled with
+Mrs. Weems' money.
+
+Gloomily she walked home alone. As she entered, she heard the telephone
+ringing, but before she could answer, the party hung up. With a sigh
+Penny locked the front door again, switched out the lights and went to
+bed.
+
+For a long while she lay staring at a patch of moonlight on the bedroom
+carpet. Although she felt tired she could not sleep.
+
+"It's just as Louise said," she reflected. "I'm always getting myself
+into hot water and for no good reason, either!"
+
+Her morose thoughts were interrupted as a hard object thudded against a
+nearby wall. Penny sat up, listening. She believed that the sound had
+come from Mrs. Weems' room, yet she knew she was alone in the house.
+
+Rolling from bed, she groped for a robe, and without turning on the
+lights, tiptoed down the hall. Mrs. Weems' door stood open. Was some
+intruder hidden in that room?
+
+Peering inside, Penny at first noticed nothing amiss. Then her gaze
+fastened on the window sill, plainly visible in the moonlight. Two iron
+hooks, evenly spaced, had been clamped over the ledge!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 16
+ _OVER THE WINDOW LEDGE_
+
+
+As Penny flattened herself against the wall, the head and shoulders of a
+man slowly rose into view. Although his body was plainly silhouetted in
+the moonlight, she could not see his face.
+
+The intruder raised the sash, making no sound. He hesitated, listening a
+moment, then dropped lightly into the bedroom.
+
+Without turning on a flashlight which he carried, he went directly to
+Mrs. Weems' desk. So deliberate was the action that Penny instantly
+decided the fellow had come for a particular purpose and knew the lay-out
+of the entire house.
+
+"He means to steal Mrs. Weems' money!" she thought.
+
+Opening the desk, the man tried the drawer where the inheritance funds
+had been hidden. Failing to unlock it with a key, he took a tool from his
+pocket and in a moment had broken the lock.
+
+Removing the stack of fake bills which Penny had substituted, he thrust
+them into his coat. Taking no interest in anything else in the room, he
+moved stealthily toward the window.
+
+Penny knew there was no one within calling distance and that the man
+probably was armed. Wisdom dictated that she remain in hiding, but she
+was determined the thief should not escape. Hoping to take him by
+surprise, she stalked forward.
+
+A board creaked. With a muttered exclamation the man whirled around. At
+the same instant Penny flung herself upon him, diving low in imitation of
+a football tackle.
+
+The thief reeled, but instead of falling he recovered his balance and
+gave Penny a tremendous shove which sent her sprawling backwards. Before
+she could regain her feet, he ran to the window. Swinging himself over
+the ledge, he vanished from view.
+
+By the time Penny reached the window there was no sign of the intruder.
+He had disappeared as if into thin air. However, she knew that the man
+must have descended by means of a ladder which he had hastily removed.
+
+She ran her hand over the window ledge. The iron hooks no longer were
+there, only the scars which had been cut in the wood.
+
+"This undoubtedly was the same fellow who broke into the Kohl apartment!"
+she thought. "But how did he escape so quickly?"
+
+Penny started for a telephone, intending to notify the police. However,
+when it occurred to her that her father might not wish the matter made
+public, she changed her mind and ran downstairs.
+
+Unlocking the rear door, she glanced carefully about the yard. There was
+no one in sight, no movement behind any of the shrubbery.
+
+"He's gone, of course," she thought.
+
+Penny wore no shoes. Finding a pair of old galoshes on the porch, she
+protected her feet with them, and hobbled into the yard.
+
+The grass beneath Mrs. Weems' window had been trampled, but at first
+glance there was no clue to indicate how the burglar had gained entrance
+to the house.
+
+"Obviously he used a ladder," she reasoned. "But how did he descend so
+quickly? And what became of the ladder? I know he never had time to carry
+away one of the ordinary type."
+
+A dark object lying on the grass attracted Penny's attention. Picking it
+up, she carried it to the porch and switched on a light that she might
+see to better advantage. In her hand she held a torn strand of black silk
+rope.
+
+"This may be an important clue!" she thought excitedly. "I know now how
+the man entered the house!"
+
+As Penny examined the piece of rope, automobile headlight beams cut a
+path across the yard. The Parker car drew up on the driveway and both
+Mrs. Weems and Mr. Parker alighted.
+
+"Dad, come here quickly!" Penny called as he started to open the garage
+doors.
+
+"What's wrong, Penny?"
+
+Both the publisher and Mrs. Weems came toward the porch.
+
+"We've had a burglar," Penny announced. "He broke into Mrs. Weems' room,
+smashing the lock on the desk--"
+
+"My money!" the housekeeper exclaimed in horror. "Oh, Penny, don't tell
+me that it's gone!"
+
+"He escaped with the contents of the drawer."
+
+Mrs. Weems gave a moan of anguish. "Haven't you called the police?" she
+demanded. "When did it happen? Tell me everything!"
+
+"First, I'll set your mind at rest," Penny replied. "Your money is safe."
+
+"Oh! I never was so relieved in all my born days." Mrs. Weems sagged
+weakly into a porch rocker. "Penny, how could you torture me by letting
+me think the money was stolen?"
+
+"Because I have a confession to make, Mrs. Weems. You left the key to
+your desk lying on the bathroom floor. I thought it might be a good joke
+to move the money to another place."
+
+"Oh, you darling blessed girl!" laughed Mrs. Weems. "Where did you hide
+it, Penny? Are you sure it's safe?"
+
+"It should be. I had it taken to the First National Bank and deposited in
+your name. The thief carried off a package of fake money."
+
+"Rather high-handed weren't you?" commented her father.
+
+"Now don't you scold her," spoke Mrs. Weems quickly. "I am glad Penny
+acted as she did. Otherwise, I might have lost my entire inheritance."
+
+Penny drew a deep breath. "I'm relieved you feel that way about it. I
+wish I could see the burglar's face when he discovers he stole worthless
+money!"
+
+Both the housekeeper and Mr. Parker pressed her with questions. She
+revealed exactly what had occurred during their absence, showing them the
+strand of black silk rope.
+
+"Dad, I think this may be a valuable clue," she declared. "What does it
+suggest to you?"
+
+"Not much of anything, I am afraid."
+
+"You remember that when the Kohls were robbed the police couldn't figure
+out how the burglar gained entrance?"
+
+"Yes, I recall the story."
+
+"Well, I believe the same man committed both burglaries."
+
+"Why do you think so, Penny?"
+
+"At the Kohl's the police found two marks on the window ledge apparently
+made by iron hooks. Similar marks are on the sill in Mrs. Weems' room.
+For that matter, I distinctly saw the iron pieces bite into the wood."
+
+"Let's look at them," proposed Mr. Parker.
+
+"Only the marks are there now, Dad. The man jerked the hooks loose after
+he descended. They must have been attached to his ladder."
+
+"I thought you said he had none, Penny."
+
+"There was no time for him to have carried away an ordinary, heavy
+ladder. I think the one he used must have been made of silk."
+
+"And this is a piece of it!" Mr. Parker exclaimed, examining the twisted
+strand with new interest. "Your theory sounds plausible. It would be
+possible for a man to scale a wall with such a ladder."
+
+"He could jerk loose the hooks in an instant, too, Dad. The ladder would
+fit into a small suitcase, or even his pocket!"
+
+"There's one objection to your theory, Penny. How could such a ladder be
+raised to the window ledge? It naturally would be limp."
+
+"That part has me puzzled, I'll admit."
+
+"I never even heard of a silken ladder," said Mrs. Weems doubtfully.
+
+"I once saw one being made," declared Penny with deliberate emphasis. "At
+a Japanese Shop on Dorr Street."
+
+"That's right, you spoke of it!" exclaimed her father. "Penny, you may
+have something!"
+
+"I think so, Dad. This strand of twisted silk may lead straight to Kano's
+Curio Shop."
+
+"And from there?"
+
+Penny hesitated, glancing at Mrs. Weems. She knew that the housekeeper
+might take offense, but she answered quietly:
+
+"My guess would be to Al Gepper, Dad. Who but he or an accomplice could
+have known where the money was hidden?"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 17
+ _KANO'S CURIO SHOP_
+
+
+As Penny had anticipated, Mrs. Weems indignantly declared that she did
+not believe Mr. Gepper could have had any connection with the attempted
+robbery. Yet, even as she made the assertion, a startled expression came
+over her face.
+
+"Think back, Mrs. Weems," urged Mr. Parker. "How many persons knew where
+you had secreted the money?"
+
+"I told Mrs. Hodges."
+
+"And Al Gepper?" Penny probed.
+
+"Well--" The housekeeper looked ill at ease. "He may have heard me
+talking with Mrs. Hodges. I remember he passed through the hall while we
+were together."
+
+"What day was that?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Yesterday. After the séance. But I can't believe that Mr. Gepper would
+try to steal the money. I just can't!"
+
+"From what Penny has told me of the man, I should judge that he is a
+schemer," contributed Mr. Parker. "You know the _Star_ has started a
+vigorous campaign directed against such mediums as Al Gepper."
+
+"But he told me such remarkable things about Cousin David," protested
+Mrs. Weems. "Facts which couldn't be faked."
+
+"Oh, Gepper doesn't make many false moves," acknowledged Penny. "He's a
+smooth worker. All the same, he's a fake."
+
+"How could he have faked Cousin David's message? You forget we actually
+saw the picture of my relative painted without the aid of a human hand."
+
+"Did the picture closely resemble your cousin?" inquired Mr. Parker.
+
+"Oh, yes, indeed. It looked exactly as I saw him many years ago."
+
+"Isn't that rather odd?" demanded Penny. "One would expect Cousin David
+to age a little."
+
+"Penny believes that a photographer's agent who came here a few days ago
+was sent by Gepper to obtain a picture of your relative," explained Mr.
+Parker. "Did the man ask you many questions about your cousin?"
+
+"Well, yes, he did," Mrs. Weems admitted unwillingly. "I made a mistake
+giving him the photograph."
+
+"It seems fairly evident that the picture was used by Gepper," Mr. Parker
+commented. "Whether he plotted to steal your money remains to be proven.
+Penny, you saw the man plainly?"
+
+"No, I didn't, Dad. Not his face. He was about the same build as Gepper."
+
+"That's not much to go on."
+
+"From the first Gepper was determined to get Mrs. Weems' money, Dad. He
+sent a man here who pretended to be from the Bierkamp Investment
+Company."
+
+"You didn't tell me that," said Mrs. Weems.
+
+"Well, no I didn't. I was afraid you would invest your money with him, so
+I drove the man away. He must have been Gepper's accomplice. Failing to
+acquire the money by that means, he plotted the burglary."
+
+"Surely you don't agree with Penny?" the housekeeper asked Mr. Parker
+unhappily.
+
+"In general, I am afraid I do. Mr. Gepper is an undesirable character,
+and I should like nothing better than to send him to jail."
+
+"Come upstairs, Mrs. Weems," urged Penny. "I'll show you the desk."
+
+Both the housekeeper and Mr. Parker followed her to the second floor. An
+examination of the bedroom disclosed no additional clues, but after
+studying the marks on the window ledge, the publisher favored Penny's
+theory that a silk ladder had been utilized.
+
+"It was unwise of me to keep my money here," Mrs. Weems remarked in a
+crestfallen tone. "I--I've been silly about everything, I guess."
+
+Penny gave her a quick hug. "No, you haven't. Anyone might have been
+taken in by Al Gepper."
+
+"I shall never attend another of his séances. I'll urge Mrs. Hodges to
+turn him from her house."
+
+"Mrs. Weems, are you willing to help get evidence against him?" asked Mr.
+Parker abruptly.
+
+"Why, yes, if I can."
+
+"Then go to the Hodges' exactly as you have in the past," instructed the
+publisher. "Penny has been warned by Gepper not to attend any of the
+séances, but you'll still be welcome. Learn everything you can and report
+to me."
+
+"I'll be glad to do it, Mr. Parker."
+
+"Don't allow him to guess that you have become suspicious. Above all,
+never withdraw your money from the bank at his suggestion."
+
+"You may be sure I won't. This has taught me a bitter lesson."
+
+"Haven't you an assignment for me, Dad?" inquired Penny. "How about
+Kano's Curio Shop?"
+
+"Early tomorrow I'll send Jerry there to question the old Jap."
+
+"Will you notify the police?"
+
+"Not for the present. If we can crack this story I'd like to get it ahead
+of the _Record_."
+
+"I wish you would send me to Kano's instead of Jerry."
+
+"Dorr Street is no place for you, Penny," Mr. Parker replied, dismissing
+the matter. "Shall we get to bed now? It's nearly midnight."
+
+After the doors had been locked once more Penny went to her room, but she
+did not immediately fall asleep. Instead, she kept mulling over the
+events of the night. The more she thought about it the more firmly she
+became convinced that both the Kohl home and her own had been entered by
+the same person.
+
+"The telephone was ringing when I came from the movie," she recalled.
+"Now I wonder who called? It may have been a trick of the thief to learn
+if anyone were in the house. When no one answered, the assumption would
+be that the coast was clear."
+
+Penny felt rather well satisfied with the way matters had developed. In
+one bold stroke she had saved Mrs. Weems' inheritance, convinced the
+housekeeper that Al Gepper was not to be trusted, and had made definite
+progress in gaining evidence to be used in her father's campaign against
+the charlatan invaders of Riverview. Yet it annoyed her that the story,
+now that it had reached an active stage, was to be turned over to Jerry.
+
+"I have a notion to visit the Kano Curio Shop ahead of him," she thought.
+"That's exactly what I'll do!"
+
+Having made up her mind, she rolled over and promptly fell asleep.
+
+In the morning Penny ate breakfast and wiped the dishes with a speed
+which astonished Mrs. Weems. Shortly after her father left for the
+office, she backed her own maroon car from the garage, and offering only
+a vague explanation, departed for Kano's Curio Shop.
+
+Dorr Street was quite deserted at such an early hour, and the Japanese
+shop owner had just unlocked his doors. He was sweeping the floor as
+Penny boldly entered.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Kano," she greeted him. "You remember me, I believe?"
+
+Mr. Kano bowed, regarding her warily. "Yes," he replied. "You are the
+young lady whose curiosity is very large."
+
+Penny smiled. "You are right, Mr. Kano. It is very large, especially
+about a certain silken ladder."
+
+Mr. Kano frowned as he leaned on his broom. "I am very sorry," he said.
+"I am a merchant, not one who answers what you call the quiz-bee."
+
+Penny understood that the Japanese never would tell her what she wished
+to know save under compulsion. She decided to adopt firm tactics.
+
+"Mr. Kano," she said, "my father is the owner of the _Riverview Star_ and
+he intends to expose certain crooks who have been robbing wealthy persons
+such as the Kohls. You read in the paper that their home was entered?"
+
+"Yes, I read," the Japanese shrugged.
+
+"My own theory is that the thief gained entrance by means of a silk
+ladder," Penny declared. "_A ladder made in this shop!_"
+
+The shopkeeper's eyes narrowed. "I know nothing," he replied. "Nothing.
+You go now, please."
+
+"If I go," said Penny, "I'll return with the police. You would not like
+that, I take it?" Her voice was crisp and full of menace.
+
+Mr. Kano lost some of his poise. "No!" he answered sharply. "I am an
+honest man and want no sad trouble with the police."
+
+Chancing to glance toward the street, Penny observed Jerry Livingston
+standing on the opposite corner. He was gazing thoughtfully toward the
+Curio Shop, and she knew that he must have been sent by her father to
+interview Mr. Kano. Inspired, she turned again to the old Japanese.
+
+"You see that young man yonder?" she asked, indicating Jerry. "I have but
+to summon him and he'll come here."
+
+"Detective?" demanded Mr. Kano, peering anxiously through the window. "Do
+not call him! I am an honest man. I will answer your questions."
+
+"Then tell me about the silken ladder."
+
+"I know little," the shopkeeper insisted. "I made the rope for a man who
+said: 'Do this or we will burn your shop down, Mr. Kano.' So I made the
+ladder and he paid me well for fashioning it."
+
+"And what was the man's name?"
+
+"His name I do not know. But his eyes were small and evil. His skin was
+dark, his nose crooked."
+
+Mr. Kano ceased speaking with an abruptness which caused Penny to glance
+toward the door. Her first thought was that Jerry had entered. Instead a
+strange young man stood there, regarding her suspiciously.
+
+As she stared at him he quickly retreated, but not before she had caught
+a fleeting impression of a face which matched Mr. Kano's description with
+startling accuracy.
+
+"Was he the one?" she demanded as the door slammed. "The man for whom you
+made the ladder?"
+
+"No, no!" denied the Japanese.
+
+His words failed to convince Penny. Darting to the door, she saw that the
+young man already was far down the street, walking rapidly.
+
+"He is the one," she thought. "I'll follow him."
+
+"Wait," called the Japanese as she started away, "I have more to tell
+you."
+
+It was a ruse to detain her, Penny knew. Pushing past the shopkeeper who
+sought to bar the exit, she reached the street and ran toward Jerry
+Livingston.
+
+"Why, Penny!" he exclaimed in surprise. "What are you doing in this part
+of town?"
+
+"Never mind that," she answered hastily. "If you're after a story, come
+along with me. We're trailing the man who just left Kano's Shop."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 18
+ _THE BELL TOWER_
+
+
+Jerry fell into step with Penny. As they walked along, she told him of
+her conversation with Mr. Kano.
+
+"I believe this man we're following is the same one who entered our house
+last night," she declared. "He's the same build as the fellow I grabbed.
+Besides, he fits Kano's description of the person who bought the silken
+ladder."
+
+"Here's hoping you're right," replied Jerry. "If I muff this assignment,
+I may wake up looking for another job."
+
+Fearing that the man ahead would discover he was being followed, Jerry
+and Penny dropped farther and farther behind. Presently they saw him
+enter a pawnshop.
+
+"I know that place," commented Jerry. "It's run by Spike Weiser, a
+notorious _fence_. He buys stolen goods and gets rid of it at a profit.
+Has a swell home on Clarmont Drive."
+
+"Why don't the police arrest him?"
+
+"Oh, they watch the place, but Spike is too smart to be caught. He has a
+system for handling _hot_ goods."
+
+"I'll venture some of the Kohl loot was sold through him, Jerry."
+
+"It wouldn't surprise me. But if the police search the place they won't
+find a thing."
+
+Loitering on the opposite side of the street, Penny and the reporter kept
+close watch of the pawnbroker's shop. Thirty minutes elapsed. The man
+whom they had trailed, did not reappear.
+
+"He must have slipped out the back door," Jerry remarked. "Probably knew
+he was being watched."
+
+"I'm beginning to think so myself."
+
+Jerry glanced at his watch. "I can't take any more time," he said. "I'll
+have to get back to the office."
+
+"I'll watch a few minutes longer," answered Penny. "If anything develops
+I'll try to telephone."
+
+Jerry walked hurriedly away. Scarcely had he disappeared when the door of
+the pawnshop opened, and the young man who had entered a half hour
+earlier, appeared. Penny hastily moved back into the vestibule of an
+office building.
+
+Without observing her, the stranger crossed the street and walked briskly
+toward an intersecting boulevard. There was no opportunity for Penny to
+telephone the _Star_ office. Following, she was hard pressed to keep the
+man within view.
+
+Not until they reached the entrance of Butternut Lane did it dawn upon
+her that the Celestial Temple might be their destination. Then, indeed,
+her pulse stepped up a pace.
+
+"It's exactly as I guessed!" she thought triumphantly. "He's connected
+with Al Gepper and the other mediums!"
+
+Not wishing to attract attention in the deserted lane, Penny took a short
+cut through the cemetery, emerging at the rear of the Celestial Temple.
+There was no door on that side of the building but a window had been left
+raised. Placed beneath it, as if for her particular convenience, was a
+large rock.
+
+Penny stood on it, peering into the Temple. The room was unoccupied.
+However, as she waited, the same man she had trailed, quietly let himself
+in through the front entrance, using a key. He glanced about and called
+in a low voice: "Pete! Pete! Anyone here?"
+
+There was no answer, which seemed to please the young man. He moved
+quickly down the aisle, crossed the platform to a door which opened into
+the bell tower. Kneeling he began to fit keys into the lock, seeking one
+which would serve.
+
+As Penny watched, the young man suddenly straightened. Apparently he had
+heard footsteps in the vestibule for he moved away from the bell tower
+door.
+
+A middle-aged woman with dyed hair and a skin of unusual pallor entered
+the Temple. She stopped short as she saw the young man.
+
+"You here, Slippery?" she commented, gazing at him with distrust.
+"Where's Pete?"
+
+"Hello, Sade. I was wonderin' about Pete myself. Just got here a minute
+ago."
+
+The woman's gaze fastened upon the key which had been left in the bell
+tower door.
+
+"Say, what's coming off here?" she demanded. "You were trying to get
+inside!"
+
+"Now don't ruffle your feathers, Sade," the man said soothingly. "I was
+only testing the door to make sure it was locked."
+
+"I'll bet! You were aiming to break in! Slippery, they sure named you
+right. Why, you'd double-cross your own mother!"
+
+"Oh, quiet down," the man retorted angrily. "I only came here to make
+sure Pete was on the job. The lazy loafer has skipped out and left the
+place unguarded."
+
+The woman deliberately seated herself in a chair beside the bell tower
+door.
+
+"I'm parking here until Pete shows up," she announced. "Maybe you're on
+the square, Slippery, but I don't trust you."
+
+"Thanks for your flattering opinion," the man responded mockingly. "You
+give me a pain, Sade. I do all the dangerous work, and what do I get? A
+measly ten per cent."
+
+"Plus what you stick in your pocket when you're on a job," the woman shot
+back with rising anger. "You've been doing pretty well for yourself,
+Slippery--you and Al. But the boys are getting wise. From now on it may
+not be so easy. Better play fair with the rest of us--or else."
+
+"You always did have a wagging tongue," the man retorted. "Always trying
+to stir up trouble. Don't you realize we've got to work together or we'll
+be jailed separately? Our ranks must be united."
+
+"Gettin' sort of jittery, ain't you?"
+
+"Maybe you haven't been reading those editorials in the _Star_."
+
+"Sure, I read them and get a big laugh. This guy Parker has to blow off
+steam. Nothing will come of it."
+
+"The police have visited this place once already."
+
+"And what did they find? Nothing."
+
+"That's no guarantee they won't try again. I tell you this town is
+getting too hot for comfort."
+
+"Figurin' on blowing?" the woman inquired, watching him shrewdly.
+
+Slippery's laughter had an unpleasant edge. "You sure do get ideas, Sade.
+Don't start peddling that line of talk. Understand?"
+
+"I hear."
+
+Suddenly losing his temper, the man strode nearer, seizing her arm.
+
+"Just start something and see where you wake up!" he said harshly. "One
+word to Pete or any of the boys and you won't do any more pretty fortune
+telling!"
+
+The woman jerked her arm free, gazing at the man in sullen silence. Nor
+did she speak as he left the Temple, slamming the door behind him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 19
+ _PENNY INVESTIGATES_
+
+
+Penny debated whether or not to follow Slippery. Deciding that she should
+try to keep him within sight, she abandoned her post beneath the window
+and ran to the front of the building.
+
+Already the young man was far down the lane, walking rapidly. Before
+Penny could overtake him he hailed a taxi and drove away. By the time she
+obtained another cab, pursuit was futile.
+
+"To the _Star_ office," Penny ordered the driver.
+
+Although Slippery had eluded her, she did not feel that her morning's
+work had been wasted. She believed that her father would be very much
+interested in a report of her findings.
+
+"It's evident that Slippery is connected with Al Gepper and various
+mediums of the Celestial Temple," she reflected. "I am sure, too, that
+he's the one who broke into our house, but to prove it may not be so
+easy."
+
+Penny had not fully understood the conversation which she had overheard
+between Slippery and Sade. That they distrusted each other was evident,
+but why had the woman feared Slippery might break into the bell tower
+during the guard's absence?
+
+"Something of great value to the organization must be kept there," she
+reasoned. "But what can it be?"
+
+Penny believed that her father would not delay in requesting police to
+search the bell tower of the Celestial Temple. However, a disappointment
+awaited her.
+
+Upon arriving at the newspaper office DeWitt stopped her as she went past
+his desk.
+
+"Don't go in there," he said, jerking his thumb toward Mr. Parker's
+private room.
+
+"Why not?" asked Penny in surprise. "Is Dad having a conference?"
+
+DeWitt nodded as he composed a two column headline. "With J. P. Henley."
+
+"The _Star's_ Sugar Daddy?"
+
+"Our biggest advertiser. He's threatening to go over to the _Record_."
+
+"Why, that's serious!"
+
+"It is if he quits the _Star_. The old man--Mr. Parker--" DeWitt
+corrected hastily, "has been trying to soften him up for the past two
+hours. Whatever you do, don't bust in there now."
+
+"I won't, Mr. DeWitt, but I did wish to see Dad."
+
+"Anything I can do for you?"
+
+Penny hesitated. "Well, I wanted to talk to him about something I learned
+today at the Celestial Temple."
+
+"Oh, yes," nodded the city editor, his attention on a sheet of copy. "Mr.
+Parker is handling the campaign personally. Sorry I can't be of service."
+
+Rather startled by DeWitt's unusual politeness, Penny glanced hopefully
+toward Jerry Livingston's desk. It was littered with papers, but quite
+deserted.
+
+With a sigh she left the building and walked to Dorr Street where she had
+left her maroon car. Upon reaching home she found that Mrs. Weems was not
+there and she had forgotten her own key. For a time she sat
+disconsolately on the front porch. Then she decided to go to the Hudell
+Garage where Leaping Lena had been left for repairs three days earlier.
+
+The car was ready, and with it a bill for eight dollars and forty-two
+cents.
+
+"I'll have to give you a dollar on account and pay the remainder next
+week," said Penny. "Or would you rather keep the car as a deposit?"
+
+"Give me the dollar," said the garage man hastily.
+
+Penny became even more depressed as she drove the automobile home. Not
+for the world would she openly admit that she had made a mistake in
+repurchasing Lena. Secretly she acknowledged that two cars were an
+unbearable financial drain upon slender resources.
+
+Turning into her own street, Penny saw Mrs. Weems walking toward home,
+and stopped for her.
+
+"I've just come from the Hodges'," the housekeeper commented, climbing
+into the car.
+
+"You have?" inquired Penny eagerly. "Did you learn anything?"
+
+"No, I didn't. Mr. Gepper seemed very unwilling to conduct another
+séance. He acted so different this time--almost as if he bore me a
+personal grudge."
+
+"He's probably provoked because your inheritance eluded him."
+
+"He did tell Mrs. Hodges that he doubted I had any money," Mrs. Weems
+responded.
+
+"What happened at the séance?"
+
+"Why, nothing. The table moved and we heard a few raps. That was all."
+
+"No message from Cousin David?"
+
+"Not a word or a sign. Mr. Gepper seemed very indifferent about it all.
+He said he couldn't give me another appointment unless I paid for it."
+
+"What do you think about him now?" Penny asked curiously. "Don't you
+agree with Dad and me that he was after your money?"
+
+"Yes, I was very silly," the housekeeper acknowledged. "Mrs. Hodges has
+begun to lose faith in him, too. She says he's been bringing all sorts of
+folks to her place. When she told him she didn't care to have the house
+over-run with strangers, he became very unpleasant."
+
+"You mean he threatened her?"
+
+"In a mild way. He told her that he would stay as long as he pleased and
+she could do nothing about it. Mrs. Hodges is afraid to go to the police
+for fear she'll be arrested with Mr. Gepper."
+
+"I wonder if he ever has charged for his séances?" Penny said
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I am sure he has, Penny. Of course I have no proof."
+
+"Mrs. Weems, you must go there again this afternoon," Penny urged.
+"Insist upon another séance, and pay him for it! Then you'll be able to
+testify as a witness against him!"
+
+"But I don't wish to go into court," the housekeeper protested. "Besides,
+Mr. Gepper won't be at the cottage this afternoon."
+
+"Where is he going?" Penny questioned alertly.
+
+"I don't know. I heard him tell Mrs. Hodges he would be gone this
+afternoon, but would return for an eight o'clock séance."
+
+"Why, that's fine--wonderful!" chuckled Penny.
+
+Mrs. Weems gazed at the girl with sudden suspicion. "Now what have you
+thought up?" she demanded.
+
+"Nothing alarming," grinned Penny. "I merely plan to visit Mr. Gepper's
+studio during his absence. Who knows, I may yet master a few of the finer
+points of ghost-making!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 20
+ _INSIDE THE CABINET_
+
+
+Despite Mrs. Weems' protests, Penny remained firm in her decision to
+investigate Mr. Gepper's studio. She ate a belatedly prepared lunch and
+did not reach the Hodges' cottage until nearly four o'clock, having
+driven there in Lena.
+
+The doors were closed and Penny knocked several times without receiving a
+response.
+
+"Everyone must have gone away," she thought. "Oh, dear, now what shall I
+do?"
+
+Penny reasoned that it was of vital importance for her to inspect Al
+Gepper's room during his absence. She might never have another
+opportunity. Yet she hesitated to enter the house while the Hodges were
+away, even though she felt certain the seamstress would not mind.
+
+Walking to the rear, Penny noticed that the porch screen had been left
+unfastened. Entering the kitchen, she called Mrs. Hodges' name but
+received no answer.
+
+"If I wait for her to come home it may be too late," decided Penny. "This
+is an emergency."
+
+Her mind made up, she took the stairs two at a time to Al Gepper's room.
+Her knock went unanswered. Satisfied that he was not there, she tried the
+door and found it unlocked.
+
+Penny raised a blind to flood light into the darkened room. Save that a
+film of dust covered the furniture, everything was approximately the same
+as she had last seen it.
+
+Her gaze fell upon two suitcases which had been pushed beneath the bed.
+The first contained only miscellaneous clothing. The second merited a
+more careful inspection.
+
+Almost at once Penny came upon an old faded picture, the one of Cousin
+David which Mrs. Weems had given to the photographer's "agent."
+
+"So that was how it was done!" she thought. "Al Gepper sent one of his
+confederates to see Mrs. Weems and obtain information about her cousin.
+The painting which appeared so miraculously during the séance was merely
+a copy of this! Even so, how was it painted so quickly?"
+
+Forgetting the picture for a moment, Penny picked up several newspaper
+clippings which were fastened together with a rubber band. All had been
+taken from the obituary column and concerned the death of well-to-do
+Riverview persons.
+
+"Al Gepper and his pals are ghouls!" Penny told herself. "They prey upon
+the relatives of persons who have died, realizing that at such a time it
+will be much easier to interest them in trying to communicate with the
+departed!"
+
+Lifting a tray from the suitcase, her attention focused upon a small red
+booklet. As she turned rapidly through it, a folded sheet of paper fell
+to the floor.
+
+Examining it, Penny saw a long list of names, together with pertinent
+information about each person. Not only was the address and financial
+standing of the individual given, but the deceased relatives in each
+family and other facts of a personal nature. The list had been
+mimeographed.
+
+"This must be a 'sucker' list!" thought Penny. "No wonder it's easy for a
+medium to find victims and tell them astonishing facts."
+
+Thrusting the paper into her pocket, she turned her attention to the
+wardrobe closet. Al Gepper's clothes hung in orderly rows from the
+hangers. Behind them, half hidden from view, was a small box.
+
+Pulling it to the window, Penny examined the contents. There were many
+bottles filled with chemicals, the names of which were unfamiliar. She
+noted a bottle of varnish, another of zinc white, and some photographic
+paper in a sealed envelope.
+
+A glance satisfying her, she replaced the box and next turned her
+attention to the cabinet behind the large circular table. Here she was
+richly rewarded as her gaze fell upon a banjo.
+
+"The same one which played during Mrs. Weems' séance!" she thought. "We
+were able to see it in the dark because it's covered with luminous paint.
+But what made it rise into the air, and how could it play without the aid
+of human hands?"
+
+Penny examined the instrument closely. She chuckled as she discovered a
+tiny phonograph with a record built into its back side. As she pressed a
+control lever, it began a stringed version of "Down Upon the Swanee
+River."
+
+Quickly turning it off, she inspected other objects in the cabinet. At
+once she found a rod which could be extended to a height of five feet.
+
+"That's how the banjo was raised!" she reasoned. "And by use of this rod
+it would be easy to make a ghost appear to float high overhead. This
+luminous material must have been used."
+
+Penny picked up a filmy robe, shaking out the many folds. While it was
+clear to her that Al Gepper had employed the garment to materialize the
+so-called spirit of Cousin David, she could only guess how he had made it
+enlarge from a mere spot to a full sized figure.
+
+"He must have wadded the cloth in his hand, and held it above his head,"
+she mused. "Then he could have slowly shaken it out until it covered his
+entire body. Thus the figure would appear to grow in size."
+
+In one corner of the cabinet Penny came upon a luminous slate.
+
+"This was used for Cousin David's message," she thought. "Al probably had
+an assistant who wrote on it and thrust it through the curtain."
+
+While many questions remained unanswered, Penny had obtained sufficient
+evidence to indicate that Al Gepper was only a clever trickster. Greatly
+elated, she decided to hasten to the _Star_ office to report her
+findings.
+
+Noticing that she had neglected to return the two suitcases to their
+former places, Penny pushed them under the bed again. As she
+straightened, a door slammed on the lower floor.
+
+For an instant she hoped that it was Mrs. Hodges or her husband who had
+come home. Then she heard footsteps on the stairs, and their rapidity
+warned her that they could belong only to a young person.
+
+Frantically, she gazed about the room. The cabinet seemed to offer the
+safest hiding place. Slipping into it, she pulled the black curtain
+across the opening.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 21
+ _STARTLING INFORMATION_
+
+
+Scarcely had Penny hidden herself when Al Gepper entered the room. With
+him was the hook-nosed young man known as Slippery.
+
+"I tell you, Al," the latter was saying, "this town is getting too hot
+for comfort. We've got to blow."
+
+"It was that Parker girl who queered everything," muttered Gepper. "How
+could I know that her father was a newspaper publisher? He's stirred up
+folks with his editorials."
+
+"You never should have let her in here. We had a swell set-up, but now we
+can expect a raid any day."
+
+"I tell you I thought she was just a smart-aleck kid, a friend of the
+Hodges'. Didn't learn until yesterday who she was."
+
+"We've got to blow, Al. Sade's threatening to make trouble, too. She
+thinks we're holding out on the others."
+
+"We have picked up a little extra coin now and then."
+
+"Sure, Al, but we've always been the brains of the outfit. We take most
+of the risk, plan all the big jobs, so why shouldn't we have more?"
+
+"It's time we cut loose from 'em, Slippery."
+
+"Now you're talking! But we can't pull out until the Henley job comes
+off. I've had a tip that the house is likely to be deserted tonight.
+Let's make the haul and then skip."
+
+"Okay," agreed Gepper. "I have some suckers coming for a séance at eight.
+I'll get rid of them in quick time, and be waiting. So long, Slippery."
+
+A door slammed, telling Penny that the hook-nosed man had left. She was
+somewhat stunned by what she had overheard, believing that the Henley who
+had been mentioned must be her father's chief advertiser.
+
+Nervously she waited inside the cabinet, wishing that she might take her
+information to the police. To her intense annoyance, Al Gepper did not
+leave the room even for a moment.
+
+Instead he threw himself on the bed and read a tabloid newspaper. After
+an hour, he arose and began to prepare his supper on an electric grill.
+
+Penny shifted from one position to another, growing more impatient. Every
+time the man came toward the cabinet her heart beat a trifle faster. She
+was quite sure the Hodges had not yet returned home, and should Al Gepper
+discover her, he would not treat her kindly.
+
+The medium finished his supper and stacked the dishes in the closet
+without washing them. Then he started to get ready for the night's
+séance.
+
+Peeping from between the cracks of the curtain, Penny saw him seat
+himself before the easel. With painstaking care he painted a picture of a
+woman, using a photograph as a model. After a coating of varnish had been
+applied, he allowed it to dry and afterwards covered the entire picture
+with zinc white. The original painting was entirely hidden.
+
+Penny knew that hours had elapsed. The room gradually darkened, and Al
+Gepper turned on the lights.
+
+"Oh, dear, I must get out of here soon!" the girl thought desperately.
+"But if I make a break for it he'll be sure to see me. That will ruin all
+my plans."
+
+Eight o'clock came. Al Gepper put on his coat, combed his hair and was
+alertly waiting when the doorbell rang. However, instead of descending
+the stairs he shouted an invitation for the visitors to come up.
+
+Two women in their early forties were ushered into the séance chamber, to
+be followed almost immediately by an elderly man.
+
+"We will start at once if you please," said Al Gepper brusquely. "I have
+another engagement tonight. However, before the séance is undertaken I
+must ask that each of you pay the required fee, five dollars."
+
+The money was paid, and the three persons seated themselves at the table.
+Gepper switched off the lights.
+
+The séance began in much the same manner as the one Penny had attended.
+The medium called upon the spirit of a woman named Flora to appear.
+
+"Now concentrate hard--everyone," he instructed. "Flora, where are you?
+Can you not show yourself that we may know it is truly your spirit which
+communicates with us?"
+
+From the cabinet, so close to Al Gepper that she could have touched his
+hand, Penny was able to see his every move. Yet so swift was his next
+action, that she barely discerned it.
+
+Taking a wet sponge from his pocket he wiped it across the painting
+previously prepared. The picture immediately became visible to the
+audience as Gepper focused his flashlight on the canvas.
+
+"That wasn't the way he made Mrs. Weems' picture appear," thought Penny.
+"The fellow must have a great repertoire of tricks!"
+
+The séance had become so interesting that she no longer thought of
+escape. Nevertheless, she came to a sudden realization of her precarious
+position as she heard the medium say that he would next endeavor to
+persuade the Spirit of Flora to take actual shape. With a shock it dawned
+upon her that in another moment the man would enter the cabinet to make
+use of the luminous gauze robe and other paraphernalia.
+
+Knowing that she could not hide from him, Penny decided upon a bold break
+for freedom. Dropping the ghostly robe over her face and shoulders, she
+pulled aside the dark curtain and flitted into the room.
+
+Her dramatic entrance brought gasps of astonishment from the persons who
+sat at the circular table. The medium, as dumbfounded as his audience
+muttered: "What the dickens!" and pushed back his chair, his legs rasping
+on the floor.
+
+Penny did not linger, but darted past the group and groped for the door.
+In the darkness she could not immediately find it. Her shining robe, on
+the other hand, made her an easy target for Al Gepper.
+
+Angrily the medium strode across the room, seizing her arm. She jerked
+away, but he grasped a fold of the robe. It tore and was left behind.
+
+At that critical instant, Penny's hand encountered the door. She swung it
+open, and bounded down the stairway.
+
+In the séance chamber a light went on, then the hallway became
+brilliantly illuminated. But by that time the girl was in the dining
+room.
+
+She could hear Al Gepper clattering down the steps, intent upon capturing
+her. Penny was determined that he should never learn her identity.
+
+Letting herself out of the house by way of the kitchen door, she decided
+that if she attempted to cross the yard, the medium certainly would
+recognize her. The woodpile offered a hiding place and she crouched
+behind it.
+
+Scarcely had she secreted herself, when Al Gepper ran into the yard. He
+glanced about carefully and circled the house twice.
+
+Finally, convinced that the "ghost" had escaped he came back to the
+porch. His customers, greatly agitated by what had occurred, were
+demanding explanations.
+
+"Someone played a prank," Gepper explained briefly. "It will be
+impossible to resume the séance for the spirits are offended. You will
+leave, please."
+
+The customers departed and the medium locked himself in the house. He did
+not bother to lower the upstairs hall blind, and Penny caught occasional
+glimpses of him as he moved to and fro.
+
+"He's packing to leave!" she observed. "Unless I act in double-quick
+time, he'll skip town! I must notify Dad and the police without an
+instant's delay!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 22
+ _SCALING THE WALL_
+
+
+The nearest drugstore with a public telephone was two blocks away. Penny
+ran the distance, and slipping into the booth, she dialed the _Star_
+office. Informed by the building switchboard operator that neither her
+father nor DeWitt was available, she inquired for Jerry Livingston, and
+to her relief was connected with him.
+
+"Listen, Jerry, this is Penny!" she began excitedly. "I haven't time to
+explain, but the lid is blowing off the fake spiritualist story! Rush the
+police out to the Hodges' cottage and demand Al Gepper's arrest! Send
+another squad or some private detectives to Mr. Henley's home."
+
+"Henley!" Jerry exclaimed. "Say, have you gone loco?"
+
+"I'm not making any mistakes," Penny replied tersely. "If you act quickly
+we may prevent a robbery. I'm on my way there now to warn Mr. Henley! Oh,
+yes, try to find Dad or DeWitt and warn them a big story is breaking!"
+
+"Penny, what's this all about?" the reporter demanded. "I can't go to the
+police unless I know what I am doing."
+
+"You must, Jerry. I have plenty of evidence against Gepper and his crowd,
+but unless you take the police to the Hodges' in the next fifteen minutes
+it will be too late!"
+
+Without giving Jerry opportunity to delay her with other questions, Penny
+hung up the receiver. Hastening to the street, she gazed frantically
+about for a taxi. None was to be had.
+
+"I'll get to the Henley place quicker in Lena than by waiting for a cab
+to come along," she thought.
+
+The battered old car had been parked a short distance from the Hodges'
+cottage. Hurrying there, Penny jumped into the ancient vehicle and
+started the motor. As usual it made a loud clatter, but she did not
+suspect that the sound carried far up the street. Nor did she guess that
+Al Gepper stood at the darkened window of his room, watching her.
+
+Penny drove as fast as she could to the Henley home in the southern
+section of Riverview. Lights blazed from the downstairs windows.
+
+Abandoning her car in the driveway, she rang the doorbell. After a long
+wait, a maid appeared.
+
+"Is Mr. Henley here?" Penny asked breathlessly. "Or Mrs. Henley? It's
+most important that I talk with them at once."
+
+"Mrs. Henley has been at the seashore for a month," the maid replied in
+an agitated voice. "Mr. Henley is somewhere downtown. I've been trying to
+get him, but the telephone wire has been cut!"
+
+"The house hasn't been robbed?"
+
+"Mrs. Henley's jewelry has been taken! I don't know what else."
+
+"When did it happen?" Penny asked.
+
+"It must have been during the last half hour. I went to the corner store
+for a book of stamps. When I came back five minutes ago I discovered what
+had occurred. I ought to call the police, but I am afraid to do it until
+I've talked with my employer."
+
+"The police already have been notified," said Penny. "They'll be here any
+minute."
+
+"But how did you know--?" the maid began in astonishment.
+
+Penny had turned away. She was convinced that the burglary had been
+committed by Slippery. Perhaps, by this time he had fled town, but she
+did not believe he would leave without his pal, Al Gepper.
+
+Climbing into the car again, Penny debated. It was reasonable to suppose
+that, having accomplished the burglary, Slippery would return to the
+Hodges' cottage to meet the medium.
+
+"If he does, the police should be on hand to seize him," she thought. "At
+least, he and Al will be held for questioning. But there's one place I
+forgot to cover--the Celestial Temple."
+
+Like a flash came the recollection that Slippery had been deeply
+interested in something which was guarded in the bell tower. Was it not
+possible that he might return there before leaving Riverview?
+
+Shifting gears, Penny turned the car and headed for Butternut Lane.
+Anxiously, she glanced at the gasoline gauge. It registered less than a
+gallon of fuel and she had used her last dime in the telephone booth.
+
+"If I coast on all the downgrades I should just make it," she estimated.
+
+In starting for the Celestial Temple Penny was acting upon a "hunch."
+However, it disturbed her that the Henley burglary had been accomplished,
+and she was afraid she might again be wasting precious time. Now that it
+was too late, she wondered if it would not have been wiser to remain at
+the Hodges' cottage until the police arrived.
+
+"I only hope that end of the affair isn't bungled," she thought. "I'll
+never get over it if Al and Slippery both escape."
+
+Penny had reached the entrance to Butternut Lane. Parking at the side of
+the road, she continued afoot toward the Celestial Temple.
+
+From a distance the building appeared dark. However, as she drew closer
+she could distinguish a dim light. Inside the Temple, a stout man wearing
+a hat sat with his chair tilted against the door of the bell tower room.
+
+"He must be the guard," thought Penny. "Probably the one they call Pete."
+
+Suddenly she paused, retreating into a clump of elder bushes near the
+walk. From the direction of the cemetery a figure emerged. At first, all
+that Penny could distinguish was a man carrying a suitcase. As he drew
+closer, her pulse quickened. Unmistakably, it was Slippery.
+
+Without passing the bushes where the girl had taken refuge, the man
+walked on toward the Temple. Presently he halted. Glancing carefully
+about to assure himself that he was unobserved, he shoved his suitcase
+into the tall weeds which lined the walk. Then he moved to one of the
+Temple windows, peering into the gloomy interior.
+
+"Now what?" thought Penny, watching alertly. "This should prove
+interesting."
+
+Slippery remained beneath the window a minute or two. Instead of entering
+the Temple, he presently returned to the high weeds, stooping to remove
+some object from his suitcase. Hiding it under his coat, he circled the
+building and approached the side adjoining the cemetery.
+
+Thoroughly mystified, Penny cautiously followed, taking care that her
+body cast no shadow which would attract Slippery's attention.
+
+The man seemed deeply engrossed in the task he had set for himself. From
+his coat he took a collapsible rod which he extended to the approximate
+length of a fish pole. To its end he attached a trailing silken ladder.
+
+Deftly the man raised the ladder until two metal hooks bit into a
+projection of the bell tower. He tested the ropes to make certain they
+would bear his weight then, with the agility of a cat, mounted the silken
+rungs. Penny saw him disappear into the bell tower.
+
+"Now why did he climb up there?" she asked herself. "He must be after
+something hidden in the belfry."
+
+Penny knew that she was a long distance from police aid, but it was
+unthinkable that Slippery should be allowed to escape. Impulsively, she
+moved from her hiding place to the base of the tower.
+
+Grasping the silken ladder, she gave it a quick jerk which dislodged the
+two iron hooks. Down it tumbled into her arms, leaving the man trapped in
+the turret.
+
+"He'll never dare call for help when he discovers what has happened,"
+reasoned Penny. "If he does, the guard, Pete, will have something to
+say!"
+
+Rolling the ladder into a small bundle, she started across the clearing,
+intending to seek the nearest telephone. With no thought of lurking
+danger, she brushed past a clump of bushes. A hand reached out and
+grasped her arm.
+
+Penny screamed in terror and tried to break free. The hand help her in a
+grip of steel.
+
+As she struggled, her captor emerged from the shelter of leaves. It was
+Al Gepper.
+
+"I thought I might find you here, my little one," he said grimly. "You
+have had your fun. Now you must pay, and the entertainment shall be
+mine!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 23
+ _A PRISONER IN THE BELFRY_
+
+
+Penny tried to scream, only to have Al Gepper clamp his hand over her
+mouth.
+
+"None of that!" he said harshly. "Behave yourself or you'll get rough
+treatment."
+
+Inside the Temple, lights suddenly were turned on, for the brief struggle
+had been heard by Pete. The squat, stupid-faced man appeared in the
+doorway of the building, peering down the lane.
+
+"Who's there?" he demanded suspiciously.
+
+Al Gepper uttered an angry word beneath his breath. It was not to his
+liking that Pete should be drawn into the affair. However, he could not
+avoid detection.
+
+"It's Al!" he called softly. "This girl broke up my séance tonight, and I
+trailed her here. She was prowling around the bell tower."
+
+As he spoke, he dragged Penny toward the Temple entrance. His words
+convinced her that he had not observed her remove the silken ladder from
+the belfry wall, nor was he aware that Slippery was a prisoner in the
+tower.
+
+"Let's have a look at her," said Pete. He flashed a light directly into
+Penny's face.
+
+"She's the Parker girl--daughter of the publisher," informed Al.
+
+"Yeah," commented Pete. "I saw her at one of our meetings. Another girl
+was with her. How much has she learned?"
+
+"Enough to get us all run out of town. The question is, what shall we do
+with her?"
+
+"Bring her inside, and we'll talk it over," said Pete. "Maybe we ought to
+call a meeting."
+
+"No," replied Al Gepper impatiently, shoving Penny through the doorway.
+"We can take care of this ourselves."
+
+The door was locked from the inside. Al pushed Penny into a chair on the
+front platform.
+
+"Now sit there," he ordered. "One peep out of you and we'll tie you up
+and tape your mouth. Understand?"
+
+"_Oui, oui, Monsieur_," said Penny, mockingly.
+
+The two men stepped a few paces away and began to whisper together. Pete
+seemed to protest at Al's proposals.
+
+Penny watched them uneasily, speculating upon their final decision.
+Whatever it was, she would never be given an opportunity to report to the
+police until it was too late to apprehend members of the Temple.
+
+"I was stupid not to realize that Gepper might trail me," she told
+herself. "If only I had used an ounce of caution, I might have brought
+about the capture of the entire gang. Not to mention a grand scoop for
+Dad's paper."
+
+Penny slumped lower in her chair. Her own predicament concerned her far
+less than the knowledge that she had bungled a golden opportunity.
+
+Speculatively, her gaze shifted toward the bell tower room. The door was
+closed and she believed that it must be locked. There was no sound from
+the belfry, adding to her conviction that the man imprisoned there was
+fearful of attracting attention to his plight.
+
+Al Gepper and Pete came toward her. With no explanation, the medium
+seized her arm and ordered her to walk toward the exit.
+
+"Where are you taking me?" Penny asked.
+
+"Never mind. You'll find out in good time."
+
+"Wait!" exclaimed Penny, bracing her legs and refusing to be pushed. "If
+you'll let me go, I'll tell you something very much worth your while."
+
+Deliberately, she allowed the silken ladder to slip from beneath her
+coat. The men would not have heeded her words, but the familiar object
+served its purpose.
+
+"Where did you get that ladder?" demanded Al Gepper.
+
+"So you would like to know what became of your friend, Slippery?"
+responded Penny evenly. "You'll be surprised when I tell you that he has
+double-crossed you both!"
+
+"You're lying," accused Gepper.
+
+Penny shrugged and did not speak.
+
+"What were you going to say?" Gepper prodded in a moment. "Out with it!
+How did you get Slippery's ladder?"
+
+"It fell into my hands, literally and figuratively."
+
+"Stalling for time will get you nowhere," snapped Gepper, losing
+patience. "If you know anything about Slippery spill it fast or you'll
+not have another chance."
+
+"Your friend tried to double-cross you," declared Penny. She decided to
+make a shrewd guess. "Tonight, after he robbed the Henley home he came
+here intending to loot the bell tower."
+
+"Why, the dirty sneak!" exclaimed Pete.
+
+"Weren't you here on guard all evening?" Gepper demanded, turning to him.
+
+"Sure, I was. I never set foot outside the building."
+
+"Slippery wasn't here?"
+
+"Haven't seen him since yesterday morning."
+
+"Then the girl is lying!"
+
+"Oh, no, the girl isn't," refuted Penny. "If you care for proof you'll
+find it in the tower."
+
+"Proof?"
+
+"I mean Slippery. He's hiding in the belfry now, hoping you'll not
+discover him there. You see, he scaled the wall by means of this silk
+ladder. I removed the ladder, and I assume he's still up there."
+
+"Why, the low-down skunk!" Pete exclaimed wrathfully. "So he planned to
+rob us! I'll get him!"
+
+Leaving Al to watch Penny, the guard ran to the tower room door and
+unlocked it. Stealthily he crept up the iron stairway which led to the
+belfry.
+
+Suddenly those below heard a cry of rage, followed by the sound of
+scuffling. Al Gepper listened tensely, yet made no move to join the
+fight. He remained standing between Penny and the outside door.
+
+"You were right," he admitted in a stunned voice. "Slippery's up there.
+He meant to get all the swag for himself."
+
+The fight increased in intensity as the two men struggled on the belfry
+steps. Over and over they rolled, first one delivering a hard blow, and
+then the other. Still locked, they finally toppled to the floor, but even
+then Al Gepper remained a bystander.
+
+Penny was less concerned with the fight than with thoughts of escape. She
+had hoped that Al, too, would join the battle. Apparently, he was taking
+no chance of letting her get away.
+
+She considered attempting a sudden break for freedom, but immediately
+abandoned it. The outside door had been locked by Pete. Before she could
+turn the key, Al would be upon her. As for the windows, none were open.
+While they might not be locked, it was out of the question to reach one
+quickly enough.
+
+Penny's gaze roved to the tower room once more, and the struggling men.
+High above their heads she saw something which previously had not drawn
+her attention. It was a loop of rope, hanging from the belfry.
+
+"Why, that must be attached to the old church bell!" thought Penny. "If
+only I could reach it, I might be able to bring help here."
+
+However, the rope dangled high overhead. Even if she were able to reach
+the room leading to the tower, there was nothing upon which she could
+stand to grasp the loop. Obviously the rope had been cut short years
+before to prevent anyone from ringing the bell.
+
+Penny glanced toward Al Gepper. The medium's gaze was upon the two
+struggling men, not her. A golden opportunity presented itself, if only
+she had the wits to make use of it.
+
+Almost at the girl's feet lay the tangle of silken ladder. As she stared
+at it, a sudden idea took possession of her. The iron hooks would serve
+her purpose, but dared she try it? If she failed--and the chances were
+against her--punishment would be certain.
+
+Yet, if she did nothing and merely waited, it was likely that Al Gepper
+and his pals never would be brought to justice. She must take the chance,
+no matter how great the personal risk.
+
+For a moment Penny remained inactive, planning what she must do. If she
+made a single mistake, fumbled at the critical instant, everything would
+be lost. Above all, her aim must be accurate. If she missed the loop--
+
+Slippery and Pete were beginning to tire, their blows becoming futile and
+ineffective. Further delay in executing her plan only increased the
+danger. She must act now or never.
+
+Her mind made up, Penny no longer hesitated. With a quick movement she
+seized the silken ladder and darted to the doorway of the bell tower.
+
+"Hey!" shouted Al Gepper, starting after her.
+
+Penny slammed the door in his face. Taking careful aim, she hurled the
+silken ladder upward. One of the iron hooks caught in the loop of the
+rope. She jerked on it, and to her joy, the bell began to ring.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 24
+ _THE WOODEN BOX_
+
+
+Penny pulled the rope again and again, causing the huge bell to sway back
+and forth violently. It rang many times before Al Gepper succeeded in
+opening the tower room door.
+
+His face was crimson with fury when he seized the girl, hurling her away
+from the rope. With one quick toss he released the hooks of the silken
+ladder, stuffing the soft strands beneath his coat. The bell made a final
+clang and became silent.
+
+Penny retreated against the wall, anticipating severe punishment for her
+act. However, Al and his companions were more concerned with thoughts of
+escape than with her.
+
+"We've got to get out of here," muttered Al. "Come on!"
+
+The two men on the floor had ceased their struggles. Painfully they
+regained their feet. In this sudden emergency they had forgotten their
+differences.
+
+"What shall we do about the box in the tower?" Pete demanded, nursing a
+swollen eye.
+
+"Leave it here," returned Al. "We can't save anything now. The police are
+apt to swoop down on us any minute."
+
+Turning, he fled to the street. Pete and Slippery hesitated, then
+followed. Penny heard a key turn in the lock. Even before she tested the
+door she knew she had been imprisoned in the tower room.
+
+"They've escaped after all," she thought dismally. "But I may have saved
+some of the loot. I'll take a look."
+
+Quickly she climbed the iron stairs to the belfry. From the turret she
+obtained a perfect view of the entire Lane. Al Gepper was running down
+the street, while Pete and Slippery had turned toward the cemetery.
+
+There were no other persons in the vicinity, Penny thought at first
+glance. Then her heart leaped as she saw three men entering the Lane at
+its junction with the main street. They, too, were running.
+
+"They must have heard the bell!" she told herself. "Oh, if only I can
+make them understand what has happened!"
+
+Her best means of attracting attention was by ringing the bell. She
+pushed against it and was rewarded by a deafening clang.
+
+The men stopped short, staring toward the belfry. Penny cupped her hands
+and shouted. Her words did not carry plainly, but the newcomers seemed to
+gain an inkling of what was amiss, for they wheeled and began to pursue
+the two who had taken refuge in the cemetery.
+
+From her high perch, Penny saw Al Gepper nearing the end of the Lane,
+unobserved by all save herself. Tapping the bell again, she called:
+
+"Get him, too! At the end of the street!"
+
+One of the pursuers halted, turning toward the tower. In the moonlight
+Penny saw his face and recognized Jerry Livingston. He was close enough
+now to hear her voice.
+
+"It's Al Gepper!" she shouted. "Don't let him escape!"
+
+The reporter turned, but as he started off in the new direction, both he
+and Penny saw the fleeing man climbing into Leaping Lena. With a grinding
+of gears, he drove away. Jerry stopped, thinking that he never could
+overtake the car.
+
+"Keep after him, Jerry!" encouraged Penny. "The gas tank is almost empty.
+He can't possibly go more than three or four blocks!"
+
+As the reporter again took up the chase, she began tolling the bell once
+more, determined to arouse everyone within a mile of the Temple.
+
+Her energy was rewarded, for in another minute she heard the familiar
+wail of a siren. A police cruiser swerved alongside the tower, stopping
+with a lurch.
+
+"What's the idea of ringing that bell?" demanded an officer, leaping to
+the ground.
+
+Tersely Penny explained the situation. The two policemen took a short-cut
+through a vacant lot, circling the cemetery. Darkness swallowed them, but
+presently there came a muffled command to halt, followed by a revolver
+shot.
+
+So excited was Penny that she nearly tumbled from the bell tower.
+Recovering her balance, she sat on the stone ledge, trying to remain
+calm. Her nerves were jumpy and on edge.
+
+"If only Jerry captures Al Gepper--that's all I ask!" she breathed.
+
+As the minutes elapsed, it occurred to her that she had not yet searched
+for the loot which she believed to be hidden in the belfry. With questing
+fingers she groped beneath the ledge. For a short distance she felt
+nothing. Then she encountered a long wooden box.
+
+Before she could open it, she heard shouts from the direction of the
+cemetery. Four men, two of them police officers, were marching Slippery
+and Pete toward the Temple. As they came nearer she received another
+pleasant surprise. The two who had aided in the capture were her father
+and Salt Sommers, a photographer for the _Star_.
+
+"Dad!" shouted Penny. "Can you get me down from this pigeon roost?"
+
+Mr. Parker, separating from the others, came to the foot of the bell
+tower.
+
+"So it was you who sounded the alarm!" he exclaimed. "I might have known!
+How did you get up there?"
+
+"I'm locked in. Dad, send the police to help Jerry. He's after Al Gepper
+who rode off in my car."
+
+The police cruiser was dispatched, leaving one officer to guard the two
+prisoners. Mr. Parker unlocked the door of the tower room, releasing his
+daughter.
+
+"You're all right?" he asked anxiously.
+
+"Of course. Here's a little present for you." Penny thrust the wooden box
+into his hands.
+
+"What's this?"
+
+"I don't know yet. I found it hidden in the belfry."
+
+"Penny, if you fell into a river you would come up with a chest of gold!"
+exclaimed the publisher admiringly.
+
+"Open it quick, Dad."
+
+Mr. Parker required no urging. The box was locked but he pried off the
+cover hinges, exposing the contents.
+
+"A real treasure!" exclaimed Penny.
+
+The box contained several bracelets, one of them set with rubies and
+diamonds, countless rings, four watches, and several strings of matched
+pearls.
+
+"Stolen loot!" ejaculated the publisher.
+
+"And what a collection!" chuckled Penny as she examined the separate
+pieces. "There's enough plunder here to start a jewelry store."
+
+"Likewise sufficient evidence to put this Celestial Temple gang out of
+circulation for a long, long time," added her father.
+
+"I learned a lot tonight, Dad. Wait until I tell you!"
+
+"A scoop for the _Star_?"
+
+"You'll be able to use your largest, blackest headlines."
+
+Penny began to tell her story, interrupting only when Slippery and Pete
+were brought into the building handcuffed together. Starting again, she
+made her charges, accusing Slippery not only of having committed the
+Henley burglary, but also of having robbed the Kohls and many prominent
+Riverview families.
+
+After inspecting the jewelry found in the wooden box, one of the police
+officers definitely identified several of the pieces as stolen goods. He
+expressed an opinion that the jewelry had been hidden in the belfry
+because it was too "hot" to be disposed of by fences.
+
+"The organization members had an agreement by which all shared in the
+loot," added Penny. "That caused trouble. Al Gepper and Slippery thought
+they were taking most of the risk without sufficient return. So they
+pulled a few extra jobs of their own."
+
+Before she could reveal more, the police car was heard outside the
+Temple. From the window Penny saw that Jerry and the policeman were
+returning with Al Gepper who had been handcuffed.
+
+"They've caught him!" she cried jubilantly.
+
+The prisoner was brought into the Temple to be identified. He had been
+captured when Leaping Lena had stalled for lack of gasoline.
+
+As Gepper was searched, the silken ladder, and various small objects were
+removed from his coat. Penny noticed two tiny rubber suction cups no
+larger than dimes, and immediately made up her mind that later she would
+try to obtain them. She was quite certain she knew their purpose.
+
+Penny told her story and learned, in turn, that after she had telephoned
+Jerry, he had traced her father, and with the police both had hastened to
+the Hodges' cottage. Arriving there, they discovered that Gepper had
+fled. Jerry, Mr. Parker, and Salt Sommers had immediately proceeded to
+the Celestial Temple.
+
+"It was lucky you rang that bell, Penny," chuckled Jerry. "If you hadn't,
+we never would have arrived here in time."
+
+"It was lucky, too, that Mr. Gepper tried to escape in Lena," she
+laughed. "I guess my old rattle-trap has redeemed itself."
+
+One of the officers picked up the silken ladder, examining it with
+critical interest. He agreed that it had undoubtedly been used in many
+mysterious burglaries committed during the past month.
+
+"It's obvious that Slippery approached the houses on the 'blind' side,
+and scaled the wall after hooking his ladder into a window ledge," Penny
+remarked. "I suppose he reasoned that second-story windows nearly always
+are left unlocked. But how did he learn the houses were deserted? By
+telephoning?"
+
+"That would be my opinion," nodded the policeman. "If someone answered,
+he could hang up. Otherwise, he would be fairly sure the house was
+empty."
+
+"One night at the theatre I saw a man who resembled Slippery noting down
+the license number of the Kohl car. But the house was robbed within a few
+hours after that. How could he have obtained the name and address?"
+
+"Easily. There are 'information fences' who supply such data to fellow
+members of the underworld. It is also possible that Slippery previously
+had watched the Kohl house, obtained the car license number, and then
+watched for it later at the theatre."
+
+Jerry already had supplied police with the name of the fence whose
+establishment Slippery had visited earlier in the day. Later, a raid
+staged there brought to light much loot taken from various Riverview
+homes.
+
+However, for the moment, police were most interested in gaining complete
+information which could be used in rounding up all members of the
+Celestial Temple Society who had not fled the city.
+
+Searching Slippery they found, not only jewelry stolen from the Henley
+residence, but a booklet containing many names and telephone numbers.
+
+"Sadie Beardsell," Penny read. "She's one of the members, I am sure."
+
+Lest Mr. and Mrs. Hodges might also be arrested, she explained that the
+old couple had been an innocent dupe of Al Gepper. Turning to the medium
+she said:
+
+"I think I know how you accomplished most of your tricks. Of course, you
+were the one who sent Mrs. Hodges a letter with six dollars. Undoubtedly,
+you had it mailed by an accomplice from New York at exactly the hour you
+specified. Then at that same hour you slipped up to the Hodges' cottage,
+and rapped six times on the bedroom wall."
+
+"You seem to have everything figured out," Al Gepper responded
+sarcastically. "Clever girl!"
+
+"I saw how you made the spirit painting tonight at the séance," resumed
+Penny. "May I ask if that same method was used in regard to Mrs. Weem's
+picture of Cousin David?"
+
+She did not dream that the medium would answer her question. With a shrug
+which implied that the entire matter was very boring, he replied:
+
+"No, the picture was painted with a solution of sulphocyanid of potassium
+and other chemicals, invisible until brought out with a re-agent. During
+the séance, an assistant sprayed the back of the canvas with an atomizer,
+bringing out the colors one by one."
+
+"And how was the paint made to appear wet?"
+
+"Poppy oil."
+
+"One more question, Mr. Gepper. I never could understand how you were
+able to raise the kitchen table at Mrs. Hodges' cottage."
+
+"No?" Al Gepper smiled mockingly. "I assure you I had nothing to do with
+that demonstration. It was a true spirit manifestation."
+
+"I'll never believe that," declared Penny.
+
+"Then figure it out for yourself," replied the medium. "You are such a
+very brilliant child."
+
+Before the prisoners were led to the police car, Salt Sommers set up his
+camera and took a number of flashlight pictures for the _Star_.
+
+"How about it, Mr. Parker?" inquired Jerry eagerly. "Are we putting out
+an extra?"
+
+"We are," said the publisher crisply. "This is the big break I've been
+hoping we would get! We should beat the _Record_ on the story by at least
+a half hour."
+
+The three men hurriedly left the Celestial Temple, with Penny trailing
+behind them. At the main street intersection they finally obtained a
+taxicab.
+
+"To the _Star_ office," Mr. Parker ordered. "An extra dollar if you step
+on it."
+
+"How about my pictures?" Salt Sommers asked, as the cab rocked around a
+corner. "They ought to be dandies."
+
+"Rush them through as soon as we get to the office," Mr. Parker
+instructed. "If they're any good we'll run 'em on page one. Jerry, you
+handle the story--play it for all it's worth."
+
+Jerry glanced at Penny who sat very still between her father and Salt.
+Their eyes met.
+
+"Chief," he said, "there's a sort of fraternity among reporters--an
+unwritten rule that we never chisel on each other's work."
+
+"What's that?" Mr. Parker asked, startled. "I don't get it."
+
+Then his glance fell upon his daughter, and he smiled.
+
+"Oh, so it's that way! You think Penny should write the story?"
+
+"I do, Chief. It's hers from the ground floor up."
+
+"Please, Dad, may I?" Penny pleaded.
+
+The cab rolled up to the _Star_ office, stopping with a jerk. Mr. Parker
+swung open the door, helping her alight.
+
+"The story is yours, Penny," he said. "That is, if you can crack it out
+fast enough to make the extra."
+
+"I'll do it or die in the attempt."
+
+"Keep to the facts and write terse, simple English--" Mr. Parker began,
+but Penny did not wait to hear his instructions.
+
+With a triumphant laugh, she ran ahead into the _Star_ office. Her entry
+into the newsroom was both dramatic and noisy.
+
+"Big scoop, Mr. DeWitt," she called cheerily. "Start the old print
+factory running full blast!"
+
+Dropping into a chair behind the nearest typewriter, she began to write.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 25
+ _EXTRA!_
+
+
+Penny stood at the window of her father's office, listening to the
+newsboys crying their wares on the street.
+
+"_Extra! Extra! Read all about it! Police Capture Three in Raid on
+Celestial Temple! Extra! Extra!_"
+
+Mr. Parker rocked back in his swivel chair, smiling at his daughter.
+
+"Your story was first-class, Penny," he said. "Thanks to you we scooped
+the _Record_. Tired?"
+
+"I do feel rather washed out," Penny admitted. "Writing at high speed
+with a deadline jabbing you in the back is worse than facing a gang of
+crooks. But it was exciting."
+
+"You turned in a good story," her father praised again. "In fact, you may
+as well take credit for breaking up that outfit of fake spiritualists."
+
+"So far the police have only captured Al Gepper, Slippery and Pete.
+There's not much evidence against the others."
+
+"True, but rest assured those who aren't rounded up will leave Riverview.
+The backbone of the organization has been smashed."
+
+Penny sank wearily into a chair, picking up a copy of the _Star_ which
+lay on her father's desk. Two-inch, black headlines proclaimed the
+capture, and opening from the banner was her own story tagged with a
+credit line: _by Penelope Parker_. Salt Sommer's photographs had made the
+front page, too, and there was a brief contribution by Jerry telling of
+Al Gepper's attempted flight in Leaping Lena.
+
+"Dad, you must admit that it was a stroke of genius when I bought back
+that old car," remarked Penny. "Why, if it hadn't been for Lena, Al
+Gepper surely would have escaped."
+
+"That and the fact you always run your cars on an empty tank," responded
+Mr. Parker. "I suppose you foresaw the future when you made your
+brilliant purchase?"
+
+"Not exactly. It was just a feeling I had--the same sort of hunch which
+came to me when I found the silken ladder at Kano's Curio Shop. If I
+depended upon a mere brain to solve mysteries, why I'd be no better than
+the police."
+
+"Your modesty overwhelms me," chuckled her father. "I'm thankful my other
+reporters aren't guided by their instincts. Otherwise I might have a
+scoop a day."
+
+"There's one thing which annoys me," Penny said, frowning.
+
+"And what is that?"
+
+"Two of Al Gepper's tricks haven't been explained. How was he able to
+raise a table and read a message in a sealed envelope?"
+
+"I was talking to the Chief of Police about that letter trick only this
+morning, Penny. Magicians often employ it. Wasn't the message written on
+a pad of paper before it was placed in the envelope?"
+
+"Yes, it was."
+
+"Then very likely Gepper read the message from the pad. He could have
+placed carbon paper beneath the second or third sheets. Possibly he
+resorted to a thin covering of paraffin wax which would be less
+noticeable."
+
+"Now that I recall it, he did glance at the pad! How would you guess he
+lifted the table?"
+
+"Were his hands held high above it, Penny?"
+
+"Only an inch or two. However, he never touched the table. I was able to
+see that."
+
+"Could he have used sharp, steel pins held between his fingers?"
+
+"I doubt it. But I think I know what he may have used! Did you notice two
+small suction cups which were taken from his pockets by the police?"
+
+"Well, no, I didn't, Penny."
+
+"The longer I mull over it, the more I'm convinced he used them to raise
+the table. They could be held between the fingers and wouldn't be
+observed in a darkened room. Dad, if I can get those rubber cups from the
+police, I'll have some fun!"
+
+The telephone rang. It was Mrs. Weems calling to ask if Penny were safe.
+Mr. Parker replied in the affirmative and handed the receiver to his
+daughter.
+
+"Penny, I just read your story in the paper," the housekeeper scolded.
+"You never should have pitted yourself against those dangerous men! I
+declare, you need someone to watch you every minute."
+
+"I need you," said Penny. "And so does Dad. Why not promise to stay with
+us instead of going away on a trip?"
+
+"Of course, I'll remain," came Mrs. Weems' surprising answer. "I made up
+my mind to that two days ago. You and your father never could take care
+of yourselves."
+
+"What will you do with your inheritance, Mrs. Weems?"
+
+"I hope your father will invest it for me," replied the housekeeper
+meekly. "One thing I know. No medium will tell me what to do with it."
+
+The hour was late. Penny felt relieved when her father locked his desk in
+preparation for leaving the office.
+
+They walked through the newsroom, down the stairway to the street. A
+middle-aged man in a brown suit and derby hat alighted from a taxi,
+pausing as he saw them.
+
+"Mr. Parker!" he called. "May I speak with you?"
+
+The publisher turned, recognizing him. "Mr. Henley!" he exclaimed.
+
+"I have just come from the police station," the advertiser said in an
+agitated voice. "I was told that your daughter is responsible for the
+capture of the men who robbed our home tonight."
+
+"Yes, Penny managed to have a rather busy evening," smiled Mr. Parker. "I
+hope you suffered no loss."
+
+"Everything was recovered, thanks to your daughter. Miss Parker, I
+realize I never can properly express my appreciation."
+
+"I was sorry I couldn't prevent the burglary," replied Penny stiffly. "As
+it turned out, the capture of the crooks was mostly due to luck."
+
+"You are too modest," protested Mr. Henley. "I've talked with the police,
+you know. I am truly grateful."
+
+The man hesitated, evidently wishing to say more, yet scarcely knowing
+how to shape his words. Penny and her father started to move away.
+
+"Oh, about that contract we were discussing today," the advertiser said
+quickly.
+
+"Yes?" Mr. Parker paused.
+
+"I've been thinking it over. I acted too hastily in deciding to cancel."
+
+"Mr. Henley, please do not feel that you are under obligation," said the
+publisher quietly. "Even though Penny accidentally did you a favor--"
+
+"It's not that," Mr. Henley interrupted. "The _Star_ is a good paper."
+
+"The best in Riverview," said Penny softly.
+
+"Yes, it is!" Mr. Henley declared with sudden emphasis. "I tell you,
+Parker, I was irritated because of a trivial mistake in my firm's copy.
+I've cooled off now. Suppose we talk over the matter tomorrow at lunch."
+
+"Very well," agreed Mr. Parker. "The Commodore Hotel at one."
+
+Bowing to Penny, Mr. Henley retreated into a waiting taxi and drove away.
+
+"How do you like that, Dad?" Penny inquired after a moment's silence.
+
+"I like it," answered Mr. Parker. "The _Star_ could have limped along
+without Mr. Henley. But the going would have been tough."
+
+"He'll renew the old contract?"
+
+"Oh, yes, and probably give us a better one. Stealing Mr. Henley's words,
+I am truly grateful."
+
+Penny gazed at her father with twinkling eyes.
+
+"Are those idle words, Dad? Or are you willing to back them in a material
+way?"
+
+"I might," grinned Mr. Parker. "Present your bill."
+
+"Well, Dad, I've discovered to my sorrow that I can't support two cars on
+my present allowance. I need a generous raise."
+
+"You could get rid of Lena."
+
+"Why, Dad! After her noble work tonight!"
+
+"No, I suppose not," sighed Mr. Parker. "You've earned an increase, and I
+may as well grant it."
+
+"Retroactive to the time I started working on the story," added Penny. "I
+figure if you pay back allowance, I'll be solvent once more!"
+
+"You drive a hard bargain," chuckled the publisher. "But I'll agree."
+
+Arm in arm, they started on down the street. Rounding a corner of the
+_Star_ building they abruptly paused before the plate-glass window to
+watch a long, unbroken sheet of white paper feed through the thundering
+press. Freshly inked newspapers, cut and folded, slid out one upon the
+other to be borne away for distribution.
+
+"It's modern magic, isn't it, Dad?" Penny said reflectively as the great
+machine pounded in steady rhythm.
+
+"Yes, Penny," her father agreed. "And for this edition, at least, you
+were the master magician!"
+
+ 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 Clue of the Silken Ladder, by Mildred A. Wirt
+
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+<title>Clue of the Silken Ladder, by Mildred A. Wirt</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Clue of the Silken Ladder, 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: Clue of the Silken Ladder
+
+Author: Mildred A. Wirt
+
+Release Date: December 7, 2010 [EBook #34591]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CLUE OF THE SILKEN LADDER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Brenda Lewis and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div id="cover" class="img">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Clue of the Silken Ladder" width="363" height="500" />
+</div>
+<div class="box">
+<h1>Clue of
+<br />the Silken
+<br />Ladder</h1>
+<p class="center"><i>By</i>
+<br />MILDRED A. WIRT</p>
+<p class="center"><i>Author of</i>
+<br /><span class="small">MILDRED A. WIRT MYSTERY STORIES
+<br />TRAILER STORIES FOR GIRLS</span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="small"><i>Illustrated</i></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="small">CUPPLES AND LEON COMPANY
+<br /><i>Publishers</i>
+<br />NEW YORK</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class="box">
+<div class="subbox">
+<p class="center"><span class="large"><b>PENNY PARKER</b></span>
+<br />MYSTERY STORIES</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="small"><i>Large 12 mo. <span class="gsw">Cloth</span> <span class="gsw">Illustrated</span></i></span></p>
+</div>
+<p class="center">TALE OF THE WITCH DOLL
+<br />THE VANISHING HOUSEBOAT
+<br />DANGER AT THE DRAWBRIDGE
+<br />BEHIND THE GREEN DOOR
+<br />CLUE OF THE SILKEN LADDER
+<br />THE SECRET PACT
+<br />THE CLOCK STRIKES THIRTEEN
+<br />THE WISHING WELL
+<br />SABOTEURS ON THE RIVER
+<br />GHOST BEYOND THE GATE
+<br />HOOFBEATS ON THE TURNPIKE
+<br />VOICE FROM THE CAVE
+<br />GUILT OF THE BRASS THIEVES
+<br />SIGNAL IN THE DARK
+<br />WHISPERING WALLS
+<br />SWAMP ISLAND
+<br />THE CRY AT MIDNIGHT</p>
+<div class="subbox">
+<p class="center"><span class="smaller">COPYRIGHT, 1941, BY CUPPLES AND LEON CO.</span></p>
+<p class="center">Clue of the Silken Ladder</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smaller">PRINTED IN U. S. A.</span></p>
+</div></div>
+<div id="front" class="img">
+<img src="images/front.png" alt="&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a ladder, Lou! A ladder made of silk!&rdquo;" width="400" height="615" />
+<p class="center"><span class="small">&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a ladder, Lou! A ladder made of silk!&rdquo;
+<br />&ldquo;<i>Clue of the Silken Ladder</i>&rdquo; <span class="gsw">(<a href="#Page_11">See Page 11</a>)</span></span></p>
+</div>
+<h2><i>CONTENTS</i></h2>
+<dl class="toc">
+<dt class="smaller"><span class="lj">CHAPTER</span> PAGE</dt>
+<dt><a href="#c1">1 DOUBLE TROUBLE</a> <i>1</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c2">2 A ROPE OF SILK</a> <i>12</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c3">3 SOCIETY ROUTINE</a> <i>23</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c4">4 A TURN OF FORTUNE</a> <i>32</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c5">5 THE MAN IN GRAY</a> <i>42</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c6">6 AN APARTMENT BURGLARY</a> <i>49</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c7">7 MARK OF THE IRON HOOK</a> <i>59</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c8">8 PSYCHIC SIGNS</a> <i>67</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c9">9 MRS. WEEMS&rsquo; INHERITANCE</a> <i>75</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c10">10 OUIJA BOARD WISDOM</a> <i>85</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c11">11 THE CELESTIAL TEMPLE</a> <i>94</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c12">12 A MESSAGE FOR MRS. WEEMS</a> <i>102</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c13">13 COUSIN DAVID&rsquo;S GHOST</a> <i>111</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c14">14 WET PAINT</a> <i>118</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c15">15 HIDDEN MONEY</a> <i>125</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c16">16 OVER THE WINDOW LEDGE</a> <i>135</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c17">17 KANO&rsquo;S CURIO SHOP</a> <i>142</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c18">18 THE BELL TOWER</a> <i>151</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c19">19 PENNY INVESTIGATES</a> <i>157</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c20">20 INSIDE THE CABINET</a> <i>163</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c21">21 STARTLING INFORMATION</a> <i>168</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c22">22 SCALING THE WALL</a> <i>174</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c23">23 A PRISONER IN THE BELFRY</a> <i>181</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c24">24 THE WOODEN BOX</a> <i>188</i></dt>
+<dt><a href="#c25">25 EXTRA!</a> <i>200</i></dt>
+</dl>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_1">[1]</div>
+<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">1</span>
+<br /><i>DOUBLE TROUBLE</i></h2>
+<p>&ldquo;Now I ask you, Lou, what have I done to deserve
+such a fate?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jerking a yellow card from beneath the windshield
+of the shiny new maroon-colored sedan, Penny Parker
+turned flashing blue eyes upon her companion, Louise
+Sidell.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Penny,&rdquo; responded her chum dryly, &ldquo;in
+Riverview persons who park their cars beside fire
+hydrants usually expect to get parking tickets.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we were only inside the drugstore five minutes.
+Wouldn&rsquo;t you think a policeman could find something
+else to do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the ticket won&rsquo;t cost you more than five or
+ten dollars,&rdquo; teased Louise wickedly. &ldquo;Your father
+should pay it.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_2">[2]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;He should but he won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; Penny answered gloomily.
+&ldquo;Dad expects his one and only daughter to assume
+her own car expense. I ask you, what&rsquo;s the good of
+having a weekly allowance when you never get to use
+it yourself?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You <i>are</i> in a mood today. Why, I think you&rsquo;re
+lucky to have a grand new car.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Louise&rsquo;s glance caressed the highly polished chrome
+plate, the sleek, streamlined body which shone in the
+sunlight. The automobile had been presented to Penny
+by her father, Anthony Parker, largely in gratitude
+because she had saved his newspaper, <i>The Riverview
+Star</i>, from a disastrous law suit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I am lucky,&rdquo; Penny agreed without enthusiasm.
+&ldquo;All the same, I&rsquo;m lonesome for my old coupe,
+Leaping Lena. I wish I could have kept her. She was
+traded in on this model.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What would you do with that old wreck now,
+Penny? Nearly every time we went around a corner
+it broke down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the same, we had marvelous times with her.
+This car takes twice as much gasoline. Another thing,
+all the policemen knew Lena. They never gave her a
+ticket for anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny sighed deeply. Pocketing the yellow card,
+she squeezed behind the steering wheel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By the way, whatever became of Lena?&rdquo; Louise
+asked curiously, slamming the car door. She glanced
+sharply at Penny.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_3">[3]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, she&rsquo;s changed hands twice. Now she&rsquo;s at Jake
+Harriman&rsquo;s lot, advertised for fifty dollars. Want to
+drive past there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not particularly. But I&rsquo;ll do it for your sake, pet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As the car started toward the Harriman Car Lot,
+Louise stole an amused glance at her chum. Penny was
+not unattractive, even when submerged in gloom.
+Upon the slightest provocation, her blue eyes sparkled;
+her smile when she chose to turn it on, would melt a
+man of stone. She dressed carelessly, brushed a mop of
+curly, golden hair only if it suited her fancy, yet somehow
+achieved an appearance envied by her friends.</p>
+<p>The automobile drew up at the curb.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s Lena.&rdquo; Penny pointed to an ancient blue
+coupe with battered fenders which stood on the
+crowded second-hand lot. A <i>For Sale</i> sign on the
+windshield informed the public that the auto might be
+bought for forty dollars.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lena&rsquo;s value seems to have dropped ten dollars,&rdquo;
+commented Louise. &ldquo;My, I had forgotten how wrecky
+the old thing looks!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t speak of her so disrespectfully, Lou. All she
+needs is a good waxing and a little paint.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girls crossed the lot to inspect the coupe. As
+they were gazing at it, Jake, the lot owner, sidled
+toward them, beaming ingratiatingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good afternoon, young ladies. May I interest you
+in a car?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_4">[4]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;No, thank you,&rdquo; replied Penny. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re just looking.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now here is a fine car,&rdquo; went on the dealer, indicating
+the coupe. &ldquo;A 1934 model&mdash;good mechanical
+condition; nice rubber; a lively battery and fair paint.
+You can&rsquo;t go wrong, ladies, not at a price of forty
+dollars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But will it run?&rdquo; asked Louise, smothering a giggle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s thousands of miles of good service left in
+this little car, ladies. And the price is only fifteen dollars
+above the junk value.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The thought of Leaping Lena coming to an inglorious
+end in a junk yard was disconcerting to
+Penny. She walked slowly about the car, inspecting it
+from every angle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Forty dollars is too much for this old wreck,&rdquo; she
+said firmly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Penny, such disrespect!&rdquo; mocked Louise.</p>
+<p>Penny frowned down her chum. Sentiment and
+business were two different matters.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What <i>will</i> you give?&rdquo; inquired the car owner
+alertly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a cent over twenty-five.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Louise clutched Penny&rsquo;s arm, trying to pull her
+away.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_5">[5]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you lost your mind?&rdquo; she demanded. &ldquo;What
+could you do with this old car when you already have
+a new one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny did not listen. She kept gazing at the coupe
+as one who had been hypnotized.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d take it in a minute, only I don&rsquo;t have twenty-five
+dollars in cash.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How much can you raise?&rdquo; asked the dealer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not more than five dollars, I&rsquo;m afraid. But my
+father is publisher of the <i>Riverview Star</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jake Harriman&rsquo;s brows unknitted as if by magic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anthony Parker&rsquo;s daughter,&rdquo; he said, smiling.
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s plenty good enough for me. I&rsquo;ll sell you the
+best car on the lot for nothing down. Just come inside
+the office and sign a note for the amount. Will
+that be okay?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Disregarding Louise&rsquo;s whispered protests, Penny
+assured the dealer that the arrangement would be perfectly
+satisfactory. The note was signed, and five dollars
+in cash given to bind the bargain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll throw in a few gallons of gas,&rdquo; the man offered.</p>
+<p>However, Jake Harriman&rsquo;s gasoline did not seem
+suited to Leaping Lena&rsquo;s dyspeptic ignition. She
+coughed feebly once or twice and then died for the
+day.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have acquired a bargain, I must say!&rdquo; exclaimed
+Louise. &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t even get the car home.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_6">[6]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I can,&rdquo; Penny insisted. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tow her. A little
+tinkering and she&rsquo;ll be as good as new.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re optimistic, to say the least,&rdquo; laughed Louise.</p>
+<p>Penny produced a steel cable from the tool kit of
+the maroon sedan, and Jake Harriman coupled the
+two cars together.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, what will your father say when he learns
+of this?&rdquo; Louise inquired dubiously. &ldquo;On top of a
+parking ticket, too!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll meet that problem when I come to it,&rdquo;
+Penny answered carelessly. &ldquo;Louise, you steer Lena.
+I&rsquo;ll drive the sedan.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Shaking her head sadly, Louise climbed into the
+old car. Although Penny was her dearest friend she
+was forced to admit that the girl often did bewildering
+things. Penny&rsquo;s mother was dead and for many years
+she had been raised by a housekeeper, Mrs. Maud
+Weems. Secretly Louise wondered if it were not the
+housekeeper who had been trained. At any rate, Penny
+enjoyed unusual freedom for a high school girl, and
+her philosophy of life was summed up in one headline:
+ACTION.</p>
+<p>Penny put the sedan in gear, towing the coupe
+slowly down the street. The two vehicles traveled
+several blocks before a hill loomed ahead. Penny considered
+turning back, and then decided that the cars
+could make the steep climb easily.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_7">[7]</div>
+<p>However, midway up the hill the sedan suddenly
+leaped forward as if released from a heavy burden.
+At the same instant Lena&rsquo;s horn gave a sharp warning
+blast.</p>
+<p>Glancing into the mirror, Penny was horrified to see
+Leaping Lena careening backwards down the steep
+slope. The tow rope had unfastened.</p>
+<p>Bringing the sedan to the curb, she jerked on the
+hand brake, and sprang to the pavement. Louise, bewildered
+and frightened, was trying desperately to
+control the coupe. The car gathered speed, wobbling
+crazily toward the line of traffic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Guide it! Guide it!&rdquo; shouted Penny. &ldquo;Put on the
+brakes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So confused was Louise that she lost her head completely.
+Straight toward a long black limousine rolled
+the coupe. The chauffeur spun his wheel, but too late.
+There was a loud crash as the two cars came together.</p>
+<p>Penny raced down the hill to help her chum from
+the coupe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you hurt?&rdquo; she asked anxiously.</p>
+<p>Louise shook her head, wailing: &ldquo;Penny Parker,
+just see what has happened now! You never should
+have bought this stupid old wreck!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_8">[8]</div>
+<p>Both the chauffeur and an elderly gentleman who
+carried a cane, alighted from the limousine. With
+grim faces they surveyed the fender which had been
+crushed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The owner is Mr. Kohl,&rdquo; Louise whispered nervously.
+&ldquo;You know, president of the First National
+Bank.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The banker did not recognize either of the girls.
+Addressing them both, he made several pointed remarks
+to the effect that irresponsible young people
+were very thoughtless to endanger the property of
+others with their ancient &ldquo;jalopies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was entirely my fault, Mr. Kohl,&rdquo; acknowledged
+Penny meekly. &ldquo;Of course, I&rsquo;ll pay for the
+fender.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The banker softened somewhat, gazing at the girls
+in a thoughtful, more friendly way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t I seen you somewhere before?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, Mr. Kohl.&rdquo; Penny was quick to press for
+an advantage. &ldquo;Why, I am one of your best customers.
+Ever since I was six years old I&rsquo;ve trusted your bank
+with my savings!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I remember you now,&rdquo; said Mr. Kohl, smiling.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re the Parker girl.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Adding a mental note that Anthony Parker actually
+was one of the bank&rsquo;s largest depositors, he decided
+it would be excellent policy to make light of the accident.
+A moment later as a policeman came to investigate,
+he insisted that the incident had been unavoidable
+and that it would be a mistake to arrest the
+girls.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_9">[9]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Kohl, you were noble, absolutely noble,&rdquo; declared
+Penny gratefully after the policeman had gone.
+&ldquo;The least I can do is to pay for the damage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll stop at Sherman&rsquo;s Garage and have a new
+fender put on,&rdquo; the banker responded. &ldquo;The bill can
+be sent to your father.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After Mr. Kohl had driven away, Louise helped
+Penny hook the coupe to the sedan once more. She
+remarked cuttingly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve done right well today. One parking ticket,
+a bill for twenty-five dollars, and another one coming
+up. Just what <i>will</i> your father say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Plenty,&rdquo; sighed Penny. &ldquo;I wonder if it might not
+be a good idea to break the news by easy stages? Perhaps
+he&rsquo;ll take it more calmly if I telephone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be too sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The street was a narrow, dingy one with few business
+houses. Noticing a Japanese store which bore a
+sign, &ldquo;Kano&rsquo;s Curio Shop,&rdquo; she started toward it, intending
+to seek a public telephone.</p>
+<p>Louise seized her arm. &ldquo;Penny, you&rsquo;re not going in
+there!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is Dorr Street&mdash;one of the worst places in
+Riverview.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_10">[10]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t be silly,&rdquo; chuckled Penny. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s perfectly
+safe by daylight. I&rsquo;ll go alone if you&rsquo;re afraid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus challenged, Louise indignantly denied that
+she was afraid, and accompanied her chum.</p>
+<p>The door of Mr. Kano&rsquo;s shop stood invitingly open.
+Pausing on the threshold, the girls caught a pleasant
+aroma of sandalwood.</p>
+<p>So quietly did Louise and Penny enter that the
+elderly, white-haired shop owner did not immediately
+see them. He sat behind a high counter, engrossed in
+something he was sewing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good afternoon,&rdquo; said Penny pleasantly.</p>
+<p>The Japanese glanced up quickly and as quickly
+thrust his work beneath the counter. Recovering
+poise, he bowed to the girls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May we use your telephone if you have one?&rdquo;
+Penny requested.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So very sorry, Miss,&rdquo; the Japanese responded,
+bowing again. &ldquo;Have no telephone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny nodded, absently fingering a tray of tiny
+ivory figures. The Japanese watched her, and mistaking
+curiosity for buying interest, brought additional
+pieces for her to inspect. The curios were all
+too expensive for Penny&rsquo;s purse, but after endless debate
+she bought a pair of wooden clogs. The shop
+owner padded away into a back room, intending to
+wrap the package for her.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_11">[11]</div>
+<p>Scarcely had he vanished when Penny turned excitedly
+to her chum.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lou, did you notice how funny he acted when we
+came in here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, he didn&rsquo;t want us to see what he was making
+evidently.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly what I thought! But we&rsquo;ll fool Mr. Kano!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Giving Louise no opportunity to protest, Penny
+boldly peered behind the counter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here it is,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;But <i>what</i> is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hidden in a pasteboard box lay coil upon coil of
+what appeared to be fine, black silk rope. Curiously,
+she lifted it up, exposing a network of crossbars.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, of all things!&rdquo; she exclaimed. <a href="#front">&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a ladder,
+Lou! A ladder made of silk!&rdquo;</a></p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_12">[12]</div>
+<h2 id="c2"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">2</span>
+<br /><i>A ROPE OF SILK</i></h2>
+<p>Even as Penny spoke, she felt a hard, warning tug
+on her skirt. Quickly she turned around.</p>
+<p>In the doorway stood the old Japanese. His smile
+was not pleasant to behold.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We-we were just looking at this rope,&rdquo; Penny
+stammered, trying to carry off the situation with
+dignity. &ldquo;I hope you don&rsquo;t mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Japanese shopkeeper gazed steadily at the girl,
+his face an emotionless mask. Since he spoke no word,
+it became increasingly evident that he regarded her
+with anger and suspicion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I ask what use is made of this silk rope?&rdquo;
+Penny inquired. &ldquo;Do you sell it for a special purpose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Japanese coldly ignored the direct questions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So very sorry to have kept you waiting,&rdquo; he said
+softly. &ldquo;Your change please.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_13">[13]</div>
+<p>Penny knew that she deserved the rebuke. Accepting
+the package and coins, she and Louise hastily left
+the shop. Not until they were some distance away did
+the latter speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, you would do a trick like that! One of
+these days your curiosity will get us into serious
+trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At least I learned what was hidden behind the
+counter,&rdquo; chuckled Penny. &ldquo;But that Jap didn&rsquo;t seem
+very eager to answer my questions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you blame him? It certainly was none of our
+affair what he kept inside the box.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps not, Lou, but you must admit he acted
+strangely when we first entered the shop. You know&mdash;as
+if we had surprised him in a questionable act.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He naturally was startled. We came in so quietly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the same, I&rsquo;m not one bit sorry I looked behind
+the counter,&rdquo; Penny maintained. &ldquo;I like to learn
+about things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I agree with you there!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lou, what purpose do you suppose silk ladders
+serve? Who uses them and why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, how should I know? Penny, you ask enough
+questions to be master of ceremonies on a radio quiz
+program.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t recall ever having seen a silk ladder before,&rdquo;
+Penny resumed, undisturbed by her chum&rsquo;s quip.
+&ldquo;Would acrobats use them, do you think?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_14">[14]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Not to my knowledge,&rdquo; Louise answered. &ldquo;If I
+were in your shoes I should worry about more serious
+matters than those connected with a mere silk ladder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The world is filled with serious things,&rdquo; sighed
+Penny. &ldquo;But mystery! One doesn&rsquo;t run into it every
+day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do,&rdquo; said Louise brutally. &ldquo;If a stranger
+twitches his ears twice you immediately suspect him
+of villainy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nevertheless, being of a suspicious nature won me
+a new car,&rdquo; Penny defended herself. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t forget
+Dad gave it to me for solving a mystery, for telling his
+newspaper readers what was going on <i>Behind the
+Green Door</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, your curiosity has paid dividends,&rdquo; Louise admitted
+with a laugh. &ldquo;Take for instance the time you
+trailed the <i>Vanishing Houseboat</i>, and again when you
+lowered the Kippenberg drawbridge to capture a
+boatload of crooks! Those were the days!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why dwell in the past, Lou? Now take this affair
+of the silk ladder&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid <i>you&rsquo;ll</i> have to take it,&rdquo; Louise interrupted.
+&ldquo;Do you realize it&rsquo;s nearly four o&rsquo;clock? In
+exactly ten minutes I am supposed to be at the auditorium
+for orchestra practice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lou, you can&rsquo;t desert me now,&rdquo; Penny protested
+quickly. &ldquo;How will I get Lena home? I need you to
+steer her.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_15">[15]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks, but I don&rsquo;t trust your tow rope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At least go as far as the <i>Star</i> office with me. Once
+there, maybe I can get one of the reporters to help
+me the rest of the way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, all right,&rdquo; Louise consented. &ldquo;But the <i>Star</i>
+office is my absolute limit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Deciding not to take time to telephone her father,
+Penny once more climbed into the maroon sedan,
+posting Louise behind the wheel of the coupe. At a
+cautious speed the two cars proceeded along the
+street, coming presently to a large corner building
+which housed the <i>Riverview Star</i>. No parking space
+being available on the street, Penny pulled into the
+newspaper plant&rsquo;s loading dock.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, you!&rdquo; shouted a man who was tossing stacks
+of freshly inked papers into a truck. &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t park
+that caravan in here!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny&rsquo;s eyes danced mischievously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s quite all right,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I guess you don&rsquo;t
+know who I am.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure, I do,&rdquo; the trucker grinned. &ldquo;But your dad
+gave orders that the next time you tried to pull that
+daughter-of-the-publisher stuff we were to bounce
+you! This dock is for <i>Star</i> trucks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the very idea,&rdquo; said Penny, with pretended
+injury. &ldquo;The night edition doesn&rsquo;t roll for an hour
+and I&rsquo;ll be away from here before then! Besides, this
+is a great emergency! When Dad hears about all the
+trouble I&rsquo;m in, a little matter such as this won&rsquo;t even
+ruffle him.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_16">[16]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Okay, chase along,&rdquo; the trucker returned good-naturedly.
+&ldquo;But see to it that you&rsquo;re out of here within
+an hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny bade Louise good-bye, and with plaid skirt
+swinging jauntily, crossed the cement runway to the
+rear elevator entrance. Without waiting for the cage
+to descend, she took the steps two at a time, arriving
+at the editorial floor gasping for breath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; inquired an amused voice.
+&ldquo;Going to a fire?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jerry Livingston, ace reporter for the <i>Star</i>, leaned
+indolently against the grillwork of the elevator shaft,
+his finger pressed on the signal button. He and Penny
+were friends of long standing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, hello, Jerry!&rdquo; Penny greeted him breathlessly.
+&ldquo;Guess what? I&rsquo;ve just come from Dorr Street&mdash;Kano&rsquo;s
+Curio Shop&mdash;and I had the most amazing adventure!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can imagine,&rdquo; grinned Jerry. &ldquo;If you breezed
+through the place the way you do this building, you
+must have left it in ruins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just for that, I won&rsquo;t tell you a thing, not a thing,&rdquo;
+retorted Penny. &ldquo;What sort of a mood is Dad in today?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_17">[17]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I heard him tell DeWitt that unless the news
+output improves on this sheet, he aims to fire half
+the force.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sounds like Dad on one of his bad days,&rdquo; Penny
+sighed. &ldquo;Maybe I should skip home without seeing
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trouble with the old allowance again?&rdquo; Jerry
+asked sympathetically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know the half of it. I&rsquo;m submerged so
+deeply in debt that I&rsquo;ll be an old lady before I get out,
+unless Dad comes to my rescue.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, good luck,&rdquo; chuckled Jerry. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll need
+it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Walking through the newsroom, between aisles of
+desks where busy reporters tapped on their typewriters,
+Penny paused before a door marked: <i>Anthony
+Parker, Editor</i>.</p>
+<p>Listening a moment and hearing no voices within,
+she knocked and entered. Her father, a lean, dignified
+man with tired lines about his eyes and mouth, sat
+working at his desk. He smiled as he saw his daughter,
+and waved her toward a chair.</p>
+<p>Instead, Penny perched herself on a corner of the
+desk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, I have a splendid surprise for you,&rdquo; she began
+brightly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve just accomplished a wonderful
+stroke of business!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_18">[18]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind beating about the bush,&rdquo; interrupted
+Mr. Parker. &ldquo;Shoot me the facts straight. What have
+you done this time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, your tone! I&rsquo;ve bought back my old car,
+Leaping Lena. And it only cost me a trifling sum.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker&rsquo;s chair squeaked as he whirled around.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve done <i>what</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a long story, Dad. Now don&rsquo;t think that I fail
+to appreciate the grand new car you gave me last
+winter. I love it. But between Lena and me there exists
+a deep bond of affection. Today when I saw her on
+Jake Harriman&rsquo;s lot looking so weather-beaten and unhappy&mdash;why,
+a little voice inside me whispered:
+&lsquo;Penny, why don&rsquo;t you buy her back?&rsquo; So I did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind the sentimental touches. When I gave
+you the new car I thought we were well rid of Lena.
+How much did you pay for it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lena was a marvelous bargain. Five dollars
+cash and a note for twenty more. The man said you
+could pay for it at your convenience.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very considerate of him,&rdquo; Mr. Parker remarked
+ironically. &ldquo;Now that we have three cars, and a double
+garage, where do you propose to keep Lena?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, anywhere. In the back yard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not on the lawn, young lady. And what do you
+plan to do with two cars?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_19">[19]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;The maroon one for style, and Lena when I want
+a good time. Why, Dad, she bears the autographs of
+nearly all my school friends! I should keep her as a
+souvenir, if for no other reason.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, it&rsquo;s high time you learned a few lessons in
+finance.&rdquo; Mr. Parker spoke sternly although his mouth
+twitched slightly. &ldquo;I regret that I cannot assume your
+debts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But Dad! I&rsquo;m a minor&mdash;under legal age. Isn&rsquo;t it a
+law that a father has to support his child?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A child, but not two cars. If you decide to take
+the case to court, I think any reasonable judge will
+understand my viewpoint. I repeat, the debt is yours,
+not mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How will I pay?&rdquo; asked Penny gloomily. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve already
+borrowed on my allowance for a month ahead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; said her father. &ldquo;However, with your ingenuity
+I am sure you can manage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny drew a deep breath. Argument, she realized,
+would be utterly useless. While her father might be
+mildly amused by her predicament, he never would
+change his decision.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Since you won&rsquo;t pay for Lena, I suppose it&rsquo;s useless
+to mention Mr. Kohl&rsquo;s fender,&rdquo; she said despairingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does he have one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please don&rsquo;t try to be funny, Dad. This is tragic.
+While I was towing Lena, the rope broke and smash
+went the fender of Mr. Kohl&rsquo;s slinky black limousine.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_20">[20]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Interesting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had to promise to pay for it to keep from being
+arrested. Oh, yes, and before that I acquired this little
+thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny tossed the yellow card across the desk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A parking ticket! Penny, how many times&mdash;&rdquo; Mr.
+Parker checked himself, finishing in a calm voice:
+&ldquo;This, too, is your debt. It may cost you five dollars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, you know I can&rsquo;t pay. Think how your reputation
+will be tarnished if I am sent to jail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker smiled and reached as if to take money
+from his pocket. Reconsidering, he shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know the warden well,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll arrange for
+you to be assigned to one of the better cells.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there nothing which will move you to generosity?&rdquo;
+pleaded Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Retrieving the parking ticket, Penny jammed it into
+her pocket. Before she could leave there came a rap
+on the door. In response to Mr. Parker&rsquo;s &ldquo;Come in,&rdquo;
+Mr. DeWitt, the city editor, entered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorry to bother you, Chief.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s wrong now, DeWitt?&rdquo; the publisher inquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Hilderman was taken sick a few minutes ago.
+We had to send her home in a cab.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_21">[21]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s nothing serious I hope,&rdquo; said Mr. Parker with
+concern.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A mild heart attack. She&rsquo;ll be out a week, if not
+longer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see. Be sure to have the treasurer give her full
+pay. You have someone to take her place?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the problem,&rdquo; moaned DeWitt. &ldquo;Her assistant
+is on vacation. I don&rsquo;t know where we can get
+a trained society editor on short notice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, do the best you can.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>DeWitt lingered, fingering a paper weight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The society page for the Sunday paper is only half
+finished,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;Deadline&rsquo;s in less than an
+hour. Not a chance we can pick up anyone in time to
+meet it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny spoke unexpectedly. &ldquo;Mr. DeWitt, perhaps I
+can help you. I&rsquo;m a whiz when it comes to writing
+society. Remember the Kippenberg wedding I covered?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do I?&rdquo; DeWitt&rsquo;s face relaxed into a broad grin.
+&ldquo;That was a real write-up. Say, maybe you could take
+over Miss Hilderman&rsquo;s job until we can replace her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Service is my motto.&rdquo; Penny eyed her father questioningly.
+&ldquo;It might save the <i>Star</i> from going to press
+minus a society page. How about it, Dad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It certainly would solve our problem,&rdquo; contributed
+DeWitt. &ldquo;Of course the undertaking might be too great
+a one for your daughter.&rdquo; He winked at Penny.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_22">[22]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll have no difficulty in taking over,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Parker stiffly. &ldquo;None whatsoever.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;ll start her in at once,&rdquo; DeWitt replied.
+&ldquo;Come with me, Miss Parker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At the door Penny paused and discreetly allowed
+the city editor to get beyond hearing. Then, turning
+to her father she remarked innocently:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, by the way, we overlooked one trifling detail.
+The salary!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The editor made a grimace. &ldquo;I might have expected
+this. Very well, I&rsquo;ll pay you the same as I do Miss
+Hilderman. Twenty-five a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, that would just take care of my debt to Jake
+Harriman,&rdquo; protested Penny. &ldquo;I simply can&rsquo;t do high
+pressure work without high pay. Shall we make it
+fifty a week?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you&rsquo;re holding me up?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; chuckled Penny. &ldquo;Merely using
+my ingenuity. Am I hired?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you win,&rdquo; answered Mr. Parker grimly. &ldquo;But
+see to it that you turn out good work. Otherwise, you
+soon may find yourself on the <i>Star&rsquo;s</i> inactive list.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_23">[23]</div>
+<h2 id="c3"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">3</span>
+<br /><i>SOCIETY ROUTINE</i></h2>
+<p>Penny followed City Editor DeWitt to a
+small, glass-enclosed office along the left hand wall of
+the newsroom. Miss Hilderman&rsquo;s desk was cluttered
+with sheets of copy paper which bore scribbled notations,
+items telephoned to the <i>Star</i> but not yet type-written.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There should be a date book around here somewhere,&rdquo;
+DeWitt remarked.</p>
+<p>Finally he found it in one of the desk drawers.
+Penny drew a deep breath as she scanned the long list
+of social events which must be covered for the Sunday
+page.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do the best you can,&rdquo; DeWitt said encouragingly.
+&ldquo;Work fast, but be careful of names.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The telephone bell rang. As Penny reached for the
+receiver, DeWitt retreated to his own domain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hello, Miss Hilderman?&rdquo; a feminine voice cooed,
+&ldquo;I wish to report a meeting, please.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_24">[24]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Hilderman isn&rsquo;t here this afternoon,&rdquo; replied
+Penny politely. &ldquo;I will take the item.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Gathering up paper and pencil, she slid into the revolving
+chair behind the telephone, poised for action.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she urged, &ldquo;I am ready.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a lengthy pause, and then the woman at
+the other end of the line recited as if she were reading
+from a paper:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;A meeting of the Mystical Society of Celestial
+Thought, Order of Amar, 67, will be held Tuesday
+night at eight o&rsquo;clock in the Temple, 426 Butternut
+Lane. The public is cordially invited.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What sort of society is the Order of Amar?&rdquo;
+Penny inquired curiously, taking notes. &ldquo;I never heard
+of it before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, my dear, the society is very well known,&rdquo;
+the woman replied. &ldquo;We hold our meetings regularly,
+communing with the spirits. I do hope that the item
+appears in print. So often Miss Hilderman has been
+careless about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see that the item is printed under club notices,&rdquo;
+Penny promised. &ldquo;Your name, please?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The woman had hung up the receiver, so with a
+shrug, Penny typed the item and speared it on a wire
+spindle. For the next hour she was kept busy with
+other telephone calls and the more important stories
+which had to be rushed through. Copy flowed steadily
+from her office by way of the pneumatic tube to the
+composing room.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_25">[25]</div>
+<p>Shortly after five o&rsquo;clock, DeWitt dropped in for a
+moment to praise her for her speed and accuracy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re doing all right,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;So far I&rsquo;ve only
+caught you in one mistake. Mignonette is spelled with
+a double t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This job wouldn&rsquo;t be half bad if only brides could
+learn to carry flowers with easy names,&rdquo; laughed
+Penny. &ldquo;When I get married I&rsquo;ll have violets and
+sweet peas!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>DeWitt reached for the copy on the spindle.
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s this?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;More to go?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Club notices.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The editor tore the sheet from the wire, reading it
+as he walked toward the door. Abruptly, he paused
+and turned toward her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Parker, this can&rsquo;t go through.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what is wrong?&rdquo; Penny asked in surprise.
+&ldquo;Have I made another error in spelling?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>DeWitt tore off the lead item and tossed it on her
+desk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s this meeting of the so-called Mystical Society
+of Celestial Thought. The <i>Star</i> never runs stuff like
+that, not even as a paid advertisement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought it was a regular lodge meeting, Mr. DeWitt.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_26">[26]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing of the sort. Merely a free advertisement
+for a group of mediums and charlatans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I didn&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; murmured Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These meetings have only one purpose,&rdquo; Mr. DeWitt
+resumed. &ldquo;To lure victims who later may be
+fleeced of their money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if that is so, why don&rsquo;t police close up the
+place?&rdquo; Penny demanded. &ldquo;Why doesn&rsquo;t the <i>Star</i> run
+an expos&eacute; story?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because evidence isn&rsquo;t easy to get. The meetings
+usually are well within the law. Whenever a police
+detective or a reporter attends, the services are decorous.
+But they provide the mediums with a list of
+suckers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny would have asked DeWitt for additional information
+had not the city editor walked hurriedly
+away. Scrambling the item into a ball, she tossed it
+into the waste paper basket. Then upon second
+thought she retrieved it and carefully smoothed the
+paper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps, I&rsquo;ll drop around at the Temple sometime
+just to see what it is like,&rdquo; she decided, placing
+the item in her pocket. &ldquo;It would be interesting to
+learn what is going on there.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_27">[27]</div>
+<p>For the next half hour Penny had no time to think
+of the Celestial Temple. However, at twenty minutes
+before six, when her father came into the office, she
+was well ahead of her work.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hello, Penny,&rdquo; he greeted her. &ldquo;How do you like
+your new job?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fine and dandy. Only routine items rather cramp
+one&rsquo;s style. Now if I were a regular reporter instead of
+a society editor, I know several stories which would
+be my dish!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For instance?&rdquo; inquired Mr. Parker, smiling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;First, there&rsquo;s an Oriental Shop on Dorr Street that
+I should investigate. The Japanese owner acted very
+mysteriously today when I went there. Louise and I
+saw him making a silk ladder, and he refused to reveal
+its purpose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A silk ladder?&rdquo; repeated Mr. Parker. &ldquo;Odd perhaps,
+but hardly worthy of a news story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, I only wish you had <i>seen</i> that old Japanese&mdash;the
+sinister way he looked at me. Oh, he&rsquo;s guilty of
+some crime. I feel it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Star</i> requires facts, not fancy or emotion,&rdquo;
+Mr. Parker rejoined. &ldquo;Better devote your talents to
+routine society items if you expect to remain on my
+payroll.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny took the announcement of the Celestial
+Thought meeting from her pocket and offered it to
+the publisher.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_28">[28]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s one which might be interesting,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;How about assigning me to it after I get this society
+job in hand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker read the item and his eyes blazed with
+anger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know what this means, Penny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. DeWitt told me a little about the Celestial
+Temple society. He said the paper never ran such
+items.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not! Why, I should like nothing better
+than to see the entire outfit driven out of town! Riverview
+is honeycombed with mediums, fortune tellers
+and faith healers!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps they mean no harm, Dad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll grant there may be a small number of persons
+who honestly try to communicate with the spirit
+world,&rdquo; Mr. Parker replied. &ldquo;My concern is not with
+them, but with a group of professional mediums who
+lately have invaded the city. Charlatans, crooks&mdash;the
+entire lot!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you write an editorial about it?&rdquo; Penny
+suggested.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An editorial! I am seriously tempted to start a
+vigorous campaign, but the trouble is, the police cannot
+be depended upon to cooperate actively.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Dad?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_29">[29]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Because experience has proven that such campaigns
+are not often successful. Evidence is hard to gain. If
+one place is closed up, others open in different sections
+of the city. The mediums and seers operate from
+dozens of private homes. When the police stage raids
+they acquire no evidence, and only succeed in making
+the department look ridiculous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet the mediums continue to fleece the public?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The more gullible strata of it. Until recent months
+the situation here has been no worse than in other
+cities of comparable size. Lately an increasing number
+of charlatans has moved in on us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you start a campaign, Dad?&rdquo; Penny
+urged. &ldquo;You would be doing the public a worthwhile
+service.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I hesitate to start something which I may be
+unable to finish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At least the public deserves to be warned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unfortunately, Penny, many persons would take
+the attitude that the <i>Star</i> was persecuting sincere
+spiritualists. A campaign must be based on absolute
+evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t it be obtained?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not without great difficulty. These mediums are
+a clever lot, Penny. They prey upon the superstitions
+of their intended victims.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you would let me work on the story, Dad.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_30">[30]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Penny,&rdquo; responded her father. &ldquo;You attend to
+your society and allow DeWitt to worry about the
+Celestial Temple crowd. Even if I should launch a
+campaign, I couldn&rsquo;t allow you to become mixed up in
+the affair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The telephone bell jingled. With a tired sigh, Penny
+reached for the receiver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Society desk,&rdquo; she said mechanically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am trying to trace Mr. Parker,&rdquo; informed the
+office exchange operator. &ldquo;Is he with you, Miss
+Parker?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Telephone, Dad,&rdquo; said Penny, offering him the receiver.</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker waited a moment for another connection
+to be made. Then Penny heard him say:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s you, Mrs. Weems? What&rsquo;s that? Repeat
+it, please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From her father&rsquo;s tone, Penny felt certain that
+something had gone wrong at home. She arose, waiting
+anxiously.</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker clicked the receiver several times. &ldquo;Apparently,
+Mrs. Weems hung up,&rdquo; he commented.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is anything the matter, Dad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; Mr. Parker admitted, his face
+troubled. &ldquo;Mrs. Weems seemed very excited. She requested
+me to come home as soon as possible. Then
+the connection was broken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you try to reach her again?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_31">[31]</div>
+<p>Mr. Parker placed an out-going call, but after ten
+minutes the operator reported that she was unable to
+contact the housekeeper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems never would have telephoned if
+something unusual hadn&rsquo;t happened,&rdquo; Penny declared
+uneasily. &ldquo;Perhaps, she&rsquo;s injured herself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think of such unpleasant things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something dreadful must have happened,&rdquo; Penny
+insisted. &ldquo;Otherwise, why doesn&rsquo;t she answer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re only wasting time in idle speculation,&rdquo; Mr.
+Parker said crisply. &ldquo;Get your things, Penny. We&rsquo;ll
+start home at once!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_32">[32]</div>
+<h2 id="c4"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">4</span>
+<br /><i>A TURN OF FORTUNE</i></h2>
+<p>Penny immediately locked her desk and
+gathered up hat and gloves. She was hard pressed to
+keep pace with her father as they hastened to the
+elevator.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By the way, you have your car downstairs?&rdquo; the
+publisher inquired absently. He seldom drove his own
+automobile to the office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a memory you have, Dad!&rdquo; chuckled Penny.
+&ldquo;Yes, I have all two of them! Parked in the loading
+dock for convenience.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, haven&rsquo;t I told you a dozen times&mdash;&rdquo; Mr.
+Parker began, only to check himself. &ldquo;Well, it will
+save us time now. However, we may discuss a few
+matters when we get home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The elevator shot them down to the first floor.
+Leaping Lena and the maroon sedan remained in the
+loading dock with a string of <i>Star</i> paper trucks blocking
+a portion of the street.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_33">[33]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Hey, sister,&rdquo; a trucker called angrily to Penny.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s time you&rsquo;re getting these cars out of here.&rdquo; He
+broke off as he recognized Mr. Parker and faded behind
+one of the trucks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, do you mind steering Lena?&rdquo; Penny asked
+demurely. &ldquo;We can&rsquo;t leave her here. You can see for
+yourself that she seems to be blocking traffic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I see,&rdquo; Mr. Parker responded grimly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course, if you would feel more dignified driving
+the sedan&mdash;&ldquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me have the keys,&rdquo; the publisher interrupted.
+&ldquo;The important thing is to get home without delay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny became sober, and slid into her place at the
+wheel of Leaping Lena. Amid the smiles of the truckers,
+Mr. Parker drove the two cars out of the dock.</p>
+<p>Once underway, the caravan made reckless progress
+through rush-hour traffic. More than once Penny
+whispered a prayer as Lena swayed around a corner,
+missing other cars by scant inches.</p>
+<p>Presently the two automobiles drew up before a
+pleasant, tree-shaded home built upon a high terrace
+overlooking a winding river. Penny and her father
+alighted, walking hurriedly toward the front porch.</p>
+<p>The door stood open and from within came the reassuring
+howl of a radio turned too high.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing so very serious can have happened,&rdquo; remarked
+Penny. &ldquo;Otherwise, Mrs. Weems wouldn&rsquo;t
+have that thing going full blast.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_34">[34]</div>
+<p>At the sound of footsteps, the housekeeper herself
+came into the living room from the kitchen. Her
+plump face was unusually animated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope you didn&rsquo;t mind because I telephoned the
+office, Mr. Parker,&rdquo; she began apologetically. &ldquo;I was
+so excited, I just did it before I stopped to think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny and I were nearly ready to start home in
+any case, Mrs. Weems. Has anything gone wrong
+here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, Mr. Parker. It was the telegram.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Telegram? One for me, you mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my own.&rdquo; The housekeeper drew a yellow
+paper from the pocket of her apron, offering it to the
+publisher. &ldquo;My Cousin David died out in Montana,&rdquo;
+she explained. &ldquo;The funeral was last Saturday.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s too bad,&rdquo; remarked Penny sympathetically.
+And then she added: &ldquo;Only you don&rsquo;t look particularly
+sad, Mrs. Weems. How much did he leave you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny! You say such shocking things! I never met
+Cousin David but once in my life. He was a kind, good
+man and I only wish I had written to him more often.
+I never dreamed he would remember me in his will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he did leave you money!&rdquo; exclaimed Penny
+triumphantly. &ldquo;How much does the telegram say,
+Dad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may as well tell her, Mr. Parker,&rdquo; sighed the
+housekeeper. &ldquo;She&rsquo;ll give me no peace until she learns
+every detail.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_35">[35]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;This message which is from a Montana lawyer
+mentions six thousand dollars,&rdquo; returned the publisher.
+&ldquo;Apparently, the money is to be turned over without
+legal delay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mrs. Weems, you&rsquo;re an heiress!&rdquo; cried
+Penny admiringly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t believe it&rsquo;s true,&rdquo; murmured Mrs. Weems.
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t think there&rsquo;s any mistake, Mr. Parker? It
+would be too cruel if someone had sent the message as
+a joke.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before returning the telegram to the housekeeper,
+Mr. Parker switched off the radio.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This message appears to be authentic,&rdquo; he declared.
+&ldquo;My congratulations upon your good fortune.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What will you do with all your money?&rdquo; inquired
+Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo; The housekeeper sank into a
+chair, her eyes fastening dreamily on a far wall. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+always wanted to travel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny and her father exchanged a quick, alarmed
+glance. Mrs. Weems had been in charge of the household
+for so many years that they could not imagine
+living without her, should she decide to leave. During
+her brief, infrequent vacations, the house always degenerated
+into a disgrace of dust and misplaced furniture,
+and meals were never served at regular hours.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_36">[36]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;The oceans are very unsafe, Mrs. Weems,&rdquo; discouraged
+Penny. &ldquo;Wars and submarines and things.
+Surely you wouldn&rsquo;t dare travel now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I mean in the United States,&rdquo; replied the
+housekeeper. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always wanted to go out West.
+They say the Grand Canyon is so pretty it takes your
+breath away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems, you have worked for us long and
+faithfully and deserve a rest,&rdquo; said Mr. Parker, trying
+to speak heartily. &ldquo;Now if you would enjoy a trip,
+Penny and I will get along somehow for two or three
+weeks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, if I go, I&rsquo;ll stay the entire summer.&rdquo; The
+housekeeper hesitated, then added: &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve enjoyed
+working here, Mr. Parker, but doing the same thing
+year after year gets tiresome. Often I&rsquo;ve said to myself
+that if I had a little money I would retire and take
+life easy for the rest of my days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mrs. Weems, you&rsquo;re only forty-eight!&rdquo; protested
+Penny. &ldquo;You would be unhappy if you didn&rsquo;t
+have any work to do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At least, I wouldn&rsquo;t mind trying it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Such a change as you contemplate should be considered
+carefully,&rdquo; contributed Mr. Parker. &ldquo;While
+six thousand seems a large sum it would not last long
+if one had no other income.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before Mrs. Weems could reply, a strong odor of
+burning food permeated the room.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_37">[37]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;The roast!&rdquo; exclaimed the housekeeper. &ldquo;I forgot
+it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny rushed ahead of her to the kitchen. As she
+jerked open the oven door, out poured a great cloud
+of smoke. Seizing a holder, she rescued the meat, and
+seeing at a glance that it was burned to a crisp, carried
+the pan outdoors.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What will the neighbors say?&rdquo; Mrs. Weems
+moaned. &ldquo;I never did a thing like that before. It&rsquo;s just
+that I am so excited I can&rsquo;t think what I am doing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you mind,&rdquo; laughed Penny. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get dinner
+tonight. You entertain Dad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With difficulty she persuaded the housekeeper to
+abandon the kitchen. Left to herself, she opened a
+can of cold meat, a can of corn, a can of peaches, and
+with a salad already prepared, speedily announced the
+meal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Parker, I truly am ashamed&mdash;&rdquo; Mrs. Weems
+began.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now don&rsquo;t apologize for my cooking,&rdquo; broke in
+Penny. &ldquo;Quantity before quality is my motto. Anyway,
+if you are leaving, Dad will have to accustom
+himself to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll hide the can opener,&rdquo; said Mr. Parker.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a good idea, Dad.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_38">[38]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Before I go, I&rsquo;ll try to teach Penny a little more
+about cooking,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems said uncomfortably.
+&ldquo;Of course, you&rsquo;ll have no difficulty in getting someone
+efficient to take my place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one can take your place,&rdquo; declared Penny. &ldquo;If
+you leave, Dad and I will go to wrack and ruin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a pair when you&rsquo;re left to yourselves,&rdquo;
+Mrs. Weems sighed. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the one thing which
+makes me hesitate. Penny needs someone to keep her
+in check.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An inexperienced person would be putty in my
+hands,&rdquo; declared Penny. &ldquo;You may as well decide to
+stay, Mrs. Weems.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what to do. I&rsquo;ve planned on this trip
+for years. Now that it is possible, I feel I can&rsquo;t give it
+up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny and Mr. Parker regarded each other across
+the table, and immediately changed the subject. Not
+until that moment had they actually believed that the
+housekeeper was serious about leaving Riverview.
+Somehow they had never contemplated a future without
+Mrs. Weems.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I happen to have two complimentary tickets to
+a show at the Rialto,&rdquo; Mr. Parker said offhand. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+be tied up with a meeting tonight, but you folks might
+enjoy going.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shall we, Mrs. Weems?&rdquo; inquired Penny.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_39">[39]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; responded the housekeeper, &ldquo;but I
+doubt if I could sit still tonight. I thought I would run
+over to see Mrs. Hodges after dinner. She&rsquo;ll be pleased
+to learn about my inheritance, I know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A friend of yours?&rdquo; asked Mr. Parker.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Penny and I have been acquainted with her
+for years. She lives on Christopher Street.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps this is none of my affair, Mrs. Weems.
+However, my advice to you is not to tell many persons
+about your inheritance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mrs. Hodges is to be trusted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure of it, Mrs. Weems. I refer to strangers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be careful,&rdquo; the housekeeper promised. &ldquo;No
+one ever will get that money away from me once I
+have it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny helped with the dishes, and then as her father
+was leaving the house, asked him if she might have the
+two theatre tickets.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Since Mrs. Weems doesn&rsquo;t care to go, I&rsquo;ll invite
+Louise,&rdquo; she explained.</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker gave her the tickets. Making certain that
+the housekeeper was upstairs, he spoke in a low tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, Mrs. Weems is serious about leaving us.
+You must try to dissuade her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can I do, Dad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you usually have a few ideas in the old filing
+cabinet. Can&rsquo;t you think of something?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_40">[40]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do my best,&rdquo; Penny said with a twinkle. &ldquo;We
+can&rsquo;t let an inheritance take Mrs. Weems from us,
+that&rsquo;s certain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After her father had gone, Penny telephoned
+Louise, agreeing to meet her chum at the entrance of
+the Rialto. Arriving a few minutes early, she idly
+watched various cars unloading their passengers at the
+theatre.</p>
+<p>Presently a long black limousine which Penny
+recognized drew up at the curb. The chauffeur opened
+the door. Mr. Kohl and his wife stepped to the pavement.
+Observing the girl, they paused to chat with her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see you have the new fender installed on your
+car, Mr. Kohl,&rdquo; Penny remarked with a grin. &ldquo;May I
+ask how much I owe the garageman?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The sum was trifling,&rdquo; responded the banker.
+&ldquo;Twelve dollars and forty cents to be exact. I may
+as well take care of it myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I insist,&rdquo; said Penny, wincing inwardly. &ldquo;You
+see, I am one of the <i>Star&rsquo;s</i> highly paid executives now.
+I write society in Miss Hilderman&rsquo;s absence and Dad
+gives me a salary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, really,&rdquo; remarked Mrs. Kohl with interest.
+&ldquo;We are giving a dinner for eight tomorrow night.
+You might like to mention it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, yes,&rdquo; said Penny eagerly.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_41">[41]</div>
+<p>Obtaining complete details, she jotted notes on the
+back of an envelope. Mrs. Kohl, at Penny&rsquo;s request,
+was able to recall several important parties which had
+been held that week, providing material for nearly
+a half-column of society.</p>
+<p>After the Kohls had entered the theatre, Penny
+turned to glance at the black limousine which was
+pulling away from the curb. A short distance away
+stood a young man who likewise appeared to be
+watching the car. He wore a gray suit and a gray felt
+hat pulled unnaturally low over his eyes as if to shield
+his face.</p>
+<p>As Penny watched, the young man jotted something
+down on a piece of paper. His gaze remained fixed
+upon the Kohl limousine which was moving slowly
+down the street toward a parking lot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, that&rsquo;s odd!&rdquo; thought Penny. &ldquo;I do believe
+he noted down the car license number! And perhaps
+for no good purpose.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_42">[42]</div>
+<h2 id="c5"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">5</span>
+<br /><i>THE MAN IN GRAY</i></h2>
+<p>Deciding that the matter should be brought to
+Mr. Kohl&rsquo;s attention, Penny looked quickly into the
+crowded theatre lobby. The banker and his wife no
+longer were to be seen.</p>
+<p>Turning once more, the girl saw that the young
+man in gray had also disappeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now where did he go?&rdquo; thought Penny. &ldquo;He must
+have slipped into the alley. I wish I knew who he was
+and why he wrote down that car license number.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Curious to learn what had become of the man, she
+walked to the entrance of the alley. At its far end she
+could barely distinguish a shadowy figure which soon
+merged into the black of the starless night.</p>
+<p>Penny was lost in thought when someone touched
+her arm. Whirling, she found herself facing Louise
+Sidell.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, hello, Lou,&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;You startled me.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_43">[43]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorry to have kept you waiting,&rdquo; apologized
+Louise. &ldquo;I missed my bus. May I ask what you find
+of such interest in this alley?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was looking for a man. He&rsquo;s disappeared now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny told Louise what she had observed, mentioning
+that in her opinion the man might be a car
+thief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard that crooks spot cars ahead of time and
+then steal them,&rdquo; she declared. &ldquo;I think I should have
+Mr. Kohl paged in the theatre, and tell him about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll make yourself appear ridiculous if you do,&rdquo;
+Louise discouraged her. &ldquo;The man may not have taken
+down the license number at all. Even if he did, his
+purpose could have been a legitimate one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why did he slip down the alley?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s merely a short-cut to another street, isn&rsquo;t it?
+Penny, your imagination simply works at high speed
+twenty-four hours of the day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, all right,&rdquo; said Penny with a shrug. &ldquo;But if
+Mr. Kohl&rsquo;s car is stolen, don&rsquo;t blame me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t be,&rdquo; laughed Louise, linking arms with
+her chum. &ldquo;Not with a chauffeur at the wheel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Entering the theatre, the girls were escorted to their
+seats only a few minutes before the lights were lowered.
+Penny glanced over the audience but failed to see
+either Mr. Kohl or his wife. The curtain went up, and
+as the entertainment began, she dismissed all else from
+her mind.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_44">[44]</div>
+<p>The show ended shortly before eleven and the girls
+mingled with the crowd which filed from the theatre.
+Penny watched for Mr. and Mrs. Kohl but did not see
+them. As she walked with Louise toward the bus stop
+she spoke of her new duties as society editor of the
+<i>Star</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lou,&rdquo; she asked abruptly, &ldquo;do you mind going
+home alone?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, no. Where are you taking yourself?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the <i>Star</i> office, if you don&rsquo;t mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At this time of night?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have a few notes I should type. Unfinished work
+always makes me nervous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You, nervous!&rdquo; Louise scoffed. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet you want
+to see Jerry Livingston!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No such thing,&rdquo; denied Penny indignantly. &ldquo;Jerry
+doesn&rsquo;t work on the night force unless he&rsquo;s assigned to
+extra duty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you have something besides work on your
+mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come along with me, Suspicious, and I&rsquo;ll prove it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, thanks,&rdquo; declined Louise. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s home and bed
+for me. You run along.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girls separated, Penny walking three blocks to
+the <i>Star</i> building. The advertising office was dark,
+but blue-white lights glowed weirdly from the composing
+room. Only a skeleton night staff occupied the
+newsroom.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_45">[45]</div>
+<p>Without attracting attention, Penny entered her
+own office. For an hour she worked steadily, writing
+copy, and experimenting with various types of
+make-up to be used on Monday&rsquo;s page.</p>
+<p>The door creaked. Glancing up, Penny momentarily
+was startled to see a large, grotesque shadow of
+a man moving across the glass panel. However, before
+she actually could be afraid, Jerry Livingston stepped
+into the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s you!&rdquo; she laughed in relief. &ldquo;I thought it
+was against your principles to work overtime.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The reporter slumped into a chair, and picking up
+a sheet of copy paper, began to read what Penny had
+composed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not working,&rdquo; he replied absently. &ldquo;Just killing
+time.&rdquo; With a yawn he tossed the paper on the desk
+again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is my stuff that bad?&rdquo; inquired Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not bad at all. Better than Miss Hilderman writes.
+But society always gives me a pain. Not worthy of
+your talents, Penny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you would tell Dad that, Jerry. I&rsquo;d love to
+work on a big story again&mdash;one that would rock
+Riverview on its foundation!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_46">[46]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I could bear up under a little excitement myself,
+Penny. Ever since you broke the Green Door yarn,
+this sheet has been as dead as an Egyptian tomb.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Things may pick up soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Meaning&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad is thinking rather seriously of launching a
+drive against an organized group of mediums.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I hear,&rdquo; nodded Jerry. &ldquo;You know, for a long
+while I&rsquo;ve thought that a clever reporter might be
+able to dig up some evidence at the Celestial Temple.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you know about the place?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been there several times.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are the meetings like, Jerry?&rdquo; Penny asked
+eagerly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Similar to a church musical service. At least everything
+was dignified when I was there. But I sure had
+a feeling that the lid was about to blow off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you were suspected of being a <i>Star</i> reporter,
+Jerry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, undoubtedly. I could tell that by the way folks
+stared at me. The only person who would have a
+chance to get real evidence would be someone unknown
+as a reporter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish Dad would let me try it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Jerry flatly. &ldquo;The Celestial Temple
+is no place for a little girl like you.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_47">[47]</div>
+<p>Penny did not reply as she lowered her typewriter
+into the cavity of the desk. She was thinking, however,
+that if Louise could be persuaded to accompany her,
+she would investigate the Celestial Temple at the first
+opportunity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take you home,&rdquo; Jerry offered as Penny
+reached for her hat.</p>
+<p>The night was a warm, mellow one in early June,
+marred only by dark clouds which scudded overhead,
+threatening rain. Deciding to walk, Penny and Jerry
+crossed the park to Oakdale Drive where many of
+Riverview&rsquo;s most expensive homes had been built.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t Mr. Kohl live on this street?&rdquo; Penny presently
+asked her escort.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;in a large stone apartment
+building. I&rsquo;ll point it out when we get there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They walked for a time in silence. Then Penny
+found herself telling about the afternoon meeting with
+Mr. Kohl which had led her to Kano&rsquo;s Curio Shop.
+She spoke, too, of the silken ladder which had so
+aroused her speculation. Jerry listened with polite interest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You and Louise shouldn&rsquo;t have chased around
+Dorr Street alone,&rdquo; he said severely. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a bad district.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it was safe enough, Jerry. I&rsquo;d like to go back
+there. I can&rsquo;t help being curious about that strange
+ladder which the old Japanese man was sewing.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_48">[48]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt if there&rsquo;s a story connected with it. The
+Japanese make any number of curious articles of silk,
+you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But a ladder, Jerry! What purpose could it serve?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For one thing it would be more convenient to
+carry than the ordinary type.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One couldn&rsquo;t stand it against a wall or use it in the
+ordinary way, Jerry. I asked the Japanese about it
+but he refused to answer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He may not have understood you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he understood, all right. Do you know what I
+think? He was afraid I might discover something
+which would involve him with the police!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better forget the Kano Curio Shop,&rdquo; Jerry said
+tolerantly. &ldquo;I repeat, Dorr Street is no place for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m supposed to forget the Celestial Temple,
+too,&rdquo; grumbled Penny. &ldquo;Oh, I see you grinned behind
+your hand! Well, Mr. Livingston, let me tell you&mdash;&ldquo;</p>
+<p>She paused, and Jerry&rsquo;s hand tightened on her own.
+Unmistakably, both had heard a muffled scream. The
+cry seemed to have come from one of several large
+brick and stone buildings only a short distance ahead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was that?&rdquo; Penny asked in a low tone.
+&ldquo;Someone calling for help?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It sure sounded like it!&rdquo; exclaimed Jerry. &ldquo;Come
+on, Penny! Let&rsquo;s find out what&rsquo;s going on here!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_49">[49]</div>
+<h2 id="c6"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">6</span>
+<br /><i>AN APARTMENT BURGLARY</i></h2>
+<p>Together Penny and Jerry ran down the
+street, their eyes raised to the unevenly lighted windows
+of the separate apartment houses. They were
+uncertain as to the building from which the cry had
+come.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the front door of the corner dwelling
+swung open, and a young woman in a maid&rsquo;s uniform
+ran toward them.</p>
+<p>Jerry, ever alert for a story of interest to the <i>Star</i>,
+neatly blocked the sidewalk. Of necessity the girl
+halted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get a policeman, quick!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Mr. Kohl&rsquo;s
+apartment has been robbed!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Kohl&mdash;the banker?&rdquo; demanded Penny,
+scarcely believing her ears.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_50">[50]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; the maid said in agitation. &ldquo;Jewels, silverware,
+everything has been taken! The telephone
+wire was cut, too! Oh, tell me where I&rsquo;ll find a policeman!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get one for you,&rdquo; offered Jerry.</p>
+<p>The information that it was Mr. Kohl&rsquo;s house which
+had been burglarized dumbfounded Penny. As the reporter
+darted away to summon help, she showered
+questions upon the distraught maid.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know yet how much has been taken,&rdquo; the
+girl told her excitedly. &ldquo;The rooms look as if a cyclone
+had swept through them! Oh, what will the Kohls say
+when they learn about it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. and Mrs. Kohl aren&rsquo;t home yet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, they went to the theatre. They must have
+stopped at a restaurant afterwards. When they hear
+of this, I&rsquo;ll lose my job.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps not,&rdquo; said Penny kindly. &ldquo;Surely you
+weren&rsquo;t to blame for the burglary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll think so,&rdquo; the maid responded gloomily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Kohl. Perhaps,
+if I speak a good word for you it may help.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt it,&rdquo; the girl responded. &ldquo;I was supposed to
+have stayed at the apartment the entire evening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you didn&rsquo;t?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I went to a picture show.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That does throw a different light on the matter,&rdquo;
+commented Penny.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_51">[51]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think it would make any difference. I intended
+to get here ahead of the Kohls.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The robbery occurred while you were away?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. As soon as I opened the door I knew what had
+happened! Oh, I&rsquo;ll lose my job all right unless I can
+think up a good story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t lie if I were you,&rdquo; advised Penny. &ldquo;The
+police are certain to break down your story. In any
+case, you owe it to yourself and your employers to
+tell the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A misty rain had started to fall. The maid, who was
+without a wrap, shivered, yet made no move to re-enter
+the building. Overhead, all along the dark expanse
+of apartment wall, lights were being turned on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am afraid your scream aroused nearly everyone
+in the building,&rdquo; said Penny. &ldquo;If I were in your place
+I would return to the Kohl apartment and not answer
+many questions until the police arrive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you stay with me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gladly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The apartment door had slammed shut and locked
+with the night latch. Fortunately the maid had a key
+with her so it was not necessary to ring for the janitor.
+Ignoring the persons who had gathered in the hall,
+they took an automatic lift to the third floor, letting
+themselves into the Kohl suite.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_52">[52]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;This is the way I found it,&rdquo; said the maid.</p>
+<p>She switched on a light, revealing a living room entirely
+bare of rugs. Where three small Oriental rugs
+had been placed, only rectangular rims of dirt remained
+to mark their outlines.</p>
+<p>Beyond, in the dining room with its massive carved
+furniture, the contents of a buffet had been emptied
+on the floor. Several pieces of china lay in fragments.
+A corner cupboard had been stripped, save for a vase
+and an ebony elephant with a broken tusk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The wall cabinet was filled with rare antiques,&rdquo;
+disclosed the maid. &ldquo;Mrs. Kohl has collected Early
+American silver for many years. Some of the pieces
+she considered priceless.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The bedrooms were in less disorder. However, bureau
+drawers had been overturned, and jewel cases
+looted of everything save the most trivial articles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Kohl&rsquo;s pearls are gone, and her diamond bracelet,&rdquo;
+the maid informed, picking up the empty jewel
+box. &ldquo;I am pretty sure she didn&rsquo;t wear them to the
+theatre.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t touch anything if I were you,&rdquo; advised
+Penny. &ldquo;Fingerprints.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The maid dropped the case. &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;I
+never thought of that! Do you think the police will
+blame me for the robbery?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_53">[53]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Not if you tell them the truth. It surely will be unwise
+to try to hide anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t hold anything back,&rdquo; the maid promised.
+&ldquo;It happened just like I said. After Mr. and Mrs. Kohl
+left I went to a picture show.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alone?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With my girl friend. After the show we had a soda
+together, and then she went home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What time did you get here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only a minute or two before I called for help. I
+tried the telephone first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you summon the janitor?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never thought of that. I was so excited I ran outside
+hoping to find a policeman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny nodded and, returning to the living room,
+satisfied herself that the telephone wires actually had
+been cut.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t notice anyone in the halls as you went
+downstairs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one. Old Mr. Veely was on the lower floor
+when I came from the show, but he&rsquo;s lived here for
+seven years. I don&rsquo;t see how the burglar got into the
+apartment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was wondering about that myself. You&rsquo;re quite
+sure you locked the suite door?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_54">[54]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, I know I did,&rdquo; the maid said emphatically.
+&ldquo;And it isn&rsquo;t possible to get into the building without
+a key. Otherwise, the janitor must be called.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny walked thoughtfully to the living room window.
+The apartment stood fully thirty-five feet from
+a neighboring building, with the space between much
+too wide to be spanned. Below, the alley was deserted,
+and no fire escape ascended from it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The burglar couldn&rsquo;t have entered that way,&rdquo; declared
+the maid. &ldquo;He must have had his own key.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before Penny could respond, a sharp knock sounded
+on the door. The servant girl turned to open it. However,
+instead of the anticipated police, the apartment
+janitor, George Bailey, peered into the disordered
+room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I heard someone scream a minute or so ago,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;Some of the tenants thought it came from this
+apartment. Maybe they were mistaken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no mistake,&rdquo; spoke Penny from across the
+room. &ldquo;The Kohls have been robbed. Will you please
+come inside and close the door?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Robbed! You don&rsquo;t say!&rdquo; The janitor stared with
+alarmed interest. &ldquo;When did it happen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny allowed the maid to tell what had occurred,
+adding no information of her own. When there came
+a lull in the excited flow of words, she said quietly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Bailey, do you mind answering a few questions?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_55">[55]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why should I?&rdquo; the janitor countered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell
+you right now I know nothing about this. I&rsquo;ve attended
+strictly to my duties. It&rsquo;s not my lookout if
+tenants leave their suite doors unlocked.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one is blaming you,&rdquo; Penny assured him. &ldquo;I
+merely thought you might contribute to a solution of
+the burglary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know a thing about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t let anyone into the apartment building
+tonight?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a soul. I locked the service door at six o&rsquo;clock,
+too. Now let me ask this: Who are you, and how did
+you get in here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s fair enough,&rdquo; smiled Penny. She told her
+name, explained that she was an acquaintance of the
+Kohls, and had been summoned by the maid.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please don&rsquo;t think that I am trying to play detective,&rdquo;
+she added. &ldquo;I ask these questions in the hope of
+gaining information for my father&rsquo;s paper, the <i>Star</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it looks to me as if it was an inside job,&rdquo; the
+janitor replied, mollified. &ldquo;Come to think of it though,
+I&rsquo;ve seen a suspicious-acting fellow hanging around
+the building.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean tonight?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, several days ago. He stayed on the other side
+of the street and kept watching the doorway.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did he look like, Mr. Bailey?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_56">[56]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t remember. He was just an average
+young man in a gray overcoat and hat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gray?&rdquo; repeated Penny alertly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It may have been light blue. I didn&rsquo;t pay much attention.
+At the time I sized up the fellow as a detective.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny had no opportunity to ask additional questions
+for just then voices were heard in the hallway.
+As she opened the door, Jerry Livingston, followed by
+a policeman, came toward her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Learn anything?&rdquo; the reporter asked softly in her
+ear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little,&rdquo; answered Penny. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s see how much
+the officer turns up before I go into my song and
+dance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Making a routine inspection of the rooms, the police
+questioned both the maid and the janitor. From an
+elderly lady who occupied the adjoining suite he
+gleaned information that the Kohls&rsquo; telephone had
+rung steadily for fifteen minutes during the early evening
+hours.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What time was that?&rdquo; interposed Penny.</p>
+<p>The policeman gazed at her with sharp disapproval.
+&ldquo;Please,&rdquo; he requested with exaggerated politeness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorry,&rdquo; apologized Penny, fading into the background.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It rang about eight o&rsquo;clock,&rdquo; the old lady revealed.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_57">[57]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;The information is not significant,&rdquo; said the officer,
+glancing again at Penny.</p>
+<p>She started to speak, then bit her lip, remaining
+silent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sister, what&rsquo;s on your mind?&rdquo; he demanded
+abruptly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me, officer, but I think the information does
+have importance. Couldn&rsquo;t it mean that the crooks,
+whoever they were, telephoned the apartment to make
+certain it was deserted before breaking in?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Possibly,&rdquo; conceded the policeman. His frown discouraged
+her. &ldquo;Any other theories?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Penny shortly.</p>
+<p>The policeman began to herd the tenants into the
+hall. For a moment he paid no attention to Penny and
+Jerry, who with the maid were permitted to remain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never try to show up a policeman, even if he is a
+stuffed shirt,&rdquo; remarked the reporter softly. &ldquo;It gets
+you nowhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The door closed and the officer faced the pair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now young lady,&rdquo; he said, quite pleasantly. &ldquo;What
+do you know about this burglary? I&rsquo;ll be very glad to
+listen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t really know a thing,&rdquo; admitted Penny. &ldquo;But
+here&rsquo;s a little clue which you may be able to interpret.
+I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_58">[58]</div>
+<p>Leading the policeman to the window, she started to
+raise the sash. The officer stopped her, performing the
+act himself, his hand protected by a handkerchief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is your clue,&rdquo; said Penny.</p>
+<p>She indicated two freshly made gashes on the window
+ledge. Separated by possibly a foot of space, they
+clearly had been made by a hook or sharp instrument
+which had dug deeply into the wood.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_59">[59]</div>
+<h2 id="c7"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">7</span>
+<br /><i>MARK OF THE IRON HOOK</i></h2>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you think of it?&rdquo; Penny asked as the
+officer studied the marks in silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d say they were made by something which
+hooked over the ledge,&rdquo; the policeman replied. &ldquo;Possibly
+a ladder with curving irons.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jerry gazed down over the window ledge into the
+dark alley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No ordinary ladder could reach this high,&rdquo; he commented.
+&ldquo;Raising an extension would be quite a problem,
+too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Kohl maid timidly approached the window,
+gazing at the two deep gashes with interest. Asked by
+the policeman if she ever had noticed them before, she
+shook her head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, sir. They must have been made tonight.
+I know they weren&rsquo;t there this afternoon when I
+dusted the window sills.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_60">[60]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Incredible as it seems, the thief came through this
+window,&rdquo; decided the policeman. &ldquo;How he did it is
+for the detectives at Central Station to figure out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Explaining that the rooms must not be disturbed until
+Identification Bureau men had made complete
+fingerprint records, the officer locked Penny, Jerry
+and the maid outside the suite. He then went to a
+nearby apartment to telephone his report.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe this is an ordinary burglary, but it doesn&rsquo;t
+look that way to me,&rdquo; remarked Jerry as he and Penny
+went down the stairway.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In any case, the story should be front page copy.
+Anything the Kohls do is news in Riverview.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How high would you estimate the loss?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I couldn&rsquo;t guess, Jerry. Thousands of dollars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Passing groups of tenants who cluttered the hallway
+excitedly discussing the burglary, they evaded questioners
+and reached the street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jerry,&rdquo; said Penny suddenly, &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mention this
+to the policeman because he seemed to resent my
+opinions. But it occurred to me that I may have seen
+the man who robbed the Kohls&mdash;or at least had something
+to do with it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How could you have seen him, Penny? We were
+together when the Kohl maid yelled for help.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Earlier than that. It was while I was at the theatre.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Half expecting that Jerry would laugh, Penny told
+how she had observed the man in gray note down the
+license number of the Kohl limousine.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_61">[61]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It came to me like a flash! That fellow may have
+telephoned the Kohl apartment after seeing the car at
+the theatre. Making sure no one was at home, he then
+looted the place at his leisure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait a minute,&rdquo; interrupted Jerry. &ldquo;The Motor
+Vehicle Department closes at six o&rsquo;clock. How could
+your man have obtained Kohl&rsquo;s name and address from
+the license number?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never thought about the department being
+closed,&rdquo; confessed Penny. &ldquo;How you do love to shoot
+shrapnel into my little ideas!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At least you have original theories, which is more
+than I do,&rdquo; comforted Jerry. &ldquo;Before we leave, shall
+we take a look at the alley?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny brightened instantly and accompanied the reporter
+to the rear of the building. The alley was deserted.
+Without a light they were unable to examine
+the ground beneath the Kohl&rsquo;s apartment window.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, both straightened as they heard a sound
+behind them. The brilliant beam of a flashlight focused
+on their faces, blinding them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s you again,&rdquo; said a gruff voice.</p>
+<p>The beam was lowered, and behind it they saw the
+policeman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You young cubs are a pest,&rdquo; he said irritably.</p>
+<p>Ignoring them, he moved his light over the ground.
+There were no footprints or other marks visible beneath
+the window.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_62">[62]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;If a ladder had stood here it would show,&rdquo; remarked
+Jerry. &ldquo;The thief must have used some other
+means of getting into the building.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While the policeman was inspecting the ground,
+the janitor stepped from a rear basement door, joining
+the group.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Officer, I have some more information for you,&rdquo; he
+volunteered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was talking with my wife. She says that about
+two hours ago she noticed a man walking through the
+alley. He carried a suitcase, and kept looking at the
+upstairs windows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No ladder?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only a suitcase.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have the detectives talk with your wife,&rdquo; the
+policeman promised. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be here any minute
+now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny and Jerry lingered until the two men arrived,
+bringing a photographer with them. No new evidence
+being made available, it seemed a waste of time to remain
+longer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t bother to take me home,&rdquo; Penny insisted.
+&ldquo;Dash straight to the office and write your story. The
+other papers won&rsquo;t have a word about the robbery until
+the police report is made.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like to abandon you.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_63">[63]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be silly, Jerry. It&rsquo;s only a few blocks farther.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus urged, the reporter bade Penny good-bye. As
+she hastened on alone, it began to rain and the air
+turned colder. To save her clothing, she ran the last
+block, reaching the porch quite breathless.</p>
+<p>The house was dark, the front door locked. Penny
+let herself in with a key, switched on the lights, and
+after getting a snack from the refrigerator, started upstairs.</p>
+<p>From her father&rsquo;s room issued loud snores. However,
+Mrs. Weems&rsquo; door stood open, and as Penny
+glanced in she was surprised to see that the bed had
+not been disturbed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems must still be at the Hodges&rsquo;,&rdquo; she
+thought. &ldquo;Perhaps I should go after her. She&rsquo;ll have a
+long walk in this rain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny went to a window and looked out. The
+downpour showed no sighs of slackening. With a sigh
+she found her raincoat and started for the garage.</p>
+<p>During her absence, Mr. Parker had towed Leaping
+Lena to a vacant lot adjoining the property. The maroon
+car awaited her beneath shelter, and she drove it
+through dark streets to the Hodges&rsquo; modest home.</p>
+<p>Lights glowed cheerily from the lower floor windows.
+In response to Penny&rsquo;s knock, a bent old man,
+his hands gnarled by hard labor, opened the door.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_64">[64]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it Penelope?&rdquo; he asked, squinting at her through
+the rain. &ldquo;Come in! Come in!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good evening, Mr. Hodges. Is Mrs. Weems still
+here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I am, Penny,&rdquo; called the housekeeper. &ldquo;Goodness,
+what time is it anyway?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nearly midnight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny shook water from her coat and stepped into
+the spic and span living room. An unshaded electric
+light disclosed a rug too bright, wallpaper too glaring,
+furniture stiff and old fashioned. Yet one felt at once
+welcome, for the seamstress and her husband were
+simple, friendly people.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have a chair, Penelope,&rdquo; invited Mrs. Hodges. She
+was short like her husband, with graying hair and an
+untroubled countenance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, but I can&rsquo;t stay,&rdquo; replied Penny. &ldquo;I
+came to drive Mrs. Weems home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had no idea it was so late,&rdquo; the housekeeper said,
+getting to her feet. &ldquo;Mrs. Hodges and I have been
+planning my traveling outfit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try to have the dresses for you within the next
+two weeks,&rdquo; promised the seamstress. &ldquo;Your good fortune
+makes me very happy, Maud. Isn&rsquo;t the news of
+her inheritance wonderful, Penelope?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_65">[65]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, yes, of course,&rdquo; stammered Penny. &ldquo;Only
+I hope Mrs. Weems isn&rsquo;t leaving us within two weeks.
+What&rsquo;s this about a traveling outfit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always wanted fine clothing,&rdquo; said Mrs. Weems
+dreamily. &ldquo;Mrs. Hodges is making me a suit, three silk
+dresses, a tissue velvet evening gown&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An evening gown!&rdquo; Penny gasped. &ldquo;Where will
+you wear it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll find places.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe she aims to catch a husband while she&rsquo;s
+galavantin&rsquo; around out there in Californy,&rdquo; contributed
+Mr. Hodges with a sly wink.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The very idea!&rdquo; laughed Mrs. Weems, yet with no
+displeasure.</p>
+<p>Penny sagged into the nearest rocking chair. The
+conversation was paced too fast for her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Evening gowns&mdash;husbands&mdash;California,&rdquo; she murmured
+weakly. &ldquo;Wait until Dad hears about this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Hodges was only joking,&rdquo; declared Mrs.
+Weems, reaching for her hat. &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t marry the
+best man on earth. But I definitely am going west this
+summer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I envy you, Maud,&rdquo; said the seamstress, her eyes
+shining. &ldquo;Pa and I want to go out there and buy a little
+orange grove someday. But with taxes what they are,
+we can&rsquo;t seem to save a penny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems squeezed her friend&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_66">[66]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I could take you along, Jenny,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;All these years you&rsquo;ve sewed your poor fingers almost
+to the bone. You deserve an easier life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Pa and I don&rsquo;t complain,&rdquo; the seamstress answered
+brightly. &ldquo;And things are going to look up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure they are,&rdquo; agreed Mr. Hodges. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get a job
+any day now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny, who was watching the seamstress&rsquo; face was
+amazed to see it suddenly transformed. Losing her
+usual calm, Mrs. Hodges exclaimed:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pa! It just this minute came to me! Maud getting
+her inheritance is another psychic sign!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny rocked violently and even Mrs. Weems
+looked startled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what you mean, Jenny,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We said we wouldn&rsquo;t tell anybody, Ma,&rdquo; protested
+Mr. Hodges mildly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems is my best friend, and Penelope won&rsquo;t
+tell. Will you, Penelope?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not what I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; replied Penny in bewilderment.
+&ldquo;How can Mrs. Weems&rsquo; inheritance have
+anything to do with a psychic sign?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may as well tell &rsquo;em,&rdquo; grinned Mr. Hodges,
+&ldquo;If you keep the news much longer you&rsquo;ll bust.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The strangest thing happened three nights ago,&rdquo;
+Mrs. Hodges began, her voice quivering with excitement.
+&ldquo;But wait! First I&rsquo;ll show you the letter!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_67">[67]</div>
+<h2 id="c8"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">8</span>
+<br /><i>PSYCHIC SIGNS</i></h2>
+<p>As Penny and Mrs. Weems waited, the seamstress
+went to another room, returning with a stamped, slit
+envelope.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Notice the postmark,&rdquo; she requested, thrusting the
+letter into Penny&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was mailed from New York,&rdquo; the girl observed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I mean the hour at which the envelope was stamped
+by the postmaster.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I make it 11:30 <span class="small">P.M.</span> June fifteenth,&rdquo; Penny read
+aloud. &ldquo;Does the time and date have special significance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, it does,&rdquo; the seamstress replied impressively.
+&ldquo;You tell them, Pa.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It happened three nights ago,&rdquo; began Mr. Hodges.
+&ldquo;Ma worked late stitchin&rsquo; up some playsuits for Mrs.
+Hudson&rsquo;s little girl. Afterwards we had bread and milk
+like we always do, and then we went to bed.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_68">[68]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;At the time, I said to Pa that something queer was
+going to happen,&rdquo; broke in the seamstress. &ldquo;I could
+feel it in my bones. It was as if something was hovering
+over us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A feeling of impending trouble?&rdquo; questioned
+Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing like that,&rdquo; said Mr. Hodges.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, it was as if one almost could feel a foreign
+presence in the room,&rdquo; Mrs. Hodges declared, lowering
+her voice. &ldquo;A supernatural being.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Surely you don&rsquo;t believe in ghosts...?&rdquo; Penny
+began, but the seamstress did not hear. Unheeding, she
+resumed:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pa rubbed my back to ease the pain I get from
+working too long at the machine. Then we went to
+bed. Neither of us had gone to sleep when suddenly
+we heard it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Six sharp raps on the outside bedroom wall,&rdquo; supplied
+Mr. Hodges. &ldquo;It was like this.&rdquo; He demonstrated
+on the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We both heard it,&rdquo; added Mrs. Hodges. &ldquo;It scared
+me nearly out of my wits.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Possibly it was someone at the door,&rdquo; suggested
+Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, it wasn&rsquo;t that. Pa got up and went to see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could it have been a tree bough brushing against
+the wall?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_69">[69]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t that,&rdquo; said Mr. Hodges. &ldquo;The maple is too
+far off to strike our bedroom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s only one explanation,&rdquo; declared the seamstress
+with conviction. &ldquo;It was a psychic sign&mdash;the
+first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe in such things myself,&rdquo; announced
+Penny. &ldquo;Surely there must be another explanation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I told Jenny,&rdquo; nodded Mr. Hodges.
+&ldquo;But since the letter came, doggoned if I don&rsquo;t think
+maybe she&rsquo;s right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What has the letter to do with it?&rdquo; inquired Mrs.
+Weems.</p>
+<p>The seamstress pointed to the postmark on the envelope.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The hour at which we heard the strange tappings
+was eleven-thirty! Pa looked at the clock. And it was
+three days ago, June fifteenth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Corresponding to the marking on this envelope,&rdquo;
+commented Penny. &ldquo;That is a coincidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Hodges shook her head impatiently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You surely don&rsquo;t think it just happened by <i>accident</i>?&rdquo;
+she asked. &ldquo;It must have been intended as a
+sign&mdash;an omen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did the letter say?&rdquo; Penny inquired, without
+answering Mrs. Hodges&rsquo; question. She knew that her
+true opinion would not please the woman.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_70">[70]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t rightly a letter,&rdquo; the seamstress returned.
+&ldquo;The envelope contained six silver dollars fitted into a
+stiff piece of cardboard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We figured it was another sign,&rdquo; contributed Mr.
+Hodges. &ldquo;Six raps on the wall&mdash;six dollars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish some ghost would come and pound all night
+long on my bedroom door,&rdquo; remarked Penny lightly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penelope, you shouldn&rsquo;t speak so disrespectfully,&rdquo;
+Mrs. Weems reproved in a mild voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me, I didn&rsquo;t mean to,&rdquo; said Penny, composing
+her face. &ldquo;What else has happened of a supernatural
+nature?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, nothing yet,&rdquo; Mrs. Hodges admitted. &ldquo;But
+Pa and I have had a feeling as if something important
+were about to take place. And now Maud inherits six
+thousand dollars!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was nothing psychic about that,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Weems. &ldquo;Cousin David had no close relatives so he
+left the money to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The seamstress shook her head, and an ethereal light
+shone in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Night before last when I went to bed I was thinking
+that I wished with all my heart something nice
+would happen to you, Maud. Now it&rsquo;s come to pass!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Even Mrs. Weems was somewhat startled by the
+seamstress&rsquo; calm assumption that her thoughts had been
+responsible for the inheritance.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_71">[71]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you see,&rdquo; Mrs. Hodges resumed patiently.
+&ldquo;It must mean that I have great psychic powers. I confess
+I am rather frightened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny arose and began to button her raincoat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me for saying it,&rdquo; she remarked, &ldquo;but if I
+were you, Mrs. Hodges, I&rsquo;d spend the six dollars and
+forget the entire affair. Someone must have played a
+joke on you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A joke!&rdquo; The seamstress was offended. &ldquo;People
+don&rsquo;t give away money as a joke.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, these days they squeeze the eagles until they
+holler,&rdquo; chuckled Mr. Hodges.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The letter was postmarked New York City,&rdquo; went
+on his wife. &ldquo;We don&rsquo;t know a soul there. Oh, no one
+ever can make me believe that it was done as a joke.
+The letter was mailed at exactly the hour we heard the
+six raps!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And there wasn&rsquo;t a sign of anyone near the house,&rdquo;
+added Mr. Hodges.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, at least you&rsquo;re six dollars ahead,&rdquo; said Penny.
+&ldquo;Shall we go, Mrs. Weems? It&rsquo;s after midnight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The seamstress walked to the door with the callers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get busy tomorrow on those new dresses,&rdquo; she
+promised Mrs. Weems. &ldquo;Drop in again whenever you
+can. And you, too, Penelope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Driving home through the rain, Penny stole a quick
+glance at the housekeeper who seemed unusually quiet.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_72">[72]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you suppose Jenny could be right?&rdquo; Mrs.
+Weems presently ventured. &ldquo;I mean about Cousin
+David and the inheritance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course not!&rdquo; laughed Penny. &ldquo;Why, your
+cousin died a long while before Mrs. Hodges discovered
+that she was psychic. It&rsquo;s all the bunk!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I really knew.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mrs. Weems!&rdquo; Penny prepared to launch
+into a violent argument. &ldquo;I never heard of such nonsense!
+How could Mrs. Hodges have psychic powers?
+Everyone realizes that communication with the spirit
+world is impossible!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are entitled to your opinion, Penny, but others
+may differ with you. Who can know about The Life
+Beyond? Isn&rsquo;t it in the realm of possibility that Mrs.
+Hodges may have had a message from Cousin David?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t speak of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not in words, Penny. But those strange rappings,
+the arrival of the letter&mdash;it was all very strange and
+unexplainable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll admit it was queer, Mrs. Weems. However, I&rsquo;ll
+never agree that there&rsquo;s anything supernatural connected
+with it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You close your mind to things you do not wish to
+believe,&rdquo; the housekeeper reproved. &ldquo;What can any of
+us know of the spirit world?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_73">[73]</div>
+<p>Penny gazed at Mrs. Weems in alarm. She realized
+that the seamstress&rsquo; story had deeply impressed her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll stake my knowledge against Mrs. Hodges&rsquo; any
+old day,&rdquo; she declared lightly. &ldquo;I met one ghost-maker&mdash;Osandra&mdash;remember
+him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why remind me of that man, Penny?&rdquo; asked the
+housekeeper wearily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because you once paid him good money for the
+privilege of attending his s&eacute;ances. You were convinced
+he was in communication with the world beyond. He
+proved to be an outrageous fraud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was taken in by him as were many other persons,&rdquo;
+Mrs. Weems acknowledged. &ldquo;Mrs. Hodges&rsquo; case is
+different. We have been friends for ten years. She
+would not misrepresent the facts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Mrs. Hodges is honest. I believe that the money
+was sent to her. But not by a ghost!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s not discuss it,&rdquo; said Mrs. Weems with finality.
+&ldquo;I never did enjoy an argument.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny lapsed into silence and a moment later the
+car swung into the Parker driveway. The housekeeper
+hurried into the house, leaving the girl to close the
+garage doors.</p>
+<p>Penny snapped the padlock shut. Unmindful of the
+rain, she stood for a moment, staring into the night.
+Nothing had gone exactly right that day, and her disagreement
+with Mrs. Weems, minor though it was,
+bothered her.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_74">[74]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s more to this psychic business than appears
+on the surface,&rdquo; she thought grimly. &ldquo;A great deal
+more! Maybe I am stubborn and opinionated. But I
+know one thing! No trickster is going to take advantage
+of the Hodges or of Mrs. Weems either&mdash;not if I
+can prevent it.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_75">[75]</div>
+<h2 id="c9"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">9</span>
+<br /><i>MRS. WEEMS&rsquo; INHERITANCE</i></h2>
+<p>The clock chimed seven-thirty the next morning
+as Penny came downstairs. She dropped a kiss on her
+father&rsquo;s forehead and slid into a chair at the opposite
+side of the breakfast table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good morning, Daddykins,&rdquo; she greeted him cheerfully.
+&ldquo;Any news in the old scandal sheet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker lowered the newspaper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please don&rsquo;t call me Daddykins,&rdquo; he requested.
+&ldquo;You know I hate it. Here&rsquo;s something which may interest
+you. Your friends the Kohls were robbed last
+night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re eight hours late,&rdquo; grinned Penny, reaching
+for the front page. &ldquo;I was there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you lifted the pearls and the diamond
+bracelet on your way to the theatre.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Penny, rapidly scanning the story which
+Jerry had written, &ldquo;but I think I may have seen the
+man who did do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_76">[76]</div>
+<p>She then told her father of having observed a stranger
+note the license number of the Kohl car, and mentioned
+the events which had followed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may have been mistaken about what the man
+wrote down,&rdquo; commented her father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s possible, but he was staring straight at the
+car.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt if the incident had any connection with the
+burglary, Penny. With the Motor Vehicle Department
+closed, he would have had no means of quickly learning
+who the Kohls were or where they lived.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t he have recognized them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In that case he would have no need for the license
+number. You didn&rsquo;t see the man note down the plates
+of other cars?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but he may have done it before I noticed him
+standing by the theatre.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Turning idly through the morning paper, Penny&rsquo;s
+attention was drawn to another news story. Reading it
+rapidly, she thrust the page into her father&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, look at this! There were two other burglaries
+last night! Apartment houses on Drexel Boulevard and
+Fenmore Street were entered.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;H-m, interesting. The Kohls occupy an apartment
+also. That rather suggests that the same thief ransacked
+the three places.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_77">[77]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;And it says here that the families were away for
+the evening!&rdquo; Penny resumed with increasing excitement.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet a cent they were at the theatre! Oh,
+Dad, that man in gray must have been the one who
+did it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If all the persons you suspect of crime were arrested,
+our jails couldn&rsquo;t hold them,&rdquo; remarked Mr.
+Parker calmly. &ldquo;Eat your breakfast, Penny, before it
+gets cold.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems entered through the kitchen door,
+bearing reenforcements of hot waffles and crisp bacon.
+Her appearance reminded Penny to launch into a
+highly entertaining account of all that had transpired
+at the Hodges&rsquo; the previous night.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny!&rdquo; protested the housekeeper. &ldquo;You promised
+Mrs. Hodges to say nothing about the letter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, I didn&rsquo;t promise,&rdquo; corrected Penny. &ldquo;I was
+careful to say that I couldn&rsquo;t tell what I didn&rsquo;t know.
+Years ago Dad taught me that a good reporter never
+agrees to accept a confidence. Isn&rsquo;t that so, Dad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A wise reporter never ties his own hands,&rdquo; replied
+Mr. Parker. &ldquo;If he promises, and then obtains the
+same story from another source, he&rsquo;s morally bound
+not to use it. His paper may be scooped by the opposition.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_78">[78]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;You two are a pair,&rdquo; sighed Mrs. Weems. &ldquo;Scoops
+and front page stories are all either of you think about.
+I declare, it distresses me to realize how Penny may be
+trained after I leave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The way to solve that problem is not to leave,&rdquo;
+said Penny. &ldquo;You know we can&rsquo;t get along without
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems shook her head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It cuts me almost in two to leave,&rdquo; she declared
+sadly, &ldquo;but my mind&rsquo;s made up. Mrs. Hodges says I
+am doing the right thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I suppose a ghost advised her,&rdquo; muttered
+Penny.</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker glanced sternly at his daughter and she
+subsided into silence. But not for long. Soon she was
+trying to reopen the subject of the mysterious letter
+received by the Hodges. For a reason she could not
+understand, her father was loath to discuss it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Penny,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If we&rsquo;re having that game
+of tennis this morning, it&rsquo;s time we start.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>En route to the park, the publisher explained why
+he had not chosen to express an opinion in the housekeeper&rsquo;s
+presence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I quite agree with you that Mrs. Hodges has no
+psychic powers, Penny. She&rsquo;s been the victim of a
+hoax. However, Mrs. Weems is intensely loyal to her
+friend, and any disparaging remarks made by us will
+only serve to antagonize her.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_79">[79]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try to be more careful, Dad. But it&rsquo;s so silly!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Monday morning found Penny busy once more with
+her duties at the society desk. No new information had
+developed regarding the Kohl burglary, and she did
+not have time to accompany Mrs. Weems who went
+frequently to the Hodges&rsquo; cottage.</p>
+<p>Secretly Penny held an opinion that the housekeeper&rsquo;s
+inheritance might be the work of a prankster.
+Therefore, upon returning from the office one afternoon
+and learning that the money actually had been
+delivered, she was very glad she had kept her thoughts
+to herself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The lawyer came this morning and had me sign a
+paper,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems revealed to the Parkers. &ldquo;Then
+he turned the money over to me&mdash;six thousand dollars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope the cheque is good,&rdquo; remarked Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was. I had the lawyer accompany me to the
+bank. They gave me the money without asking a
+single question. I have it here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have six thousand dollars cash in the house!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I had the cashier give it to me in hundred dollar
+bills.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you consider it safe to keep such a large sum?&rdquo;
+Mr. Parker inquired mildly. &ldquo;I should advise returning
+it to the bank, or better still, why not invest it in
+sound securities?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_80">[80]</div>
+<p>Mrs. Weems shook her head. &ldquo;It gives me a nice rich
+feeling to have the cash. I&rsquo;ve hidden it in a good place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo; demanded Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t tell,&rdquo; laughed Mrs. Weems.</p>
+<p>Again later in the evening, Mr. Parker tried without
+success to convince the housekeeper that she should
+return the money to a bank. Never one to force his
+opinions upon another, he then dropped the subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When will you be leaving us, Mrs. Weems?&rdquo; he
+inquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whenever you can spare me. Now that I have the
+money, I should like to leave within ten days or two
+weeks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Since we can&rsquo;t persuade you to remain, I&rsquo;ll try to
+find someone to take your place,&rdquo; Mr. Parker promised.</p>
+<p>Both he and Penny were gloomy at the prospect of
+replacing the housekeeper. Not only would they miss
+Mrs. Weems but they honestly believed that she would
+never be happy without two incorrigibles and a home
+to manage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad,&rdquo; Penny ventured when they were alone, &ldquo;just
+supposing that Mrs. Weems&rsquo; money should mysteriously
+disappear&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t allow your mind to dwell on that idea,&rdquo; cut
+in her father sternly. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll play fair.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_81">[81]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I wouldn&rsquo;t do it,&rdquo; said Penny hastily. &ldquo;I was
+only joking. But if something <i>should</i> happen to the
+money, it would solve all our problems.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems has earned her vacation. Even though
+it will be hard to lose her, we mustn&rsquo;t stand in her
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess you&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; sighed Penny.</p>
+<p>The following day Miss Hilderman resumed her
+duties at the <i>Star</i>, and Penny once more found herself
+a person of leisure. To her annoyance, Mrs. Weems
+insisted that she spend many hours in the kitchen,
+learning how to bake pies and cakes. A particularly
+distasteful lesson came to an end only when Penny,
+with brilliant inspiration, remembered that the housekeeper
+had an appointment with the seamstress.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me, I had forgotten it!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs.
+Weems. &ldquo;Yes, I must try on my new dresses!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll drive you over,&rdquo; offered Penny.</p>
+<p>Not in recent days had the girl called upon the
+Hodges. As she and Mrs. Weems alighted from the
+car, they both noticed freshly ironed curtains at the
+windows. Mr. Hodges was pounding dust from a
+carpet on the line.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Housecleaning?&rdquo; inquired Penny, pausing to chat
+with the old man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Jenny&rsquo;s got me hard at it,&rdquo; he grinned. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s
+been tearin&rsquo; the house upside down gettin&rsquo; ready for
+the new roomer.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_82">[82]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, have you taken one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny was surprised, knowing that in past years the
+Hodges had been too proud to rent rooms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a young feller moving in today,&rdquo; Mr.
+Hodges said, picking up the carpet beater. &ldquo;Go on
+inside. Jenny&rsquo;ll tell you about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny and Mrs. Weems entered the cottage where
+the seamstress was running a dust mop over the floors.
+She was somewhat dismayed to see the housekeeper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Maud, I&rsquo;ve been so busy I didn&rsquo;t get your
+dresses ready to be tried on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t matter,&rdquo; replied Mrs. Weems. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s
+this about a new roomer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I always said I wouldn&rsquo;t have one cluttering up the
+place. But this young man is different. His coming
+here&mdash;well, I interpret it as another sign.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A sign of what?&rdquo; inquired Penny with her usual
+directness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it seemed as if I had a direct message from
+the spirit world to take him into our home. He came
+here last night. Instead of knocking in the usual way,
+he rapped six times in succession!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Probably he was the one who sent the letter,&rdquo; said
+Penny alertly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no! He didn&rsquo;t know anything about it. I asked
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is his name, Mrs. Hodges?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_83">[83]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Al Gepper. He&rsquo;s such a nice young man and he
+talks so refined. I am letting him have the entire floor
+upstairs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That should bring you a nice income,&rdquo; remarked
+Mrs. Weems.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am asking only two dollars a week,&rdquo; admitted
+the seamstress. &ldquo;He said he couldn&rsquo;t pay more than
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Jenny,&rdquo; protested Mrs. Weems, &ldquo;such a
+small amount hardly will cover the lights and various
+extras.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know, Maud, but I couldn&rsquo;t turn him away. He
+moved his apparatus in last night and will bring his
+personal belongings sometime today.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His apparatus?&rdquo; echoed Penny. &ldquo;What is he, a
+chemist?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the seamstress, smiling mysteriously.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll show you the rooms.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny and Mrs. Weems followed the woman upstairs.
+The upper floor was divided into two small bedrooms
+with a wide, old-fashioned sliding door between
+which could be opened to make one large chamber.
+The larger of the rooms had been cleared of its usual
+furniture. Where a bed previously had stood was a
+circular table with six or eight chairs, and behind it a
+tall cabinet with a black curtain across the front.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Gepper plans to use this room for his studio,&rdquo;
+explained Mrs. Hodges.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_84">[84]</div>
+<p>Penny&rsquo;s gaze had fastened upon the cabinet. She
+crossed to it and pulled aside the curtain. Inside were
+several unpacked boxes and a suitcase.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Hodges, to what purpose does your young
+man expect to put this studio?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. He didn&rsquo;t tell me. But I think he intends
+to carry on psychic experiments. He&rsquo;s a student,
+he said.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Gepper was afraid to tell you the truth lest
+you refuse to rent the rooms,&rdquo; declared Penny. &ldquo;Mrs.
+Hodges, your roomer is a medium.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why do you think so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because I&rsquo;ve seen trappings such as these before at
+other s&eacute;ance chambers,&rdquo; replied Penny. &ldquo;Mrs. Hodges,
+you must send him away before he involves you with
+the police.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_85">[85]</div>
+<h2 id="c10"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">10</span>
+<br /><i>OUIJA BOARD WISDOM</i></h2>
+<p>&ldquo;Trouble with the police!&rdquo; Mrs. Hodges echoed,
+regarding Penny with unconcealed dismay. &ldquo;How
+can it be illegal to rent Mr. Gepper these rooms?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Renting the rooms isn&rsquo;t illegal,&rdquo; Penny corrected.
+&ldquo;But if the young man conducts public s&eacute;ances here&mdash;filches
+money from people&mdash;then you may be considered
+a party to the scheme. This city has a local
+ordinance prohibiting fortune telling, mind reading
+and the like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure the young man means no wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny,&rdquo; commented Mrs. Weems, &ldquo;it seems to me
+that you are overly concerned. Why are you convinced
+that Mr. Gepper is a medium?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t this cabinet indicate it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought it was some sort of wardrobe closet,&rdquo;
+Mrs. Hodges admitted.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_86">[86]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Al Gepper is a medium, or pretends to have spiritualistic
+powers,&rdquo; Penny repeated. &ldquo;In my opinion
+you&rsquo;ll be very unwise to allow him to start an illegal
+business here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, dear, I don&rsquo;t know what to do now,&rdquo; declared
+the seamstress. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have to ask Pa about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She and Mrs. Weems started downstairs, expecting
+that Penny would follow. Instead, the girl lingered to
+inspect the cabinet.</p>
+<p>On the lower floor a door slammed, and there were
+footsteps ascending the stairway. She paid no heed,
+assuming that it was either Mr. Hodges or his wife
+who approached.</p>
+<p>The door swung open. Turning, Penny saw a young
+man, possibly thirty years of age, standing on the
+threshold. His dark eyes were sharp and appraising.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hello,&rdquo; he said, without smiling. &ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t you
+afraid a monkey may jump out of that cabinet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny, who seldom blushed, felt a wave of heat
+creeping over her cheeks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hello,&rdquo; she stammered. &ldquo;You must be Mrs. Hodges&rsquo;
+new roomer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Al Gepper, at your service. Who are you, girlie?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You guessed it,&rdquo; said Penny shortly, edging away
+from the cabinet.</p>
+<p>Al Gepper remained in the doorway, blocking the
+exit with his arm. He did not move as the girl attempted
+to move past him.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_87">[87]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your hurry?&rdquo; he drawled. &ldquo;Stick around
+and let&rsquo;s get acquainted. I&rsquo;ll show you some neat card
+tricks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks, but I haven&rsquo;t time, Mr. Gepper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your name anyhow?&rdquo; he persisted. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
+not Mrs. Hodges&rsquo; daughter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, only a friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t be so icy about it,&rdquo; he rebuked. &ldquo;Any
+friend of Mrs. Hodges&rsquo; is a friend of mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never make friends easily,&rdquo; Penny replied. &ldquo;For
+that matter, I don&rsquo;t mind telling you that I have advised
+Mrs. Hodges not to rent you these rooms.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you have?&rdquo; inquired the man, his eyes hardening.
+&ldquo;And what business is it of yours?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None, perhaps. I merely am not going to allow her
+to be taken in if I can prevent it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, indeed. Do you mind explaining?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s perfectly obvious that you&rsquo;re one of these fake
+spiritualists,&rdquo; Penny accused bluntly. &ldquo;Your nickname
+should be Six-Raps Al!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little spit-fire, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; the man retorted.
+&ldquo;But you have style. Now I may be able to use you in
+my business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You admit that you&rsquo;re a medium?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am a spiritualist. Not a fake, as you so crudely
+accuse. And I assure you I have no intention of deceiving
+or taking advantage of your dear friends, the
+Hodges.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_88">[88]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;You expect to use these rooms for public s&eacute;ances?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you are certain to get the Hodges into trouble
+with the police.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not unless you start squawking.&rdquo; Al Gepper&rsquo;s
+manner changed abruptly. He grasped Penny&rsquo;s wrist
+and pushed a leering face close to hers. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not looking
+for any trouble from you or anyone else&mdash;see! If
+you try to make it, you&rsquo;ll wake up with a headache!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny jerked free and, shouldering through the
+door, raced downstairs.</p>
+<p>Glancing back, she saw that Al Gepper was following,
+though at a more leisurely pace. Instantly she divined
+that he intended to make sure no report of the
+incident was given to the Hodges, save in his presence.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems and the old couple were talking in the
+kitchen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Ma, it&rsquo;s for you to decide,&rdquo; Mr. Hodges was
+saying. &ldquo;We gave our word to the young feller, and
+it&rsquo;s kinda mean to turn him out so sudden like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I regret Penny said anything about the matter.&rdquo;
+apologized Mrs. Weems. &ldquo;You know how out-spoken
+and impulsive she is. Of course, she has no information
+about Mr. Gepper.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_89">[89]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, but I do have information,&rdquo; spoke Penny from
+the doorway. &ldquo;Mr. Gepper has just admitted that he
+intends to use the room for public s&eacute;ances. Isn&rsquo;t that
+true?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Defiantly, she turned to face the young man who
+had followed her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite true,&rdquo; he acknowledged loftily. &ldquo;One who
+has a great psychic gift is duty-bound to allow the
+world to benefit from one&rsquo;s talents. The selection of
+this house as a Temple for Celestial Communication
+was not mine, but the bidding of the Spirits. In a
+dream I was instructed to come here and take up residence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What night did you have the dream?&rdquo; questioned
+Mrs. Hodges, deeply impressed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was June fifteenth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The very night we heard the strange rappings on
+our bedroom wall, Pa.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dogonned if it wasn&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Gepper, do you truly believe it is possible to
+communicate with the spiritual world?&rdquo; Mrs. Weems
+inquired politely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear madam, I can best answer by offering a
+demonstration. Have you a ouija board in the house?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, we have,&rdquo; spoke Mrs. Hodges eagerly. &ldquo;Pa
+and I got it from a mail order house years ago, but it
+never worked for us. You fetch it, Pa.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_90">[90]</div>
+<p>Mr. Hodges brought a large, flat board which
+bore letters and figures. Upon it he placed a small, triangular
+piece with cushioned legs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This do-dad is supposed to spell out messages, ain&rsquo;t
+it?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Ma and I could never make it work
+right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Al Gepper smiled in a superior way, and placing the
+board on his lap, motioned for Mrs. Weems to sit opposite
+him. However, before the housekeeper could
+obey, Penny slid into the vacant chair. The medium
+frowned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Place your hands lightly on the triangular piece,&rdquo;
+he instructed. &ldquo;Concentrate with me as we await a
+message from the spiritual world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny fastened her eyes on the distant wall with a
+blank stare.</p>
+<p>A minute passed. The ouija board made several convulsive
+struggles, but seemed unable to move.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Spirits encounter resistance,&rdquo; the medium said
+testily. &ldquo;They can send no message when one&rsquo;s attitude
+is antagonistic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shall I take off the brakes?&rdquo; asked Penny.</p>
+<p>Even as she spoke the pointer of the triangle began
+moving, rapidly spelling a message.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;AL GEPPER IS A FRAUD,&rdquo; it wrote.</p>
+<p>The medium sprang to his feet, allowing the board
+to fall from his lap.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You pushed it!&rdquo; he accused. &ldquo;The test was unfair.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_91">[91]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the very idea,&rdquo; chuckled Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, please allow Mr. Gepper to conduct a true
+test,&rdquo; reproved Mrs. Weems severely. &ldquo;Let me try.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Al Gepper, however, would have no more of the
+ouija board. Instead, he took a pad of white paper
+from his pocket. Seating Mrs. Weems at the kitchen
+table he requested her to write a message, which, without
+being shown to anyone in the room, was sealed in
+an envelope.</p>
+<p>The medium pointedly requested Penny to examine
+the envelope to assure herself the writing could not be
+seen through the paper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are satisfied that I have not read the message?&rdquo;
+he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Penny admitted reluctantly.</p>
+<p>The medium took the envelope, ran his fingers
+lightly over it, and returned it still sealed to Mrs.
+Weems.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I am not mistaken, Madam, you wrote, &lsquo;Is the
+spirit of my cousin in this room?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I did!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Weems. &ldquo;Those were
+the exact words! How did you know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Al Gepper smiled mysteriously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have seen nothing, Madam,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Now if
+conditions are right, it may be possible for us to learn
+if a Spirit has joined our group. Lower the blinds,
+please.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_92">[92]</div>
+<p>Mr. Hodges hastened to obey. With the kitchen in
+semi-darkness, the medium motioned for his audience
+to move a few paces away. Taking his own position
+behind the kitchen table, he intoned:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Spirit, if you are with us in the room, signal
+by lifting this piece of furniture.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Slowly the man moved his hands above the table.
+At first nothing happened, then to the astonishment
+of his audience, it lifted a few inches from the floor.
+There it hung suspended a moment before dropping
+into place again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see?&rdquo; With a triumphant ring to his voice, the
+medium crossed the room to raise the window shades.
+&ldquo;Now do you doubt me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No! No!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Hodges tremulously. &ldquo;Only
+a Spirit could have moved that table. Maud, perhaps
+it <i>was</i> your Cousin David.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The medium gazed at Mrs. Weems with sympathetic
+interest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have lost a loved one recently?&rdquo; he inquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cousin David and I never were well acquainted,&rdquo;
+replied the housekeeper. &ldquo;That was why I was so surprised
+when he left me an inheritance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems!&rdquo; remonstrated Penny. She was dismayed
+by the revelation so casually offered.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_93">[93]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;No doubt you would like to communicate with
+your departed cousin at some later time,&rdquo; the medium
+said smoothly. &ldquo;Allow me to offer my services as an
+intermediary. No charge, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, that&rsquo;s very generous of you, Mr. Gepper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all. Friends of the Hodges are my friends.
+Shall we set a definite date&mdash;say tomorrow at two
+o&rsquo;clock?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ll come. That is, if the Hodges are to be
+present.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Assuredly. Mrs. Hodges is definitely psychic and
+should contribute to our s&eacute;ance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was with the greatest of difficulty that Penny
+finally induced the housekeeper to leave the cottage.
+Al Gepper accompanied them to the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tomorrow at two,&rdquo; he repeated, smiling slyly at
+Penny. &ldquo;And you may come also, my little doubter. I
+assure you it will be well worth your time.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_94">[94]</div>
+<h2 id="c11"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">11</span>
+<br /><i>THE CELESTIAL TEMPLE</i></h2>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, tell me the truth,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems urged
+as they drove home together. &ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you push the
+ouija board?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; laughed Penny. &ldquo;But if I hadn&rsquo;t, Al
+Gepper would have. He was trying hard enough!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said you were resisting the spirits.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was the worst sort of nonsense,&rdquo; Penny returned
+impatiently. &ldquo;Gepper is a fraud, and I wish you
+hadn&rsquo;t told him about your inheritance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can you accuse him of being a fraud after
+you saw his marvelous demonstration? The table actually
+rose from the floor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it did,&rdquo; Penny acknowledged unwillingly.
+&ldquo;But it must have been trickery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How could it have been? The table was an ordinary
+one. Mrs. Hodges uses it every day of her life.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_95">[95]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how he did it,&rdquo; Penny responded.
+&ldquo;All the same, I am sure he&rsquo;s a trickster. Promise me
+you won&rsquo;t tell him anything more about yourself or
+the inheritance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, I&rsquo;ll promise if it gives you satisfaction,&rdquo;
+the housekeeper replied. &ldquo;However, I do intend to
+keep my appointment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny had no opportunity to relate to her father
+what had occurred at the Hodges home, for Mr. Parker
+was absent on a two-day business trip to a distant
+town. Feeling that she must tell someone, she sought
+Louise Sidell, and they discussed every angle of the
+affair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you attend the s&eacute;ance with Mrs. Weems?&rdquo;
+Louise asked her curiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will I?&rdquo; Penny repeated. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be right there with
+bells! I intend to expose Mr. Al Gepper if it&rsquo;s the last
+act of my life!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Returning home later in the afternoon, she found
+Mrs. Weems sitting on the living room floor, sorting a
+drawer of old photographs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not packing your things already?&rdquo; Penny
+asked in alarm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only these photographs,&rdquo; the housekeeper responded.
+&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t have started the task, only I got
+into it when the agent came.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Agent?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A man from the Clamont Photograph Studio.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never heard of the place.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_96">[96]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s opening this week. They&rsquo;re having a special
+offer&mdash;three old photographs enlarged for only
+twenty-five cents. I gave the man Cousin David&rsquo;s picture
+and two others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is a bargain,&rdquo; remarked Penny. &ldquo;I wish I had
+been here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The evening meal was served, and afterwards Mrs.
+Weems devoted herself to the reading of travel books
+borrowed from the library. Penny could find no occupation
+to satisfy her. She turned the radio on, switched
+it off again, and wandered restlessly from room to
+room. Finally she went to the telephone and called
+Louise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How about a little adventure?&rdquo; she proposed. &ldquo;And
+don&rsquo;t ask for explanations.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will we be home by ten o&rsquo;clock? That&rsquo;s the
+parental deadline.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, we&rsquo;ll make it easily. Meet me at the corner
+of Carabel and Clinton Streets.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems was so engrossed in her book that she
+merely nodded as Penny explained that she and Louise
+were going for a walk. Reaching the appointed corner
+the girl found her chum awaiting her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me about this so-called adventure,&rdquo; she commanded.
+&ldquo;Where are we going?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_97">[97]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;To the Celestial Temple, Lou. At least, we&rsquo;ll look
+at it from the outside. Meetings are held there nearly
+every night at eight o&rsquo;clock.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, I don&rsquo;t think I care to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nonsense! The meetings are open to the public,
+aren&rsquo;t they? We&rsquo;ll have a very interesting time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, all right,&rdquo; Louise consented reluctantly. &ldquo;But
+I can&rsquo;t understand why you&rsquo;re so interested in the
+place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girls took a bus to the end of the line, then
+walked three blocks until they came to Butternut
+Lane. For long stretches there were only scattered
+houses and the street lamps were far between. Becoming
+increasingly uneasy, Louise urged her chum to
+turn back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, we&rsquo;re at our destination now,&rdquo; Penny protested.
+&ldquo;I am sure that must be the building.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She pointed to an old, rectangular brick structure
+only a few yards ahead. Obviously it once had been a
+church for there was a high bell tower, and behind the
+building a cluster of neglected tombstones gleamed in
+the moonlight.</p>
+<p>The evenly spaced windows were illuminated, and
+music could be heard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure this is the place?&rdquo; Louise inquired
+dubiously. &ldquo;It looks like a church to me, and they&rsquo;re
+holding a service.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_98">[98]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the building hasn&rsquo;t been used for such purposes
+in over fifteen years,&rdquo; Penny explained. &ldquo;I investigated,
+so I know its history. Until three years ago it was
+used as a county fire station. Only recently it was reclaimed
+by this Omar Society of Celestial Thought.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girls moved closer. Through an open window
+they were able to see fifteen or twenty people seated
+in the pews. A woman played a wheezing organ while
+a man led the off-key singing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go inside,&rdquo; Penny proposed.</p>
+<p>Louise held back. &ldquo;Oh, no, we can see everything
+from here. It looks as if it were a very stupid sort of
+meeting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Appearances are often deceiving. I want a ringside
+seat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny pulled her chum toward the entrance door.
+There they hesitated, reading a large placard which
+bore the invitation:</p>
+<p><i>The Public Is Invited. Services at eight p.m. daily.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re part of the public, Lou,&rdquo; urged Penny.
+&ldquo;Come along.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She boldly opened the door, and there was no retreat.</p>
+<p>Heads turned slightly as the girls entered the rear of
+the Temple. As quickly they turned forward again,
+but not before Penny had gained an impression, of
+sharp, appraising faces.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_99">[99]</div>
+<p>A man arose, bowed, and offered the girls his bench,
+although many others were available. They slipped
+into the pew, accepting a song book which was placed
+in Louise&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<p>While her chum sang in a thin, squeaky voice,
+Penny allowed her gaze to wander over the room. At
+the far end she saw a door which apparently opened
+into the bell tower. On a slightly raised platform where
+the leader stood, were two black-draped cabinets somewhat
+similar to the one she had seen at Mrs. Hodges&rsquo;
+cottage. Otherwise, there was nothing of unusual interest.</p>
+<p>The services were decorous to the point of being
+boring. Yet as the meeting went on, Penny and Louise
+both felt that they were being studied. More than once
+they surprised persons gazing at them.</p>
+<p>At the conclusion of the session which lasted no
+longer than thirty minutes, the leader asked the audience
+if any &ldquo;brother&rdquo; were present who wished to
+attempt a spirit communication. Immediately, Penny
+sat up a bit straighter, anticipating that interesting
+demonstrations were in store.</p>
+<p>Nor was she mistaken. A thin, hard-faced man went
+to the rostrum, and in a loud voice began to call upon
+the spirits to make known their presence. Signs were
+at once forthcoming. The empty pews began to dance
+as if alive. The speaker&rsquo;s table lifted a foot from the
+floor and a pitcher of water fell from it, smashing into
+a dozen pieces.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_100">[100]</div>
+<p>Louise, her eyes dilated with fear, edged closer to
+Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go,&rdquo; she pleaded.</p>
+<p>Penny shook her head.</p>
+<p>A woman dressed in blue silk glided down the aisle,
+stopping beside the girls. She held a tray upon which
+were a number of objects, an opal ring, a knife, and
+several pins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dearie,&rdquo; she said to Penny, &ldquo;if you would care to
+have a message from a departed soul, place a trinket in
+this collection. Any personal object. Our leader will
+then exhort the spirit to appear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, thank you,&rdquo; replied Louise, without giving
+her chum a chance to speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps, you would prefer a private reading,&rdquo; the
+woman murmured. &ldquo;I give them at my home, and the
+fee is trivial. Only a dollar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, no,&rdquo; Louise repeated firmly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not
+interested.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The woman shrugged and moved on down the aisle,
+pausing beside an elderly man to whom she addressed
+herself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lou, why did you discourage her?&rdquo; Penny whispered.
+&ldquo;We might have learned something.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve learned quite enough. I&rsquo;m leaving.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_101">[101]</div>
+<p>Louise squeezed past her chum, heading for the
+exit. Penny had no choice but to follow.</p>
+<p>Before they could reach the door, it suddenly
+opened from the outside. A young man who had not
+bothered to remove his hat, entered. Seeing the girls,
+he abruptly halted, then turned and retreated.</p>
+<p>Penny quickened her step. Taking Louise&rsquo;s hand she
+pulled her along at a faster pace. They reached the
+vestibule. It was deserted. Penny peered up and down
+the dark street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;s gone,&rdquo; she remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who?&rdquo; Louise questioned in a puzzled voice. &ldquo;You
+mean that man who entered the Temple and then
+left so suddenly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do,&rdquo; responded Penny. &ldquo;Unless my eyes tricked
+me, he was none other than Al Gepper!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_102">[102]</div>
+<h2 id="c12"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">12</span>
+<br /><i>A MESSAGE FOR MRS. WEEMS</i></h2>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know anyone answering to that name,&rdquo;
+remarked Louise. &ldquo;However, the fellow did act as if
+he were retreating from us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny glanced up and down the dark street. No
+one was to be seen, and since so little time had elapsed,
+she reasoned that the man had taken refuge either in
+the high weeds or the nearby cemetery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must have been Gepper,&rdquo; she declared. &ldquo;Naturally
+he wouldn&rsquo;t care to meet me here.&rdquo; Quickly
+Penny recounted the events of the afternoon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you think he may be connected with the
+Temple, Penny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That would be my guess. Lou, this place is nothing
+but a blind. The members of the society pretend to be
+honest spiritualists, while in reality they&rsquo;re charlatans.
+They hold services for one purpose only&mdash;to solicit
+persons for private readings.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that illegal?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_103">[103]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course it is. The police should raid the place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why don&rsquo;t they, Penny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad says it&rsquo;s because they&rsquo;ve been unable to obtain
+sufficient evidence. But they&rsquo;ll have it after we report
+what we&rsquo;ve seen tonight!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you suppose they made things jump
+around as if they were alive?&rdquo; Louise remarked as the
+girls walked slowly toward home. &ldquo;It frightened me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Everything was done by trickery. I&rsquo;m sure of that,
+Lou. Just as soon as Dad returns I shall make a full report
+to him. We&rsquo;ll see what he can do about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By the time Penny arrived home, Mrs. Weems had
+retired to her room. However, the light still burned
+and the door was open a crack. Rapping, the girl entered,
+for she was eager to tell the housekeeper about
+her visit to the Celestial Temple.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems sat at the desk. Hastily she closed one
+of the drawers, and turned the key.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You startled me, Penny!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;I do
+wish you would give more warning before you descend
+upon one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorry,&rdquo; apologized Penny, glancing curiously toward
+the desk. &ldquo;Oh, I see!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see what?&rdquo; demanded the housekeeper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Six thousand dollars reposing in a desk drawer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems&rsquo; look of consternation betrayed her.
+She glanced at the locked drawer, and then laughed.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_104">[104]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;For an instant I thought you actually could see
+the money, Penny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then my guess was right?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I keep the money in the drawer,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems
+admitted.</p>
+<p>Penny sat down on the edge of the bed, drawing
+up her knees for a chin rest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems, don&rsquo;t you think it&rsquo;s risky keeping so
+much money here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will only be for a few days, Penny. I&rsquo;ll have it
+converted into traveler&rsquo;s cheques as soon as I am ready
+to start west.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The desk doesn&rsquo;t seem a safe place to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re the only person who knows where I keep
+the money, Penny. Oh, yes, I told Mrs. Hodges, but
+she is to be trusted. No one can steal it as long as I
+have the key.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems tapped a black velvet ribbon which
+she wore about her neck.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I keep this on me day and night,&rdquo; she declared. &ldquo;No
+thief ever will get it way from me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny said nothing more about the matter. Instead,
+she launched into a highly colored account of her visit
+to the Celestial Temple. The housekeeper expressed
+disapproval, remarking that she never would have
+granted permission had she known in advance where
+the girls were going. Nevertheless, her eager questions
+made it evident that she was deeply interested in the
+demonstration which had been witnessed.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_105">[105]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how you can call it trickery,&rdquo; she protested.
+&ldquo;You have no proof, Penny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never in the world will I believe that spirits can
+make tables do a dance, Mrs. Weems! Probably the
+furniture had special wiring or something of the sort.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t say that about the table at Mrs. Hodges&rsquo;,
+Penny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, it seemed to be just an ordinary piece of furniture,&rdquo;
+the girl admitted reluctantly. &ldquo;All the same, Al
+Gepper is a fraud, and I wish you wouldn&rsquo;t attend his
+old s&eacute;ance tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But Penny, I gave my promise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can run over to the house and tell him you&rsquo;ve
+changed your mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems shook her head. &ldquo;No, Penny, I am
+curious to learn if he will be able to communicate
+with the spirits. Tomorrow&rsquo;s s&eacute;ance should provide a
+genuine test. The man knows nothing about me or my
+ancestors.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Hodges probably has provided all the information
+he&rsquo;ll require.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I telephoned her yesterday and requested her not
+to tell Mr. Gepper anything about me. She&rsquo;ll respect
+my wishes. The test should prove a true one.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_106">[106]</div>
+<p>Penny sighed and arose from the bed. Knowing
+Mrs. Weems as she did, she realized that her opinion
+could not be changed by argument. It was her hope
+that Al Gepper would discredit himself by failing in
+the s&eacute;ance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, please promise that you&rsquo;ll do nothing outrageous
+tomorrow,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems begged as the girl
+started to leave. &ldquo;I am sure Mr. Gepper feels that you
+are antagonistic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try to behave myself,&rdquo; Penny laughed. &ldquo;Yes,
+we&rsquo;ll give Mr. Gepper a chance to prove what he can
+do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At two the following afternoon she and Mrs.
+Weems presented themselves at the Hodges&rsquo; cottage.
+Both Mr. Hodges and his wife, who were to sit in at
+the s&eacute;ance, were trembling with anticipation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Gepper is simply wonderful,&rdquo; the seamstress
+confided to Mrs. Weems. &ldquo;He tells me that I have
+great healing powers as well as a psychic personality.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jenny, I hope you haven&rsquo;t told him anything
+about me,&rdquo; the housekeeper mentioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, Maud. For that matter, he&rsquo;s said nothing
+about you since you were here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems cast Penny an &ldquo;I-told-you-so&rdquo; glance
+which was not lost upon Al Gepper who entered the
+room at that moment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am ready for you, ladies,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Kindly follow
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_107">[107]</div>
+<p>In the upstairs room blinds had been drawn. Al
+Gepper indicated that his audience was to occupy the
+chairs around the circular table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Before we attempt to communicate with the departed
+souls, I wish to assure you that I employ no
+trickery,&rdquo; he announced, looking hard at Penny. &ldquo;You
+may examine the table or the cabinet if you wish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, Mr. Gepper,&rdquo; murmured Mrs. Hodges.
+&ldquo;We trust you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll look, if you don&rsquo;t mind,&rdquo; said Penny.</p>
+<p>She peered beneath the table, thumped it several
+times, and pulled aside the curtain of the cabinet. It
+was empty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now if you are quite satisfied, shall we begin?&rdquo;
+purred Mr. Gepper. &ldquo;It will make it much easier, if
+each one of you will give me a personal object.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A la the Celestial Temple method,&rdquo; muttered
+Penny beneath her breath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was that?&rdquo; questioned the medium sharply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing. I was merely thinking to myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then please think more quietly. I must warn you
+that this s&eacute;ance cannot be successful unless each person
+present concentrates, entering into the occasion
+with the deepest of sincerity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I assure you, I am as sincere as yourself,&rdquo; Penny
+responded gravely.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_108">[108]</div>
+<p>Mr. Hodges deposited his gold watch on the table.
+His wife offered a pin and Mrs. Weems a plain band
+ring. Penny parted with a handkerchief.</p>
+<p>After everyone was seated about the table, Al
+Gepper played several phonograph records, all the
+while exhorting the Spirits to appear.</p>
+<p>Taking Mrs. Weems&rsquo; ring from the tray before him,
+he pressed it to his forehead. A convulsive shudder
+wracked his body.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Someone comes to me&mdash;&rdquo; he mumbled. &ldquo;Someone
+comes, giving the name of David&mdash;David Swester.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My cousin,&rdquo; breathed Mrs. Weems in awe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is tall and dark with a scar over his left eye,&rdquo;
+resumed the medium. &ldquo;I see him plainly now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That <i>is</i> David!&rdquo; cried the housekeeper, leaning
+forward in her eagerness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;David, have you a message for us?&rdquo; the medium
+intoned.</p>
+<p>There was a long silence, during which the man
+could be seen writhing and twisting in the semi-darkness.
+Then his voice began again:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;David has a message for a person called Maud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am Maud,&rdquo; said Mrs. Weems tremulously. &ldquo;Oh,
+what does he say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That he is well and happy in the Spirit World, but
+he is worried about Maud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Worried about me? Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_109">[109]</div>
+<p>The medium again seemed to undergo physical suffering,
+but presently the message &ldquo;came through,&rdquo; although
+not in an entirely clear form.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;David&rsquo;s voice has faded. I am not certain, but it has
+something to do with six thousand dollars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The exact amount he left to me!&rdquo; Mrs. Weems
+murmured.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;David is afraid that you will not have the wisdom
+to invest the money wisely. He warns you that the
+present place where you have it deposited is not safe.
+He will tell you what to do with it. Now the voice is
+fading again. David has gone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With another convulsive shudder, Al Gepper
+straightened from the position into which he had
+slumped. Resuming his normal tone he said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is all. The connection with Cousin David has
+been broken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t we contact him again?&rdquo; Mrs. Weems asked
+in disappointment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not today. Possibly tomorrow at this same hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t you call up another Spirit by using my
+pin or Pa&rsquo;s watch?&rdquo; Mrs. Hodges suggested wistfully.</p>
+<p>Al Gepper raised one of the window blinds. &ldquo;I am
+very, very tired,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;This s&eacute;ance was particularly
+exhausting due to the presence of someone antagonistic.
+Tomorrow if conditions are right, I hope
+actually to materialize Cousin David. The poor soul
+is trying so hard to get a message through to the one
+he calls Maud.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_110">[110]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean I&rsquo;ll be able to see him?&rdquo; the housekeeper
+asked incredulously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope and believe so. I must rest now. After a
+s&eacute;ance I should refresh myself with sleep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; agreed Mrs. Hodges. &ldquo;We are selfish
+to overtax you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Recovering their trinkets, the elderly couple and
+Mrs. Weems went from the room. Penny was the last
+to leave.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sister?&rdquo; inquired the medium in a low voice.
+&ldquo;Were you convinced, or do you still think that you
+can show up Al Gepper?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said Penny softly, &ldquo;that you are a very
+clever man. But clever as you are, one of your well-trained
+ghosts may yet lead you to the city jail!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_111">[111]</div>
+<h2 id="c13"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">13</span>
+<br /><i>COUSIN DAVID&rsquo;S GHOST</i></h2>
+<p>When Penny reached the lower floor she found
+Mrs. Weems and the Hodges excitedly discussing the
+s&eacute;ance. The seamstress and her husband emphatically
+declared that they had given the medium no information
+regarding either the housekeeper or the deceased
+Cousin David.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then there can be only one explanation,&rdquo; Mrs.
+Weems said. &ldquo;We were truly in communication with
+a departed spirit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you agree, Penny?&rdquo; inquired Mrs. Hodges.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am afraid I can&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The test was a fair one,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems insisted.
+&ldquo;Mr. Gepper couldn&rsquo;t have described Cousin David
+so accurately if he hadn&rsquo;t actually seen him as he materialized
+from the spirit world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Al Gepper could have obtained much of his information
+from persons in Riverview,&rdquo; Penny responded.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_112">[112]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;About me, perhaps,&rdquo; the housekeeper conceded.
+&ldquo;But not about Cousin David. Why, I doubt if anyone
+save myself knew he had a scar over his eye. He received
+it in an automobile accident twelve or thirteen
+years ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just think!&rdquo; murmured Mrs. Hodges. &ldquo;Tomorrow
+you may actually be able to see your departed cousin!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In vain Penny argued that Al Gepper was a trickster.
+She was unable to offer the slightest evidence to
+support her contention while, on the other hand, the
+Hodges reminded her that the medium had never
+asked one penny for his services.</p>
+<p>From the cottage Penny went directly to the <i>Star</i>
+office, feeling certain that her father would have returned
+there from his trip. Nor was she mistaken.
+Gaining admittance to the private office, she wasted no
+words in relating everything which had transpired
+during his absence. Her father&rsquo;s attention was flattering.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, you actually saw all this?&rdquo; he questioned
+when she had finished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes! At the Celestial Temple Louise was with
+me, too. We thought you might take up the matter
+with the police.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s exactly what I will do,&rdquo; decided Mr. Parker.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve turned the matter over in my mind for several
+days. The <i>Star</i> will take the initiative in driving these
+mediums, character readers and the like out of Riverview!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_113">[113]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Dad, I was hoping you&rsquo;d say that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker pressed a desk buzzer. Summoning DeWitt,
+he told of his plan to launch an active campaign.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing will please me better, Chief,&rdquo; responded
+the city editor. &ldquo;Where do we start?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll tip the police to what is going on at the
+Celestial Temple. Have them send detectives there for
+tonight&rsquo;s meeting. Then when the usual hocus-pocus
+starts, arrests can be made. Have photographers and a
+good reporter on hand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That should start the ball rolling,&rdquo; agreed DeWitt.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll assign Jerry Livingston to the story. Salt Sommers
+is my best photographer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get busy right away,&rdquo; Mr. Parker ordered. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
+play the story big tomorrow&mdash;give it a spread.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How about Al Gepper?&rdquo; Penny inquired after DeWitt
+had gone. &ldquo;Could he be arrested without involving
+the Hodges?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not very easily if he lives at their place. Has he accepted
+money for the s&eacute;ances he conducts there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t taken any yet from Mrs. Weems. I am
+sure he must have other customers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have no proof of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_114">[114]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Suppose we forget Al Gepper for the time being,
+and concentrate on the Celestial Temple,&rdquo; Mr. Parker
+proposed. &ldquo;In the meantime, learn everything you can
+about the man&rsquo;s methods.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No assignment would please me more, Dad. I&rsquo;ve
+the same as promised Mr. Gepper he&rsquo;ll land in jail, and
+I want to make good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker began to pace the floor. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll write a
+scorching editorial,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll fight ignorance
+with information. Our reporters must learn how these
+mediums do their tricks, and expose them to the gullible
+public.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do everything I can to help,&rdquo; Penny promised
+eagerly. &ldquo;May I have Al Gepper for my particular fish
+bait?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s your assignment. And I&rsquo;m depending upon
+you to see that he doesn&rsquo;t work any of his trickery on
+Mrs. Weems. If she can&rsquo;t be persuaded to remain
+away from the Hodges&rsquo;, then we must protect her as
+best we can.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try to accompany her every time she goes there,
+Dad. I am afraid he may be after her money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gepper doesn&rsquo;t know she inherited six thousand
+dollars?&rdquo; Mr. Parker asked in alarm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, she dropped the information that she had
+come into money. He supplied figures himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder how?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_115">[115]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t the slightest idea, Dad. Gepper is as clever
+a man as ever I met. Honestly, it wouldn&rsquo;t surprise me
+if he does produce Cousin David at tomorrow&rsquo;s
+s&eacute;ance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker snorted in disgust.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tommyrot! The man will make an excuse about
+the conditions not being right, and fail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps, but he seems pretty confident.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You expect to attend the s&eacute;ance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, definitely. Jungle beasts couldn&rsquo;t keep me
+away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then be alert every instant&mdash;without appearing
+too suspicious, of course. Try to learn how the man
+accomplishes his tricks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave it to me,&rdquo; chuckled Penny. &ldquo;Mr. Al Gepper
+is due for his first shock when he wakes up tomorrow
+and reads that the Celestial Temple has been raided.
+Unless I am much mistaken, that place is one of his
+favorite haunts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Leaving the newspaper office, Penny went directly
+home. She longed to stop at the Sidell home, but she
+had promised her father to say nothing about the
+planned raid until it was an accomplished fact. Feeling
+the need of work to occupy her time, she washed the
+maroon car and waxed the fading paint of Leaping
+Lena.</p>
+<p>At six o&rsquo;clock her father came home for dinner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Any news?&rdquo; Penny asked, running to meet him.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_116">[116]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Everything&rsquo;s set,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;DeWitt laid your
+information before the police. Tonight three detectives
+will attend the meeting at the Temple. If anything
+out of the way happens, the raid will be staged.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny was so tense with expectation that she was
+unable to do justice to the delicious dinner which Mrs.
+Weems had prepared. Her father, too, seemed unusually
+restless. After dinner he made a pretense of reading
+the paper, but actually his eyes did not see the
+print.</p>
+<p>The hands of the clock scarcely appeared to move,
+so slowly did time pass. Eight o&rsquo;clock came, then nine.
+Suddenly the telephone rang.</p>
+<p>Penny was away in an instant to answer it. From
+the next room she called to her father:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s for you, Dad! DeWitt, I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told him to telephone me as soon as the raid was
+staged.&rdquo; Mr. Parker arose and went quickly to take
+the receiver. Penny hovered at his elbow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hello! DeWitt?&rdquo; the publisher asked, and after a
+slight pause: &ldquo;Oh, I see. No, I don&rsquo;t think Penny was
+mistaken. It&rsquo;s more likely there was a tip-off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He hung up the receiver and turned toward Penny
+who anticipated the news.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The raid was a failure?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_117">[117]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Penny. Detectives spent two hours at the
+meeting. Nothing happened. It was impossible to make
+arrests.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They must have been recognized as detectives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Undoubtedly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Others will be assigned to the case?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt it, Penny. DeWitt reports that the police
+have become convinced that the spiritualists who use
+the Temple are not operating for profit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Louise and I know better because she was approached.&rdquo;
+Penny anxiously regarded her father. &ldquo;Dad,
+even if the police do give up, we won&rsquo;t, will we?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, we&rsquo;re in this fight and we&rsquo;ll stay in it,&rdquo; he answered
+grimly. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll put some new teeth in our trap.
+And the next time it&rsquo;s sprung, I warrant you we&rsquo;ll
+catch a crook.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_118">[118]</div>
+<h2 id="c14"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">14</span>
+<br /><i>WET PAINT</i></h2>
+<p>Promptly at two o&rsquo;clock the following afternoon,
+Penny and Mrs. Weems presented themselves at
+the Hodges&rsquo; cottage for the appointed s&eacute;ance. Already
+Mr. Gepper awaited them in the darkened apartment
+on the second floor.</p>
+<p>Penny&rsquo;s glance about the room found everything in
+the same order as upon the previous visit, save that an
+easel with a large black sheet of artist&rsquo;s paper stood
+beside the cabinet.</p>
+<p>She moved as if to examine it. Al Gepper intercepted
+her by saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sit here, if you please. Beside Mrs. Weems. I&rsquo;ll call
+the Hodges and we&rsquo;ll start at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The medium went to the door and shouted down
+the stairway. Penny noticed that he remained where
+he could watch her every move in a mirror which
+hung on the wall. She shrewdly guessed that he was
+afraid she might attempt to examine either the cabinet
+or the easel.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_119">[119]</div>
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Hodges came in response to the call,
+taking chairs about the circular table. The gaze which
+they fastened upon Al Gepper was almost worshipful.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now today I hope to materialize the Spirit of
+Cousin David,&rdquo; announced the medium. &ldquo;The task
+will be difficult, as you must realize. After the s&eacute;ance
+begins I am compelled to request absolute quiet. The
+slightest movement may frighten away the Spirits.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why are spirits so timid?&rdquo; asked Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because their beings are so sensitive that they instantly
+feel an unfriendly presence,&rdquo; the man responded
+glibly. &ldquo;Please hold hands, and use every precaution
+that contact is not broken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems took one of Penny&rsquo;s hands and Mr.
+Hodges the other. Mrs. Hodges sat next to her husband.</p>
+<p>After lowering black curtains over the window
+blinds to further darken the room, the medium returned
+to his chair. Those at the table were unable to
+distinguish his form, and for a time there was no sound
+save the scratching music of a phonograph record.</p>
+<p>Presently the medium exhorted the Spirit of Cousin
+David to appear. For at least ten minutes there was no
+indication that communication was to be established.
+Then a cowbell tinkled, causing Mrs. Weems to shake
+and tremble.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_120">[120]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you there, David?&rdquo; called the medium.</p>
+<p>The bell jingled violently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are ready, David,&rdquo; intoned the medium.
+&ldquo;Have you a message for us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To Penny&rsquo;s amazement, a pair of shapely white
+hands slowly materialized, apparently pulling aside
+the curtain of the cabinet above the medium&rsquo;s head.
+In the darkness they glowed with a weird phosphorescent
+light.</p>
+<p>Next appeared a white-rimmed slate, upon which
+luminous words were written: &ldquo;I am the Spirit of
+Cousin David. Is Maud here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; responded Mrs. Weems, quivering with
+excitement. &ldquo;Have you a message for me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again the hand wrote: &ldquo;My happiness in this world
+beyond is disturbed. Maud, do not squander the
+money which I gave to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Squander it?&rdquo; the housekeeper said aloud. &ldquo;Why,
+I&rsquo;ve scarcely spent a penny!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A trip to California is ill-advised,&rdquo; wrote the hand.
+&ldquo;Invest your money in good eight per cent securities.
+There are many excellent companies&mdash;the Brantwell
+Corporation, White and Edwards, the Bierkamp Company.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_121">[121]</div>
+<p>The slate vanished and once more the jingling of
+the cowbell denoted that the spirit was moving away.</p>
+<p>The medium spoke. &ldquo;Contact has been broken.
+Shall we try to reach Cousin David again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, please!&rdquo; pleaded Mrs. Weems. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know
+what to do now. I&rsquo;ve planned on the western trip and
+I can&rsquo;t understand why Cousin David should advise
+me to give it up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t go agin&rsquo; the Spirits if I was you,&rdquo; advised
+Mr. Hodges. &ldquo;You better change your plans,
+Maud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how can I be certain that the message came
+from Cousin David?&rdquo; the housekeeper quavered. &ldquo;Oh,
+dear, I am so upset! If only I could be certain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam, I hope you do not distrust me,&rdquo; said Al
+Gepper reprovingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, it&rsquo;s not that. I&rsquo;m just upset.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps, if you actually saw your cousin it would
+set your mind at rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it possible to see him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot promise, but we will try. Hold hands
+again please, and everyone concentrate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There followed an interval during which the medium
+pleaded with the Spirit of Cousin David to return
+and show himself. Suddenly the group was startled
+to see a luminous banjo move high through the
+air, unsupported by any hand. It began to play &ldquo;Down
+upon the Swanee River.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_122">[122]</div>
+<p>Midway through the selection, the music broke off
+and the banjo disappeared. An instant later Mrs.
+Hodges uttered a choked cry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The easel! Look at it, Maud!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All eyes turned toward the painter&rsquo;s canvas. As the
+medium focused a flashlight upon it, the face of an
+elderly man slowly materialized on the blank surface,
+the picture appearing in red, blue and finally black oil
+paint.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It <i>is</i> Cousin David!&rdquo; whispered Mrs. Weems, gripping
+Penny&rsquo;s hand so tightly that it hurt. &ldquo;He looks
+exactly as he did when last I saw him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The medium extinguished his light and again the
+room was dark. Mrs. Weems&rsquo; chair creaked as she
+stirred restlessly. Mr. Hodges&rsquo; heavy breathing could
+be plainly heard. There was no other sound. Everyone
+waited in tense expectancy, sensing that the climax of
+the s&eacute;ance was at hand.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, behind Al Gepper&rsquo;s chair a spot of
+ethereal light appeared. As Penny watched, it grew in
+size until the figure had assumed the proportions of a
+man. Then, to her further amazement, it slowly rose
+toward the ceiling, hovering above Mrs. Weems&rsquo; chair.</p>
+<p>Throughout the s&eacute;ance Penny had remained firm in
+her conviction that the medium had resorted to trickery
+to produce his startling effects. Although she could
+not be sure, she thought that several times he had
+slipped from his chair to enter the conveniently placed
+cabinet. She also believed that the only way he could
+have materialized the ghost was by donning luminous
+robes.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_123">[123]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll end his little game once and for all,&rdquo; she
+thought.</p>
+<p>Deliberately she waited until the ghostly figure
+floated close to her own chair. Then with a sudden upward
+spring, she snatched at it.</p>
+<p>Greatly to her chagrin, her hand encountered nothing
+solid. With the speed of lightning, the figure
+streaked toward the cabinet behind Al Gepper&rsquo;s chair
+and was seen no more.</p>
+<p>Arising, the medium switched on the room lights.
+His face was white with anger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I warned you to make no move,&rdquo; he said harshly
+to Penny. &ldquo;You deliberately disobeyed me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Penny, why did you do it?&rdquo; wailed Mrs.
+Weems. &ldquo;I was so eager to get another message from
+Cousin David.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His Spirit has been frightened away,&rdquo; announced
+the medium. &ldquo;It will be impossible ever to recall him.
+For that matter, I shall never again conduct a s&eacute;ance
+with this young person present. She is a disturbing
+element.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Penny, you&rsquo;ve ruined everything,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Weems accusingly. &ldquo;Why do you act so outrageously?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_124">[124]</div>
+<p>Penny started to speak and then changed her mind.
+Mrs. Weems, the seamstress and her husband, all were
+gazing at her with deep reproach. She realized that
+there was nothing she could say which would make
+them understand.</p>
+<p>She arose and walked to the easel. The painting of
+Cousin David remained clearly visible. She touched
+it and then glanced at her finger which bore a streak
+of red.</p>
+<p>The paint was still wet.</p>
+<p>Penny stared at her finger a moment. Lifting her
+eyes she met the triumphant gaze of Al Gepper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not even a skillful artist could have painted a
+picture so quickly,&rdquo; he said with a smirk. &ldquo;Only a
+spirit would have the ability. You are dumbfounded,
+my little one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, just plain dumb,&rdquo; answered Penny. &ldquo;I salute
+you, Mr. Gepper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Without waiting for Mrs. Weems, she turned and
+went from the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now how <i>did</i> he do it?&rdquo; she muttered. &ldquo;I saw
+everything and yet I am more in the dark than ever.
+But I am sure of one thing. Unless I work fast, Al
+Gepper is almost certain to obtain Mrs. Weems&rsquo; inheritance.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_125">[125]</div>
+<h2 id="c15"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">15</span>
+<br /><i>HIDDEN MONEY</i></h2>
+<p>One of Penny&rsquo;s first acts upon arriving home was
+to scan the telephone directory under the heading,
+Investment Firms. The three companies mentioned
+during the s&eacute;ance, White and Edwards, Brantwell, and
+Bierkamp, were unlisted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Evidently there are no such firms in Riverview,&rdquo;
+she reflected. &ldquo;But why was Mrs. Weems advised to
+invest her money with one of them? It looks very
+suspicious to me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not until after five o&rsquo;clock did Mrs. Weems return
+from the Hodges&rsquo;. She seemed rather upset, and when
+Penny tried to bring up the subject of the s&eacute;ance, said
+distantly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please, Penny, I prefer not to discuss it. Your conduct
+was disgraceful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I apologize for grabbing at the ghost, Mrs. Weems.
+I only did it to prove that Al Gepper is a fraud.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_126">[126]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Your motives were quite apparent. One could not
+blame Mr. Gepper for being angry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mrs. Weems,&rdquo; said Penny in desperation.
+&ldquo;How can you be taken in by his smooth line? His
+one purpose is to obtain your money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are very unjust,&rdquo; the housekeeper responded.
+&ldquo;Today I tried to pay Mr. Gepper for the s&eacute;ance and
+he would not accept one penny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s because he is playing for higher stakes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s no use discussing the matter with you,&rdquo; Mrs.
+Weems shrugged. &ldquo;You are prejudiced and will give
+the man credit for nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I give him credit for being very clever. Mrs.
+Weems, please promise that you&rsquo;ll not allow him to
+invest your money for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have no intention of doing so, Penny. It does seem
+to me that I should consider Cousin David&rsquo;s wishes in
+the matter. Very likely I shall abandon my plans for
+the western trip.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And stay here with us?&rdquo; Penny cried eagerly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I am thinking of going to a larger city and
+taking an apartment. With my money invested in
+eight per cent securities, I should have a comfortable
+little income.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_127">[127]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems, I&rsquo;ve heard Dad say over and over
+that sound securities will not pay such a high rate of
+interest. Promise you won&rsquo;t invest your money until
+you&rsquo;ve talked with him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re always asking me to promise something or
+other,&rdquo; the housekeeper sighed. &ldquo;This time I shall use
+my own judgment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Realizing that further argument was only a waste of
+breath, Penny wandered outside to await her father.
+When he came, they sat together on the front porch
+steps, discussing the situation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll drop a word of advice to Mrs. Weems at the
+first opportunity,&rdquo; offered Mr. Parker. &ldquo;If she is in the
+mood you describe, it would not be wise to bring up
+the subject tonight. She merely would resent my interference.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What worries me is that I am afraid she may have
+told Al Gepper where the money is kept.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tomorrow I&rsquo;ll urge her again to deposit it in a
+bank. We&rsquo;ll do our best to protect her from these
+sharpers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The publisher had been very much interested in
+Penny&rsquo;s account of the s&eacute;ance. However, he was unable
+to explain how the various tricks had been accomplished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad,&rdquo; Penny said thoughtfully, &ldquo;you don&rsquo;t suppose
+there&rsquo;s any chance it wasn&rsquo;t trickery?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not! I hope you&rsquo;re not falling under this
+fellow&rsquo;s spell?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_128">[128]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but it gave me a real shock when I saw Cousin
+David&rsquo;s face materialize on the canvas. It was the absolute
+image of him&mdash;or rather of a picture Mrs. Weems
+once showed me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A startled expression came over Penny&rsquo;s face. Without
+explanation, she sprang to her feet and ran to the
+kitchen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;did you ever get it back?
+Your picture!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What picture, Penny?&rdquo; The housekeeper scarcely
+glanced up as she vigorously scrubbed carrots.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I mean the one of Cousin David. You allowed a
+photographer to take it for enlargement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It hasn&rsquo;t been returned,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems admitted.
+&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t imagine why the work takes so long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I can,&rdquo; announced Penny. &ldquo;But you never
+would believe me if I told you, so I won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Racing to the porch, she revealed to her father what
+she thought had occurred. It was her theory that the
+agent who had called at the Parker home days earlier
+had in actuality been one of Al Gepper&rsquo;s assistants.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you see, Dad!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;The man obtained
+a picture of Cousin David, and probably turned
+it over to the medium.&rdquo; Her face fell slightly. &ldquo;Of
+course, that still doesn&rsquo;t explain how the painting
+slowly materialized.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_129">[129]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor does it explain the ghost or the banjo. Penny,
+couldn&rsquo;t Gepper have painted the picture himself in
+the darkness?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There wasn&rsquo;t time, Dad. Besides, he held a flashlight
+on the painting. No human hand touched it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say, too, that the banjo was high overhead
+when it played?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right, Dad. Gepper couldn&rsquo;t have reached
+the strings. The instrument floated free in the air.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sounds fantastic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Believe me, it was, Dad. It&rsquo;s no wonder Gepper is
+gaining such influence over Mrs. Weems. He&rsquo;s as slick
+as a greased fox!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have Jerry go to the house and try to learn how
+the fellow operates,&rdquo; declared Mr. Parker. &ldquo;We can&rsquo;t
+break the story until we have absolute evidence that
+Gepper has obtained money under false pretenses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next day Penny remained close at home. Mrs.
+Weems still treated her somewhat distantly, leaving
+the house immediately after lunch and declining to explain
+where she was going. Penny was quite certain
+that her destination was the Hodges&rsquo; cottage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Guess I&rsquo;ll run over and see Louise,&rdquo; she thought
+restlessly. &ldquo;Nothing to do here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before she could leave the house, the doorbell rang.
+A man of perhaps thirty, well dressed, with a leather
+briefcase tucked under his arm, stood on the front
+porch. He bowed politely to Penny.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_130">[130]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;This is where Mrs. Weems resides, I believe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but she isn&rsquo;t here now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When will she be home?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say,&rdquo; replied Penny. &ldquo;Are you an agent?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man&rsquo;s appearance displeased her although she
+could not have said exactly why. His smile was too
+ingratiating, his eyes calculating and hard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My name is Bierkamp,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;I represent
+the Harold G. Bierkamp Investment Company.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny stiffened. She glared at the agent. &ldquo;You mean
+you represent the Al Gepper Spookus Company,&rdquo; she
+said in a cutting voice. &ldquo;Well, Mrs. Weems doesn&rsquo;t
+want any of your wonderful eight per cent stocks!
+She&rsquo;ll not see you, so don&rsquo;t come here again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And who are you to speak for her?&rdquo; the man retorted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you come here again, I&rsquo;ll call the police,&rdquo; Penny
+threatened. &ldquo;Now get out!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Without another word, the man retreated down
+the street. Penny watched until he turned a corner
+and was lost to view. She was a trifle worried as to
+what she had done.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If Mrs. Weems learns about this she&rsquo;ll never forgive
+me,&rdquo; she thought uneasily. &ldquo;But he was a crook
+sent by Al Gepper. I know it.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_131">[131]</div>
+<p>Wandering upstairs, she entered the bathroom, intending
+to wash before going to Louise&rsquo;s home. On
+the tiled floor lay a velvet ribbon with a key attached.
+At once, Penny realized that Mrs. Weems had left it
+there inadvertently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the key to her desk,&rdquo; she reflected, picking it
+up. &ldquo;And she insists that her money is kept in a safe
+place! I have a notion to play a joke on her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The longer Penny considered the idea, the more it
+pleased her. Jubilantly, she set forth for the Sidell
+home. Taking Louise into her confidence, she visited
+a novelty shop and purchased a supply of fake money.</p>
+<p>Returning home, she then unlocked the drawer of
+Mrs. Weems&rsquo; desk and, removing the six thousand
+dollars, replaced it with neat stacks of imitation bills.
+Louise watched her with misgiving.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, this joke of yours isn&rsquo;t likely to strike
+Mrs. Weems as very funny,&rdquo; she warned. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re always
+doing things which get you into trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is in a good cause, Lou. I am protecting Mrs.
+Weems from her own folly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What will you do with the money?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Deposit it in a bank.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are taking matters into your hands with a
+vengeance! Suppose you&rsquo;re robbed on the way downtown?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That would complicate my life. Upon second
+thought, I&rsquo;ll send for an armored truck.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_132">[132]</div>
+<p>To Louise&rsquo;s amazement, Penny actually carried
+through her plan. A heavily guarded express truck
+presently drew up before the Parker residence, and
+Mrs. Weems&rsquo; money was turned over to the two
+armed men who promised that it would be delivered
+safely to the First National Bank.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There, that&rsquo;s a load off my mind,&rdquo; said Penny.
+&ldquo;Just let Al Gepper try to steal Mrs. Weems&rsquo; money
+now!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Louise shook her head sadly. &ldquo;You may be accused
+of stealing yourself. I wouldn&rsquo;t be in your slippers
+when Mrs. Weems learns about this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll be able to explain,&rdquo; laughed Penny.</p>
+<p>The joke she had played did not seem quite so funny
+an hour later. Mrs. Weems returned home and without
+comment recovered the key which had been replaced
+on the lavatory floor. She did not open her desk
+or mention the money.</p>
+<p>At dinner Penny was so subdued that the housekeeper
+inquired if she were ill.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not yet,&rdquo; the girl answered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m just thinking
+about the future. It&rsquo;s so depressing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps a picture show would cheer us all,&rdquo; proposed
+Mr. Parker.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems displayed interest, and Penny, without
+enthusiasm, agreed to go. Eight o&rsquo;clock found them
+at the Avalon, a neighborhood theatre. The show was
+not to Penny&rsquo;s liking, although her father and the
+housekeeper seemed to enjoy it. She squirmed restlessly,
+and finally whispered to her father that she was
+returning home.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_133">[133]</div>
+<p>In truth, as Penny well knew, she was suffering
+from an acute case of &ldquo;conscience.&rdquo; Now that it was
+too late, she regretted having meddled with Mrs.
+Weems&rsquo; money.</p>
+<p>Gloomily she walked home alone. As she entered,
+she heard the telephone ringing, but before she could
+answer, the party hung up. With a sigh Penny locked
+the front door again, switched out the lights and went
+to bed.</p>
+<p>For a long while she lay staring at a patch of moonlight
+on the bedroom carpet. Although she felt tired
+she could not sleep.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s just as Louise said,&rdquo; she reflected. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m always
+getting myself into hot water and for no good reason,
+either!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her morose thoughts were interrupted as a hard
+object thudded against a nearby wall. Penny sat up,
+listening. She believed that the sound had come from
+Mrs. Weems&rsquo; room, yet she knew she was alone in the
+house.</p>
+<p>Rolling from bed, she groped for a robe, and without
+turning on the lights, tiptoed down the hall. Mrs.
+Weems&rsquo; door stood open. Was some intruder hidden
+in that room?</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_134">[134]</div>
+<p>Peering inside, Penny at first noticed nothing amiss.
+Then her gaze fastened on the window sill, plainly
+visible in the moonlight. Two iron hooks, evenly
+spaced, had been clamped over the ledge!</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_135">[135]</div>
+<h2 id="c16"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">16</span>
+<br /><i>OVER THE WINDOW LEDGE</i></h2>
+<p>As Penny flattened herself against the wall, the
+head and shoulders of a man slowly rose into view.
+Although his body was plainly silhouetted in the
+moonlight, she could not see his face.</p>
+<p>The intruder raised the sash, making no sound. He
+hesitated, listening a moment, then dropped lightly
+into the bedroom.</p>
+<p>Without turning on a flashlight which he carried, he
+went directly to Mrs. Weems&rsquo; desk. So deliberate was
+the action that Penny instantly decided the fellow had
+come for a particular purpose and knew the lay-out of
+the entire house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He means to steal Mrs. Weems&rsquo; money!&rdquo; she
+thought.</p>
+<p>Opening the desk, the man tried the drawer where
+the inheritance funds had been hidden. Failing to unlock
+it with a key, he took a tool from his pocket and
+in a moment had broken the lock.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_136">[136]</div>
+<p>Removing the stack of fake bills which Penny had
+substituted, he thrust them into his coat. Taking no
+interest in anything else in the room, he moved
+stealthily toward the window.</p>
+<p>Penny knew there was no one within calling distance
+and that the man probably was armed. Wisdom
+dictated that she remain in hiding, but she was determined
+the thief should not escape. Hoping to take him
+by surprise, she stalked forward.</p>
+<p>A board creaked. With a muttered exclamation the
+man whirled around. At the same instant Penny flung
+herself upon him, diving low in imitation of a football
+tackle.</p>
+<p>The thief reeled, but instead of falling he recovered
+his balance and gave Penny a tremendous shove which
+sent her sprawling backwards. Before she could regain
+her feet, he ran to the window. Swinging himself over
+the ledge, he vanished from view.</p>
+<p>By the time Penny reached the window there was
+no sign of the intruder. He had disappeared as if into
+thin air. However, she knew that the man must have
+descended by means of a ladder which he had hastily
+removed.</p>
+<p>She ran her hand over the window ledge. The iron
+hooks no longer were there, only the scars which had
+been cut in the wood.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_137">[137]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;This undoubtedly was the same fellow who broke
+into the Kohl apartment!&rdquo; she thought. &ldquo;But how did
+he escape so quickly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny started for a telephone, intending to notify
+the police. However, when it occurred to her that her
+father might not wish the matter made public, she
+changed her mind and ran downstairs.</p>
+<p>Unlocking the rear door, she glanced carefully
+about the yard. There was no one in sight, no movement
+behind any of the shrubbery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s gone, of course,&rdquo; she thought.</p>
+<p>Penny wore no shoes. Finding a pair of old galoshes
+on the porch, she protected her feet with them, and
+hobbled into the yard.</p>
+<p>The grass beneath Mrs. Weems&rsquo; window had been
+trampled, but at first glance there was no clue to indicate
+how the burglar had gained entrance to the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Obviously he used a ladder,&rdquo; she reasoned. &ldquo;But
+how did he descend so quickly? And what became of
+the ladder? I know he never had time to carry away
+one of the ordinary type.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A dark object lying on the grass attracted Penny&rsquo;s
+attention. Picking it up, she carried it to the porch and
+switched on a light that she might see to better advantage.
+In her hand she held a torn strand of black
+silk rope.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_138">[138]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;This may be an important clue!&rdquo; she thought excitedly.
+&ldquo;I know now how the man entered the
+house!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As Penny examined the piece of rope, automobile
+headlight beams cut a path across the yard. The Parker
+car drew up on the driveway and both Mrs. Weems
+and Mr. Parker alighted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, come here quickly!&rdquo; Penny called as he
+started to open the garage doors.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s wrong, Penny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Both the publisher and Mrs. Weems came toward
+the porch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve had a burglar,&rdquo; Penny announced. &ldquo;He
+broke into Mrs. Weems&rsquo; room, smashing the lock on
+the desk&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My money!&rdquo; the housekeeper exclaimed in horror.
+&ldquo;Oh, Penny, don&rsquo;t tell me that it&rsquo;s gone!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He escaped with the contents of the drawer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Weems gave a moan of anguish. &ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t you
+called the police?&rdquo; she demanded. &ldquo;When did it happen?
+Tell me everything!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;First, I&rsquo;ll set your mind at rest,&rdquo; Penny replied.
+&ldquo;Your money is safe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! I never was so relieved in all my born days.&rdquo;
+Mrs. Weems sagged weakly into a porch rocker.
+&ldquo;Penny, how could you torture me by letting me
+think the money was stolen?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_139">[139]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Because I have a confession to make, Mrs. Weems.
+You left the key to your desk lying on the bathroom
+floor. I thought it might be a good joke to move the
+money to another place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you darling blessed girl!&rdquo; laughed Mrs.
+Weems. &ldquo;Where did you hide it, Penny? Are you sure
+it&rsquo;s safe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It should be. I had it taken to the First National
+Bank and deposited in your name. The thief carried
+off a package of fake money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rather high-handed weren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; commented her
+father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now don&rsquo;t you scold her,&rdquo; spoke Mrs. Weems
+quickly. &ldquo;I am glad Penny acted as she did. Otherwise,
+I might have lost my entire inheritance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny drew a deep breath. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m relieved you feel
+that way about it. I wish I could see the burglar&rsquo;s face
+when he discovers he stole worthless money!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Both the housekeeper and Mr. Parker pressed her
+with questions. She revealed exactly what had occurred
+during their absence, showing them the strand
+of black silk rope.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, I think this may be a valuable clue,&rdquo; she declared.
+&ldquo;What does it suggest to you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not much of anything, I am afraid.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_140">[140]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;You remember that when the Kohls were robbed
+the police couldn&rsquo;t figure out how the burglar gained
+entrance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I recall the story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I believe the same man committed both
+burglaries.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why do you think so, Penny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the Kohl&rsquo;s the police found two marks on the
+window ledge apparently made by iron hooks. Similar
+marks are on the sill in Mrs. Weems&rsquo; room. For that
+matter, I distinctly saw the iron pieces bite into the
+wood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s look at them,&rdquo; proposed Mr. Parker.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only the marks are there now, Dad. The man
+jerked the hooks loose after he descended. They must
+have been attached to his ladder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought you said he had none, Penny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was no time for him to have carried away
+an ordinary, heavy ladder. I think the one he used
+must have been made of silk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this is a piece of it!&rdquo; Mr. Parker exclaimed,
+examining the twisted strand with new interest. &ldquo;Your
+theory sounds plausible. It would be possible for a
+man to scale a wall with such a ladder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He could jerk loose the hooks in an instant, too,
+Dad. The ladder would fit into a small suitcase, or
+even his pocket!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_141">[141]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s one objection to your theory, Penny. How
+could such a ladder be raised to the window ledge? It
+naturally would be limp.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That part has me puzzled, I&rsquo;ll admit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never even heard of a silken ladder,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Weems doubtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I once saw one being made,&rdquo; declared Penny with
+deliberate emphasis. &ldquo;At a Japanese Shop on Dorr
+Street.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right, you spoke of it!&rdquo; exclaimed her
+father. &ldquo;Penny, you may have something!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think so, Dad. This strand of twisted silk may
+lead straight to Kano&rsquo;s Curio Shop.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And from there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny hesitated, glancing at Mrs. Weems. She knew
+that the housekeeper might take offense, but she answered
+quietly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My guess would be to Al Gepper, Dad. Who but
+he or an accomplice could have known where the
+money was hidden?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_142">[142]</div>
+<h2 id="c17"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">17</span>
+<br /><i>KANO&rsquo;S CURIO SHOP</i></h2>
+<p>As Penny had anticipated, Mrs. Weems indignantly
+declared that she did not believe Mr. Gepper could
+have had any connection with the attempted robbery.
+Yet, even as she made the assertion, a startled expression
+came over her face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Think back, Mrs. Weems,&rdquo; urged Mr. Parker.
+&ldquo;How many persons knew where you had secreted the
+money?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told Mrs. Hodges.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Al Gepper?&rdquo; Penny probed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;&rdquo; The housekeeper looked ill at ease. &ldquo;He
+may have heard me talking with Mrs. Hodges. I remember
+he passed through the hall while we were
+together.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What day was that?&rdquo; inquired Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yesterday. After the s&eacute;ance. But I can&rsquo;t believe
+that Mr. Gepper would try to steal the money. I just
+can&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_143">[143]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;From what Penny has told me of the man, I should
+judge that he is a schemer,&rdquo; contributed Mr. Parker.
+&ldquo;You know the <i>Star</i> has started a vigorous campaign
+directed against such mediums as Al Gepper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he told me such remarkable things about
+Cousin David,&rdquo; protested Mrs. Weems. &ldquo;Facts which
+couldn&rsquo;t be faked.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Gepper doesn&rsquo;t make many false moves,&rdquo; acknowledged
+Penny. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a smooth worker. All the
+same, he&rsquo;s a fake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How could he have faked Cousin David&rsquo;s message?
+You forget we actually saw the picture of my relative
+painted without the aid of a human hand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did the picture closely resemble your cousin?&rdquo; inquired
+Mr. Parker.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, indeed. It looked exactly as I saw him
+many years ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that rather odd?&rdquo; demanded Penny. &ldquo;One
+would expect Cousin David to age a little.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny believes that a photographer&rsquo;s agent who
+came here a few days ago was sent by Gepper to obtain
+a picture of your relative,&rdquo; explained Mr. Parker.
+&ldquo;Did the man ask you many questions about your
+cousin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, yes, he did,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems admitted unwillingly.
+&ldquo;I made a mistake giving him the photograph.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_144">[144]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems fairly evident that the picture was used
+by Gepper,&rdquo; Mr. Parker commented. &ldquo;Whether he
+plotted to steal your money remains to be proven.
+Penny, you saw the man plainly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I didn&rsquo;t, Dad. Not his face. He was about the
+same build as Gepper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s not much to go on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From the first Gepper was determined to get Mrs.
+Weems&rsquo; money, Dad. He sent a man here who pretended
+to be from the Bierkamp Investment Company.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t tell me that,&rdquo; said Mrs. Weems.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, no I didn&rsquo;t. I was afraid you would invest
+your money with him, so I drove the man away. He
+must have been Gepper&rsquo;s accomplice. Failing to acquire
+the money by that means, he plotted the burglary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Surely you don&rsquo;t agree with Penny?&rdquo; the housekeeper
+asked Mr. Parker unhappily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In general, I am afraid I do. Mr. Gepper is an undesirable
+character, and I should like nothing better
+than to send him to jail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come upstairs, Mrs. Weems,&rdquo; urged Penny. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+show you the desk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Both the housekeeper and Mr. Parker followed her
+to the second floor. An examination of the bedroom
+disclosed no additional clues, but after studying the
+marks on the window ledge, the publisher favored
+Penny&rsquo;s theory that a silk ladder had been utilized.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_145">[145]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It was unwise of me to keep my money here,&rdquo;
+Mrs. Weems remarked in a crestfallen tone. &ldquo;I&mdash;I&rsquo;ve
+been silly about everything, I guess.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny gave her a quick hug. &ldquo;No, you haven&rsquo;t.
+Anyone might have been taken in by Al Gepper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall never attend another of his s&eacute;ances. I&rsquo;ll urge
+Mrs. Hodges to turn him from her house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems, are you willing to help get evidence
+against him?&rdquo; asked Mr. Parker abruptly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, if I can.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then go to the Hodges&rsquo; exactly as you have in the
+past,&rdquo; instructed the publisher. &ldquo;Penny has been
+warned by Gepper not to attend any of the s&eacute;ances,
+but you&rsquo;ll still be welcome. Learn everything you can
+and report to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be glad to do it, Mr. Parker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t allow him to guess that you have become
+suspicious. Above all, never withdraw your money
+from the bank at his suggestion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may be sure I won&rsquo;t. This has taught me a
+bitter lesson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t you an assignment for me, Dad?&rdquo; inquired
+Penny. &ldquo;How about Kano&rsquo;s Curio Shop?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Early tomorrow I&rsquo;ll send Jerry there to question
+the old Jap.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you notify the police?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_146">[146]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Not for the present. If we can crack this story I&rsquo;d
+like to get it ahead of the <i>Record</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you would send me to Kano&rsquo;s instead of
+Jerry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dorr Street is no place for you, Penny,&rdquo; Mr.
+Parker replied, dismissing the matter. &ldquo;Shall we get to
+bed now? It&rsquo;s nearly midnight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After the doors had been locked once more Penny
+went to her room, but she did not immediately fall
+asleep. Instead, she kept mulling over the events of the
+night. The more she thought about it the more firmly
+she became convinced that both the Kohl home and
+her own had been entered by the same person.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The telephone was ringing when I came from the
+movie,&rdquo; she recalled. &ldquo;Now I wonder who called? It
+may have been a trick of the thief to learn if anyone
+were in the house. When no one answered, the assumption
+would be that the coast was clear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny felt rather well satisfied with the way matters
+had developed. In one bold stroke she had saved Mrs.
+Weems&rsquo; inheritance, convinced the housekeeper that
+Al Gepper was not to be trusted, and had made definite
+progress in gaining evidence to be used in her
+father&rsquo;s campaign against the charlatan invaders of
+Riverview. Yet it annoyed her that the story, now
+that it had reached an active stage, was to be turned
+over to Jerry.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_147">[147]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I have a notion to visit the Kano Curio Shop ahead
+of him,&rdquo; she thought. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s exactly what I&rsquo;ll do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Having made up her mind, she rolled over and
+promptly fell asleep.</p>
+<p>In the morning Penny ate breakfast and wiped the
+dishes with a speed which astonished Mrs. Weems.
+Shortly after her father left for the office, she backed
+her own maroon car from the garage, and offering
+only a vague explanation, departed for Kano&rsquo;s Curio
+Shop.</p>
+<p>Dorr Street was quite deserted at such an early
+hour, and the Japanese shop owner had just unlocked
+his doors. He was sweeping the floor as Penny boldly
+entered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good morning, Mr. Kano,&rdquo; she greeted him. &ldquo;You
+remember me, I believe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Kano bowed, regarding her warily. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he
+replied. &ldquo;You are the young lady whose curiosity is
+very large.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny smiled. &ldquo;You are right, Mr. Kano. It is very
+large, especially about a certain silken ladder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Kano frowned as he leaned on his broom. &ldquo;I
+am very sorry,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I am a merchant, not one
+who answers what you call the quiz-bee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny understood that the Japanese never would
+tell her what she wished to know save under compulsion.
+She decided to adopt firm tactics.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_148">[148]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Kano,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;my father is the owner of
+the <i>Riverview Star</i> and he intends to expose certain
+crooks who have been robbing wealthy persons such
+as the Kohls. You read in the paper that their home
+was entered?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I read,&rdquo; the Japanese shrugged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My own theory is that the thief gained entrance
+by means of a silk ladder,&rdquo; Penny declared. &ldquo;<i>A ladder
+made in this shop!</i>&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The shopkeeper&rsquo;s eyes narrowed. &ldquo;I know nothing,&rdquo;
+he replied. &ldquo;Nothing. You go now, please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I go,&rdquo; said Penny, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll return with the police.
+You would not like that, I take it?&rdquo; Her voice was
+crisp and full of menace.</p>
+<p>Mr. Kano lost some of his poise. &ldquo;No!&rdquo; he answered
+sharply. &ldquo;I am an honest man and want no sad trouble
+with the police.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Chancing to glance toward the street, Penny observed
+Jerry Livingston standing on the opposite
+corner. He was gazing thoughtfully toward the Curio
+Shop, and she knew that he must have been sent by
+her father to interview Mr. Kano. Inspired, she turned
+again to the old Japanese.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see that young man yonder?&rdquo; she asked, indicating
+Jerry. &ldquo;I have but to summon him and he&rsquo;ll
+come here.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_149">[149]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Detective?&rdquo; demanded Mr. Kano, peering anxiously
+through the window. &ldquo;Do not call him! I am
+an honest man. I will answer your questions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then tell me about the silken ladder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know little,&rdquo; the shopkeeper insisted. &ldquo;I made the
+rope for a man who said: &lsquo;Do this or we will burn
+your shop down, Mr. Kano.&rsquo; So I made the ladder and
+he paid me well for fashioning it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what was the man&rsquo;s name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His name I do not know. But his eyes were small
+and evil. His skin was dark, his nose crooked.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Kano ceased speaking with an abruptness which
+caused Penny to glance toward the door. Her first
+thought was that Jerry had entered. Instead a strange
+young man stood there, regarding her suspiciously.</p>
+<p>As she stared at him he quickly retreated, but not
+before she had caught a fleeting impression of a face
+which matched Mr. Kano&rsquo;s description with startling
+accuracy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was he the one?&rdquo; she demanded as the door
+slammed. &ldquo;The man for whom you made the ladder?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; denied the Japanese.</p>
+<p>His words failed to convince Penny. Darting to the
+door, she saw that the young man already was far
+down the street, walking rapidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is the one,&rdquo; she thought. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll follow him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait,&rdquo; called the Japanese as she started away, &ldquo;I
+have more to tell you.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_150">[150]</div>
+<p>It was a ruse to detain her, Penny knew. Pushing
+past the shopkeeper who sought to bar the exit, she
+reached the street and ran toward Jerry Livingston.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Penny!&rdquo; he exclaimed in surprise. &ldquo;What
+are you doing in this part of town?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind that,&rdquo; she answered hastily. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;re
+after a story, come along with me. We&rsquo;re trailing the
+man who just left Kano&rsquo;s Shop.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_151">[151]</div>
+<h2 id="c18"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">18</span>
+<br /><i>THE BELL TOWER</i></h2>
+<p>Jerry fell into step with Penny. As they walked
+along, she told him of her conversation with Mr. Kano.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe this man we&rsquo;re following is the same one
+who entered our house last night,&rdquo; she declared. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
+the same build as the fellow I grabbed. Besides, he fits
+Kano&rsquo;s description of the person who bought the
+silken ladder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s hoping you&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; replied Jerry. &ldquo;If I
+muff this assignment, I may wake up looking for another
+job.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fearing that the man ahead would discover he was
+being followed, Jerry and Penny dropped farther and
+farther behind. Presently they saw him enter a pawnshop.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know that place,&rdquo; commented Jerry. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s run by
+Spike Weiser, a notorious <i>fence</i>. He buys stolen goods
+and gets rid of it at a profit. Has a swell home on
+Clarmont Drive.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_152">[152]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t the police arrest him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they watch the place, but Spike is too smart
+to be caught. He has a system for handling <i>hot</i> goods.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll venture some of the Kohl loot was sold through
+him, Jerry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t surprise me. But if the police search
+the place they won&rsquo;t find a thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Loitering on the opposite side of the street, Penny
+and the reporter kept close watch of the pawnbroker&rsquo;s
+shop. Thirty minutes elapsed. The man whom they
+had trailed, did not reappear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must have slipped out the back door,&rdquo; Jerry
+remarked. &ldquo;Probably knew he was being watched.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m beginning to think so myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jerry glanced at his watch. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t take any more
+time,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have to get back to the office.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll watch a few minutes longer,&rdquo; answered Penny.
+&ldquo;If anything develops I&rsquo;ll try to telephone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jerry walked hurriedly away. Scarcely had he disappeared
+when the door of the pawnshop opened, and
+the young man who had entered a half hour earlier,
+appeared. Penny hastily moved back into the vestibule
+of an office building.</p>
+<p>Without observing her, the stranger crossed the
+street and walked briskly toward an intersecting boulevard.
+There was no opportunity for Penny to telephone
+the <i>Star</i> office. Following, she was hard pressed
+to keep the man within view.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_153">[153]</div>
+<p>Not until they reached the entrance of Butternut
+Lane did it dawn upon her that the Celestial Temple
+might be their destination. Then, indeed, her pulse
+stepped up a pace.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s exactly as I guessed!&rdquo; she thought triumphantly.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s connected with Al Gepper and the
+other mediums!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not wishing to attract attention in the deserted lane,
+Penny took a short cut through the cemetery, emerging
+at the rear of the Celestial Temple. There was no
+door on that side of the building but a window had
+been left raised. Placed beneath it, as if for her particular
+convenience, was a large rock.</p>
+<p>Penny stood on it, peering into the Temple. The
+room was unoccupied. However, as she waited, the
+same man she had trailed, quietly let himself in through
+the front entrance, using a key. He glanced about and
+called in a low voice: &ldquo;Pete! Pete! Anyone here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was no answer, which seemed to please the
+young man. He moved quickly down the aisle, crossed
+the platform to a door which opened into the bell
+tower. Kneeling he began to fit keys into the lock,
+seeking one which would serve.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_154">[154]</div>
+<p>As Penny watched, the young man suddenly
+straightened. Apparently he had heard footsteps in the
+vestibule for he moved away from the bell tower door.</p>
+<p>A middle-aged woman with dyed hair and a skin of
+unusual pallor entered the Temple. She stopped short
+as she saw the young man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You here, Slippery?&rdquo; she commented, gazing at
+him with distrust. &ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Pete?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hello, Sade. I was wonderin&rsquo; about Pete myself.
+Just got here a minute ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The woman&rsquo;s gaze fastened upon the key which had
+been left in the bell tower door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, what&rsquo;s coming off here?&rdquo; she demanded. &ldquo;You
+were trying to get inside!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now don&rsquo;t ruffle your feathers, Sade,&rdquo; the man
+said soothingly. &ldquo;I was only testing the door to make
+sure it was locked.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet! You were aiming to break in! Slippery,
+they sure named you right. Why, you&rsquo;d double-cross
+your own mother!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, quiet down,&rdquo; the man retorted angrily. &ldquo;I only
+came here to make sure Pete was on the job. The lazy
+loafer has skipped out and left the place unguarded.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The woman deliberately seated herself in a chair
+beside the bell tower door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m parking here until Pete shows up,&rdquo; she announced.
+&ldquo;Maybe you&rsquo;re on the square, Slippery, but
+I don&rsquo;t trust you.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_155">[155]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks for your flattering opinion,&rdquo; the man responded
+mockingly. &ldquo;You give me a pain, Sade. I do
+all the dangerous work, and what do I get? A measly
+ten per cent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Plus what you stick in your pocket when you&rsquo;re
+on a job,&rdquo; the woman shot back with rising anger.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been doing pretty well for yourself, Slippery&mdash;you
+and Al. But the boys are getting wise. From
+now on it may not be so easy. Better play fair with the
+rest of us&mdash;or else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You always did have a wagging tongue,&rdquo; the man
+retorted. &ldquo;Always trying to stir up trouble. Don&rsquo;t you
+realize we&rsquo;ve got to work together or we&rsquo;ll be jailed
+separately? Our ranks must be united.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gettin&rsquo; sort of jittery, ain&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe you haven&rsquo;t been reading those editorials
+in the <i>Star</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure, I read them and get a big laugh. This guy
+Parker has to blow off steam. Nothing will come
+of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The police have visited this place once already.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what did they find? Nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s no guarantee they won&rsquo;t try again. I tell you
+this town is getting too hot for comfort.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Figurin&rsquo; on blowing?&rdquo; the woman inquired, watching
+him shrewdly.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_156">[156]</div>
+<p>Slippery&rsquo;s laughter had an unpleasant edge. &ldquo;You
+sure do get ideas, Sade. Don&rsquo;t start peddling that line
+of talk. Understand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly losing his temper, the man strode nearer,
+seizing her arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just start something and see where you wake up!&rdquo;
+he said harshly. &ldquo;One word to Pete or any of the boys
+and you won&rsquo;t do any more pretty fortune telling!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The woman jerked her arm free, gazing at the man
+in sullen silence. Nor did she speak as he left the
+Temple, slamming the door behind him.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_157">[157]</div>
+<h2 id="c19"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">19</span>
+<br /><i>PENNY INVESTIGATES</i></h2>
+<p>Penny debated whether or not to follow Slippery.
+Deciding that she should try to keep him within
+sight, she abandoned her post beneath the window and
+ran to the front of the building.</p>
+<p>Already the young man was far down the lane,
+walking rapidly. Before Penny could overtake him he
+hailed a taxi and drove away. By the time she obtained
+another cab, pursuit was futile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the <i>Star</i> office,&rdquo; Penny ordered the driver.</p>
+<p>Although Slippery had eluded her, she did not feel
+that her morning&rsquo;s work had been wasted. She believed
+that her father would be very much interested in
+a report of her findings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s evident that Slippery is connected with Al
+Gepper and various mediums of the Celestial Temple,&rdquo;
+she reflected. &ldquo;I am sure, too, that he&rsquo;s the one who
+broke into our house, but to prove it may not be so
+easy.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_158">[158]</div>
+<p>Penny had not fully understood the conversation
+which she had overheard between Slippery and Sade.
+That they distrusted each other was evident, but why
+had the woman feared Slippery might break into the
+bell tower during the guard&rsquo;s absence?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something of great value to the organization must
+be kept there,&rdquo; she reasoned. &ldquo;But what can it be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny believed that her father would not delay in
+requesting police to search the bell tower of the
+Celestial Temple. However, a disappointment awaited
+her.</p>
+<p>Upon arriving at the newspaper office DeWitt
+stopped her as she went past his desk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t go in there,&rdquo; he said, jerking his thumb toward
+Mr. Parker&rsquo;s private room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; asked Penny in surprise. &ldquo;Is Dad having
+a conference?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>DeWitt nodded as he composed a two column headline.
+&ldquo;With J. P. Henley.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Star&rsquo;s</i> Sugar Daddy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our biggest advertiser. He&rsquo;s threatening to go over
+to the <i>Record</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, that&rsquo;s serious!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is if he quits the <i>Star</i>. The old man&mdash;Mr. Parker&mdash;&rdquo; DeWitt
+corrected hastily, &ldquo;has been trying to
+soften him up for the past two hours. Whatever you
+do, don&rsquo;t bust in there now.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_159">[159]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t, Mr. DeWitt, but I did wish to see Dad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anything I can do for you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny hesitated. &ldquo;Well, I wanted to talk to him
+about something I learned today at the Celestial
+Temple.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; nodded the city editor, his attention on
+a sheet of copy. &ldquo;Mr. Parker is handling the campaign
+personally. Sorry I can&rsquo;t be of service.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Rather startled by DeWitt&rsquo;s unusual politeness,
+Penny glanced hopefully toward Jerry Livingston&rsquo;s
+desk. It was littered with papers, but quite deserted.</p>
+<p>With a sigh she left the building and walked to Dorr
+Street where she had left her maroon car. Upon reaching
+home she found that Mrs. Weems was not there
+and she had forgotten her own key. For a time she sat
+disconsolately on the front porch. Then she decided
+to go to the Hudell Garage where Leaping Lena had
+been left for repairs three days earlier.</p>
+<p>The car was ready, and with it a bill for eight dollars
+and forty-two cents.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have to give you a dollar on account and pay
+the remainder next week,&rdquo; said Penny. &ldquo;Or would
+you rather keep the car as a deposit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give me the dollar,&rdquo; said the garage man hastily.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_160">[160]</div>
+<p>Penny became even more depressed as she drove
+the automobile home. Not for the world would she
+openly admit that she had made a mistake in repurchasing
+Lena. Secretly she acknowledged that two
+cars were an unbearable financial drain upon slender
+resources.</p>
+<p>Turning into her own street, Penny saw Mrs.
+Weems walking toward home, and stopped for her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve just come from the Hodges&rsquo;,&rdquo; the housekeeper
+commented, climbing into the car.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have?&rdquo; inquired Penny eagerly. &ldquo;Did you
+learn anything?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I didn&rsquo;t. Mr. Gepper seemed very unwilling
+to conduct another s&eacute;ance. He acted so different this
+time&mdash;almost as if he bore me a personal grudge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s probably provoked because your inheritance
+eluded him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did tell Mrs. Hodges that he doubted I had
+any money,&rdquo; Mrs. Weems responded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What happened at the s&eacute;ance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, nothing. The table moved and we heard a
+few raps. That was all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No message from Cousin David?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a word or a sign. Mr. Gepper seemed very
+indifferent about it all. He said he couldn&rsquo;t give me
+another appointment unless I paid for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you think about him now?&rdquo; Penny asked
+curiously. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you agree with Dad and me that
+he was after your money?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_161">[161]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I was very silly,&rdquo; the housekeeper acknowledged.
+&ldquo;Mrs. Hodges has begun to lose faith in him,
+too. She says he&rsquo;s been bringing all sorts of folks to
+her place. When she told him she didn&rsquo;t care to have
+the house over-run with strangers, he became very
+unpleasant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean he threatened her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In a mild way. He told her that he would stay as
+long as he pleased and she could do nothing about it.
+Mrs. Hodges is afraid to go to the police for fear
+she&rsquo;ll be arrested with Mr. Gepper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder if he ever has charged for his s&eacute;ances?&rdquo;
+Penny said thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure he has, Penny. Of course I have no
+proof.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Weems, you must go there again this afternoon,&rdquo;
+Penny urged. &ldquo;Insist upon another s&eacute;ance, and
+pay him for it! Then you&rsquo;ll be able to testify as a
+witness against him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t wish to go into court,&rdquo; the housekeeper
+protested. &ldquo;Besides, Mr. Gepper won&rsquo;t be at
+the cottage this afternoon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is he going?&rdquo; Penny questioned alertly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. I heard him tell Mrs. Hodges he
+would be gone this afternoon, but would return for
+an eight o&rsquo;clock s&eacute;ance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, that&rsquo;s fine&mdash;wonderful!&rdquo; chuckled Penny.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_162">[162]</div>
+<p>Mrs. Weems gazed at the girl with sudden suspicion.
+&ldquo;Now what have you thought up?&rdquo; she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing alarming,&rdquo; grinned Penny. &ldquo;I merely plan
+to visit Mr. Gepper&rsquo;s studio during his absence. Who
+knows, I may yet master a few of the finer points
+of ghost-making!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_163">[163]</div>
+<h2 id="c20"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">20</span>
+<br /><i>INSIDE THE CABINET</i></h2>
+<p>Despite Mrs. Weems&rsquo; protests, Penny remained
+firm in her decision to investigate Mr. Gepper&rsquo;s
+studio. She ate a belatedly prepared lunch and did
+not reach the Hodges&rsquo; cottage until nearly four
+o&rsquo;clock, having driven there in Lena.</p>
+<p>The doors were closed and Penny knocked several
+times without receiving a response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Everyone must have gone away,&rdquo; she thought.
+&ldquo;Oh, dear, now what shall I do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny reasoned that it was of vital importance for
+her to inspect Al Gepper&rsquo;s room during his absence.
+She might never have another opportunity. Yet she
+hesitated to enter the house while the Hodges were
+away, even though she felt certain the seamstress
+would not mind.</p>
+<p>Walking to the rear, Penny noticed that the porch
+screen had been left unfastened. Entering the kitchen,
+she called Mrs. Hodges&rsquo; name but received no answer.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_164">[164]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;If I wait for her to come home it may be too late,&rdquo;
+decided Penny. &ldquo;This is an emergency.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her mind made up, she took the stairs two at a time
+to Al Gepper&rsquo;s room. Her knock went unanswered.
+Satisfied that he was not there, she tried the door and
+found it unlocked.</p>
+<p>Penny raised a blind to flood light into the darkened
+room. Save that a film of dust covered the furniture,
+everything was approximately the same as she had
+last seen it.</p>
+<p>Her gaze fell upon two suitcases which had been
+pushed beneath the bed. The first contained only
+miscellaneous clothing. The second merited a more
+careful inspection.</p>
+<p>Almost at once Penny came upon an old faded
+picture, the one of Cousin David which Mrs. Weems
+had given to the photographer&rsquo;s &ldquo;agent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So that was how it was done!&rdquo; she thought. &ldquo;Al
+Gepper sent one of his confederates to see Mrs. Weems
+and obtain information about her cousin. The painting
+which appeared so miraculously during the s&eacute;ance was
+merely a copy of this! Even so, how was it painted
+so quickly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Forgetting the picture for a moment, Penny picked
+up several newspaper clippings which were fastened
+together with a rubber band. All had been taken from
+the obituary column and concerned the death of well-to-do
+Riverview persons.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_165">[165]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Al Gepper and his pals are ghouls!&rdquo; Penny told
+herself. &ldquo;They prey upon the relatives of persons who
+have died, realizing that at such a time it will be much
+easier to interest them in trying to communicate with
+the departed!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lifting a tray from the suitcase, her attention focused
+upon a small red booklet. As she turned rapidly
+through it, a folded sheet of paper fell to the floor.</p>
+<p>Examining it, Penny saw a long list of names, together
+with pertinent information about each person.
+Not only was the address and financial standing of
+the individual given, but the deceased relatives in each
+family and other facts of a personal nature. The list
+had been mimeographed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This must be a &lsquo;sucker&rsquo; list!&rdquo; thought Penny. &ldquo;No
+wonder it&rsquo;s easy for a medium to find victims and tell
+them astonishing facts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thrusting the paper into her pocket, she turned her
+attention to the wardrobe closet. Al Gepper&rsquo;s clothes
+hung in orderly rows from the hangers. Behind them,
+half hidden from view, was a small box.</p>
+<p>Pulling it to the window, Penny examined the contents.
+There were many bottles filled with chemicals,
+the names of which were unfamiliar. She noted a bottle
+of varnish, another of zinc white, and some photographic
+paper in a sealed envelope.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_166">[166]</div>
+<p>A glance satisfying her, she replaced the box and
+next turned her attention to the cabinet behind the
+large circular table. Here she was richly rewarded
+as her gaze fell upon a banjo.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The same one which played during Mrs. Weems&rsquo;
+s&eacute;ance!&rdquo; she thought. &ldquo;We were able to see it in the
+dark because it&rsquo;s covered with luminous paint. But
+what made it rise into the air, and how could it play
+without the aid of human hands?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny examined the instrument closely. She
+chuckled as she discovered a tiny phonograph with
+a record built into its back side. As she pressed a
+control lever, it began a stringed version of &ldquo;Down
+Upon the Swanee River.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Quickly turning it off, she inspected other objects
+in the cabinet. At once she found a rod which could
+be extended to a height of five feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s how the banjo was raised!&rdquo; she reasoned.
+&ldquo;And by use of this rod it would be easy to make a
+ghost appear to float high overhead. This luminous
+material must have been used.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny picked up a filmy robe, shaking out the
+many folds. While it was clear to her that Al Gepper
+had employed the garment to materialize the so-called
+spirit of Cousin David, she could only guess how he
+had made it enlarge from a mere spot to a full sized
+figure.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_167">[167]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;He must have wadded the cloth in his hand, and
+held it above his head,&rdquo; she mused. &ldquo;Then he could
+have slowly shaken it out until it covered his entire
+body. Thus the figure would appear to grow in size.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In one corner of the cabinet Penny came upon a
+luminous slate.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This was used for Cousin David&rsquo;s message,&rdquo; she
+thought. &ldquo;Al probably had an assistant who wrote on
+it and thrust it through the curtain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While many questions remained unanswered, Penny
+had obtained sufficient evidence to indicate that Al
+Gepper was only a clever trickster. Greatly elated,
+she decided to hasten to the <i>Star</i> office to report her
+findings.</p>
+<p>Noticing that she had neglected to return the two
+suitcases to their former places, Penny pushed them
+under the bed again. As she straightened, a door
+slammed on the lower floor.</p>
+<p>For an instant she hoped that it was Mrs. Hodges
+or her husband who had come home. Then she heard
+footsteps on the stairs, and their rapidity warned her
+that they could belong only to a young person.</p>
+<p>Frantically, she gazed about the room. The cabinet
+seemed to offer the safest hiding place. Slipping into
+it, she pulled the black curtain across the opening.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_168">[168]</div>
+<h2 id="c21"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">21</span>
+<br /><i>STARTLING INFORMATION</i></h2>
+<p>Scarcely had Penny hidden herself when Al
+Gepper entered the room. With him was the hook-nosed
+young man known as Slippery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you, Al,&rdquo; the latter was saying, &ldquo;this town
+is getting too hot for comfort. We&rsquo;ve got to blow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was that Parker girl who queered everything,&rdquo;
+muttered Gepper. &ldquo;How could I know that her father
+was a newspaper publisher? He&rsquo;s stirred up folks with
+his editorials.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You never should have let her in here. We had a
+swell set-up, but now we can expect a raid any day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you I thought she was just a smart-aleck kid,
+a friend of the Hodges&rsquo;. Didn&rsquo;t learn until yesterday
+who she was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got to blow, Al. Sade&rsquo;s threatening to make
+trouble, too. She thinks we&rsquo;re holding out on the
+others.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_169">[169]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;We have picked up a little extra coin now and
+then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure, Al, but we&rsquo;ve always been the brains of the
+outfit. We take most of the risk, plan all the big jobs,
+so why shouldn&rsquo;t we have more?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s time we cut loose from &rsquo;em, Slippery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now you&rsquo;re talking! But we can&rsquo;t pull out until
+the Henley job comes off. I&rsquo;ve had a tip that the house
+is likely to be deserted tonight. Let&rsquo;s make the haul
+and then skip.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Okay,&rdquo; agreed Gepper. &ldquo;I have some suckers
+coming for a s&eacute;ance at eight. I&rsquo;ll get rid of them in
+quick time, and be waiting. So long, Slippery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A door slammed, telling Penny that the hook-nosed
+man had left. She was somewhat stunned by
+what she had overheard, believing that the Henley
+who had been mentioned must be her father&rsquo;s chief
+advertiser.</p>
+<p>Nervously she waited inside the cabinet, wishing
+that she might take her information to the police. To
+her intense annoyance, Al Gepper did not leave the
+room even for a moment.</p>
+<p>Instead he threw himself on the bed and read a
+tabloid newspaper. After an hour, he arose and began
+to prepare his supper on an electric grill.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_170">[170]</div>
+<p>Penny shifted from one position to another, growing
+more impatient. Every time the man came toward the
+cabinet her heart beat a trifle faster. She was quite
+sure the Hodges had not yet returned home, and
+should Al Gepper discover her, he would not treat
+her kindly.</p>
+<p>The medium finished his supper and stacked the
+dishes in the closet without washing them. Then he
+started to get ready for the night&rsquo;s s&eacute;ance.</p>
+<p>Peeping from between the cracks of the curtain,
+Penny saw him seat himself before the easel. With
+painstaking care he painted a picture of a woman,
+using a photograph as a model. After a coating of
+varnish had been applied, he allowed it to dry and
+afterwards covered the entire picture with zinc white.
+The original painting was entirely hidden.</p>
+<p>Penny knew that hours had elapsed. The room
+gradually darkened, and Al Gepper turned on the
+lights.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, dear, I must get out of here soon!&rdquo; the girl
+thought desperately. &ldquo;But if I make a break for it
+he&rsquo;ll be sure to see me. That will ruin all my plans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Eight o&rsquo;clock came. Al Gepper put on his coat,
+combed his hair and was alertly waiting when the
+doorbell rang. However, instead of descending the
+stairs he shouted an invitation for the visitors to come
+up.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_171">[171]</div>
+<p>Two women in their early forties were ushered
+into the s&eacute;ance chamber, to be followed almost immediately
+by an elderly man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will start at once if you please,&rdquo; said Al Gepper
+brusquely. &ldquo;I have another engagement tonight. However,
+before the s&eacute;ance is undertaken I must ask that
+each of you pay the required fee, five dollars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The money was paid, and the three persons seated
+themselves at the table. Gepper switched off the lights.</p>
+<p>The s&eacute;ance began in much the same manner as the
+one Penny had attended. The medium called upon
+the spirit of a woman named Flora to appear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now concentrate hard&mdash;everyone,&rdquo; he instructed.
+&ldquo;Flora, where are you? Can you not show yourself
+that we may know it is truly your spirit which communicates
+with us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From the cabinet, so close to Al Gepper that she
+could have touched his hand, Penny was able to see
+his every move. Yet so swift was his next action, that
+she barely discerned it.</p>
+<p>Taking a wet sponge from his pocket he wiped it
+across the painting previously prepared. The picture
+immediately became visible to the audience as Gepper
+focused his flashlight on the canvas.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That wasn&rsquo;t the way he made Mrs. Weems&rsquo; picture
+appear,&rdquo; thought Penny. &ldquo;The fellow must have a
+great repertoire of tricks!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_172">[172]</div>
+<p>The s&eacute;ance had become so interesting that she no
+longer thought of escape. Nevertheless, she came to
+a sudden realization of her precarious position as she
+heard the medium say that he would next endeavor to
+persuade the Spirit of Flora to take actual shape. With
+a shock it dawned upon her that in another moment
+the man would enter the cabinet to make use of the
+luminous gauze robe and other paraphernalia.</p>
+<p>Knowing that she could not hide from him, Penny
+decided upon a bold break for freedom. Dropping the
+ghostly robe over her face and shoulders, she pulled
+aside the dark curtain and flitted into the room.</p>
+<p>Her dramatic entrance brought gasps of astonishment
+from the persons who sat at the circular table.
+The medium, as dumbfounded as his audience muttered:
+&ldquo;What the dickens!&rdquo; and pushed back his chair,
+his legs rasping on the floor.</p>
+<p>Penny did not linger, but darted past the group and
+groped for the door. In the darkness she could not
+immediately find it. Her shining robe, on the other
+hand, made her an easy target for Al Gepper.</p>
+<p>Angrily the medium strode across the room, seizing
+her arm. She jerked away, but he grasped a fold of the
+robe. It tore and was left behind.</p>
+<p>At that critical instant, Penny&rsquo;s hand encountered
+the door. She swung it open, and bounded down the
+stairway.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_173">[173]</div>
+<p>In the s&eacute;ance chamber a light went on, then the
+hallway became brilliantly illuminated. But by that
+time the girl was in the dining room.</p>
+<p>She could hear Al Gepper clattering down the
+steps, intent upon capturing her. Penny was determined
+that he should never learn her identity.</p>
+<p>Letting herself out of the house by way of the
+kitchen door, she decided that if she attempted to
+cross the yard, the medium certainly would recognize
+her. The woodpile offered a hiding place and she
+crouched behind it.</p>
+<p>Scarcely had she secreted herself, when Al Gepper
+ran into the yard. He glanced about carefully and
+circled the house twice.</p>
+<p>Finally, convinced that the &ldquo;ghost&rdquo; had escaped he
+came back to the porch. His customers, greatly agitated
+by what had occurred, were demanding explanations.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Someone played a prank,&rdquo; Gepper explained
+briefly. &ldquo;It will be impossible to resume the s&eacute;ance for
+the spirits are offended. You will leave, please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The customers departed and the medium locked
+himself in the house. He did not bother to lower the
+upstairs hall blind, and Penny caught occasional
+glimpses of him as he moved to and fro.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s packing to leave!&rdquo; she observed. &ldquo;Unless I
+act in double-quick time, he&rsquo;ll skip town! I must
+notify Dad and the police without an instant&rsquo;s delay!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_174">[174]</div>
+<h2 id="c22"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">22</span>
+<br /><i>SCALING THE WALL</i></h2>
+<p>The nearest drugstore with a public telephone
+was two blocks away. Penny ran the distance, and
+slipping into the booth, she dialed the <i>Star</i> office.
+Informed by the building switchboard operator that
+neither her father nor DeWitt was available, she inquired
+for Jerry Livingston, and to her relief was connected
+with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen, Jerry, this is Penny!&rdquo; she began excitedly.
+&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t time to explain, but the lid is blowing off
+the fake spiritualist story! Rush the police out to the
+Hodges&rsquo; cottage and demand Al Gepper&rsquo;s arrest! Send
+another squad or some private detectives to Mr.
+Henley&rsquo;s home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Henley!&rdquo; Jerry exclaimed. &ldquo;Say, have you gone
+loco?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not making any mistakes,&rdquo; Penny replied
+tersely. &ldquo;If you act quickly we may prevent a robbery.
+I&rsquo;m on my way there now to warn Mr. Henley! Oh,
+yes, try to find Dad or DeWitt and warn them a big
+story is breaking!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_175">[175]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, what&rsquo;s this all about?&rdquo; the reporter demanded.
+&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t go to the police unless I know what
+I am doing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must, Jerry. I have plenty of evidence against
+Gepper and his crowd, but unless you take the police
+to the Hodges&rsquo; in the next fifteen minutes it will be
+too late!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Without giving Jerry opportunity to delay her with
+other questions, Penny hung up the receiver. Hastening
+to the street, she gazed frantically about for a
+taxi. None was to be had.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get to the Henley place quicker in Lena than
+by waiting for a cab to come along,&rdquo; she thought.</p>
+<p>The battered old car had been parked a short
+distance from the Hodges&rsquo; cottage. Hurrying there,
+Penny jumped into the ancient vehicle and started
+the motor. As usual it made a loud clatter, but she did
+not suspect that the sound carried far up the street.
+Nor did she guess that Al Gepper stood at the darkened
+window of his room, watching her.</p>
+<p>Penny drove as fast as she could to the Henley home
+in the southern section of Riverview. Lights blazed
+from the downstairs windows.</p>
+<p>Abandoning her car in the driveway, she rang the
+doorbell. After a long wait, a maid appeared.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_176">[176]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Is Mr. Henley here?&rdquo; Penny asked breathlessly.
+&ldquo;Or Mrs. Henley? It&rsquo;s most important that I talk with
+them at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Henley has been at the seashore for a month,&rdquo;
+the maid replied in an agitated voice. &ldquo;Mr. Henley is
+somewhere downtown. I&rsquo;ve been trying to get him,
+but the telephone wire has been cut!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The house hasn&rsquo;t been robbed?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Henley&rsquo;s jewelry has been taken! I don&rsquo;t
+know what else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When did it happen?&rdquo; Penny asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must have been during the last half hour. I went
+to the corner store for a book of stamps. When I came
+back five minutes ago I discovered what had occurred.
+I ought to call the police, but I am afraid to do it until
+I&rsquo;ve talked with my employer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The police already have been notified,&rdquo; said Penny.
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be here any minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how did you know&mdash;?&rdquo; the maid began in
+astonishment.</p>
+<p>Penny had turned away. She was convinced that
+the burglary had been committed by Slippery. Perhaps,
+by this time he had fled town, but she did not
+believe he would leave without his pal, Al Gepper.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_177">[177]</div>
+<p>Climbing into the car again, Penny debated. It was
+reasonable to suppose that, having accomplished the
+burglary, Slippery would return to the Hodges&rsquo; cottage
+to meet the medium.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he does, the police should be on hand to seize
+him,&rdquo; she thought. &ldquo;At least, he and Al will be held
+for questioning. But there&rsquo;s one place I forgot to cover&mdash;the
+Celestial Temple.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Like a flash came the recollection that Slippery had
+been deeply interested in something which was
+guarded in the bell tower. Was it not possible that
+he might return there before leaving Riverview?</p>
+<p>Shifting gears, Penny turned the car and headed for
+Butternut Lane. Anxiously, she glanced at the gasoline
+gauge. It registered less than a gallon of fuel and she
+had used her last dime in the telephone booth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I coast on all the downgrades I should just make
+it,&rdquo; she estimated.</p>
+<p>In starting for the Celestial Temple Penny was
+acting upon a &ldquo;hunch.&rdquo; However, it disturbed her that
+the Henley burglary had been accomplished, and she
+was afraid she might again be wasting precious time.
+Now that it was too late, she wondered if it would not
+have been wiser to remain at the Hodges&rsquo; cottage until
+the police arrived.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I only hope that end of the affair isn&rsquo;t bungled,&rdquo;
+she thought. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never get over it if Al and Slippery
+both escape.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_178">[178]</div>
+<p>Penny had reached the entrance to Butternut Lane.
+Parking at the side of the road, she continued afoot
+toward the Celestial Temple.</p>
+<p>From a distance the building appeared dark. However,
+as she drew closer she could distinguish a dim
+light. Inside the Temple, a stout man wearing a hat
+sat with his chair tilted against the door of the bell
+tower room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be the guard,&rdquo; thought Penny. &ldquo;Probably
+the one they call Pete.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly she paused, retreating into a clump of
+elder bushes near the walk. From the direction of the
+cemetery a figure emerged. At first, all that Penny
+could distinguish was a man carrying a suitcase. As
+he drew closer, her pulse quickened. Unmistakably, it
+was Slippery.</p>
+<p>Without passing the bushes where the girl had taken
+refuge, the man walked on toward the Temple.
+Presently he halted. Glancing carefully about to assure
+himself that he was unobserved, he shoved his suitcase
+into the tall weeds which lined the walk. Then he
+moved to one of the Temple windows, peering into
+the gloomy interior.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now what?&rdquo; thought Penny, watching alertly.
+&ldquo;This should prove interesting.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_179">[179]</div>
+<p>Slippery remained beneath the window a minute
+or two. Instead of entering the Temple, he presently
+returned to the high weeds, stooping to remove some
+object from his suitcase. Hiding it under his coat, he
+circled the building and approached the side adjoining
+the cemetery.</p>
+<p>Thoroughly mystified, Penny cautiously followed,
+taking care that her body cast no shadow which would
+attract Slippery&rsquo;s attention.</p>
+<p>The man seemed deeply engrossed in the task he
+had set for himself. From his coat he took a collapsible
+rod which he extended to the approximate length of
+a fish pole. To its end he attached a trailing silken
+ladder.</p>
+<p>Deftly the man raised the ladder until two metal
+hooks bit into a projection of the bell tower. He
+tested the ropes to make certain they would bear his
+weight then, with the agility of a cat, mounted the
+silken rungs. Penny saw him disappear into the bell
+tower.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now why did he climb up there?&rdquo; she asked herself.
+&ldquo;He must be after something hidden in the
+belfry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny knew that she was a long distance from police
+aid, but it was unthinkable that Slippery should be
+allowed to escape. Impulsively, she moved from her
+hiding place to the base of the tower.</p>
+<p>Grasping the silken ladder, she gave it a quick jerk
+which dislodged the two iron hooks. Down it tumbled
+into her arms, leaving the man trapped in the turret.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_180">[180]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll never dare call for help when he discovers
+what has happened,&rdquo; reasoned Penny. &ldquo;If he does, the
+guard, Pete, will have something to say!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Rolling the ladder into a small bundle, she started
+across the clearing, intending to seek the nearest telephone.
+With no thought of lurking danger, she
+brushed past a clump of bushes. A hand reached out
+and grasped her arm.</p>
+<p>Penny screamed in terror and tried to break free.
+The hand help her in a grip of steel.</p>
+<p>As she struggled, her captor emerged from the
+shelter of leaves. It was Al Gepper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought I might find you here, my little one,&rdquo;
+he said grimly. &ldquo;You have had your fun. Now you
+must pay, and the entertainment shall be mine!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_181">[181]</div>
+<h2 id="c23"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">23</span>
+<br /><i>A PRISONER IN THE BELFRY</i></h2>
+<p>Penny tried to scream, only to have Al Gepper
+clamp his hand over her mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None of that!&rdquo; he said harshly. &ldquo;Behave yourself
+or you&rsquo;ll get rough treatment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Inside the Temple, lights suddenly were turned on,
+for the brief struggle had been heard by Pete. The
+squat, stupid-faced man appeared in the doorway of
+the building, peering down the lane.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s there?&rdquo; he demanded suspiciously.</p>
+<p>Al Gepper uttered an angry word beneath his
+breath. It was not to his liking that Pete should be
+drawn into the affair. However, he could not avoid
+detection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Al!&rdquo; he called softly. &ldquo;This girl broke up my
+s&eacute;ance tonight, and I trailed her here. She was
+prowling around the bell tower.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_182">[182]</div>
+<p>As he spoke, he dragged Penny toward the Temple
+entrance. His words convinced her that he had not
+observed her remove the silken ladder from the belfry
+wall, nor was he aware that Slippery was a prisoner in
+the tower.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s have a look at her,&rdquo; said Pete. He flashed a
+light directly into Penny&rsquo;s face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s the Parker girl&mdash;daughter of the publisher,&rdquo;
+informed Al.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yeah,&rdquo; commented Pete. &ldquo;I saw her at one of our
+meetings. Another girl was with her. How much has
+she learned?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Enough to get us all run out of town. The question
+is, what shall we do with her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring her inside, and we&rsquo;ll talk it over,&rdquo; said Pete.
+&ldquo;Maybe we ought to call a meeting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied Al Gepper impatiently, shoving
+Penny through the doorway. &ldquo;We can take care of
+this ourselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The door was locked from the inside. Al pushed
+Penny into a chair on the front platform.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now sit there,&rdquo; he ordered. &ldquo;One peep out of you
+and we&rsquo;ll tie you up and tape your mouth. Understand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Oui, oui, Monsieur</i>,&rdquo; said Penny, mockingly.</p>
+<p>The two men stepped a few paces away and began
+to whisper together. Pete seemed to protest at Al&rsquo;s
+proposals.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_183">[183]</div>
+<p>Penny watched them uneasily, speculating upon
+their final decision. Whatever it was, she would never
+be given an opportunity to report to the police until
+it was too late to apprehend members of the Temple.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was stupid not to realize that Gepper might trail
+me,&rdquo; she told herself. &ldquo;If only I had used an ounce of
+caution, I might have brought about the capture of the
+entire gang. Not to mention a grand scoop for Dad&rsquo;s
+paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny slumped lower in her chair. Her own predicament
+concerned her far less than the knowledge that
+she had bungled a golden opportunity.</p>
+<p>Speculatively, her gaze shifted toward the bell tower
+room. The door was closed and she believed that it
+must be locked. There was no sound from the belfry,
+adding to her conviction that the man imprisoned
+there was fearful of attracting attention to his plight.</p>
+<p>Al Gepper and Pete came toward her. With no
+explanation, the medium seized her arm and ordered
+her to walk toward the exit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where are you taking me?&rdquo; Penny asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind. You&rsquo;ll find out in good time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; exclaimed Penny, bracing her legs and refusing
+to be pushed. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;ll let me go, I&rsquo;ll tell you
+something very much worth your while.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_184">[184]</div>
+<p>Deliberately, she allowed the silken ladder to slip
+from beneath her coat. The men would not have
+heeded her words, but the familiar object served its
+purpose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did you get that ladder?&rdquo; demanded Al
+Gepper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you would like to know what became of your
+friend, Slippery?&rdquo; responded Penny evenly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
+be surprised when I tell you that he has double-crossed
+you both!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re lying,&rdquo; accused Gepper.</p>
+<p>Penny shrugged and did not speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What were you going to say?&rdquo; Gepper prodded
+in a moment. &ldquo;Out with it! How did you get Slippery&rsquo;s
+ladder?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It fell into my hands, literally and figuratively.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stalling for time will get you nowhere,&rdquo; snapped
+Gepper, losing patience. &ldquo;If you know anything about
+Slippery spill it fast or you&rsquo;ll not have another chance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your friend tried to double-cross you,&rdquo; declared
+Penny. She decided to make a shrewd guess. &ldquo;Tonight,
+after he robbed the Henley home he came here intending
+to loot the bell tower.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the dirty sneak!&rdquo; exclaimed Pete.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weren&rsquo;t you here on guard all evening?&rdquo; Gepper
+demanded, turning to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure, I was. I never set foot outside the building.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Slippery wasn&rsquo;t here?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_185">[185]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t seen him since yesterday morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then the girl is lying!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, the girl isn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; refuted Penny. &ldquo;If you care
+for proof you&rsquo;ll find it in the tower.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Proof?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I mean Slippery. He&rsquo;s hiding in the belfry now,
+hoping you&rsquo;ll not discover him there. You see, he
+scaled the wall by means of this silk ladder. I removed
+the ladder, and I assume he&rsquo;s still up there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the low-down skunk!&rdquo; Pete exclaimed
+wrathfully. &ldquo;So he planned to rob us! I&rsquo;ll get him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Leaving Al to watch Penny, the guard ran to the
+tower room door and unlocked it. Stealthily he crept
+up the iron stairway which led to the belfry.</p>
+<p>Suddenly those below heard a cry of rage, followed
+by the sound of scuffling. Al Gepper listened tensely,
+yet made no move to join the fight. He remained
+standing between Penny and the outside door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were right,&rdquo; he admitted in a stunned voice.
+&ldquo;Slippery&rsquo;s up there. He meant to get all the swag for
+himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The fight increased in intensity as the two men
+struggled on the belfry steps. Over and over they
+rolled, first one delivering a hard blow, and then the
+other. Still locked, they finally toppled to the floor,
+but even then Al Gepper remained a bystander.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_186">[186]</div>
+<p>Penny was less concerned with the fight than with
+thoughts of escape. She had hoped that Al, too, would
+join the battle. Apparently, he was taking no chance
+of letting her get away.</p>
+<p>She considered attempting a sudden break for freedom,
+but immediately abandoned it. The outside door
+had been locked by Pete. Before she could turn the
+key, Al would be upon her. As for the windows, none
+were open. While they might not be locked, it was out
+of the question to reach one quickly enough.</p>
+<p>Penny&rsquo;s gaze roved to the tower room once more,
+and the struggling men. High above their heads she
+saw something which previously had not drawn her
+attention. It was a loop of rope, hanging from the
+belfry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, that must be attached to the old church
+bell!&rdquo; thought Penny. &ldquo;If only I could reach it, I
+might be able to bring help here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>However, the rope dangled high overhead. Even
+if she were able to reach the room leading to the
+tower, there was nothing upon which she could stand
+to grasp the loop. Obviously the rope had been cut
+short years before to prevent anyone from ringing
+the bell.</p>
+<p>Penny glanced toward Al Gepper. The medium&rsquo;s
+gaze was upon the two struggling men, not her. A
+golden opportunity presented itself, if only she had the
+wits to make use of it.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_187">[187]</div>
+<p>Almost at the girl&rsquo;s feet lay the tangle of silken
+ladder. As she stared at it, a sudden idea took possession
+of her. The iron hooks would serve her purpose,
+but dared she try it? If she failed&mdash;and the chances
+were against her&mdash;punishment would be certain.</p>
+<p>Yet, if she did nothing and merely waited, it was
+likely that Al Gepper and his pals never would be
+brought to justice. She must take the chance, no matter
+how great the personal risk.</p>
+<p>For a moment Penny remained inactive, planning
+what she must do. If she made a single mistake,
+fumbled at the critical instant, everything would be
+lost. Above all, her aim must be accurate. If she missed
+the loop&mdash;</p>
+<p>Slippery and Pete were beginning to tire, their
+blows becoming futile and ineffective. Further delay
+in executing her plan only increased the danger. She
+must act now or never.</p>
+<p>Her mind made up, Penny no longer hesitated. With
+a quick movement she seized the silken ladder and
+darted to the doorway of the bell tower.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hey!&rdquo; shouted Al Gepper, starting after her.</p>
+<p>Penny slammed the door in his face. Taking careful
+aim, she hurled the silken ladder upward. One of the
+iron hooks caught in the loop of the rope. She jerked
+on it, and to her joy, the bell began to ring.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_188">[188]</div>
+<h2 id="c24"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">24</span>
+<br /><i>THE WOODEN BOX</i></h2>
+<p>Penny pulled the rope again and again, causing
+the huge bell to sway back and forth violently. It
+rang many times before Al Gepper succeeded in
+opening the tower room door.</p>
+<p>His face was crimson with fury when he seized the
+girl, hurling her away from the rope. With one quick
+toss he released the hooks of the silken ladder, stuffing
+the soft strands beneath his coat. The bell made a final
+clang and became silent.</p>
+<p>Penny retreated against the wall, anticipating severe
+punishment for her act. However, Al and his companions
+were more concerned with thoughts of escape
+than with her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got to get out of here,&rdquo; muttered Al. &ldquo;Come
+on!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two men on the floor had ceased their struggles.
+Painfully they regained their feet. In this sudden
+emergency they had forgotten their differences.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_189">[189]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;What shall we do about the box in the tower?&rdquo;
+Pete demanded, nursing a swollen eye.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave it here,&rdquo; returned Al. &ldquo;We can&rsquo;t save anything
+now. The police are apt to swoop down on us
+any minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Turning, he fled to the street. Pete and Slippery
+hesitated, then followed. Penny heard a key turn in
+the lock. Even before she tested the door she knew
+she had been imprisoned in the tower room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve escaped after all,&rdquo; she thought dismally.
+&ldquo;But I may have saved some of the loot. I&rsquo;ll take a
+look.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Quickly she climbed the iron stairs to the belfry.
+From the turret she obtained a perfect view of the
+entire Lane. Al Gepper was running down the street,
+while Pete and Slippery had turned toward the
+cemetery.</p>
+<p>There were no other persons in the vicinity, Penny
+thought at first glance. Then her heart leaped as she
+saw three men entering the Lane at its junction with
+the main street. They, too, were running.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They must have heard the bell!&rdquo; she told herself.
+&ldquo;Oh, if only I can make them understand what has
+happened!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her best means of attracting attention was by ringing
+the bell. She pushed against it and was rewarded
+by a deafening clang.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_190">[190]</div>
+<p>The men stopped short, staring toward the belfry.
+Penny cupped her hands and shouted. Her words did
+not carry plainly, but the newcomers seemed to gain
+an inkling of what was amiss, for they wheeled and
+began to pursue the two who had taken refuge in the
+cemetery.</p>
+<p>From her high perch, Penny saw Al Gepper nearing
+the end of the Lane, unobserved by all save herself.
+Tapping the bell again, she called:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get him, too! At the end of the street!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>One of the pursuers halted, turning toward the
+tower. In the moonlight Penny saw his face and recognized
+Jerry Livingston. He was close enough now
+to hear her voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Al Gepper!&rdquo; she shouted. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let him
+escape!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The reporter turned, but as he started off in the
+new direction, both he and Penny saw the fleeing man
+climbing into Leaping Lena. With a grinding of gears,
+he drove away. Jerry stopped, thinking that he never
+could overtake the car.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep after him, Jerry!&rdquo; encouraged Penny. &ldquo;The
+gas tank is almost empty. He can&rsquo;t possibly go more
+than three or four blocks!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As the reporter again took up the chase, she began
+tolling the bell once more, determined to arouse everyone
+within a mile of the Temple.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_191">[191]</div>
+<p>Her energy was rewarded, for in another minute
+she heard the familiar wail of a siren. A police cruiser
+swerved alongside the tower, stopping with a lurch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the idea of ringing that bell?&rdquo; demanded
+an officer, leaping to the ground.</p>
+<p>Tersely Penny explained the situation. The two
+policemen took a short-cut through a vacant lot,
+circling the cemetery. Darkness swallowed them, but
+presently there came a muffled command to halt, followed
+by a revolver shot.</p>
+<p>So excited was Penny that she nearly tumbled from
+the bell tower. Recovering her balance, she sat on the
+stone ledge, trying to remain calm. Her nerves were
+jumpy and on edge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If only Jerry captures Al Gepper&mdash;that&rsquo;s all I
+ask!&rdquo; she breathed.</p>
+<p>As the minutes elapsed, it occurred to her that she
+had not yet searched for the loot which she believed
+to be hidden in the belfry. With questing fingers
+she groped beneath the ledge. For a short distance she
+felt nothing. Then she encountered a long wooden
+box.</p>
+<p>Before she could open it, she heard shouts from the
+direction of the cemetery. Four men, two of them
+police officers, were marching Slippery and Pete toward
+the Temple. As they came nearer she received
+another pleasant surprise. The two who had aided in
+the capture were her father and Salt Sommers, a
+photographer for the <i>Star</i>.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_192">[192]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad!&rdquo; shouted Penny. &ldquo;Can you get me down
+from this pigeon roost?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker, separating from the others, came to
+the foot of the bell tower.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it was you who sounded the alarm!&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+&ldquo;I might have known! How did you get up
+there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m locked in. Dad, send the police to help Jerry.
+He&rsquo;s after Al Gepper who rode off in my car.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The police cruiser was dispatched, leaving one
+officer to guard the two prisoners. Mr. Parker unlocked
+the door of the tower room, releasing his
+daughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re all right?&rdquo; he asked anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course. Here&rsquo;s a little present for you.&rdquo; Penny
+thrust the wooden box into his hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know yet. I found it hidden in the belfry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, if you fell into a river you would come up
+with a chest of gold!&rdquo; exclaimed the publisher admiringly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Open it quick, Dad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker required no urging. The box was locked
+but he pried off the cover hinges, exposing the contents.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_193">[193]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;A real treasure!&rdquo; exclaimed Penny.</p>
+<p>The box contained several bracelets, one of them
+set with rubies and diamonds, countless rings, four
+watches, and several strings of matched pearls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stolen loot!&rdquo; ejaculated the publisher.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what a collection!&rdquo; chuckled Penny as she
+examined the separate pieces. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s enough plunder
+here to start a jewelry store.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Likewise sufficient evidence to put this Celestial
+Temple gang out of circulation for a long, long time,&rdquo;
+added her father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I learned a lot tonight, Dad. Wait until I tell you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A scoop for the <i>Star</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be able to use your largest, blackest headlines.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny began to tell her story, interrupting only
+when Slippery and Pete were brought into the building
+handcuffed together. Starting again, she made her
+charges, accusing Slippery not only of having committed
+the Henley burglary, but also of having robbed
+the Kohls and many prominent Riverview families.</p>
+<p>After inspecting the jewelry found in the wooden
+box, one of the police officers definitely identified
+several of the pieces as stolen goods. He expressed an
+opinion that the jewelry had been hidden in the belfry
+because it was too &ldquo;hot&rdquo; to be disposed of by fences.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_194">[194]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;The organization members had an agreement by
+which all shared in the loot,&rdquo; added Penny. &ldquo;That
+caused trouble. Al Gepper and Slippery thought they
+were taking most of the risk without sufficient return.
+So they pulled a few extra jobs of their own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before she could reveal more, the police car was
+heard outside the Temple. From the window Penny
+saw that Jerry and the policeman were returning with
+Al Gepper who had been handcuffed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve caught him!&rdquo; she cried jubilantly.</p>
+<p>The prisoner was brought into the Temple to be
+identified. He had been captured when Leaping Lena
+had stalled for lack of gasoline.</p>
+<p>As Gepper was searched, the silken ladder, and
+various small objects were removed from his coat.
+Penny noticed two tiny rubber suction cups no larger
+than dimes, and immediately made up her mind that
+later she would try to obtain them. She was quite
+certain she knew their purpose.</p>
+<p>Penny told her story and learned, in turn, that after
+she had telephoned Jerry, he had traced her father, and
+with the police both had hastened to the Hodges&rsquo;
+cottage. Arriving there, they discovered that Gepper
+had fled. Jerry, Mr. Parker, and Salt Sommers had
+immediately proceeded to the Celestial Temple.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was lucky you rang that bell, Penny,&rdquo; chuckled
+Jerry. &ldquo;If you hadn&rsquo;t, we never would have arrived
+here in time.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_195">[195]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It was lucky, too, that Mr. Gepper tried to escape
+in Lena,&rdquo; she laughed. &ldquo;I guess my old rattle-trap has
+redeemed itself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>One of the officers picked up the silken ladder,
+examining it with critical interest. He agreed that it
+had undoubtedly been used in many mysterious burglaries
+committed during the past month.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s obvious that Slippery approached the houses
+on the &lsquo;blind&rsquo; side, and scaled the wall after hooking
+his ladder into a window ledge,&rdquo; Penny remarked.
+&ldquo;I suppose he reasoned that second-story windows
+nearly always are left unlocked. But how did he learn
+the houses were deserted? By telephoning?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That would be my opinion,&rdquo; nodded the policeman.
+&ldquo;If someone answered, he could hang up. Otherwise,
+he would be fairly sure the house was empty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One night at the theatre I saw a man who resembled
+Slippery noting down the license number of
+the Kohl car. But the house was robbed within a few
+hours after that. How could he have obtained the
+name and address?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Easily. There are &lsquo;information fences&rsquo; who supply
+such data to fellow members of the underworld. It
+is also possible that Slippery previously had watched
+the Kohl house, obtained the car license number, and
+then watched for it later at the theatre.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_196">[196]</div>
+<p>Jerry already had supplied police with the name of
+the fence whose establishment Slippery had visited
+earlier in the day. Later, a raid staged there brought
+to light much loot taken from various Riverview
+homes.</p>
+<p>However, for the moment, police were most interested
+in gaining complete information which could
+be used in rounding up all members of the Celestial
+Temple Society who had not fled the city.</p>
+<p>Searching Slippery they found, not only jewelry
+stolen from the Henley residence, but a booklet containing
+many names and telephone numbers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sadie Beardsell,&rdquo; Penny read. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s one of the
+members, I am sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lest Mr. and Mrs. Hodges might also be arrested,
+she explained that the old couple had been an innocent
+dupe of Al Gepper. Turning to the medium she said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I know how you accomplished most of
+your tricks. Of course, you were the one who sent
+Mrs. Hodges a letter with six dollars. Undoubtedly,
+you had it mailed by an accomplice from New York
+at exactly the hour you specified. Then at that same
+hour you slipped up to the Hodges&rsquo; cottage, and
+rapped six times on the bedroom wall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You seem to have everything figured out,&rdquo; Al
+Gepper responded sarcastically. &ldquo;Clever girl!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_197">[197]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I saw how you made the spirit painting tonight at
+the s&eacute;ance,&rdquo; resumed Penny. &ldquo;May I ask if that same
+method was used in regard to Mrs. Weem&rsquo;s picture of
+Cousin David?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not dream that the medium would answer
+her question. With a shrug which implied that the
+entire matter was very boring, he replied:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, the picture was painted with a solution of
+sulphocyanid of potassium and other chemicals, invisible
+until brought out with a re-agent. During the
+s&eacute;ance, an assistant sprayed the back of the canvas
+with an atomizer, bringing out the colors one by one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And how was the paint made to appear wet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poppy oil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One more question, Mr. Gepper. I never could
+understand how you were able to raise the kitchen
+table at Mrs. Hodges&rsquo; cottage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo; Al Gepper smiled mockingly. &ldquo;I assure you
+I had nothing to do with that demonstration. It was
+a true spirit manifestation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never believe that,&rdquo; declared Penny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then figure it out for yourself,&rdquo; replied the
+medium. &ldquo;You are such a very brilliant child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before the prisoners were led to the police car, Salt
+Sommers set up his camera and took a number of flashlight
+pictures for the <i>Star</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How about it, Mr. Parker?&rdquo; inquired Jerry eagerly.
+&ldquo;Are we putting out an extra?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_198">[198]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;We are,&rdquo; said the publisher crisply. &ldquo;This is the
+big break I&rsquo;ve been hoping we would get! We should
+beat the <i>Record</i> on the story by at least a half hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The three men hurriedly left the Celestial Temple,
+with Penny trailing behind them. At the main street
+intersection they finally obtained a taxicab.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the <i>Star</i> office,&rdquo; Mr. Parker ordered. &ldquo;An extra
+dollar if you step on it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How about my pictures?&rdquo; Salt Sommers asked, as
+the cab rocked around a corner. &ldquo;They ought to be
+dandies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rush them through as soon as we get to the office,&rdquo;
+Mr. Parker instructed. &ldquo;If they&rsquo;re any good we&rsquo;ll run
+&rsquo;em on page one. Jerry, you handle the story&mdash;play it
+for all it&rsquo;s worth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jerry glanced at Penny who sat very still between
+her father and Salt. Their eyes met.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Chief,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s a sort of fraternity among
+reporters&mdash;an unwritten rule that we never chisel on
+each other&rsquo;s work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; Mr. Parker asked, startled. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+get it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then his glance fell upon his daughter, and he
+smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, so it&rsquo;s that way! You think Penny should write
+the story?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do, Chief. It&rsquo;s hers from the ground floor up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please, Dad, may I?&rdquo; Penny pleaded.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_199">[199]</div>
+<p>The cab rolled up to the <i>Star</i> office, stopping with a
+jerk. Mr. Parker swung open the door, helping her
+alight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The story is yours, Penny,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That is, if
+you can crack it out fast enough to make the extra.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do it or die in the attempt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep to the facts and write terse, simple English&mdash;&rdquo;
+Mr. Parker began, but Penny did not wait to hear his
+instructions.</p>
+<p>With a triumphant laugh, she ran ahead into the
+<i>Star</i> office. Her entry into the newsroom was both
+dramatic and noisy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Big scoop, Mr. DeWitt,&rdquo; she called cheerily. &ldquo;Start
+the old print factory running full blast!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dropping into a chair behind the nearest typewriter,
+she began to write.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_200">[200]</div>
+<h2 id="c25"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span>
+<br /><span class="large">25</span>
+<br /><i>EXTRA!</i></h2>
+<p>Penny stood at the window of her father&rsquo;s office,
+listening to the newsboys crying their wares on the
+street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Extra! Extra! Read all about it! Police Capture
+Three in Raid on Celestial Temple! Extra! Extra!</i>&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Parker rocked back in his swivel chair, smiling
+at his daughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your story was first-class, Penny,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Thanks
+to you we scooped the <i>Record</i>. Tired?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do feel rather washed out,&rdquo; Penny admitted.
+&ldquo;Writing at high speed with a deadline jabbing you in
+the back is worse than facing a gang of crooks. But it
+was exciting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You turned in a good story,&rdquo; her father praised
+again. &ldquo;In fact, you may as well take credit for breaking
+up that outfit of fake spiritualists.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_201">[201]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;So far the police have only captured Al Gepper,
+Slippery and Pete. There&rsquo;s not much evidence against
+the others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True, but rest assured those who aren&rsquo;t rounded up
+will leave Riverview. The backbone of the organization
+has been smashed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny sank wearily into a chair, picking up a copy
+of the <i>Star</i> which lay on her father&rsquo;s desk. Two-inch,
+black headlines proclaimed the capture, and opening
+from the banner was her own story tagged with a
+credit line: <i>by Penelope Parker</i>. Salt Sommer&rsquo;s photographs
+had made the front page, too, and there was
+a brief contribution by Jerry telling of Al Gepper&rsquo;s attempted
+flight in Leaping Lena.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dad, you must admit that it was a stroke of genius
+when I bought back that old car,&rdquo; remarked Penny.
+&ldquo;Why, if it hadn&rsquo;t been for Lena, Al Gepper surely
+would have escaped.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That and the fact you always run your cars on
+an empty tank,&rdquo; responded Mr. Parker. &ldquo;I suppose you
+foresaw the future when you made your brilliant purchase?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not exactly. It was just a feeling I had&mdash;the same
+sort of hunch which came to me when I found the
+silken ladder at Kano&rsquo;s Curio Shop. If I depended upon
+a mere brain to solve mysteries, why I&rsquo;d be no better
+than the police.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_202">[202]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Your modesty overwhelms me,&rdquo; chuckled her
+father. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m thankful my other reporters aren&rsquo;t guided
+by their instincts. Otherwise I might have a scoop a
+day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s one thing which annoys me,&rdquo; Penny said,
+frowning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what is that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two of Al Gepper&rsquo;s tricks haven&rsquo;t been explained.
+How was he able to raise a table and read a message in
+a sealed envelope?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was talking to the Chief of Police about that letter
+trick only this morning, Penny. Magicians often
+employ it. Wasn&rsquo;t the message written on a pad of
+paper before it was placed in the envelope?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then very likely Gepper read the message from
+the pad. He could have placed carbon paper beneath
+the second or third sheets. Possibly he resorted to a
+thin covering of paraffin wax which would be less
+noticeable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now that I recall it, he did glance at the pad! How
+would you guess he lifted the table?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were his hands held high above it, Penny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only an inch or two. However, he never touched
+the table. I was able to see that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could he have used sharp, steel pins held between
+his fingers?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_203">[203]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt it. But I think I know what he may have
+used! Did you notice two small suction cups which
+were taken from his pockets by the police?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, no, I didn&rsquo;t, Penny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The longer I mull over it, the more I&rsquo;m convinced
+he used them to raise the table. They could be held between
+the fingers and wouldn&rsquo;t be observed in a darkened
+room. Dad, if I can get those rubber cups from
+the police, I&rsquo;ll have some fun!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The telephone rang. It was Mrs. Weems calling to
+ask if Penny were safe. Mr. Parker replied in the affirmative
+and handed the receiver to his daughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Penny, I just read your story in the paper,&rdquo; the
+housekeeper scolded. &ldquo;You never should have pitted
+yourself against those dangerous men! I declare, you
+need someone to watch you every minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I need you,&rdquo; said Penny. &ldquo;And so does Dad. Why
+not promise to stay with us instead of going away on
+a trip?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course, I&rsquo;ll remain,&rdquo; came Mrs. Weems&rsquo; surprising
+answer. &ldquo;I made up my mind to that two days ago.
+You and your father never could take care of yourselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What will you do with your inheritance, Mrs.
+Weems?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope your father will invest it for me,&rdquo; replied
+the housekeeper meekly. &ldquo;One thing I know. No medium
+will tell me what to do with it.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_204">[204]</div>
+<p>The hour was late. Penny felt relieved when her
+father locked his desk in preparation for leaving the
+office.</p>
+<p>They walked through the newsroom, down the stairway
+to the street. A middle-aged man in a brown suit
+and derby hat alighted from a taxi, pausing as he saw
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Parker!&rdquo; he called. &ldquo;May I speak with you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The publisher turned, recognizing him. &ldquo;Mr. Henley!&rdquo;
+he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have just come from the police station,&rdquo; the advertiser
+said in an agitated voice. &ldquo;I was told that your
+daughter is responsible for the capture of the men who
+robbed our home tonight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Penny managed to have a rather busy evening,&rdquo;
+smiled Mr. Parker. &ldquo;I hope you suffered no
+loss.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Everything was recovered, thanks to your daughter.
+Miss Parker, I realize I never can properly express
+my appreciation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was sorry I couldn&rsquo;t prevent the burglary,&rdquo; replied
+Penny stiffly. &ldquo;As it turned out, the capture of
+the crooks was mostly due to luck.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are too modest,&rdquo; protested Mr. Henley. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+talked with the police, you know. I am truly grateful.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_205">[205]</div>
+<p>The man hesitated, evidently wishing to say more,
+yet scarcely knowing how to shape his words. Penny
+and her father started to move away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, about that contract we were discussing today,&rdquo;
+the advertiser said quickly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; Mr. Parker paused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been thinking it over. I acted too hastily in deciding
+to cancel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Henley, please do not feel that you are under
+obligation,&rdquo; said the publisher quietly. &ldquo;Even though
+Penny accidentally did you a favor&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not that,&rdquo; Mr. Henley interrupted. &ldquo;The <i>Star</i> is
+a good paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The best in Riverview,&rdquo; said Penny softly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it is!&rdquo; Mr. Henley declared with sudden emphasis.
+&ldquo;I tell you, Parker, I was irritated because of a
+trivial mistake in my firm&rsquo;s copy. I&rsquo;ve cooled off now.
+Suppose we talk over the matter tomorrow at lunch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; agreed Mr. Parker. &ldquo;The Commodore
+Hotel at one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bowing to Penny, Mr. Henley retreated into a waiting
+taxi and drove away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you like that, Dad?&rdquo; Penny inquired after
+a moment&rsquo;s silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I like it,&rdquo; answered Mr. Parker. &ldquo;The <i>Star</i> could
+have limped along without Mr. Henley. But the going
+would have been tough.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_206">[206]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll renew the old contract?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, and probably give us a better one. Stealing
+Mr. Henley&rsquo;s words, I am truly grateful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Penny gazed at her father with twinkling eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are those idle words, Dad? Or are you willing to
+back them in a material way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I might,&rdquo; grinned Mr. Parker. &ldquo;Present your bill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Dad, I&rsquo;ve discovered to my sorrow that I
+can&rsquo;t support two cars on my present allowance. I need
+a generous raise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You could get rid of Lena.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Dad! After her noble work tonight!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I suppose not,&rdquo; sighed Mr. Parker. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve
+earned an increase, and I may as well grant it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Retroactive to the time I started working on the
+story,&rdquo; added Penny. &ldquo;I figure if you pay back allowance,
+I&rsquo;ll be solvent once more!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You drive a hard bargain,&rdquo; chuckled the publisher.
+&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll agree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Arm in arm, they started on down the street. Rounding
+a corner of the <i>Star</i> building they abruptly paused
+before the plate-glass window to watch a long, unbroken
+sheet of white paper feed through the thundering
+press. Freshly inked newspapers, cut and folded,
+slid out one upon the other to be borne away for distribution.</p>
+<div class="pb" id="Page_207">[207]</div>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s modern magic, isn&rsquo;t it, Dad?&rdquo; Penny said reflectively
+as the great machine pounded in steady
+rhythm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Penny,&rdquo; her father agreed. &ldquo;And for this edition,
+at least, you were the master magician!&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smaller">THE END</span></p>
+<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
+<ul>
+<li>Replaced the list of books in the series by the complete list,
+as in the final book, &ldquo;The Cry at Midnight&rdquo;.</li>
+<li>Silently corrected a handful of palpable typos.</li>
+<li>Conforming to later volumes, standardized on &ldquo;DeWitt&rdquo;
+as the name of the city editor.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Clue of the Silken Ladder, by Mildred A. Wirt
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Clue of the Silken Ladder, 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: Clue of the Silken Ladder
+
+Author: Mildred A. Wirt
+
+Release Date: December 7, 2010 [EBook #34591]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CLUE OF THE SILKEN LADDER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Brenda Lewis and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Clue of
+ the Silken
+ Ladder
+
+
+ _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, 1941, BY CUPPLES AND LEON CO.
+
+ Clue of the Silken Ladder
+
+ PRINTED IN U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ _CONTENTS_
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ 1 DOUBLE TROUBLE _1_
+ 2 A ROPE OF SILK _12_
+ 3 SOCIETY ROUTINE _23_
+ 4 A TURN OF FORTUNE _32_
+ 5 THE MAN IN GRAY _42_
+ 6 AN APARTMENT BURGLARY _49_
+ 7 MARK OF THE IRON HOOK _59_
+ 8 PSYCHIC SIGNS _67_
+ 9 MRS. WEEMS' INHERITANCE _75_
+ 10 OUIJA BOARD WISDOM _85_
+ 11 THE CELESTIAL TEMPLE _94_
+ 12 A MESSAGE FOR MRS. WEEMS _102_
+ 13 COUSIN DAVID'S GHOST _111_
+ 14 WET PAINT _118_
+ 15 HIDDEN MONEY _125_
+ 16 OVER THE WINDOW LEDGE _135_
+ 17 KANO'S CURIO SHOP _142_
+ 18 THE BELL TOWER _151_
+ 19 PENNY INVESTIGATES _157_
+ 20 INSIDE THE CABINET _163_
+ 21 STARTLING INFORMATION _168_
+ 22 SCALING THE WALL _174_
+ 23 A PRISONER IN THE BELFRY _181_
+ 24 THE WOODEN BOX _188_
+ 25 EXTRA! _200_
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 1
+ _DOUBLE TROUBLE_
+
+
+"Now I ask you, Lou, what have I done to deserve such a fate?"
+
+Jerking a yellow card from beneath the windshield of the shiny new
+maroon-colored sedan, Penny Parker turned flashing blue eyes upon her
+companion, Louise Sidell.
+
+"Well, Penny," responded her chum dryly, "in Riverview persons who park
+their cars beside fire hydrants usually expect to get parking tickets."
+
+"But we were only inside the drugstore five minutes. Wouldn't you think a
+policeman could find something else to do?"
+
+"Oh, the ticket won't cost you more than five or ten dollars," teased
+Louise wickedly. "Your father should pay it."
+
+"He should but he won't," Penny answered gloomily. "Dad expects his one
+and only daughter to assume her own car expense. I ask you, what's the
+good of having a weekly allowance when you never get to use it yourself?"
+
+"You _are_ in a mood today. Why, I think you're lucky to have a grand new
+car."
+
+Louise's glance caressed the highly polished chrome plate, the sleek,
+streamlined body which shone in the sunlight. The automobile had been
+presented to Penny by her father, Anthony Parker, largely in gratitude
+because she had saved his newspaper, _The Riverview Star_, from a
+disastrous law suit.
+
+"Yes, I am lucky," Penny agreed without enthusiasm. "All the same, I'm
+lonesome for my old coupe, Leaping Lena. I wish I could have kept her.
+She was traded in on this model."
+
+"What would you do with that old wreck now, Penny? Nearly every time we
+went around a corner it broke down."
+
+"All the same, we had marvelous times with her. This car takes twice as
+much gasoline. Another thing, all the policemen knew Lena. They never
+gave her a ticket for anything."
+
+Penny sighed deeply. Pocketing the yellow card, she squeezed behind the
+steering wheel.
+
+"By the way, whatever became of Lena?" Louise asked curiously, slamming
+the car door. She glanced sharply at Penny.
+
+"Oh, she's changed hands twice. Now she's at Jake Harriman's lot,
+advertised for fifty dollars. Want to drive past there?"
+
+"Not particularly. But I'll do it for your sake, pet."
+
+As the car started toward the Harriman Car Lot, Louise stole an amused
+glance at her chum. Penny was not unattractive, even when submerged in
+gloom. Upon the slightest provocation, her blue eyes sparkled; her smile
+when she chose to turn it on, would melt a man of stone. She dressed
+carelessly, brushed a mop of curly, golden hair only if it suited her
+fancy, yet somehow achieved an appearance envied by her friends.
+
+The automobile drew up at the curb.
+
+"There's Lena." Penny pointed to an ancient blue coupe with battered
+fenders which stood on the crowded second-hand lot. A _For Sale_ sign on
+the windshield informed the public that the auto might be bought for
+forty dollars.
+
+"Lena's value seems to have dropped ten dollars," commented Louise. "My,
+I had forgotten how wrecky the old thing looks!"
+
+"Don't speak of her so disrespectfully, Lou. All she needs is a good
+waxing and a little paint."
+
+The girls crossed the lot to inspect the coupe. As they were gazing at
+it, Jake, the lot owner, sidled toward them, beaming ingratiatingly.
+
+"Good afternoon, young ladies. May I interest you in a car?"
+
+"No, thank you," replied Penny. "We're just looking."
+
+"Now here is a fine car," went on the dealer, indicating the coupe. "A
+1934 model--good mechanical condition; nice rubber; a lively battery and
+fair paint. You can't go wrong, ladies, not at a price of forty dollars."
+
+"But will it run?" asked Louise, smothering a giggle.
+
+"There's thousands of miles of good service left in this little car,
+ladies. And the price is only fifteen dollars above the junk value."
+
+The thought of Leaping Lena coming to an inglorious end in a junk yard
+was disconcerting to Penny. She walked slowly about the car, inspecting
+it from every angle.
+
+"Forty dollars is too much for this old wreck," she said firmly.
+
+"Why, Penny, such disrespect!" mocked Louise.
+
+Penny frowned down her chum. Sentiment and business were two different
+matters.
+
+"What _will_ you give?" inquired the car owner alertly.
+
+"Not a cent over twenty-five."
+
+Louise clutched Penny's arm, trying to pull her away.
+
+"Have you lost your mind?" she demanded. "What could you do with this old
+car when you already have a new one?"
+
+Penny did not listen. She kept gazing at the coupe as one who had been
+hypnotized.
+
+"I'd take it in a minute, only I don't have twenty-five dollars in cash."
+
+"How much can you raise?" asked the dealer.
+
+"Not more than five dollars, I'm afraid. But my father is publisher of
+the _Riverview Star_."
+
+Jake Harriman's brows unknitted as if by magic.
+
+"Anthony Parker's daughter," he said, smiling. "That's plenty good enough
+for me. I'll sell you the best car on the lot for nothing down. Just come
+inside the office and sign a note for the amount. Will that be okay?"
+
+Disregarding Louise's whispered protests, Penny assured the dealer that
+the arrangement would be perfectly satisfactory. The note was signed, and
+five dollars in cash given to bind the bargain.
+
+"I'll throw in a few gallons of gas," the man offered.
+
+However, Jake Harriman's gasoline did not seem suited to Leaping Lena's
+dyspeptic ignition. She coughed feebly once or twice and then died for
+the day.
+
+"You have acquired a bargain, I must say!" exclaimed Louise. "You can't
+even get the car home."
+
+"Yes, I can," Penny insisted. "I'll tow her. A little tinkering and
+she'll be as good as new."
+
+"You're optimistic, to say the least," laughed Louise.
+
+Penny produced a steel cable from the tool kit of the maroon sedan, and
+Jake Harriman coupled the two cars together.
+
+"Penny, what will your father say when he learns of this?" Louise
+inquired dubiously. "On top of a parking ticket, too!"
+
+"Oh, I'll meet that problem when I come to it," Penny answered
+carelessly. "Louise, you steer Lena. I'll drive the sedan."
+
+Shaking her head sadly, Louise climbed into the old car. Although Penny
+was her dearest friend she was forced to admit that the girl often did
+bewildering things. Penny's mother was dead and for many years she had
+been raised by a housekeeper, Mrs. Maud Weems. Secretly Louise wondered
+if it were not the housekeeper who had been trained. At any rate, Penny
+enjoyed unusual freedom for a high school girl, and her philosophy of
+life was summed up in one headline: ACTION.
+
+Penny put the sedan in gear, towing the coupe slowly down the street. The
+two vehicles traveled several blocks before a hill loomed ahead. Penny
+considered turning back, and then decided that the cars could make the
+steep climb easily.
+
+However, midway up the hill the sedan suddenly leaped forward as if
+released from a heavy burden. At the same instant Lena's horn gave a
+sharp warning blast.
+
+Glancing into the mirror, Penny was horrified to see Leaping Lena
+careening backwards down the steep slope. The tow rope had unfastened.
+
+Bringing the sedan to the curb, she jerked on the hand brake, and sprang
+to the pavement. Louise, bewildered and frightened, was trying
+desperately to control the coupe. The car gathered speed, wobbling
+crazily toward the line of traffic.
+
+"Guide it! Guide it!" shouted Penny. "Put on the brakes!"
+
+So confused was Louise that she lost her head completely. Straight toward
+a long black limousine rolled the coupe. The chauffeur spun his wheel,
+but too late. There was a loud crash as the two cars came together.
+
+Penny raced down the hill to help her chum from the coupe.
+
+"Are you hurt?" she asked anxiously.
+
+Louise shook her head, wailing: "Penny Parker, just see what has happened
+now! You never should have bought this stupid old wreck!"
+
+Both the chauffeur and an elderly gentleman who carried a cane, alighted
+from the limousine. With grim faces they surveyed the fender which had
+been crushed.
+
+"The owner is Mr. Kohl," Louise whispered nervously. "You know, president
+of the First National Bank."
+
+The banker did not recognize either of the girls. Addressing them both,
+he made several pointed remarks to the effect that irresponsible young
+people were very thoughtless to endanger the property of others with
+their ancient "jalopies."
+
+"It was entirely my fault, Mr. Kohl," acknowledged Penny meekly. "Of
+course, I'll pay for the fender."
+
+The banker softened somewhat, gazing at the girls in a thoughtful, more
+friendly way.
+
+"Haven't I seen you somewhere before?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, yes, Mr. Kohl." Penny was quick to press for an advantage. "Why, I
+am one of your best customers. Ever since I was six years old I've
+trusted your bank with my savings!"
+
+"I remember you now," said Mr. Kohl, smiling. "You're the Parker girl."
+
+Adding a mental note that Anthony Parker actually was one of the bank's
+largest depositors, he decided it would be excellent policy to make light
+of the accident. A moment later as a policeman came to investigate, he
+insisted that the incident had been unavoidable and that it would be a
+mistake to arrest the girls.
+
+"Mr. Kohl, you were noble, absolutely noble," declared Penny gratefully
+after the policeman had gone. "The least I can do is to pay for the
+damage."
+
+"I'll stop at Sherman's Garage and have a new fender put on," the banker
+responded. "The bill can be sent to your father."
+
+After Mr. Kohl had driven away, Louise helped Penny hook the coupe to the
+sedan once more. She remarked cuttingly:
+
+"You've done right well today. One parking ticket, a bill for twenty-five
+dollars, and another one coming up. Just what _will_ your father say?"
+
+"Plenty," sighed Penny. "I wonder if it might not be a good idea to break
+the news by easy stages? Perhaps he'll take it more calmly if I
+telephone."
+
+"Don't be too sure."
+
+The street was a narrow, dingy one with few business houses. Noticing a
+Japanese store which bore a sign, "Kano's Curio Shop," she started toward
+it, intending to seek a public telephone.
+
+Louise seized her arm. "Penny, you're not going in there!"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"This is Dorr Street--one of the worst places in Riverview."
+
+"Oh, don't be silly," chuckled Penny. "It's perfectly safe by daylight.
+I'll go alone if you're afraid."
+
+Thus challenged, Louise indignantly denied that she was afraid, and
+accompanied her chum.
+
+The door of Mr. Kano's shop stood invitingly open. Pausing on the
+threshold, the girls caught a pleasant aroma of sandalwood.
+
+So quietly did Louise and Penny enter that the elderly, white-haired shop
+owner did not immediately see them. He sat behind a high counter,
+engrossed in something he was sewing.
+
+"Good afternoon," said Penny pleasantly.
+
+The Japanese glanced up quickly and as quickly thrust his work beneath
+the counter. Recovering poise, he bowed to the girls.
+
+"May we use your telephone if you have one?" Penny requested.
+
+"So very sorry, Miss," the Japanese responded, bowing again. "Have no
+telephone."
+
+Penny nodded, absently fingering a tray of tiny ivory figures. The
+Japanese watched her, and mistaking curiosity for buying interest,
+brought additional pieces for her to inspect. The curios were all too
+expensive for Penny's purse, but after endless debate she bought a pair
+of wooden clogs. The shop owner padded away into a back room, intending
+to wrap the package for her.
+
+Scarcely had he vanished when Penny turned excitedly to her chum.
+
+"Lou, did you notice how funny he acted when we came in here?"
+
+"Yes, he didn't want us to see what he was making evidently."
+
+"Exactly what I thought! But we'll fool Mr. Kano!"
+
+Giving Louise no opportunity to protest, Penny boldly peered behind the
+counter.
+
+"Here it is," she whispered. "But _what_ is it?"
+
+Hidden in a pasteboard box lay coil upon coil of what appeared to be
+fine, black silk rope. Curiously, she lifted it up, exposing a network of
+crossbars.
+
+"Well, of all things!" she exclaimed. "It's a ladder, Lou! A ladder made
+of silk!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 2
+ _A ROPE OF SILK_
+
+
+Even as Penny spoke, she felt a hard, warning tug on her skirt. Quickly
+she turned around.
+
+In the doorway stood the old Japanese. His smile was not pleasant to
+behold.
+
+"We-we were just looking at this rope," Penny stammered, trying to carry
+off the situation with dignity. "I hope you don't mind."
+
+The Japanese shopkeeper gazed steadily at the girl, his face an
+emotionless mask. Since he spoke no word, it became increasingly evident
+that he regarded her with anger and suspicion.
+
+"May I ask what use is made of this silk rope?" Penny inquired. "Do you
+sell it for a special purpose?"
+
+The Japanese coldly ignored the direct questions.
+
+"So very sorry to have kept you waiting," he said softly. "Your change
+please."
+
+Penny knew that she deserved the rebuke. Accepting the package and coins,
+she and Louise hastily left the shop. Not until they were some distance
+away did the latter speak.
+
+"Penny, you would do a trick like that! One of these days your curiosity
+will get us into serious trouble."
+
+"At least I learned what was hidden behind the counter," chuckled Penny.
+"But that Jap didn't seem very eager to answer my questions."
+
+"Can you blame him? It certainly was none of our affair what he kept
+inside the box."
+
+"Perhaps not, Lou, but you must admit he acted strangely when we first
+entered the shop. You know--as if we had surprised him in a questionable
+act."
+
+"He naturally was startled. We came in so quietly."
+
+"All the same, I'm not one bit sorry I looked behind the counter," Penny
+maintained. "I like to learn about things."
+
+"I agree with you there!"
+
+"Lou, what purpose do you suppose silk ladders serve? Who uses them and
+why?"
+
+"Now, how should I know? Penny, you ask enough questions to be master of
+ceremonies on a radio quiz program."
+
+"I can't recall ever having seen a silk ladder before," Penny resumed,
+undisturbed by her chum's quip. "Would acrobats use them, do you think?"
+
+"Not to my knowledge," Louise answered. "If I were in your shoes I should
+worry about more serious matters than those connected with a mere silk
+ladder."
+
+"The world is filled with serious things," sighed Penny. "But mystery!
+One doesn't run into it every day."
+
+"You do," said Louise brutally. "If a stranger twitches his ears twice
+you immediately suspect him of villainy."
+
+"Nevertheless, being of a suspicious nature won me a new car," Penny
+defended herself. "Don't forget Dad gave it to me for solving a mystery,
+for telling his newspaper readers what was going on _Behind the Green
+Door_."
+
+"Oh, your curiosity has paid dividends," Louise admitted with a laugh.
+"Take for instance the time you trailed the _Vanishing Houseboat_, and
+again when you lowered the Kippenberg drawbridge to capture a boatload of
+crooks! Those were the days!"
+
+"Why dwell in the past, Lou? Now take this affair of the silk ladder--"
+
+"I'm afraid _you'll_ have to take it," Louise interrupted. "Do you
+realize it's nearly four o'clock? In exactly ten minutes I am supposed to
+be at the auditorium for orchestra practice."
+
+"Lou, you can't desert me now," Penny protested quickly. "How will I get
+Lena home? I need you to steer her."
+
+"Thanks, but I don't trust your tow rope."
+
+"At least go as far as the _Star_ office with me. Once there, maybe I can
+get one of the reporters to help me the rest of the way."
+
+"Oh, all right," Louise consented. "But the _Star_ office is my absolute
+limit."
+
+Deciding not to take time to telephone her father, Penny once more
+climbed into the maroon sedan, posting Louise behind the wheel of the
+coupe. At a cautious speed the two cars proceeded along the street,
+coming presently to a large corner building which housed the _Riverview
+Star_. No parking space being available on the street, Penny pulled into
+the newspaper plant's loading dock.
+
+"Say, you!" shouted a man who was tossing stacks of freshly inked papers
+into a truck. "You can't park that caravan in here!"
+
+Penny's eyes danced mischievously.
+
+"Oh, it's quite all right," she said. "I guess you don't know who I am."
+
+"Sure, I do," the trucker grinned. "But your dad gave orders that the
+next time you tried to pull that daughter-of-the-publisher stuff we were
+to bounce you! This dock is for _Star_ trucks."
+
+"Why, the very idea," said Penny, with pretended injury. "The night
+edition doesn't roll for an hour and I'll be away from here before then!
+Besides, this is a great emergency! When Dad hears about all the trouble
+I'm in, a little matter such as this won't even ruffle him."
+
+"Okay, chase along," the trucker returned good-naturedly. "But see to it
+that you're out of here within an hour."
+
+Penny bade Louise good-bye, and with plaid skirt swinging jauntily,
+crossed the cement runway to the rear elevator entrance. Without waiting
+for the cage to descend, she took the steps two at a time, arriving at
+the editorial floor gasping for breath.
+
+"What's your rush?" inquired an amused voice. "Going to a fire?"
+
+Jerry Livingston, ace reporter for the _Star_, leaned indolently against
+the grillwork of the elevator shaft, his finger pressed on the signal
+button. He and Penny were friends of long standing.
+
+"Oh, hello, Jerry!" Penny greeted him breathlessly. "Guess what? I've
+just come from Dorr Street--Kano's Curio Shop--and I had the most amazing
+adventure!"
+
+"I can imagine," grinned Jerry. "If you breezed through the place the way
+you do this building, you must have left it in ruins."
+
+"Just for that, I won't tell you a thing, not a thing," retorted Penny.
+"What sort of a mood is Dad in today?"
+
+"Well, I heard him tell DeWitt that unless the news output improves on
+this sheet, he aims to fire half the force."
+
+"Sounds like Dad on one of his bad days," Penny sighed. "Maybe I should
+skip home without seeing him."
+
+"Trouble with the old allowance again?" Jerry asked sympathetically.
+
+"You don't know the half of it. I'm submerged so deeply in debt that I'll
+be an old lady before I get out, unless Dad comes to my rescue."
+
+"Well, good luck," chuckled Jerry. "You'll need it!"
+
+Walking through the newsroom, between aisles of desks where busy
+reporters tapped on their typewriters, Penny paused before a door marked:
+_Anthony Parker, Editor_.
+
+Listening a moment and hearing no voices within, she knocked and entered.
+Her father, a lean, dignified man with tired lines about his eyes and
+mouth, sat working at his desk. He smiled as he saw his daughter, and
+waved her toward a chair.
+
+Instead, Penny perched herself on a corner of the desk.
+
+"Dad, I have a splendid surprise for you," she began brightly. "I've just
+accomplished a wonderful stroke of business!"
+
+"Never mind beating about the bush," interrupted Mr. Parker. "Shoot me
+the facts straight. What have you done this time?"
+
+"Dad, your tone! I've bought back my old car, Leaping Lena. And it only
+cost me a trifling sum."
+
+Mr. Parker's chair squeaked as he whirled around.
+
+"You've done _what_?"
+
+"It's a long story, Dad. Now don't think that I fail to appreciate the
+grand new car you gave me last winter. I love it. But between Lena and me
+there exists a deep bond of affection. Today when I saw her on Jake
+Harriman's lot looking so weather-beaten and unhappy--why, a little voice
+inside me whispered: 'Penny, why don't you buy her back?' So I did."
+
+"Never mind the sentimental touches. When I gave you the new car I
+thought we were well rid of Lena. How much did you pay for it?"
+
+"Oh, Lena was a marvelous bargain. Five dollars cash and a note for
+twenty more. The man said you could pay for it at your convenience."
+
+"Very considerate of him," Mr. Parker remarked ironically. "Now that we
+have three cars, and a double garage, where do you propose to keep Lena?"
+
+"Oh, anywhere. In the back yard."
+
+"Not on the lawn, young lady. And what do you plan to do with two cars?"
+
+"The maroon one for style, and Lena when I want a good time. Why, Dad,
+she bears the autographs of nearly all my school friends! I should keep
+her as a souvenir, if for no other reason."
+
+"Penny, it's high time you learned a few lessons in finance." Mr. Parker
+spoke sternly although his mouth twitched slightly. "I regret that I
+cannot assume your debts."
+
+"But Dad! I'm a minor--under legal age. Isn't it a law that a father has
+to support his child?"
+
+"A child, but not two cars. If you decide to take the case to court, I
+think any reasonable judge will understand my viewpoint. I repeat, the
+debt is yours, not mine."
+
+"How will I pay?" asked Penny gloomily. "I've already borrowed on my
+allowance for a month ahead."
+
+"I know," said her father. "However, with your ingenuity I am sure you
+can manage."
+
+Penny drew a deep breath. Argument, she realized, would be utterly
+useless. While her father might be mildly amused by her predicament, he
+never would change his decision.
+
+"Since you won't pay for Lena, I suppose it's useless to mention Mr.
+Kohl's fender," she said despairingly.
+
+"Does he have one?"
+
+"Please don't try to be funny, Dad. This is tragic. While I was towing
+Lena, the rope broke and smash went the fender of Mr. Kohl's slinky black
+limousine."
+
+"Interesting."
+
+"I had to promise to pay for it to keep from being arrested. Oh, yes, and
+before that I acquired this little thing."
+
+Penny tossed the yellow card across the desk.
+
+"A parking ticket! Penny, how many times--" Mr. Parker checked himself,
+finishing in a calm voice: "This, too, is your debt. It may cost you five
+dollars."
+
+"Dad, you know I can't pay. Think how your reputation will be tarnished
+if I am sent to jail."
+
+Mr. Parker smiled and reached as if to take money from his pocket.
+Reconsidering, he shook his head.
+
+"I know the warden well," he said. "I'll arrange for you to be assigned
+to one of the better cells."
+
+"Is there nothing which will move you to generosity?" pleaded Penny.
+
+"Nothing."
+
+Retrieving the parking ticket, Penny jammed it into her pocket. Before
+she could leave there came a rap on the door. In response to Mr. Parker's
+"Come in," Mr. DeWitt, the city editor, entered.
+
+"Sorry to bother you, Chief."
+
+"What's wrong now, DeWitt?" the publisher inquired.
+
+"Miss Hilderman was taken sick a few minutes ago. We had to send her home
+in a cab."
+
+"It's nothing serious I hope," said Mr. Parker with concern.
+
+"A mild heart attack. She'll be out a week, if not longer."
+
+"I see. Be sure to have the treasurer give her full pay. You have someone
+to take her place?"
+
+"That's the problem," moaned DeWitt. "Her assistant is on vacation. I
+don't know where we can get a trained society editor on short notice."
+
+"Well, do the best you can."
+
+DeWitt lingered, fingering a paper weight.
+
+"The society page for the Sunday paper is only half finished," he
+explained. "Deadline's in less than an hour. Not a chance we can pick up
+anyone in time to meet it."
+
+Penny spoke unexpectedly. "Mr. DeWitt, perhaps I can help you. I'm a whiz
+when it comes to writing society. Remember the Kippenberg wedding I
+covered?"
+
+"Do I?" DeWitt's face relaxed into a broad grin. "That was a real
+write-up. Say, maybe you could take over Miss Hilderman's job until we
+can replace her."
+
+"Service is my motto." Penny eyed her father questioningly. "It might
+save the _Star_ from going to press minus a society page. How about it,
+Dad?"
+
+"It certainly would solve our problem," contributed DeWitt. "Of course
+the undertaking might be too great a one for your daughter." He winked at
+Penny.
+
+"She'll have no difficulty in taking over," said Mr. Parker stiffly.
+"None whatsoever."
+
+"Then I'll start her in at once," DeWitt replied. "Come with me, Miss
+Parker."
+
+At the door Penny paused and discreetly allowed the city editor to get
+beyond hearing. Then, turning to her father she remarked innocently:
+
+"Oh, by the way, we overlooked one trifling detail. The salary!"
+
+The editor made a grimace. "I might have expected this. Very well, I'll
+pay you the same as I do Miss Hilderman. Twenty-five a week."
+
+"Why, that would just take care of my debt to Jake Harriman," protested
+Penny. "I simply can't do high pressure work without high pay. Shall we
+make it fifty a week?"
+
+"So you're holding me up?"
+
+"Certainly not," chuckled Penny. "Merely using my ingenuity. Am I hired?"
+
+"Yes, you win," answered Mr. Parker grimly. "But see to it that you turn
+out good work. Otherwise, you soon may find yourself on the _Star's_
+inactive list."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 3
+ _SOCIETY ROUTINE_
+
+
+Penny followed City Editor DeWitt to a small, glass-enclosed office along
+the left hand wall of the newsroom. Miss Hilderman's desk was cluttered
+with sheets of copy paper which bore scribbled notations, items
+telephoned to the _Star_ but not yet type-written.
+
+"There should be a date book around here somewhere," DeWitt remarked.
+
+Finally he found it in one of the desk drawers. Penny drew a deep breath
+as she scanned the long list of social events which must be covered for
+the Sunday page.
+
+"Do the best you can," DeWitt said encouragingly. "Work fast, but be
+careful of names."
+
+The telephone bell rang. As Penny reached for the receiver, DeWitt
+retreated to his own domain.
+
+"Hello, Miss Hilderman?" a feminine voice cooed, "I wish to report a
+meeting, please."
+
+"Miss Hilderman isn't here this afternoon," replied Penny politely. "I
+will take the item."
+
+Gathering up paper and pencil, she slid into the revolving chair behind
+the telephone, poised for action.
+
+"Yes," she urged, "I am ready."
+
+There was a lengthy pause, and then the woman at the other end of the
+line recited as if she were reading from a paper:
+
+"'A meeting of the Mystical Society of Celestial Thought, Order of Amar,
+67, will be held Tuesday night at eight o'clock in the Temple, 426
+Butternut Lane. The public is cordially invited.'"
+
+"What sort of society is the Order of Amar?" Penny inquired curiously,
+taking notes. "I never heard of it before."
+
+"Why, my dear, the society is very well known," the woman replied. "We
+hold our meetings regularly, communing with the spirits. I do hope that
+the item appears in print. So often Miss Hilderman has been careless
+about it."
+
+"I'll see that the item is printed under club notices," Penny promised.
+"Your name, please?"
+
+The woman had hung up the receiver, so with a shrug, Penny typed the item
+and speared it on a wire spindle. For the next hour she was kept busy
+with other telephone calls and the more important stories which had to be
+rushed through. Copy flowed steadily from her office by way of the
+pneumatic tube to the composing room.
+
+Shortly after five o'clock, DeWitt dropped in for a moment to praise her
+for her speed and accuracy.
+
+"You're doing all right," he said. "So far I've only caught you in one
+mistake. Mignonette is spelled with a double t."
+
+"This job wouldn't be half bad if only brides could learn to carry
+flowers with easy names," laughed Penny. "When I get married I'll have
+violets and sweet peas!"
+
+DeWitt reached for the copy on the spindle. "What's this?" he asked.
+"More to go?"
+
+"Club notices."
+
+The editor tore the sheet from the wire, reading it as he walked toward
+the door. Abruptly, he paused and turned toward her.
+
+"Miss Parker, this can't go through."
+
+"Why, what is wrong?" Penny asked in surprise. "Have I made another error
+in spelling?"
+
+DeWitt tore off the lead item and tossed it on her desk.
+
+"It's this meeting of the so-called Mystical Society of Celestial
+Thought. The _Star_ never runs stuff like that, not even as a paid
+advertisement."
+
+"I thought it was a regular lodge meeting, Mr. DeWitt."
+
+"Nothing of the sort. Merely a free advertisement for a group of mediums
+and charlatans."
+
+"Oh, I didn't know," murmured Penny.
+
+"These meetings have only one purpose," Mr. DeWitt resumed. "To lure
+victims who later may be fleeced of their money."
+
+"But if that is so, why don't police close up the place?" Penny demanded.
+"Why doesn't the _Star_ run an expose story?"
+
+"Because evidence isn't easy to get. The meetings usually are well within
+the law. Whenever a police detective or a reporter attends, the services
+are decorous. But they provide the mediums with a list of suckers."
+
+Penny would have asked DeWitt for additional information had not the city
+editor walked hurriedly away. Scrambling the item into a ball, she tossed
+it into the waste paper basket. Then upon second thought she retrieved it
+and carefully smoothed the paper.
+
+"Perhaps, I'll drop around at the Temple sometime just to see what it is
+like," she decided, placing the item in her pocket. "It would be
+interesting to learn what is going on there."
+
+For the next half hour Penny had no time to think of the Celestial
+Temple. However, at twenty minutes before six, when her father came into
+the office, she was well ahead of her work.
+
+"Hello, Penny," he greeted her. "How do you like your new job?"
+
+"Fine and dandy. Only routine items rather cramp one's style. Now if I
+were a regular reporter instead of a society editor, I know several
+stories which would be my dish!"
+
+"For instance?" inquired Mr. Parker, smiling.
+
+"First, there's an Oriental Shop on Dorr Street that I should
+investigate. The Japanese owner acted very mysteriously today when I went
+there. Louise and I saw him making a silk ladder, and he refused to
+reveal its purpose."
+
+"A silk ladder?" repeated Mr. Parker. "Odd perhaps, but hardly worthy of
+a news story."
+
+"Dad, I only wish you had _seen_ that old Japanese--the sinister way he
+looked at me. Oh, he's guilty of some crime. I feel it."
+
+"The _Star_ requires facts, not fancy or emotion," Mr. Parker rejoined.
+"Better devote your talents to routine society items if you expect to
+remain on my payroll."
+
+Penny took the announcement of the Celestial Thought meeting from her
+pocket and offered it to the publisher.
+
+"Here's one which might be interesting," she said. "How about assigning
+me to it after I get this society job in hand?"
+
+Mr. Parker read the item and his eyes blazed with anger.
+
+"Do you know what this means, Penny?"
+
+"Mr. DeWitt told me a little about the Celestial Temple society. He said
+the paper never ran such items."
+
+"Certainly not! Why, I should like nothing better than to see the entire
+outfit driven out of town! Riverview is honeycombed with mediums, fortune
+tellers and faith healers!"
+
+"Perhaps they mean no harm, Dad."
+
+"I'll grant there may be a small number of persons who honestly try to
+communicate with the spirit world," Mr. Parker replied. "My concern is
+not with them, but with a group of professional mediums who lately have
+invaded the city. Charlatans, crooks--the entire lot!"
+
+"Why don't you write an editorial about it?" Penny suggested.
+
+"An editorial! I am seriously tempted to start a vigorous campaign, but
+the trouble is, the police cannot be depended upon to cooperate
+actively."
+
+"Why, Dad?"
+
+"Because experience has proven that such campaigns are not often
+successful. Evidence is hard to gain. If one place is closed up, others
+open in different sections of the city. The mediums and seers operate
+from dozens of private homes. When the police stage raids they acquire no
+evidence, and only succeed in making the department look ridiculous."
+
+"Yet the mediums continue to fleece the public?"
+
+"The more gullible strata of it. Until recent months the situation here
+has been no worse than in other cities of comparable size. Lately an
+increasing number of charlatans has moved in on us."
+
+"Why don't you start a campaign, Dad?" Penny urged. "You would be doing
+the public a worthwhile service."
+
+"Well, I hesitate to start something which I may be unable to finish."
+
+"At least the public deserves to be warned."
+
+"Unfortunately, Penny, many persons would take the attitude that the
+_Star_ was persecuting sincere spiritualists. A campaign must be based on
+absolute evidence."
+
+"Can't it be obtained?"
+
+"Not without great difficulty. These mediums are a clever lot, Penny.
+They prey upon the superstitions of their intended victims."
+
+"I wish you would let me work on the story, Dad."
+
+"No, Penny," responded her father. "You attend to your society and allow
+DeWitt to worry about the Celestial Temple crowd. Even if I should launch
+a campaign, I couldn't allow you to become mixed up in the affair."
+
+The telephone bell jingled. With a tired sigh, Penny reached for the
+receiver.
+
+"Society desk," she said mechanically.
+
+"I am trying to trace Mr. Parker," informed the office exchange operator.
+"Is he with you, Miss Parker?"
+
+"Telephone, Dad," said Penny, offering him the receiver.
+
+Mr. Parker waited a moment for another connection to be made. Then Penny
+heard him say:
+
+"Oh, it's you, Mrs. Weems? What's that? Repeat it, please."
+
+From her father's tone, Penny felt certain that something had gone wrong
+at home. She arose, waiting anxiously.
+
+Mr. Parker clicked the receiver several times. "Apparently, Mrs. Weems
+hung up," he commented.
+
+"Is anything the matter, Dad?"
+
+"I don't know," Mr. Parker admitted, his face troubled. "Mrs. Weems
+seemed very excited. She requested me to come home as soon as possible.
+Then the connection was broken."
+
+"Why don't you try to reach her again?"
+
+Mr. Parker placed an out-going call, but after ten minutes the operator
+reported that she was unable to contact the housekeeper.
+
+"Mrs. Weems never would have telephoned if something unusual hadn't
+happened," Penny declared uneasily. "Perhaps, she's injured herself."
+
+"You think of such unpleasant things."
+
+"Something dreadful must have happened," Penny insisted. "Otherwise, why
+doesn't she answer?"
+
+"We're only wasting time in idle speculation," Mr. Parker said crisply.
+"Get your things, Penny. We'll start home at once!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 4
+ _A TURN OF FORTUNE_
+
+
+Penny immediately locked her desk and gathered up hat and gloves. She was
+hard pressed to keep pace with her father as they hastened to the
+elevator.
+
+"By the way, you have your car downstairs?" the publisher inquired
+absently. He seldom drove his own automobile to the office.
+
+"What a memory you have, Dad!" chuckled Penny. "Yes, I have all two of
+them! Parked in the loading dock for convenience."
+
+"Penny, haven't I told you a dozen times--" Mr. Parker began, only to
+check himself. "Well, it will save us time now. However, we may discuss a
+few matters when we get home."
+
+The elevator shot them down to the first floor. Leaping Lena and the
+maroon sedan remained in the loading dock with a string of _Star_ paper
+trucks blocking a portion of the street.
+
+"Hey, sister," a trucker called angrily to Penny. "It's time you're
+getting these cars out of here." He broke off as he recognized Mr. Parker
+and faded behind one of the trucks.
+
+"Dad, do you mind steering Lena?" Penny asked demurely. "We can't leave
+her here. You can see for yourself that she seems to be blocking
+traffic."
+
+"Yes, I see," Mr. Parker responded grimly.
+
+"Of course, if you would feel more dignified driving the sedan--"
+
+"Let me have the keys," the publisher interrupted. "The important thing
+is to get home without delay."
+
+Penny became sober, and slid into her place at the wheel of Leaping Lena.
+Amid the smiles of the truckers, Mr. Parker drove the two cars out of the
+dock.
+
+Once underway, the caravan made reckless progress through rush-hour
+traffic. More than once Penny whispered a prayer as Lena swayed around a
+corner, missing other cars by scant inches.
+
+Presently the two automobiles drew up before a pleasant, tree-shaded home
+built upon a high terrace overlooking a winding river. Penny and her
+father alighted, walking hurriedly toward the front porch.
+
+The door stood open and from within came the reassuring howl of a radio
+turned too high.
+
+"Nothing so very serious can have happened," remarked Penny. "Otherwise,
+Mrs. Weems wouldn't have that thing going full blast."
+
+At the sound of footsteps, the housekeeper herself came into the living
+room from the kitchen. Her plump face was unusually animated.
+
+"I hope you didn't mind because I telephoned the office, Mr. Parker," she
+began apologetically. "I was so excited, I just did it before I stopped
+to think."
+
+"Penny and I were nearly ready to start home in any case, Mrs. Weems. Has
+anything gone wrong here?"
+
+"Oh, no, Mr. Parker. It was the telegram."
+
+"Telegram? One for me, you mean?"
+
+"No, my own." The housekeeper drew a yellow paper from the pocket of her
+apron, offering it to the publisher. "My Cousin David died out in
+Montana," she explained. "The funeral was last Saturday."
+
+"That's too bad," remarked Penny sympathetically. And then she added:
+"Only you don't look particularly sad, Mrs. Weems. How much did he leave
+you?"
+
+"Penny! You say such shocking things! I never met Cousin David but once
+in my life. He was a kind, good man and I only wish I had written to him
+more often. I never dreamed he would remember me in his will."
+
+"Then he did leave you money!" exclaimed Penny triumphantly. "How much
+does the telegram say, Dad?"
+
+"You may as well tell her, Mr. Parker," sighed the housekeeper. "She'll
+give me no peace until she learns every detail."
+
+"This message which is from a Montana lawyer mentions six thousand
+dollars," returned the publisher. "Apparently, the money is to be turned
+over without legal delay."
+
+"Why, Mrs. Weems, you're an heiress!" cried Penny admiringly.
+
+"I can't believe it's true," murmured Mrs. Weems. "You don't think
+there's any mistake, Mr. Parker? It would be too cruel if someone had
+sent the message as a joke."
+
+Before returning the telegram to the housekeeper, Mr. Parker switched off
+the radio.
+
+"This message appears to be authentic," he declared. "My congratulations
+upon your good fortune."
+
+"What will you do with all your money?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Oh, I don't know." The housekeeper sank into a chair, her eyes fastening
+dreamily on a far wall. "I've always wanted to travel."
+
+Penny and her father exchanged a quick, alarmed glance. Mrs. Weems had
+been in charge of the household for so many years that they could not
+imagine living without her, should she decide to leave. During her brief,
+infrequent vacations, the house always degenerated into a disgrace of
+dust and misplaced furniture, and meals were never served at regular
+hours.
+
+"The oceans are very unsafe, Mrs. Weems," discouraged Penny. "Wars and
+submarines and things. Surely you wouldn't dare travel now."
+
+"Oh, I mean in the United States," replied the housekeeper. "I've always
+wanted to go out West. They say the Grand Canyon is so pretty it takes
+your breath away."
+
+"Mrs. Weems, you have worked for us long and faithfully and deserve a
+rest," said Mr. Parker, trying to speak heartily. "Now if you would enjoy
+a trip, Penny and I will get along somehow for two or three weeks."
+
+"Oh, if I go, I'll stay the entire summer." The housekeeper hesitated,
+then added: "I've enjoyed working here, Mr. Parker, but doing the same
+thing year after year gets tiresome. Often I've said to myself that if I
+had a little money I would retire and take life easy for the rest of my
+days."
+
+"Why, Mrs. Weems, you're only forty-eight!" protested Penny. "You would
+be unhappy if you didn't have any work to do."
+
+"At least, I wouldn't mind trying it."
+
+"Such a change as you contemplate should be considered carefully,"
+contributed Mr. Parker. "While six thousand seems a large sum it would
+not last long if one had no other income."
+
+Before Mrs. Weems could reply, a strong odor of burning food permeated
+the room.
+
+"The roast!" exclaimed the housekeeper. "I forgot it!"
+
+Penny rushed ahead of her to the kitchen. As she jerked open the oven
+door, out poured a great cloud of smoke. Seizing a holder, she rescued
+the meat, and seeing at a glance that it was burned to a crisp, carried
+the pan outdoors.
+
+"What will the neighbors say?" Mrs. Weems moaned. "I never did a thing
+like that before. It's just that I am so excited I can't think what I am
+doing."
+
+"Don't you mind," laughed Penny. "I'll get dinner tonight. You entertain
+Dad."
+
+With difficulty she persuaded the housekeeper to abandon the kitchen.
+Left to herself, she opened a can of cold meat, a can of corn, a can of
+peaches, and with a salad already prepared, speedily announced the meal.
+
+"Mr. Parker, I truly am ashamed--" Mrs. Weems began.
+
+"Now don't apologize for my cooking," broke in Penny. "Quantity before
+quality is my motto. Anyway, if you are leaving, Dad will have to
+accustom himself to it."
+
+"I'll hide the can opener," said Mr. Parker.
+
+"That's a good idea, Dad."
+
+"Before I go, I'll try to teach Penny a little more about cooking," Mrs.
+Weems said uncomfortably. "Of course, you'll have no difficulty in
+getting someone efficient to take my place."
+
+"No one can take your place," declared Penny. "If you leave, Dad and I
+will go to wrack and ruin."
+
+"You are a pair when you're left to yourselves," Mrs. Weems sighed.
+"That's the one thing which makes me hesitate. Penny needs someone to
+keep her in check."
+
+"An inexperienced person would be putty in my hands," declared Penny.
+"You may as well decide to stay, Mrs. Weems."
+
+"I don't know what to do. I've planned on this trip for years. Now that
+it is possible, I feel I can't give it up."
+
+Penny and Mr. Parker regarded each other across the table, and
+immediately changed the subject. Not until that moment had they actually
+believed that the housekeeper was serious about leaving Riverview.
+Somehow they had never contemplated a future without Mrs. Weems.
+
+"I happen to have two complimentary tickets to a show at the Rialto," Mr.
+Parker said offhand. "I'll be tied up with a meeting tonight, but you
+folks might enjoy going."
+
+"Shall we, Mrs. Weems?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Thank you," responded the housekeeper, "but I doubt if I could sit still
+tonight. I thought I would run over to see Mrs. Hodges after dinner.
+She'll be pleased to learn about my inheritance, I know."
+
+"A friend of yours?" asked Mr. Parker.
+
+"Yes, Penny and I have been acquainted with her for years. She lives on
+Christopher Street."
+
+"Perhaps this is none of my affair, Mrs. Weems. However, my advice to you
+is not to tell many persons about your inheritance."
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Hodges is to be trusted."
+
+"I am sure of it, Mrs. Weems. I refer to strangers."
+
+"I'll be careful," the housekeeper promised. "No one ever will get that
+money away from me once I have it!"
+
+Penny helped with the dishes, and then as her father was leaving the
+house, asked him if she might have the two theatre tickets.
+
+"Since Mrs. Weems doesn't care to go, I'll invite Louise," she explained.
+
+Mr. Parker gave her the tickets. Making certain that the housekeeper was
+upstairs, he spoke in a low tone.
+
+"Penny, Mrs. Weems is serious about leaving us. You must try to dissuade
+her."
+
+"What can I do, Dad?"
+
+"Well, you usually have a few ideas in the old filing cabinet. Can't you
+think of something?"
+
+"I'll do my best," Penny said with a twinkle. "We can't let an
+inheritance take Mrs. Weems from us, that's certain."
+
+After her father had gone, Penny telephoned Louise, agreeing to meet her
+chum at the entrance of the Rialto. Arriving a few minutes early, she
+idly watched various cars unloading their passengers at the theatre.
+
+Presently a long black limousine which Penny recognized drew up at the
+curb. The chauffeur opened the door. Mr. Kohl and his wife stepped to the
+pavement. Observing the girl, they paused to chat with her.
+
+"I see you have the new fender installed on your car, Mr. Kohl," Penny
+remarked with a grin. "May I ask how much I owe the garageman?"
+
+"The sum was trifling," responded the banker. "Twelve dollars and forty
+cents to be exact. I may as well take care of it myself."
+
+"No, I insist," said Penny, wincing inwardly. "You see, I am one of the
+_Star's_ highly paid executives now. I write society in Miss Hilderman's
+absence and Dad gives me a salary."
+
+"Oh, really," remarked Mrs. Kohl with interest. "We are giving a dinner
+for eight tomorrow night. You might like to mention it."
+
+"Indeed, yes," said Penny eagerly.
+
+Obtaining complete details, she jotted notes on the back of an envelope.
+Mrs. Kohl, at Penny's request, was able to recall several important
+parties which had been held that week, providing material for nearly a
+half-column of society.
+
+After the Kohls had entered the theatre, Penny turned to glance at the
+black limousine which was pulling away from the curb. A short distance
+away stood a young man who likewise appeared to be watching the car. He
+wore a gray suit and a gray felt hat pulled unnaturally low over his eyes
+as if to shield his face.
+
+As Penny watched, the young man jotted something down on a piece of
+paper. His gaze remained fixed upon the Kohl limousine which was moving
+slowly down the street toward a parking lot.
+
+"Why, that's odd!" thought Penny. "I do believe he noted down the car
+license number! And perhaps for no good purpose."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 5
+ _THE MAN IN GRAY_
+
+
+Deciding that the matter should be brought to Mr. Kohl's attention, Penny
+looked quickly into the crowded theatre lobby. The banker and his wife no
+longer were to be seen.
+
+Turning once more, the girl saw that the young man in gray had also
+disappeared.
+
+"Now where did he go?" thought Penny. "He must have slipped into the
+alley. I wish I knew who he was and why he wrote down that car license
+number."
+
+Curious to learn what had become of the man, she walked to the entrance
+of the alley. At its far end she could barely distinguish a shadowy
+figure which soon merged into the black of the starless night.
+
+Penny was lost in thought when someone touched her arm. Whirling, she
+found herself facing Louise Sidell.
+
+"Oh, hello, Lou," she laughed. "You startled me."
+
+"Sorry to have kept you waiting," apologized Louise. "I missed my bus.
+May I ask what you find of such interest in this alley?"
+
+"I was looking for a man. He's disappeared now."
+
+Penny told Louise what she had observed, mentioning that in her opinion
+the man might be a car thief.
+
+"I've heard that crooks spot cars ahead of time and then steal them," she
+declared. "I think I should have Mr. Kohl paged in the theatre, and tell
+him about it."
+
+"You'll make yourself appear ridiculous if you do," Louise discouraged
+her. "The man may not have taken down the license number at all. Even if
+he did, his purpose could have been a legitimate one."
+
+"Then why did he slip down the alley?"
+
+"It's merely a short-cut to another street, isn't it? Penny, your
+imagination simply works at high speed twenty-four hours of the day."
+
+"Oh, all right," said Penny with a shrug. "But if Mr. Kohl's car is
+stolen, don't blame me."
+
+"It won't be," laughed Louise, linking arms with her chum. "Not with a
+chauffeur at the wheel."
+
+Entering the theatre, the girls were escorted to their seats only a few
+minutes before the lights were lowered. Penny glanced over the audience
+but failed to see either Mr. Kohl or his wife. The curtain went up, and
+as the entertainment began, she dismissed all else from her mind.
+
+The show ended shortly before eleven and the girls mingled with the crowd
+which filed from the theatre. Penny watched for Mr. and Mrs. Kohl but did
+not see them. As she walked with Louise toward the bus stop she spoke of
+her new duties as society editor of the _Star_.
+
+"Lou," she asked abruptly, "do you mind going home alone?"
+
+"Why, no. Where are you taking yourself?"
+
+"To the _Star_ office, if you don't mind."
+
+"At this time of night?"
+
+"I have a few notes I should type. Unfinished work always makes me
+nervous."
+
+"You, nervous!" Louise scoffed. "I'll bet you want to see Jerry
+Livingston!"
+
+"No such thing," denied Penny indignantly. "Jerry doesn't work on the
+night force unless he's assigned to extra duty."
+
+"Well, you have something besides work on your mind."
+
+"Come along with me, Suspicious, and I'll prove it."
+
+"No, thanks," declined Louise. "It's home and bed for me. You run along."
+
+The girls separated, Penny walking three blocks to the _Star_ building.
+The advertising office was dark, but blue-white lights glowed weirdly
+from the composing room. Only a skeleton night staff occupied the
+newsroom.
+
+Without attracting attention, Penny entered her own office. For an hour
+she worked steadily, writing copy, and experimenting with various types
+of make-up to be used on Monday's page.
+
+The door creaked. Glancing up, Penny momentarily was startled to see a
+large, grotesque shadow of a man moving across the glass panel. However,
+before she actually could be afraid, Jerry Livingston stepped into the
+room.
+
+"Oh, it's you!" she laughed in relief. "I thought it was against your
+principles to work overtime."
+
+The reporter slumped into a chair, and picking up a sheet of copy paper,
+began to read what Penny had composed.
+
+"I'm not working," he replied absently. "Just killing time." With a yawn
+he tossed the paper on the desk again.
+
+"Is my stuff that bad?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Not bad at all. Better than Miss Hilderman writes. But society always
+gives me a pain. Not worthy of your talents, Penny."
+
+"I wish you would tell Dad that, Jerry. I'd love to work on a big story
+again--one that would rock Riverview on its foundation!"
+
+"I could bear up under a little excitement myself, Penny. Ever since you
+broke the Green Door yarn, this sheet has been as dead as an Egyptian
+tomb."
+
+"Things may pick up soon."
+
+"Meaning--?"
+
+"Dad is thinking rather seriously of launching a drive against an
+organized group of mediums."
+
+"So I hear," nodded Jerry. "You know, for a long while I've thought that
+a clever reporter might be able to dig up some evidence at the Celestial
+Temple."
+
+"Then you know about the place?"
+
+"I've been there several times."
+
+"What are the meetings like, Jerry?" Penny asked eagerly.
+
+"Similar to a church musical service. At least everything was dignified
+when I was there. But I sure had a feeling that the lid was about to blow
+off."
+
+"Perhaps you were suspected of being a _Star_ reporter, Jerry."
+
+"Oh, undoubtedly. I could tell that by the way folks stared at me. The
+only person who would have a chance to get real evidence would be someone
+unknown as a reporter."
+
+"I wish Dad would let me try it."
+
+"I don't," said Jerry flatly. "The Celestial Temple is no place for a
+little girl like you."
+
+Penny did not reply as she lowered her typewriter into the cavity of the
+desk. She was thinking, however, that if Louise could be persuaded to
+accompany her, she would investigate the Celestial Temple at the first
+opportunity.
+
+"I'll take you home," Jerry offered as Penny reached for her hat.
+
+The night was a warm, mellow one in early June, marred only by dark
+clouds which scudded overhead, threatening rain. Deciding to walk, Penny
+and Jerry crossed the park to Oakdale Drive where many of Riverview's
+most expensive homes had been built.
+
+"Doesn't Mr. Kohl live on this street?" Penny presently asked her escort.
+
+"Yes," he answered, "in a large stone apartment building. I'll point it
+out when we get there."
+
+They walked for a time in silence. Then Penny found herself telling about
+the afternoon meeting with Mr. Kohl which had led her to Kano's Curio
+Shop. She spoke, too, of the silken ladder which had so aroused her
+speculation. Jerry listened with polite interest.
+
+"You and Louise shouldn't have chased around Dorr Street alone," he said
+severely. "It's a bad district."
+
+"Oh, it was safe enough, Jerry. I'd like to go back there. I can't help
+being curious about that strange ladder which the old Japanese man was
+sewing."
+
+"I doubt if there's a story connected with it. The Japanese make any
+number of curious articles of silk, you know."
+
+"But a ladder, Jerry! What purpose could it serve?"
+
+"For one thing it would be more convenient to carry than the ordinary
+type."
+
+"One couldn't stand it against a wall or use it in the ordinary way,
+Jerry. I asked the Japanese about it but he refused to answer."
+
+"He may not have understood you."
+
+"Oh, he understood, all right. Do you know what I think? He was afraid I
+might discover something which would involve him with the police!"
+
+"Better forget the Kano Curio Shop," Jerry said tolerantly. "I repeat,
+Dorr Street is no place for you."
+
+"And I'm supposed to forget the Celestial Temple, too," grumbled Penny.
+"Oh, I see you grinned behind your hand! Well, Mr. Livingston, let me
+tell you--"
+
+She paused, and Jerry's hand tightened on her own. Unmistakably, both had
+heard a muffled scream. The cry seemed to have come from one of several
+large brick and stone buildings only a short distance ahead.
+
+"What was that?" Penny asked in a low tone. "Someone calling for help?"
+
+"It sure sounded like it!" exclaimed Jerry. "Come on, Penny! Let's find
+out what's going on here!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 6
+ _AN APARTMENT BURGLARY_
+
+
+Together Penny and Jerry ran down the street, their eyes raised to the
+unevenly lighted windows of the separate apartment houses. They were
+uncertain as to the building from which the cry had come.
+
+Suddenly the front door of the corner dwelling swung open, and a young
+woman in a maid's uniform ran toward them.
+
+Jerry, ever alert for a story of interest to the _Star_, neatly blocked
+the sidewalk. Of necessity the girl halted.
+
+"Get a policeman, quick!" she gasped. "Mr. Kohl's apartment has been
+robbed!"
+
+"Mr. Kohl--the banker?" demanded Penny, scarcely believing her ears.
+
+"Yes, yes," the maid said in agitation. "Jewels, silverware, everything
+has been taken! The telephone wire was cut, too! Oh, tell me where I'll
+find a policeman!"
+
+"I'll get one for you," offered Jerry.
+
+The information that it was Mr. Kohl's house which had been burglarized
+dumbfounded Penny. As the reporter darted away to summon help, she
+showered questions upon the distraught maid.
+
+"I don't know yet how much has been taken," the girl told her excitedly.
+"The rooms look as if a cyclone had swept through them! Oh, what will the
+Kohls say when they learn about it?"
+
+"Mr. and Mrs. Kohl aren't home yet?"
+
+"No, they went to the theatre. They must have stopped at a restaurant
+afterwards. When they hear of this, I'll lose my job."
+
+"Perhaps not," said Penny kindly. "Surely you weren't to blame for the
+burglary."
+
+"They'll think so," the maid responded gloomily.
+
+"I am acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Kohl. Perhaps, if I speak a good word
+for you it may help."
+
+"I doubt it," the girl responded. "I was supposed to have stayed at the
+apartment the entire evening."
+
+"And you didn't?"
+
+"No, I went to a picture show."
+
+"That does throw a different light on the matter," commented Penny.
+
+"I didn't think it would make any difference. I intended to get here
+ahead of the Kohls."
+
+"The robbery occurred while you were away?"
+
+"Yes. As soon as I opened the door I knew what had happened! Oh, I'll
+lose my job all right unless I can think up a good story."
+
+"I wouldn't lie if I were you," advised Penny. "The police are certain to
+break down your story. In any case, you owe it to yourself and your
+employers to tell the truth."
+
+A misty rain had started to fall. The maid, who was without a wrap,
+shivered, yet made no move to re-enter the building. Overhead, all along
+the dark expanse of apartment wall, lights were being turned on.
+
+"I am afraid your scream aroused nearly everyone in the building," said
+Penny. "If I were in your place I would return to the Kohl apartment and
+not answer many questions until the police arrive."
+
+"Will you stay with me?"
+
+"Gladly."
+
+The apartment door had slammed shut and locked with the night latch.
+Fortunately the maid had a key with her so it was not necessary to ring
+for the janitor. Ignoring the persons who had gathered in the hall, they
+took an automatic lift to the third floor, letting themselves into the
+Kohl suite.
+
+"This is the way I found it," said the maid.
+
+She switched on a light, revealing a living room entirely bare of rugs.
+Where three small Oriental rugs had been placed, only rectangular rims of
+dirt remained to mark their outlines.
+
+Beyond, in the dining room with its massive carved furniture, the
+contents of a buffet had been emptied on the floor. Several pieces of
+china lay in fragments. A corner cupboard had been stripped, save for a
+vase and an ebony elephant with a broken tusk.
+
+"The wall cabinet was filled with rare antiques," disclosed the maid.
+"Mrs. Kohl has collected Early American silver for many years. Some of
+the pieces she considered priceless."
+
+The bedrooms were in less disorder. However, bureau drawers had been
+overturned, and jewel cases looted of everything save the most trivial
+articles.
+
+"Mrs. Kohl's pearls are gone, and her diamond bracelet," the maid
+informed, picking up the empty jewel box. "I am pretty sure she didn't
+wear them to the theatre."
+
+"I wouldn't touch anything if I were you," advised Penny. "Fingerprints."
+
+The maid dropped the case. "Oh!" she gasped. "I never thought of that! Do
+you think the police will blame me for the robbery?"
+
+"Not if you tell them the truth. It surely will be unwise to try to hide
+anything."
+
+"I won't hold anything back," the maid promised. "It happened just like I
+said. After Mr. and Mrs. Kohl left I went to a picture show."
+
+"Alone?"
+
+"With my girl friend. After the show we had a soda together, and then she
+went home."
+
+"What time did you get here?"
+
+"Only a minute or two before I called for help. I tried the telephone
+first."
+
+"Why didn't you summon the janitor?"
+
+"I never thought of that. I was so excited I ran outside hoping to find a
+policeman."
+
+Penny nodded and, returning to the living room, satisfied herself that
+the telephone wires actually had been cut.
+
+"You didn't notice anyone in the halls as you went downstairs."
+
+"No one. Old Mr. Veely was on the lower floor when I came from the show,
+but he's lived here for seven years. I don't see how the burglar got into
+the apartment."
+
+"I was wondering about that myself. You're quite sure you locked the
+suite door?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I know I did," the maid said emphatically. "And it isn't
+possible to get into the building without a key. Otherwise, the janitor
+must be called."
+
+Penny walked thoughtfully to the living room window. The apartment stood
+fully thirty-five feet from a neighboring building, with the space
+between much too wide to be spanned. Below, the alley was deserted, and
+no fire escape ascended from it.
+
+"The burglar couldn't have entered that way," declared the maid. "He must
+have had his own key."
+
+Before Penny could respond, a sharp knock sounded on the door. The
+servant girl turned to open it. However, instead of the anticipated
+police, the apartment janitor, George Bailey, peered into the disordered
+room.
+
+"I heard someone scream a minute or so ago," he said. "Some of the
+tenants thought it came from this apartment. Maybe they were mistaken."
+
+"There's no mistake," spoke Penny from across the room. "The Kohls have
+been robbed. Will you please come inside and close the door?"
+
+"Robbed! You don't say!" The janitor stared with alarmed interest. "When
+did it happen?"
+
+Penny allowed the maid to tell what had occurred, adding no information
+of her own. When there came a lull in the excited flow of words, she said
+quietly:
+
+"Mr. Bailey, do you mind answering a few questions?"
+
+"Why should I?" the janitor countered. "I'll tell you right now I know
+nothing about this. I've attended strictly to my duties. It's not my
+lookout if tenants leave their suite doors unlocked."
+
+"No one is blaming you," Penny assured him. "I merely thought you might
+contribute to a solution of the burglary."
+
+"I don't know a thing about it."
+
+"You didn't let anyone into the apartment building tonight?"
+
+"Not a soul. I locked the service door at six o'clock, too. Now let me
+ask this: Who are you, and how did you get in here?"
+
+"That's fair enough," smiled Penny. She told her name, explained that she
+was an acquaintance of the Kohls, and had been summoned by the maid.
+
+"Please don't think that I am trying to play detective," she added. "I
+ask these questions in the hope of gaining information for my father's
+paper, the _Star_."
+
+"Well, it looks to me as if it was an inside job," the janitor replied,
+mollified. "Come to think of it though, I've seen a suspicious-acting
+fellow hanging around the building."
+
+"You mean tonight?"
+
+"No, several days ago. He stayed on the other side of the street and kept
+watching the doorway."
+
+"What did he look like, Mr. Bailey?"
+
+"Oh, I don't remember. He was just an average young man in a gray
+overcoat and hat."
+
+"Gray?" repeated Penny alertly.
+
+"It may have been light blue. I didn't pay much attention. At the time I
+sized up the fellow as a detective."
+
+Penny had no opportunity to ask additional questions for just then voices
+were heard in the hallway. As she opened the door, Jerry Livingston,
+followed by a policeman, came toward her.
+
+"Learn anything?" the reporter asked softly in her ear.
+
+"A little," answered Penny. "Let's see how much the officer turns up
+before I go into my song and dance."
+
+Making a routine inspection of the rooms, the police questioned both the
+maid and the janitor. From an elderly lady who occupied the adjoining
+suite he gleaned information that the Kohls' telephone had rung steadily
+for fifteen minutes during the early evening hours.
+
+"What time was that?" interposed Penny.
+
+The policeman gazed at her with sharp disapproval. "Please," he requested
+with exaggerated politeness.
+
+"Sorry," apologized Penny, fading into the background.
+
+"It rang about eight o'clock," the old lady revealed.
+
+"The information is not significant," said the officer, glancing again at
+Penny.
+
+She started to speak, then bit her lip, remaining silent.
+
+"Well, sister, what's on your mind?" he demanded abruptly.
+
+"Excuse me, officer, but I think the information does have importance.
+Couldn't it mean that the crooks, whoever they were, telephoned the
+apartment to make certain it was deserted before breaking in?"
+
+"Possibly," conceded the policeman. His frown discouraged her. "Any other
+theories?"
+
+"No," said Penny shortly.
+
+The policeman began to herd the tenants into the hall. For a moment he
+paid no attention to Penny and Jerry, who with the maid were permitted to
+remain.
+
+"Never try to show up a policeman, even if he is a stuffed shirt,"
+remarked the reporter softly. "It gets you nowhere."
+
+The door closed and the officer faced the pair.
+
+"Now young lady," he said, quite pleasantly. "What do you know about this
+burglary? I'll be very glad to listen."
+
+"I don't really know a thing," admitted Penny. "But here's a little clue
+which you may be able to interpret. I can't."
+
+Leading the policeman to the window, she started to raise the sash. The
+officer stopped her, performing the act himself, his hand protected by a
+handkerchief.
+
+"There is your clue," said Penny.
+
+She indicated two freshly made gashes on the window ledge. Separated by
+possibly a foot of space, they clearly had been made by a hook or sharp
+instrument which had dug deeply into the wood.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 7
+ _MARK OF THE IRON HOOK_
+
+
+"What do you think of it?" Penny asked as the officer studied the marks
+in silence.
+
+"I'd say they were made by something which hooked over the ledge," the
+policeman replied. "Possibly a ladder with curving irons."
+
+Jerry gazed down over the window ledge into the dark alley.
+
+"No ordinary ladder could reach this high," he commented. "Raising an
+extension would be quite a problem, too."
+
+The Kohl maid timidly approached the window, gazing at the two deep
+gashes with interest. Asked by the policeman if she ever had noticed them
+before, she shook her head.
+
+"Oh, no, sir. They must have been made tonight. I know they weren't there
+this afternoon when I dusted the window sills."
+
+"Incredible as it seems, the thief came through this window," decided the
+policeman. "How he did it is for the detectives at Central Station to
+figure out."
+
+Explaining that the rooms must not be disturbed until Identification
+Bureau men had made complete fingerprint records, the officer locked
+Penny, Jerry and the maid outside the suite. He then went to a nearby
+apartment to telephone his report.
+
+"Maybe this is an ordinary burglary, but it doesn't look that way to me,"
+remarked Jerry as he and Penny went down the stairway.
+
+"In any case, the story should be front page copy. Anything the Kohls do
+is news in Riverview."
+
+"How high would you estimate the loss?"
+
+"Oh, I couldn't guess, Jerry. Thousands of dollars."
+
+Passing groups of tenants who cluttered the hallway excitedly discussing
+the burglary, they evaded questioners and reached the street.
+
+"Jerry," said Penny suddenly, "I didn't mention this to the policeman
+because he seemed to resent my opinions. But it occurred to me that I may
+have seen the man who robbed the Kohls--or at least had something to do
+with it."
+
+"How could you have seen him, Penny? We were together when the Kohl maid
+yelled for help."
+
+"Earlier than that. It was while I was at the theatre."
+
+Half expecting that Jerry would laugh, Penny told how she had observed
+the man in gray note down the license number of the Kohl limousine.
+
+"It came to me like a flash! That fellow may have telephoned the Kohl
+apartment after seeing the car at the theatre. Making sure no one was at
+home, he then looted the place at his leisure."
+
+"Wait a minute," interrupted Jerry. "The Motor Vehicle Department closes
+at six o'clock. How could your man have obtained Kohl's name and address
+from the license number?"
+
+"I never thought about the department being closed," confessed Penny.
+"How you do love to shoot shrapnel into my little ideas!"
+
+"At least you have original theories, which is more than I do," comforted
+Jerry. "Before we leave, shall we take a look at the alley?"
+
+Penny brightened instantly and accompanied the reporter to the rear of
+the building. The alley was deserted. Without a light they were unable to
+examine the ground beneath the Kohl's apartment window.
+
+Suddenly, both straightened as they heard a sound behind them. The
+brilliant beam of a flashlight focused on their faces, blinding them.
+
+"Oh, it's you again," said a gruff voice.
+
+The beam was lowered, and behind it they saw the policeman.
+
+"You young cubs are a pest," he said irritably.
+
+Ignoring them, he moved his light over the ground. There were no
+footprints or other marks visible beneath the window.
+
+"If a ladder had stood here it would show," remarked Jerry. "The thief
+must have used some other means of getting into the building."
+
+While the policeman was inspecting the ground, the janitor stepped from a
+rear basement door, joining the group.
+
+"Officer, I have some more information for you," he volunteered.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"I was talking with my wife. She says that about two hours ago she
+noticed a man walking through the alley. He carried a suitcase, and kept
+looking at the upstairs windows."
+
+"No ladder?"
+
+"Only a suitcase."
+
+"I'll have the detectives talk with your wife," the policeman promised.
+"They'll be here any minute now."
+
+Penny and Jerry lingered until the two men arrived, bringing a
+photographer with them. No new evidence being made available, it seemed a
+waste of time to remain longer.
+
+"Don't bother to take me home," Penny insisted. "Dash straight to the
+office and write your story. The other papers won't have a word about the
+robbery until the police report is made."
+
+"I don't like to abandon you."
+
+"Don't be silly, Jerry. It's only a few blocks farther."
+
+Thus urged, the reporter bade Penny good-bye. As she hastened on alone,
+it began to rain and the air turned colder. To save her clothing, she ran
+the last block, reaching the porch quite breathless.
+
+The house was dark, the front door locked. Penny let herself in with a
+key, switched on the lights, and after getting a snack from the
+refrigerator, started upstairs.
+
+From her father's room issued loud snores. However, Mrs. Weems' door
+stood open, and as Penny glanced in she was surprised to see that the bed
+had not been disturbed.
+
+"Mrs. Weems must still be at the Hodges'," she thought. "Perhaps I should
+go after her. She'll have a long walk in this rain."
+
+Penny went to a window and looked out. The downpour showed no sighs of
+slackening. With a sigh she found her raincoat and started for the
+garage.
+
+During her absence, Mr. Parker had towed Leaping Lena to a vacant lot
+adjoining the property. The maroon car awaited her beneath shelter, and
+she drove it through dark streets to the Hodges' modest home.
+
+Lights glowed cheerily from the lower floor windows. In response to
+Penny's knock, a bent old man, his hands gnarled by hard labor, opened
+the door.
+
+"Is it Penelope?" he asked, squinting at her through the rain. "Come in!
+Come in!"
+
+"Good evening, Mr. Hodges. Is Mrs. Weems still here?"
+
+"Yes, I am, Penny," called the housekeeper. "Goodness, what time is it
+anyway?"
+
+"Nearly midnight."
+
+Penny shook water from her coat and stepped into the spic and span living
+room. An unshaded electric light disclosed a rug too bright, wallpaper
+too glaring, furniture stiff and old fashioned. Yet one felt at once
+welcome, for the seamstress and her husband were simple, friendly people.
+
+"Have a chair, Penelope," invited Mrs. Hodges. She was short like her
+husband, with graying hair and an untroubled countenance.
+
+"Thank you, but I can't stay," replied Penny. "I came to drive Mrs. Weems
+home."
+
+"I had no idea it was so late," the housekeeper said, getting to her
+feet. "Mrs. Hodges and I have been planning my traveling outfit."
+
+"I'll try to have the dresses for you within the next two weeks,"
+promised the seamstress. "Your good fortune makes me very happy, Maud.
+Isn't the news of her inheritance wonderful, Penelope?"
+
+"Oh, yes, yes, of course," stammered Penny. "Only I hope Mrs. Weems isn't
+leaving us within two weeks. What's this about a traveling outfit?"
+
+"I've always wanted fine clothing," said Mrs. Weems dreamily. "Mrs.
+Hodges is making me a suit, three silk dresses, a tissue velvet evening
+gown--"
+
+"An evening gown!" Penny gasped. "Where will you wear it?"
+
+"I'll find places."
+
+"Maybe she aims to catch a husband while she's galavantin' around out
+there in Californy," contributed Mr. Hodges with a sly wink.
+
+"The very idea!" laughed Mrs. Weems, yet with no displeasure.
+
+Penny sagged into the nearest rocking chair. The conversation was paced
+too fast for her.
+
+"Evening gowns--husbands--California," she murmured weakly. "Wait until
+Dad hears about this."
+
+"Mr. Hodges was only joking," declared Mrs. Weems, reaching for her hat.
+"I wouldn't marry the best man on earth. But I definitely am going west
+this summer."
+
+"I envy you, Maud," said the seamstress, her eyes shining. "Pa and I want
+to go out there and buy a little orange grove someday. But with taxes
+what they are, we can't seem to save a penny."
+
+Mrs. Weems squeezed her friend's hand.
+
+"I wish I could take you along, Jenny," she said. "All these years you've
+sewed your poor fingers almost to the bone. You deserve an easier life."
+
+"Oh, Pa and I don't complain," the seamstress answered brightly. "And
+things are going to look up."
+
+"Sure they are," agreed Mr. Hodges. "I'll get a job any day now."
+
+Penny, who was watching the seamstress' face was amazed to see it
+suddenly transformed. Losing her usual calm, Mrs. Hodges exclaimed:
+
+"Pa! It just this minute came to me! Maud getting her inheritance is
+another psychic sign!"
+
+Penny rocked violently and even Mrs. Weems looked startled.
+
+"I don't know what you mean, Jenny," she said.
+
+"We said we wouldn't tell anybody, Ma," protested Mr. Hodges mildly.
+
+"Mrs. Weems is my best friend, and Penelope won't tell. Will you,
+Penelope?"
+
+"Not what I don't know," replied Penny in bewilderment. "How can Mrs.
+Weems' inheritance have anything to do with a psychic sign?"
+
+"You may as well tell 'em," grinned Mr. Hodges, "If you keep the news
+much longer you'll bust."
+
+"The strangest thing happened three nights ago," Mrs. Hodges began, her
+voice quivering with excitement. "But wait! First I'll show you the
+letter!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 8
+ _PSYCHIC SIGNS_
+
+
+As Penny and Mrs. Weems waited, the seamstress went to another room,
+returning with a stamped, slit envelope.
+
+"Notice the postmark," she requested, thrusting the letter into Penny's
+hand.
+
+"It was mailed from New York," the girl observed.
+
+"I mean the hour at which the envelope was stamped by the postmaster."
+
+"I make it 11:30 P.M. June fifteenth," Penny read aloud. "Does the time
+and date have special significance?"
+
+"Indeed, it does," the seamstress replied impressively. "You tell them,
+Pa."
+
+"It happened three nights ago," began Mr. Hodges. "Ma worked late
+stitchin' up some playsuits for Mrs. Hudson's little girl. Afterwards we
+had bread and milk like we always do, and then we went to bed."
+
+"At the time, I said to Pa that something queer was going to happen,"
+broke in the seamstress. "I could feel it in my bones. It was as if
+something was hovering over us."
+
+"A feeling of impending trouble?" questioned Penny.
+
+"Nothing like that," said Mr. Hodges.
+
+"No, it was as if one almost could feel a foreign presence in the room,"
+Mrs. Hodges declared, lowering her voice. "A supernatural being."
+
+"Surely you don't believe in ghosts...?" Penny began, but the seamstress
+did not hear. Unheeding, she resumed:
+
+"Pa rubbed my back to ease the pain I get from working too long at the
+machine. Then we went to bed. Neither of us had gone to sleep when
+suddenly we heard it!"
+
+"Six sharp raps on the outside bedroom wall," supplied Mr. Hodges. "It
+was like this." He demonstrated on the table.
+
+"We both heard it," added Mrs. Hodges. "It scared me nearly out of my
+wits."
+
+"Possibly it was someone at the door," suggested Penny.
+
+"No, it wasn't that. Pa got up and went to see."
+
+"Could it have been a tree bough brushing against the wall?"
+
+"It wasn't that," said Mr. Hodges. "The maple is too far off to strike
+our bedroom."
+
+"There's only one explanation," declared the seamstress with conviction.
+"It was a psychic sign--the first."
+
+"I don't believe in such things myself," announced Penny. "Surely there
+must be another explanation."
+
+"That's what I told Jenny," nodded Mr. Hodges. "But since the letter
+came, doggoned if I don't think maybe she's right."
+
+"What has the letter to do with it?" inquired Mrs. Weems.
+
+The seamstress pointed to the postmark on the envelope.
+
+"The hour at which we heard the strange tappings was eleven-thirty! Pa
+looked at the clock. And it was three days ago, June fifteenth."
+
+"Corresponding to the marking on this envelope," commented Penny. "That
+is a coincidence."
+
+Mrs. Hodges shook her head impatiently.
+
+"You surely don't think it just happened by _accident_?" she asked. "It
+must have been intended as a sign--an omen."
+
+"What did the letter say?" Penny inquired, without answering Mrs. Hodges'
+question. She knew that her true opinion would not please the woman.
+
+"It wasn't rightly a letter," the seamstress returned. "The envelope
+contained six silver dollars fitted into a stiff piece of cardboard."
+
+"We figured it was another sign," contributed Mr. Hodges. "Six raps on
+the wall--six dollars."
+
+"I wish some ghost would come and pound all night long on my bedroom
+door," remarked Penny lightly.
+
+"Penelope, you shouldn't speak so disrespectfully," Mrs. Weems reproved
+in a mild voice.
+
+"Excuse me, I didn't mean to," said Penny, composing her face. "What else
+has happened of a supernatural nature?"
+
+"Why, nothing yet," Mrs. Hodges admitted. "But Pa and I have had a
+feeling as if something important were about to take place. And now Maud
+inherits six thousand dollars!"
+
+"There was nothing psychic about that," said Mrs. Weems. "Cousin David
+had no close relatives so he left the money to me."
+
+The seamstress shook her head, and an ethereal light shone in her eyes.
+
+"Night before last when I went to bed I was thinking that I wished with
+all my heart something nice would happen to you, Maud. Now it's come to
+pass!"
+
+Even Mrs. Weems was somewhat startled by the seamstress' calm assumption
+that her thoughts had been responsible for the inheritance.
+
+"Don't you see," Mrs. Hodges resumed patiently. "It must mean that I have
+great psychic powers. I confess I am rather frightened."
+
+Penny arose and began to button her raincoat.
+
+"Excuse me for saying it," she remarked, "but if I were you, Mrs. Hodges,
+I'd spend the six dollars and forget the entire affair. Someone must have
+played a joke on you!"
+
+"A joke!" The seamstress was offended. "People don't give away money as a
+joke."
+
+"No, these days they squeeze the eagles until they holler," chuckled Mr.
+Hodges.
+
+"The letter was postmarked New York City," went on his wife. "We don't
+know a soul there. Oh, no one ever can make me believe that it was done
+as a joke. The letter was mailed at exactly the hour we heard the six
+raps!"
+
+"And there wasn't a sign of anyone near the house," added Mr. Hodges.
+
+"Well, at least you're six dollars ahead," said Penny. "Shall we go, Mrs.
+Weems? It's after midnight."
+
+The seamstress walked to the door with the callers.
+
+"I'll get busy tomorrow on those new dresses," she promised Mrs. Weems.
+"Drop in again whenever you can. And you, too, Penelope."
+
+Driving home through the rain, Penny stole a quick glance at the
+housekeeper who seemed unusually quiet.
+
+"Do you suppose Jenny could be right?" Mrs. Weems presently ventured. "I
+mean about Cousin David and the inheritance?"
+
+"Of course not!" laughed Penny. "Why, your cousin died a long while
+before Mrs. Hodges discovered that she was psychic. It's all the bunk!"
+
+"I wish I really knew."
+
+"Why, Mrs. Weems!" Penny prepared to launch into a violent argument. "I
+never heard of such nonsense! How could Mrs. Hodges have psychic powers?
+Everyone realizes that communication with the spirit world is
+impossible!"
+
+"You are entitled to your opinion, Penny, but others may differ with you.
+Who can know about The Life Beyond? Isn't it in the realm of possibility
+that Mrs. Hodges may have had a message from Cousin David?"
+
+"She didn't speak of it."
+
+"Not in words, Penny. But those strange rappings, the arrival of the
+letter--it was all very strange and unexplainable."
+
+"I'll admit it was queer, Mrs. Weems. However, I'll never agree that
+there's anything supernatural connected with it."
+
+"You close your mind to things you do not wish to believe," the
+housekeeper reproved. "What can any of us know of the spirit world?"
+
+Penny gazed at Mrs. Weems in alarm. She realized that the seamstress'
+story had deeply impressed her.
+
+"I'll stake my knowledge against Mrs. Hodges' any old day," she declared
+lightly. "I met one ghost-maker--Osandra--remember him?"
+
+"Why remind me of that man, Penny?" asked the housekeeper wearily.
+
+"Because you once paid him good money for the privilege of attending his
+seances. You were convinced he was in communication with the world
+beyond. He proved to be an outrageous fraud."
+
+"I was taken in by him as were many other persons," Mrs. Weems
+acknowledged. "Mrs. Hodges' case is different. We have been friends for
+ten years. She would not misrepresent the facts."
+
+"No, Mrs. Hodges is honest. I believe that the money was sent to her. But
+not by a ghost!"
+
+"Let's not discuss it," said Mrs. Weems with finality. "I never did enjoy
+an argument."
+
+Penny lapsed into silence and a moment later the car swung into the
+Parker driveway. The housekeeper hurried into the house, leaving the girl
+to close the garage doors.
+
+Penny snapped the padlock shut. Unmindful of the rain, she stood for a
+moment, staring into the night. Nothing had gone exactly right that day,
+and her disagreement with Mrs. Weems, minor though it was, bothered her.
+
+"There's more to this psychic business than appears on the surface," she
+thought grimly. "A great deal more! Maybe I am stubborn and opinionated.
+But I know one thing! No trickster is going to take advantage of the
+Hodges or of Mrs. Weems either--not if I can prevent it."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 9
+ _MRS. WEEMS' INHERITANCE_
+
+
+The clock chimed seven-thirty the next morning as Penny came downstairs.
+She dropped a kiss on her father's forehead and slid into a chair at the
+opposite side of the breakfast table.
+
+"Good morning, Daddykins," she greeted him cheerfully. "Any news in the
+old scandal sheet?"
+
+Mr. Parker lowered the newspaper.
+
+"Please don't call me Daddykins," he requested. "You know I hate it.
+Here's something which may interest you. Your friends the Kohls were
+robbed last night."
+
+"You're eight hours late," grinned Penny, reaching for the front page. "I
+was there."
+
+"I suppose you lifted the pearls and the diamond bracelet on your way to
+the theatre."
+
+"No," said Penny, rapidly scanning the story which Jerry had written,
+"but I think I may have seen the man who did do it."
+
+She then told her father of having observed a stranger note the license
+number of the Kohl car, and mentioned the events which had followed.
+
+"You may have been mistaken about what the man wrote down," commented her
+father.
+
+"That's possible, but he was staring straight at the car."
+
+"I doubt if the incident had any connection with the burglary, Penny.
+With the Motor Vehicle Department closed, he would have had no means of
+quickly learning who the Kohls were or where they lived."
+
+"Couldn't he have recognized them?"
+
+"In that case he would have no need for the license number. You didn't
+see the man note down the plates of other cars?"
+
+"No, but he may have done it before I noticed him standing by the
+theatre."
+
+Turning idly through the morning paper, Penny's attention was drawn to
+another news story. Reading it rapidly, she thrust the page into her
+father's hand.
+
+"Dad, look at this! There were two other burglaries last night! Apartment
+houses on Drexel Boulevard and Fenmore Street were entered."
+
+"H-m, interesting. The Kohls occupy an apartment also. That rather
+suggests that the same thief ransacked the three places."
+
+"And it says here that the families were away for the evening!" Penny
+resumed with increasing excitement. "I'll bet a cent they were at the
+theatre! Oh, Dad, that man in gray must have been the one who did it!"
+
+"If all the persons you suspect of crime were arrested, our jails
+couldn't hold them," remarked Mr. Parker calmly. "Eat your breakfast,
+Penny, before it gets cold."
+
+Mrs. Weems entered through the kitchen door, bearing reenforcements of
+hot waffles and crisp bacon. Her appearance reminded Penny to launch into
+a highly entertaining account of all that had transpired at the Hodges'
+the previous night.
+
+"Penny!" protested the housekeeper. "You promised Mrs. Hodges to say
+nothing about the letter."
+
+"Oh, no, I didn't promise," corrected Penny. "I was careful to say that I
+couldn't tell what I didn't know. Years ago Dad taught me that a good
+reporter never agrees to accept a confidence. Isn't that so, Dad?"
+
+"A wise reporter never ties his own hands," replied Mr. Parker. "If he
+promises, and then obtains the same story from another source, he's
+morally bound not to use it. His paper may be scooped by the opposition."
+
+"You two are a pair," sighed Mrs. Weems. "Scoops and front page stories
+are all either of you think about. I declare, it distresses me to realize
+how Penny may be trained after I leave."
+
+"The way to solve that problem is not to leave," said Penny. "You know we
+can't get along without you."
+
+Mrs. Weems shook her head.
+
+"It cuts me almost in two to leave," she declared sadly, "but my mind's
+made up. Mrs. Hodges says I am doing the right thing."
+
+"And I suppose a ghost advised her," muttered Penny.
+
+Mr. Parker glanced sternly at his daughter and she subsided into silence.
+But not for long. Soon she was trying to reopen the subject of the
+mysterious letter received by the Hodges. For a reason she could not
+understand, her father was loath to discuss it.
+
+"Come, Penny," he said. "If we're having that game of tennis this
+morning, it's time we start."
+
+En route to the park, the publisher explained why he had not chosen to
+express an opinion in the housekeeper's presence.
+
+"I quite agree with you that Mrs. Hodges has no psychic powers, Penny.
+She's been the victim of a hoax. However, Mrs. Weems is intensely loyal
+to her friend, and any disparaging remarks made by us will only serve to
+antagonize her."
+
+"I'll try to be more careful, Dad. But it's so silly!"
+
+Monday morning found Penny busy once more with her duties at the society
+desk. No new information had developed regarding the Kohl burglary, and
+she did not have time to accompany Mrs. Weems who went frequently to the
+Hodges' cottage.
+
+Secretly Penny held an opinion that the housekeeper's inheritance might
+be the work of a prankster. Therefore, upon returning from the office one
+afternoon and learning that the money actually had been delivered, she
+was very glad she had kept her thoughts to herself.
+
+"The lawyer came this morning and had me sign a paper," Mrs. Weems
+revealed to the Parkers. "Then he turned the money over to me--six
+thousand dollars."
+
+"I hope the cheque is good," remarked Penny.
+
+"It was. I had the lawyer accompany me to the bank. They gave me the
+money without asking a single question. I have it here."
+
+"You have six thousand dollars cash in the house!"
+
+"Yes, I had the cashier give it to me in hundred dollar bills."
+
+"Do you consider it safe to keep such a large sum?" Mr. Parker inquired
+mildly. "I should advise returning it to the bank, or better still, why
+not invest it in sound securities?"
+
+Mrs. Weems shook her head. "It gives me a nice rich feeling to have the
+cash. I've hidden it in a good place."
+
+"Where?" demanded Penny.
+
+"I won't tell," laughed Mrs. Weems.
+
+Again later in the evening, Mr. Parker tried without success to convince
+the housekeeper that she should return the money to a bank. Never one to
+force his opinions upon another, he then dropped the subject.
+
+"When will you be leaving us, Mrs. Weems?" he inquired.
+
+"Whenever you can spare me. Now that I have the money, I should like to
+leave within ten days or two weeks."
+
+"Since we can't persuade you to remain, I'll try to find someone to take
+your place," Mr. Parker promised.
+
+Both he and Penny were gloomy at the prospect of replacing the
+housekeeper. Not only would they miss Mrs. Weems but they honestly
+believed that she would never be happy without two incorrigibles and a
+home to manage.
+
+"Dad," Penny ventured when they were alone, "just supposing that Mrs.
+Weems' money should mysteriously disappear--"
+
+"Don't allow your mind to dwell on that idea," cut in her father sternly.
+"We'll play fair."
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't do it," said Penny hastily. "I was only joking. But if
+something _should_ happen to the money, it would solve all our problems."
+
+"Mrs. Weems has earned her vacation. Even though it will be hard to lose
+her, we mustn't stand in her way."
+
+"I guess you're right," sighed Penny.
+
+The following day Miss Hilderman resumed her duties at the _Star_, and
+Penny once more found herself a person of leisure. To her annoyance, Mrs.
+Weems insisted that she spend many hours in the kitchen, learning how to
+bake pies and cakes. A particularly distasteful lesson came to an end
+only when Penny, with brilliant inspiration, remembered that the
+housekeeper had an appointment with the seamstress.
+
+"Dear me, I had forgotten it!" exclaimed Mrs. Weems. "Yes, I must try on
+my new dresses!"
+
+"I'll drive you over," offered Penny.
+
+Not in recent days had the girl called upon the Hodges. As she and Mrs.
+Weems alighted from the car, they both noticed freshly ironed curtains at
+the windows. Mr. Hodges was pounding dust from a carpet on the line.
+
+"Housecleaning?" inquired Penny, pausing to chat with the old man.
+
+"Yes, Jenny's got me hard at it," he grinned. "She's been tearin' the
+house upside down gettin' ready for the new roomer."
+
+"Oh, have you taken one?"
+
+Penny was surprised, knowing that in past years the Hodges had been too
+proud to rent rooms.
+
+"There's a young feller moving in today," Mr. Hodges said, picking up the
+carpet beater. "Go on inside. Jenny'll tell you about it."
+
+Penny and Mrs. Weems entered the cottage where the seamstress was running
+a dust mop over the floors. She was somewhat dismayed to see the
+housekeeper.
+
+"Oh, Maud, I've been so busy I didn't get your dresses ready to be tried
+on."
+
+"It doesn't matter," replied Mrs. Weems. "What's this about a new
+roomer?"
+
+"I always said I wouldn't have one cluttering up the place. But this
+young man is different. His coming here--well, I interpret it as another
+sign."
+
+"A sign of what?" inquired Penny with her usual directness.
+
+"Well, it seemed as if I had a direct message from the spirit world to
+take him into our home. He came here last night. Instead of knocking in
+the usual way, he rapped six times in succession!"
+
+"Probably he was the one who sent the letter," said Penny alertly.
+
+"Oh, no! He didn't know anything about it. I asked him."
+
+"What is his name, Mrs. Hodges?"
+
+"Al Gepper. He's such a nice young man and he talks so refined. I am
+letting him have the entire floor upstairs."
+
+"That should bring you a nice income," remarked Mrs. Weems.
+
+"I am asking only two dollars a week," admitted the seamstress. "He said
+he couldn't pay more than that."
+
+"Why, Jenny," protested Mrs. Weems, "such a small amount hardly will
+cover the lights and various extras."
+
+"I know, Maud, but I couldn't turn him away. He moved his apparatus in
+last night and will bring his personal belongings sometime today."
+
+"His apparatus?" echoed Penny. "What is he, a chemist?"
+
+"No," replied the seamstress, smiling mysteriously. "I'll show you the
+rooms."
+
+Penny and Mrs. Weems followed the woman upstairs. The upper floor was
+divided into two small bedrooms with a wide, old-fashioned sliding door
+between which could be opened to make one large chamber. The larger of
+the rooms had been cleared of its usual furniture. Where a bed previously
+had stood was a circular table with six or eight chairs, and behind it a
+tall cabinet with a black curtain across the front.
+
+"Mr. Gepper plans to use this room for his studio," explained Mrs.
+Hodges.
+
+Penny's gaze had fastened upon the cabinet. She crossed to it and pulled
+aside the curtain. Inside were several unpacked boxes and a suitcase.
+
+"Mrs. Hodges, to what purpose does your young man expect to put this
+studio?" she asked.
+
+"I don't know. He didn't tell me. But I think he intends to carry on
+psychic experiments. He's a student, he said."
+
+"Mr. Gepper was afraid to tell you the truth lest you refuse to rent the
+rooms," declared Penny. "Mrs. Hodges, your roomer is a medium."
+
+"Why do you think so?"
+
+"Because I've seen trappings such as these before at other seance
+chambers," replied Penny. "Mrs. Hodges, you must send him away before he
+involves you with the police."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 10
+ _OUIJA BOARD WISDOM_
+
+
+"Trouble with the police!" Mrs. Hodges echoed, regarding Penny with
+unconcealed dismay. "How can it be illegal to rent Mr. Gepper these
+rooms?"
+
+"Renting the rooms isn't illegal," Penny corrected. "But if the young man
+conducts public seances here--filches money from people--then you may be
+considered a party to the scheme. This city has a local ordinance
+prohibiting fortune telling, mind reading and the like."
+
+"I am sure the young man means no wrong."
+
+"Penny," commented Mrs. Weems, "it seems to me that you are overly
+concerned. Why are you convinced that Mr. Gepper is a medium?"
+
+"Doesn't this cabinet indicate it?"
+
+"I thought it was some sort of wardrobe closet," Mrs. Hodges admitted.
+
+"Al Gepper is a medium, or pretends to have spiritualistic powers," Penny
+repeated. "In my opinion you'll be very unwise to allow him to start an
+illegal business here."
+
+"Oh, dear, I don't know what to do now," declared the seamstress. "I'll
+have to ask Pa about it."
+
+She and Mrs. Weems started downstairs, expecting that Penny would follow.
+Instead, the girl lingered to inspect the cabinet.
+
+On the lower floor a door slammed, and there were footsteps ascending the
+stairway. She paid no heed, assuming that it was either Mr. Hodges or his
+wife who approached.
+
+The door swung open. Turning, Penny saw a young man, possibly thirty
+years of age, standing on the threshold. His dark eyes were sharp and
+appraising.
+
+"Hello," he said, without smiling. "Aren't you afraid a monkey may jump
+out of that cabinet?"
+
+Penny, who seldom blushed, felt a wave of heat creeping over her cheeks.
+
+"Hello," she stammered. "You must be Mrs. Hodges' new roomer."
+
+"Al Gepper, at your service. Who are you, girlie?"
+
+"You guessed it," said Penny shortly, edging away from the cabinet.
+
+Al Gepper remained in the doorway, blocking the exit with his arm. He did
+not move as the girl attempted to move past him.
+
+"What's your hurry?" he drawled. "Stick around and let's get acquainted.
+I'll show you some neat card tricks."
+
+"Thanks, but I haven't time, Mr. Gepper."
+
+"What's your name anyhow?" he persisted. "You're not Mrs. Hodges'
+daughter."
+
+"No, only a friend."
+
+"You needn't be so icy about it," he rebuked. "Any friend of Mrs. Hodges'
+is a friend of mine."
+
+"I never make friends easily," Penny replied. "For that matter, I don't
+mind telling you that I have advised Mrs. Hodges not to rent you these
+rooms."
+
+"Oh, you have?" inquired the man, his eyes hardening. "And what business
+is it of yours?"
+
+"None, perhaps. I merely am not going to allow her to be taken in if I
+can prevent it!"
+
+"Oh, indeed. Do you mind explaining?"
+
+"It's perfectly obvious that you're one of these fake spiritualists,"
+Penny accused bluntly. "Your nickname should be Six-Raps Al!"
+
+"A little spit-fire, aren't you?" the man retorted. "But you have style.
+Now I may be able to use you in my business."
+
+"You admit that you're a medium?"
+
+"I am a spiritualist. Not a fake, as you so crudely accuse. And I assure
+you I have no intention of deceiving or taking advantage of your dear
+friends, the Hodges."
+
+"You expect to use these rooms for public seances?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Then you are certain to get the Hodges into trouble with the police."
+
+"Not unless you start squawking." Al Gepper's manner changed abruptly. He
+grasped Penny's wrist and pushed a leering face close to hers. "I'm not
+looking for any trouble from you or anyone else--see! If you try to make
+it, you'll wake up with a headache!"
+
+Penny jerked free and, shouldering through the door, raced downstairs.
+
+Glancing back, she saw that Al Gepper was following, though at a more
+leisurely pace. Instantly she divined that he intended to make sure no
+report of the incident was given to the Hodges, save in his presence.
+
+Mrs. Weems and the old couple were talking in the kitchen.
+
+"Well, Ma, it's for you to decide," Mr. Hodges was saying. "We gave our
+word to the young feller, and it's kinda mean to turn him out so sudden
+like."
+
+"I regret Penny said anything about the matter." apologized Mrs. Weems.
+"You know how out-spoken and impulsive she is. Of course, she has no
+information about Mr. Gepper."
+
+"Oh, but I do have information," spoke Penny from the doorway. "Mr.
+Gepper has just admitted that he intends to use the room for public
+seances. Isn't that true?"
+
+Defiantly, she turned to face the young man who had followed her.
+
+"Quite true," he acknowledged loftily. "One who has a great psychic gift
+is duty-bound to allow the world to benefit from one's talents. The
+selection of this house as a Temple for Celestial Communication was not
+mine, but the bidding of the Spirits. In a dream I was instructed to come
+here and take up residence."
+
+"What night did you have the dream?" questioned Mrs. Hodges, deeply
+impressed.
+
+"It was June fifteenth."
+
+"The very night we heard the strange rappings on our bedroom wall, Pa."
+
+"Dogonned if it wasn't!"
+
+"Mr. Gepper, do you truly believe it is possible to communicate with the
+spiritual world?" Mrs. Weems inquired politely.
+
+"My dear madam, I can best answer by offering a demonstration. Have you a
+ouija board in the house?"
+
+"Yes, we have," spoke Mrs. Hodges eagerly. "Pa and I got it from a mail
+order house years ago, but it never worked for us. You fetch it, Pa."
+
+Mr. Hodges brought a large, flat board which bore letters and figures.
+Upon it he placed a small, triangular piece with cushioned legs.
+
+"This do-dad is supposed to spell out messages, ain't it?" he asked. "Ma
+and I could never make it work right."
+
+Al Gepper smiled in a superior way, and placing the board on his lap,
+motioned for Mrs. Weems to sit opposite him. However, before the
+housekeeper could obey, Penny slid into the vacant chair. The medium
+frowned.
+
+"Place your hands lightly on the triangular piece," he instructed.
+"Concentrate with me as we await a message from the spiritual world."
+
+Penny fastened her eyes on the distant wall with a blank stare.
+
+A minute passed. The ouija board made several convulsive struggles, but
+seemed unable to move.
+
+"The Spirits encounter resistance," the medium said testily. "They can
+send no message when one's attitude is antagonistic."
+
+"Shall I take off the brakes?" asked Penny.
+
+Even as she spoke the pointer of the triangle began moving, rapidly
+spelling a message.
+
+"AL GEPPER IS A FRAUD," it wrote.
+
+The medium sprang to his feet, allowing the board to fall from his lap.
+
+"You pushed it!" he accused. "The test was unfair."
+
+"Why, the very idea," chuckled Penny.
+
+"Penny, please allow Mr. Gepper to conduct a true test," reproved Mrs.
+Weems severely. "Let me try."
+
+Al Gepper, however, would have no more of the ouija board. Instead, he
+took a pad of white paper from his pocket. Seating Mrs. Weems at the
+kitchen table he requested her to write a message, which, without being
+shown to anyone in the room, was sealed in an envelope.
+
+The medium pointedly requested Penny to examine the envelope to assure
+herself the writing could not be seen through the paper.
+
+"You are satisfied that I have not read the message?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," Penny admitted reluctantly.
+
+The medium took the envelope, ran his fingers lightly over it, and
+returned it still sealed to Mrs. Weems.
+
+"If I am not mistaken, Madam, you wrote, 'Is the spirit of my cousin in
+this room?'"
+
+"Why, I did!" exclaimed Mrs. Weems. "Those were the exact words! How did
+you know?"
+
+Al Gepper smiled mysteriously.
+
+"You have seen nothing, Madam," he said. "Now if conditions are right, it
+may be possible for us to learn if a Spirit has joined our group. Lower
+the blinds, please."
+
+Mr. Hodges hastened to obey. With the kitchen in semi-darkness, the
+medium motioned for his audience to move a few paces away. Taking his own
+position behind the kitchen table, he intoned:
+
+"Oh, Spirit, if you are with us in the room, signal by lifting this piece
+of furniture."
+
+Slowly the man moved his hands above the table. At first nothing
+happened, then to the astonishment of his audience, it lifted a few
+inches from the floor. There it hung suspended a moment before dropping
+into place again.
+
+"You see?" With a triumphant ring to his voice, the medium crossed the
+room to raise the window shades. "Now do you doubt me?"
+
+"No! No!" cried Mrs. Hodges tremulously. "Only a Spirit could have moved
+that table. Maud, perhaps it _was_ your Cousin David."
+
+The medium gazed at Mrs. Weems with sympathetic interest.
+
+"You have lost a loved one recently?" he inquired.
+
+"Cousin David and I never were well acquainted," replied the housekeeper.
+"That was why I was so surprised when he left me an inheritance."
+
+"Mrs. Weems!" remonstrated Penny. She was dismayed by the revelation so
+casually offered.
+
+"No doubt you would like to communicate with your departed cousin at some
+later time," the medium said smoothly. "Allow me to offer my services as
+an intermediary. No charge, of course."
+
+"Why, that's very generous of you, Mr. Gepper."
+
+"Not at all. Friends of the Hodges are my friends. Shall we set a
+definite date--say tomorrow at two o'clock?"
+
+"Yes, I'll come. That is, if the Hodges are to be present."
+
+"Assuredly. Mrs. Hodges is definitely psychic and should contribute to
+our seance."
+
+It was with the greatest of difficulty that Penny finally induced the
+housekeeper to leave the cottage. Al Gepper accompanied them to the door.
+
+"Tomorrow at two," he repeated, smiling slyly at Penny. "And you may come
+also, my little doubter. I assure you it will be well worth your time."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 11
+ _THE CELESTIAL TEMPLE_
+
+
+"Penny, tell me the truth," Mrs. Weems urged as they drove home together.
+"Didn't you push the ouija board?"
+
+"Of course," laughed Penny. "But if I hadn't, Al Gepper would have. He
+was trying hard enough!"
+
+"He said you were resisting the spirits."
+
+"That was the worst sort of nonsense," Penny returned impatiently.
+"Gepper is a fraud, and I wish you hadn't told him about your
+inheritance."
+
+"How can you accuse him of being a fraud after you saw his marvelous
+demonstration? The table actually rose from the floor."
+
+"I know it did," Penny acknowledged unwillingly. "But it must have been
+trickery."
+
+"How could it have been? The table was an ordinary one. Mrs. Hodges uses
+it every day of her life."
+
+"I don't know how he did it," Penny responded. "All the same, I am sure
+he's a trickster. Promise me you won't tell him anything more about
+yourself or the inheritance."
+
+"Very well, I'll promise if it gives you satisfaction," the housekeeper
+replied. "However, I do intend to keep my appointment."
+
+Penny had no opportunity to relate to her father what had occurred at the
+Hodges home, for Mr. Parker was absent on a two-day business trip to a
+distant town. Feeling that she must tell someone, she sought Louise
+Sidell, and they discussed every angle of the affair.
+
+"Will you attend the seance with Mrs. Weems?" Louise asked her curiously.
+
+"Will I?" Penny repeated. "I'll be right there with bells! I intend to
+expose Mr. Al Gepper if it's the last act of my life!"
+
+Returning home later in the afternoon, she found Mrs. Weems sitting on
+the living room floor, sorting a drawer of old photographs.
+
+"You're not packing your things already?" Penny asked in alarm.
+
+"Only these photographs," the housekeeper responded. "I wouldn't have
+started the task, only I got into it when the agent came."
+
+"Agent?"
+
+"A man from the Clamont Photograph Studio."
+
+"Never heard of the place."
+
+"It's opening this week. They're having a special offer--three old
+photographs enlarged for only twenty-five cents. I gave the man Cousin
+David's picture and two others."
+
+"That is a bargain," remarked Penny. "I wish I had been here."
+
+The evening meal was served, and afterwards Mrs. Weems devoted herself to
+the reading of travel books borrowed from the library. Penny could find
+no occupation to satisfy her. She turned the radio on, switched it off
+again, and wandered restlessly from room to room. Finally she went to the
+telephone and called Louise.
+
+"How about a little adventure?" she proposed. "And don't ask for
+explanations."
+
+"Will we be home by ten o'clock? That's the parental deadline."
+
+"Oh, yes, we'll make it easily. Meet me at the corner of Carabel and
+Clinton Streets."
+
+Mrs. Weems was so engrossed in her book that she merely nodded as Penny
+explained that she and Louise were going for a walk. Reaching the
+appointed corner the girl found her chum awaiting her.
+
+"Tell me about this so-called adventure," she commanded. "Where are we
+going?"
+
+"To the Celestial Temple, Lou. At least, we'll look at it from the
+outside. Meetings are held there nearly every night at eight o'clock."
+
+"Penny, I don't think I care to go."
+
+"Nonsense! The meetings are open to the public, aren't they? We'll have a
+very interesting time."
+
+"Oh, all right," Louise consented reluctantly. "But I can't understand
+why you're so interested in the place."
+
+The girls took a bus to the end of the line, then walked three blocks
+until they came to Butternut Lane. For long stretches there were only
+scattered houses and the street lamps were far between. Becoming
+increasingly uneasy, Louise urged her chum to turn back.
+
+"Why, we're at our destination now," Penny protested. "I am sure that
+must be the building."
+
+She pointed to an old, rectangular brick structure only a few yards
+ahead. Obviously it once had been a church for there was a high bell
+tower, and behind the building a cluster of neglected tombstones gleamed
+in the moonlight.
+
+The evenly spaced windows were illuminated, and music could be heard.
+
+"Are you sure this is the place?" Louise inquired dubiously. "It looks
+like a church to me, and they're holding a service."
+
+"Oh, the building hasn't been used for such purposes in over fifteen
+years," Penny explained. "I investigated, so I know its history. Until
+three years ago it was used as a county fire station. Only recently it
+was reclaimed by this Omar Society of Celestial Thought."
+
+The girls moved closer. Through an open window they were able to see
+fifteen or twenty people seated in the pews. A woman played a wheezing
+organ while a man led the off-key singing.
+
+"Let's go inside," Penny proposed.
+
+Louise held back. "Oh, no, we can see everything from here. It looks as
+if it were a very stupid sort of meeting."
+
+"Appearances are often deceiving. I want a ringside seat."
+
+Penny pulled her chum toward the entrance door. There they hesitated,
+reading a large placard which bore the invitation:
+
+_The Public Is Invited. Services at eight p.m. daily._
+
+"We're part of the public, Lou," urged Penny. "Come along."
+
+She boldly opened the door, and there was no retreat.
+
+Heads turned slightly as the girls entered the rear of the Temple. As
+quickly they turned forward again, but not before Penny had gained an
+impression, of sharp, appraising faces.
+
+A man arose, bowed, and offered the girls his bench, although many others
+were available. They slipped into the pew, accepting a song book which
+was placed in Louise's hand.
+
+While her chum sang in a thin, squeaky voice, Penny allowed her gaze to
+wander over the room. At the far end she saw a door which apparently
+opened into the bell tower. On a slightly raised platform where the
+leader stood, were two black-draped cabinets somewhat similar to the one
+she had seen at Mrs. Hodges' cottage. Otherwise, there was nothing of
+unusual interest.
+
+The services were decorous to the point of being boring. Yet as the
+meeting went on, Penny and Louise both felt that they were being studied.
+More than once they surprised persons gazing at them.
+
+At the conclusion of the session which lasted no longer than thirty
+minutes, the leader asked the audience if any "brother" were present who
+wished to attempt a spirit communication. Immediately, Penny sat up a bit
+straighter, anticipating that interesting demonstrations were in store.
+
+Nor was she mistaken. A thin, hard-faced man went to the rostrum, and in
+a loud voice began to call upon the spirits to make known their presence.
+Signs were at once forthcoming. The empty pews began to dance as if
+alive. The speaker's table lifted a foot from the floor and a pitcher of
+water fell from it, smashing into a dozen pieces.
+
+Louise, her eyes dilated with fear, edged closer to Penny.
+
+"Let's go," she pleaded.
+
+Penny shook her head.
+
+A woman dressed in blue silk glided down the aisle, stopping beside the
+girls. She held a tray upon which were a number of objects, an opal ring,
+a knife, and several pins.
+
+"Dearie," she said to Penny, "if you would care to have a message from a
+departed soul, place a trinket in this collection. Any personal object.
+Our leader will then exhort the spirit to appear."
+
+"No, thank you," replied Louise, without giving her chum a chance to
+speak.
+
+"Perhaps, you would prefer a private reading," the woman murmured. "I
+give them at my home, and the fee is trivial. Only a dollar."
+
+"Thank you, no," Louise repeated firmly. "I'm not interested."
+
+The woman shrugged and moved on down the aisle, pausing beside an elderly
+man to whom she addressed herself.
+
+"Lou, why did you discourage her?" Penny whispered. "We might have
+learned something."
+
+"I've learned quite enough. I'm leaving."
+
+Louise squeezed past her chum, heading for the exit. Penny had no choice
+but to follow.
+
+Before they could reach the door, it suddenly opened from the outside. A
+young man who had not bothered to remove his hat, entered. Seeing the
+girls, he abruptly halted, then turned and retreated.
+
+Penny quickened her step. Taking Louise's hand she pulled her along at a
+faster pace. They reached the vestibule. It was deserted. Penny peered up
+and down the dark street.
+
+"Well, he's gone," she remarked.
+
+"Who?" Louise questioned in a puzzled voice. "You mean that man who
+entered the Temple and then left so suddenly?"
+
+"I do," responded Penny. "Unless my eyes tricked me, he was none other
+than Al Gepper!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 12
+ _A MESSAGE FOR MRS. WEEMS_
+
+
+"I don't know anyone answering to that name," remarked Louise. "However,
+the fellow did act as if he were retreating from us."
+
+Penny glanced up and down the dark street. No one was to be seen, and
+since so little time had elapsed, she reasoned that the man had taken
+refuge either in the high weeds or the nearby cemetery.
+
+"It must have been Gepper," she declared. "Naturally he wouldn't care to
+meet me here." Quickly Penny recounted the events of the afternoon.
+
+"Then you think he may be connected with the Temple, Penny?"
+
+"That would be my guess. Lou, this place is nothing but a blind. The
+members of the society pretend to be honest spiritualists, while in
+reality they're charlatans. They hold services for one purpose only--to
+solicit persons for private readings."
+
+"Isn't that illegal?"
+
+"Of course it is. The police should raid the place."
+
+"Then why don't they, Penny?"
+
+"Dad says it's because they've been unable to obtain sufficient evidence.
+But they'll have it after we report what we've seen tonight!"
+
+"How do you suppose they made things jump around as if they were alive?"
+Louise remarked as the girls walked slowly toward home. "It frightened
+me."
+
+"Everything was done by trickery. I'm sure of that, Lou. Just as soon as
+Dad returns I shall make a full report to him. We'll see what he can do
+about it."
+
+By the time Penny arrived home, Mrs. Weems had retired to her room.
+However, the light still burned and the door was open a crack. Rapping,
+the girl entered, for she was eager to tell the housekeeper about her
+visit to the Celestial Temple.
+
+Mrs. Weems sat at the desk. Hastily she closed one of the drawers, and
+turned the key.
+
+"You startled me, Penny!" she exclaimed. "I do wish you would give more
+warning before you descend upon one."
+
+"Sorry," apologized Penny, glancing curiously toward the desk. "Oh, I
+see!"
+
+"You see what?" demanded the housekeeper.
+
+"Six thousand dollars reposing in a desk drawer!"
+
+Mrs. Weems' look of consternation betrayed her. She glanced at the locked
+drawer, and then laughed.
+
+"For an instant I thought you actually could see the money, Penny."
+
+"Then my guess was right?"
+
+"I keep the money in the drawer," Mrs. Weems admitted.
+
+Penny sat down on the edge of the bed, drawing up her knees for a chin
+rest.
+
+"Mrs. Weems, don't you think it's risky keeping so much money here?"
+
+"It will only be for a few days, Penny. I'll have it converted into
+traveler's cheques as soon as I am ready to start west."
+
+"The desk doesn't seem a safe place to me."
+
+"You're the only person who knows where I keep the money, Penny. Oh, yes,
+I told Mrs. Hodges, but she is to be trusted. No one can steal it as long
+as I have the key."
+
+Mrs. Weems tapped a black velvet ribbon which she wore about her neck.
+
+"I keep this on me day and night," she declared. "No thief ever will get
+it way from me."
+
+Penny said nothing more about the matter. Instead, she launched into a
+highly colored account of her visit to the Celestial Temple. The
+housekeeper expressed disapproval, remarking that she never would have
+granted permission had she known in advance where the girls were going.
+Nevertheless, her eager questions made it evident that she was deeply
+interested in the demonstration which had been witnessed.
+
+"I don't see how you can call it trickery," she protested. "You have no
+proof, Penny."
+
+"Never in the world will I believe that spirits can make tables do a
+dance, Mrs. Weems! Probably the furniture had special wiring or something
+of the sort."
+
+"You can't say that about the table at Mrs. Hodges', Penny."
+
+"No, it seemed to be just an ordinary piece of furniture," the girl
+admitted reluctantly. "All the same, Al Gepper is a fraud, and I wish you
+wouldn't attend his old seance tomorrow."
+
+"But Penny, I gave my promise."
+
+"I can run over to the house and tell him you've changed your mind."
+
+Mrs. Weems shook her head. "No, Penny, I am curious to learn if he will
+be able to communicate with the spirits. Tomorrow's seance should provide
+a genuine test. The man knows nothing about me or my ancestors."
+
+"Mrs. Hodges probably has provided all the information he'll require."
+
+"I telephoned her yesterday and requested her not to tell Mr. Gepper
+anything about me. She'll respect my wishes. The test should prove a true
+one."
+
+Penny sighed and arose from the bed. Knowing Mrs. Weems as she did, she
+realized that her opinion could not be changed by argument. It was her
+hope that Al Gepper would discredit himself by failing in the seance.
+
+"Penny, please promise that you'll do nothing outrageous tomorrow," Mrs.
+Weems begged as the girl started to leave. "I am sure Mr. Gepper feels
+that you are antagonistic."
+
+"I'll try to behave myself," Penny laughed. "Yes, we'll give Mr. Gepper a
+chance to prove what he can do."
+
+At two the following afternoon she and Mrs. Weems presented themselves at
+the Hodges' cottage. Both Mr. Hodges and his wife, who were to sit in at
+the seance, were trembling with anticipation.
+
+"Mr. Gepper is simply wonderful," the seamstress confided to Mrs. Weems.
+"He tells me that I have great healing powers as well as a psychic
+personality."
+
+"Jenny, I hope you haven't told him anything about me," the housekeeper
+mentioned.
+
+"Oh, no, Maud. For that matter, he's said nothing about you since you
+were here."
+
+Mrs. Weems cast Penny an "I-told-you-so" glance which was not lost upon
+Al Gepper who entered the room at that moment.
+
+"I am ready for you, ladies," he said. "Kindly follow me."
+
+In the upstairs room blinds had been drawn. Al Gepper indicated that his
+audience was to occupy the chairs around the circular table.
+
+"Before we attempt to communicate with the departed souls, I wish to
+assure you that I employ no trickery," he announced, looking hard at
+Penny. "You may examine the table or the cabinet if you wish."
+
+"Oh, no, Mr. Gepper," murmured Mrs. Hodges. "We trust you."
+
+"I'll look, if you don't mind," said Penny.
+
+She peered beneath the table, thumped it several times, and pulled aside
+the curtain of the cabinet. It was empty.
+
+"Now if you are quite satisfied, shall we begin?" purred Mr. Gepper. "It
+will make it much easier, if each one of you will give me a personal
+object."
+
+"A la the Celestial Temple method," muttered Penny beneath her breath.
+
+"What was that?" questioned the medium sharply.
+
+"Nothing. I was merely thinking to myself."
+
+"Then please think more quietly. I must warn you that this seance cannot
+be successful unless each person present concentrates, entering into the
+occasion with the deepest of sincerity."
+
+"I assure you, I am as sincere as yourself," Penny responded gravely.
+
+Mr. Hodges deposited his gold watch on the table. His wife offered a pin
+and Mrs. Weems a plain band ring. Penny parted with a handkerchief.
+
+After everyone was seated about the table, Al Gepper played several
+phonograph records, all the while exhorting the Spirits to appear.
+
+Taking Mrs. Weems' ring from the tray before him, he pressed it to his
+forehead. A convulsive shudder wracked his body.
+
+"Someone comes to me--" he mumbled. "Someone comes, giving the name of
+David--David Swester."
+
+"My cousin," breathed Mrs. Weems in awe.
+
+"He is tall and dark with a scar over his left eye," resumed the medium.
+"I see him plainly now."
+
+"That _is_ David!" cried the housekeeper, leaning forward in her
+eagerness.
+
+"David, have you a message for us?" the medium intoned.
+
+There was a long silence, during which the man could be seen writhing and
+twisting in the semi-darkness. Then his voice began again:
+
+"David has a message for a person called Maud."
+
+"I am Maud," said Mrs. Weems tremulously. "Oh, what does he say?"
+
+"That he is well and happy in the Spirit World, but he is worried about
+Maud."
+
+"Worried about me? Why?"
+
+The medium again seemed to undergo physical suffering, but presently the
+message "came through," although not in an entirely clear form.
+
+"David's voice has faded. I am not certain, but it has something to do
+with six thousand dollars."
+
+"The exact amount he left to me!" Mrs. Weems murmured.
+
+"David is afraid that you will not have the wisdom to invest the money
+wisely. He warns you that the present place where you have it deposited
+is not safe. He will tell you what to do with it. Now the voice is fading
+again. David has gone."
+
+With another convulsive shudder, Al Gepper straightened from the position
+into which he had slumped. Resuming his normal tone he said:
+
+"That is all. The connection with Cousin David has been broken."
+
+"Can't we contact him again?" Mrs. Weems asked in disappointment.
+
+"Not today. Possibly tomorrow at this same hour."
+
+"Couldn't you call up another Spirit by using my pin or Pa's watch?" Mrs.
+Hodges suggested wistfully.
+
+Al Gepper raised one of the window blinds. "I am very, very tired," he
+said. "This seance was particularly exhausting due to the presence of
+someone antagonistic. Tomorrow if conditions are right, I hope actually
+to materialize Cousin David. The poor soul is trying so hard to get a
+message through to the one he calls Maud."
+
+"You mean I'll be able to see him?" the housekeeper asked incredulously.
+
+"I hope and believe so. I must rest now. After a seance I should refresh
+myself with sleep."
+
+"Of course," agreed Mrs. Hodges. "We are selfish to overtax you."
+
+Recovering their trinkets, the elderly couple and Mrs. Weems went from
+the room. Penny was the last to leave.
+
+"Well, sister?" inquired the medium in a low voice. "Were you convinced,
+or do you still think that you can show up Al Gepper?"
+
+"I think," said Penny softly, "that you are a very clever man. But clever
+as you are, one of your well-trained ghosts may yet lead you to the city
+jail!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 13
+ _COUSIN DAVID'S GHOST_
+
+
+When Penny reached the lower floor she found Mrs. Weems and the Hodges
+excitedly discussing the seance. The seamstress and her husband
+emphatically declared that they had given the medium no information
+regarding either the housekeeper or the deceased Cousin David.
+
+"Then there can be only one explanation," Mrs. Weems said. "We were truly
+in communication with a departed spirit."
+
+"Don't you agree, Penny?" inquired Mrs. Hodges.
+
+"I am afraid I can't," she replied.
+
+"The test was a fair one," Mrs. Weems insisted. "Mr. Gepper couldn't have
+described Cousin David so accurately if he hadn't actually seen him as he
+materialized from the spirit world."
+
+"Al Gepper could have obtained much of his information from persons in
+Riverview," Penny responded.
+
+"About me, perhaps," the housekeeper conceded. "But not about Cousin
+David. Why, I doubt if anyone save myself knew he had a scar over his
+eye. He received it in an automobile accident twelve or thirteen years
+ago."
+
+"Just think!" murmured Mrs. Hodges. "Tomorrow you may actually be able to
+see your departed cousin!"
+
+In vain Penny argued that Al Gepper was a trickster. She was unable to
+offer the slightest evidence to support her contention while, on the
+other hand, the Hodges reminded her that the medium had never asked one
+penny for his services.
+
+From the cottage Penny went directly to the _Star_ office, feeling
+certain that her father would have returned there from his trip. Nor was
+she mistaken. Gaining admittance to the private office, she wasted no
+words in relating everything which had transpired during his absence. Her
+father's attention was flattering.
+
+"Penny, you actually saw all this?" he questioned when she had finished.
+
+"Oh, yes! At the Celestial Temple Louise was with me, too. We thought you
+might take up the matter with the police."
+
+"That's exactly what I will do," decided Mr. Parker. "I've turned the
+matter over in my mind for several days. The _Star_ will take the
+initiative in driving these mediums, character readers and the like out
+of Riverview!"
+
+"Oh, Dad, I was hoping you'd say that!"
+
+Mr. Parker pressed a desk buzzer. Summoning DeWitt, he told of his plan
+to launch an active campaign.
+
+"Nothing will please me better, Chief," responded the city editor. "Where
+do we start?"
+
+"We'll tip the police to what is going on at the Celestial Temple. Have
+them send detectives there for tonight's meeting. Then when the usual
+hocus-pocus starts, arrests can be made. Have photographers and a good
+reporter on hand."
+
+"That should start the ball rolling," agreed DeWitt. "I'll assign Jerry
+Livingston to the story. Salt Sommers is my best photographer."
+
+"Get busy right away," Mr. Parker ordered. "We'll play the story big
+tomorrow--give it a spread."
+
+"How about Al Gepper?" Penny inquired after DeWitt had gone. "Could he be
+arrested without involving the Hodges?"
+
+"Not very easily if he lives at their place. Has he accepted money for
+the seances he conducts there?"
+
+"He hasn't taken any yet from Mrs. Weems. I am sure he must have other
+customers."
+
+"You have no proof of it?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Suppose we forget Al Gepper for the time being, and concentrate on the
+Celestial Temple," Mr. Parker proposed. "In the meantime, learn
+everything you can about the man's methods."
+
+"No assignment would please me more, Dad. I've the same as promised Mr.
+Gepper he'll land in jail, and I want to make good."
+
+Mr. Parker began to pace the floor. "I'll write a scorching editorial,"
+he said. "We'll fight ignorance with information. Our reporters must
+learn how these mediums do their tricks, and expose them to the gullible
+public."
+
+"I'll do everything I can to help," Penny promised eagerly. "May I have
+Al Gepper for my particular fish bait?"
+
+"He's your assignment. And I'm depending upon you to see that he doesn't
+work any of his trickery on Mrs. Weems. If she can't be persuaded to
+remain away from the Hodges', then we must protect her as best we can."
+
+"I'll try to accompany her every time she goes there, Dad. I am afraid he
+may be after her money."
+
+"Gepper doesn't know she inherited six thousand dollars?" Mr. Parker
+asked in alarm.
+
+"Yes, she dropped the information that she had come into money. He
+supplied figures himself."
+
+"I wonder how?"
+
+"I haven't the slightest idea, Dad. Gepper is as clever a man as ever I
+met. Honestly, it wouldn't surprise me if he does produce Cousin David at
+tomorrow's seance."
+
+Mr. Parker snorted in disgust.
+
+"Tommyrot! The man will make an excuse about the conditions not being
+right, and fail."
+
+"Perhaps, but he seems pretty confident."
+
+"You expect to attend the seance?"
+
+"Oh, definitely. Jungle beasts couldn't keep me away."
+
+"Then be alert every instant--without appearing too suspicious, of
+course. Try to learn how the man accomplishes his tricks."
+
+"Leave it to me," chuckled Penny. "Mr. Al Gepper is due for his first
+shock when he wakes up tomorrow and reads that the Celestial Temple has
+been raided. Unless I am much mistaken, that place is one of his favorite
+haunts."
+
+Leaving the newspaper office, Penny went directly home. She longed to
+stop at the Sidell home, but she had promised her father to say nothing
+about the planned raid until it was an accomplished fact. Feeling the
+need of work to occupy her time, she washed the maroon car and waxed the
+fading paint of Leaping Lena.
+
+At six o'clock her father came home for dinner.
+
+"Any news?" Penny asked, running to meet him.
+
+"Everything's set," he answered. "DeWitt laid your information before the
+police. Tonight three detectives will attend the meeting at the Temple.
+If anything out of the way happens, the raid will be staged."
+
+Penny was so tense with expectation that she was unable to do justice to
+the delicious dinner which Mrs. Weems had prepared. Her father, too,
+seemed unusually restless. After dinner he made a pretense of reading the
+paper, but actually his eyes did not see the print.
+
+The hands of the clock scarcely appeared to move, so slowly did time
+pass. Eight o'clock came, then nine. Suddenly the telephone rang.
+
+Penny was away in an instant to answer it. From the next room she called
+to her father:
+
+"It's for you, Dad! DeWitt, I think."
+
+"I told him to telephone me as soon as the raid was staged." Mr. Parker
+arose and went quickly to take the receiver. Penny hovered at his elbow.
+
+"Hello! DeWitt?" the publisher asked, and after a slight pause: "Oh, I
+see. No, I don't think Penny was mistaken. It's more likely there was a
+tip-off."
+
+He hung up the receiver and turned toward Penny who anticipated the news.
+
+"The raid was a failure?"
+
+"Yes, Penny. Detectives spent two hours at the meeting. Nothing happened.
+It was impossible to make arrests."
+
+"They must have been recognized as detectives."
+
+"Undoubtedly."
+
+"Others will be assigned to the case?"
+
+"I doubt it, Penny. DeWitt reports that the police have become convinced
+that the spiritualists who use the Temple are not operating for profit."
+
+"Louise and I know better because she was approached." Penny anxiously
+regarded her father. "Dad, even if the police do give up, we won't, will
+we?"
+
+"No, we're in this fight and we'll stay in it," he answered grimly.
+"We'll put some new teeth in our trap. And the next time it's sprung, I
+warrant you we'll catch a crook."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 14
+ _WET PAINT_
+
+
+Promptly at two o'clock the following afternoon, Penny and Mrs. Weems
+presented themselves at the Hodges' cottage for the appointed seance.
+Already Mr. Gepper awaited them in the darkened apartment on the second
+floor.
+
+Penny's glance about the room found everything in the same order as upon
+the previous visit, save that an easel with a large black sheet of
+artist's paper stood beside the cabinet.
+
+She moved as if to examine it. Al Gepper intercepted her by saying:
+
+"Sit here, if you please. Beside Mrs. Weems. I'll call the Hodges and
+we'll start at once."
+
+The medium went to the door and shouted down the stairway. Penny noticed
+that he remained where he could watch her every move in a mirror which
+hung on the wall. She shrewdly guessed that he was afraid she might
+attempt to examine either the cabinet or the easel.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Hodges came in response to the call, taking chairs about the
+circular table. The gaze which they fastened upon Al Gepper was almost
+worshipful.
+
+"Now today I hope to materialize the Spirit of Cousin David," announced
+the medium. "The task will be difficult, as you must realize. After the
+seance begins I am compelled to request absolute quiet. The slightest
+movement may frighten away the Spirits."
+
+"Why are spirits so timid?" asked Penny.
+
+"Because their beings are so sensitive that they instantly feel an
+unfriendly presence," the man responded glibly. "Please hold hands, and
+use every precaution that contact is not broken."
+
+Mrs. Weems took one of Penny's hands and Mr. Hodges the other. Mrs.
+Hodges sat next to her husband.
+
+After lowering black curtains over the window blinds to further darken
+the room, the medium returned to his chair. Those at the table were
+unable to distinguish his form, and for a time there was no sound save
+the scratching music of a phonograph record.
+
+Presently the medium exhorted the Spirit of Cousin David to appear. For
+at least ten minutes there was no indication that communication was to be
+established. Then a cowbell tinkled, causing Mrs. Weems to shake and
+tremble.
+
+"Are you there, David?" called the medium.
+
+The bell jingled violently.
+
+"We are ready, David," intoned the medium. "Have you a message for us?"
+
+To Penny's amazement, a pair of shapely white hands slowly materialized,
+apparently pulling aside the curtain of the cabinet above the medium's
+head. In the darkness they glowed with a weird phosphorescent light.
+
+Next appeared a white-rimmed slate, upon which luminous words were
+written: "I am the Spirit of Cousin David. Is Maud here?"
+
+"Yes, yes," responded Mrs. Weems, quivering with excitement. "Have you a
+message for me?"
+
+Again the hand wrote: "My happiness in this world beyond is disturbed.
+Maud, do not squander the money which I gave to you."
+
+"Squander it?" the housekeeper said aloud. "Why, I've scarcely spent a
+penny!"
+
+"A trip to California is ill-advised," wrote the hand. "Invest your money
+in good eight per cent securities. There are many excellent
+companies--the Brantwell Corporation, White and Edwards, the Bierkamp
+Company."
+
+The slate vanished and once more the jingling of the cowbell denoted that
+the spirit was moving away.
+
+The medium spoke. "Contact has been broken. Shall we try to reach Cousin
+David again?"
+
+"Oh, please!" pleaded Mrs. Weems. "I don't know what to do now. I've
+planned on the western trip and I can't understand why Cousin David
+should advise me to give it up."
+
+"I wouldn't go agin' the Spirits if I was you," advised Mr. Hodges. "You
+better change your plans, Maud."
+
+"But how can I be certain that the message came from Cousin David?" the
+housekeeper quavered. "Oh, dear, I am so upset! If only I could be
+certain."
+
+"Madam, I hope you do not distrust me," said Al Gepper reprovingly.
+
+"Oh, no, it's not that. I'm just upset."
+
+"Perhaps, if you actually saw your cousin it would set your mind at
+rest."
+
+"Is it possible to see him?"
+
+"I cannot promise, but we will try. Hold hands again please, and everyone
+concentrate."
+
+There followed an interval during which the medium pleaded with the
+Spirit of Cousin David to return and show himself. Suddenly the group was
+startled to see a luminous banjo move high through the air, unsupported
+by any hand. It began to play "Down upon the Swanee River."
+
+Midway through the selection, the music broke off and the banjo
+disappeared. An instant later Mrs. Hodges uttered a choked cry.
+
+"The easel! Look at it, Maud!"
+
+All eyes turned toward the painter's canvas. As the medium focused a
+flashlight upon it, the face of an elderly man slowly materialized on the
+blank surface, the picture appearing in red, blue and finally black oil
+paint.
+
+"It _is_ Cousin David!" whispered Mrs. Weems, gripping Penny's hand so
+tightly that it hurt. "He looks exactly as he did when last I saw him!"
+
+The medium extinguished his light and again the room was dark. Mrs.
+Weems' chair creaked as she stirred restlessly. Mr. Hodges' heavy
+breathing could be plainly heard. There was no other sound. Everyone
+waited in tense expectancy, sensing that the climax of the seance was at
+hand.
+
+Suddenly, behind Al Gepper's chair a spot of ethereal light appeared. As
+Penny watched, it grew in size until the figure had assumed the
+proportions of a man. Then, to her further amazement, it slowly rose
+toward the ceiling, hovering above Mrs. Weems' chair.
+
+Throughout the seance Penny had remained firm in her conviction that the
+medium had resorted to trickery to produce his startling effects.
+Although she could not be sure, she thought that several times he had
+slipped from his chair to enter the conveniently placed cabinet. She also
+believed that the only way he could have materialized the ghost was by
+donning luminous robes.
+
+"I'll end his little game once and for all," she thought.
+
+Deliberately she waited until the ghostly figure floated close to her own
+chair. Then with a sudden upward spring, she snatched at it.
+
+Greatly to her chagrin, her hand encountered nothing solid. With the
+speed of lightning, the figure streaked toward the cabinet behind Al
+Gepper's chair and was seen no more.
+
+Arising, the medium switched on the room lights. His face was white with
+anger.
+
+"I warned you to make no move," he said harshly to Penny. "You
+deliberately disobeyed me."
+
+"Oh, Penny, why did you do it?" wailed Mrs. Weems. "I was so eager to get
+another message from Cousin David."
+
+"His Spirit has been frightened away," announced the medium. "It will be
+impossible ever to recall him. For that matter, I shall never again
+conduct a seance with this young person present. She is a disturbing
+element."
+
+"Oh, Penny, you've ruined everything," said Mrs. Weems accusingly. "Why
+do you act so outrageously?"
+
+Penny started to speak and then changed her mind. Mrs. Weems, the
+seamstress and her husband, all were gazing at her with deep reproach.
+She realized that there was nothing she could say which would make them
+understand.
+
+She arose and walked to the easel. The painting of Cousin David remained
+clearly visible. She touched it and then glanced at her finger which bore
+a streak of red.
+
+The paint was still wet.
+
+Penny stared at her finger a moment. Lifting her eyes she met the
+triumphant gaze of Al Gepper.
+
+"Not even a skillful artist could have painted a picture so quickly," he
+said with a smirk. "Only a spirit would have the ability. You are
+dumbfounded, my little one?"
+
+"No, just plain dumb," answered Penny. "I salute you, Mr. Gepper."
+
+Without waiting for Mrs. Weems, she turned and went from the house.
+
+"Now how _did_ he do it?" she muttered. "I saw everything and yet I am
+more in the dark than ever. But I am sure of one thing. Unless I work
+fast, Al Gepper is almost certain to obtain Mrs. Weems' inheritance."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 15
+ _HIDDEN MONEY_
+
+
+One of Penny's first acts upon arriving home was to scan the telephone
+directory under the heading, Investment Firms. The three companies
+mentioned during the seance, White and Edwards, Brantwell, and Bierkamp,
+were unlisted.
+
+"Evidently there are no such firms in Riverview," she reflected. "But why
+was Mrs. Weems advised to invest her money with one of them? It looks
+very suspicious to me!"
+
+Not until after five o'clock did Mrs. Weems return from the Hodges'. She
+seemed rather upset, and when Penny tried to bring up the subject of the
+seance, said distantly:
+
+"Please, Penny, I prefer not to discuss it. Your conduct was
+disgraceful."
+
+"I apologize for grabbing at the ghost, Mrs. Weems. I only did it to
+prove that Al Gepper is a fraud."
+
+"Your motives were quite apparent. One could not blame Mr. Gepper for
+being angry."
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Weems," said Penny in desperation. "How can you be taken in by
+his smooth line? His one purpose is to obtain your money."
+
+"You are very unjust," the housekeeper responded. "Today I tried to pay
+Mr. Gepper for the seance and he would not accept one penny."
+
+"That's because he is playing for higher stakes."
+
+"It's no use discussing the matter with you," Mrs. Weems shrugged. "You
+are prejudiced and will give the man credit for nothing."
+
+"I give him credit for being very clever. Mrs. Weems, please promise that
+you'll not allow him to invest your money for you."
+
+"I have no intention of doing so, Penny. It does seem to me that I should
+consider Cousin David's wishes in the matter. Very likely I shall abandon
+my plans for the western trip."
+
+"And stay here with us?" Penny cried eagerly.
+
+"No, I am thinking of going to a larger city and taking an apartment.
+With my money invested in eight per cent securities, I should have a
+comfortable little income."
+
+"Mrs. Weems, I've heard Dad say over and over that sound securities will
+not pay such a high rate of interest. Promise you won't invest your money
+until you've talked with him."
+
+"You're always asking me to promise something or other," the housekeeper
+sighed. "This time I shall use my own judgment."
+
+Realizing that further argument was only a waste of breath, Penny
+wandered outside to await her father. When he came, they sat together on
+the front porch steps, discussing the situation.
+
+"I'll drop a word of advice to Mrs. Weems at the first opportunity,"
+offered Mr. Parker. "If she is in the mood you describe, it would not be
+wise to bring up the subject tonight. She merely would resent my
+interference."
+
+"What worries me is that I am afraid she may have told Al Gepper where
+the money is kept."
+
+"Tomorrow I'll urge her again to deposit it in a bank. We'll do our best
+to protect her from these sharpers."
+
+The publisher had been very much interested in Penny's account of the
+seance. However, he was unable to explain how the various tricks had been
+accomplished.
+
+"Dad," Penny said thoughtfully, "you don't suppose there's any chance it
+wasn't trickery?"
+
+"Certainly not! I hope you're not falling under this fellow's spell?"
+
+"No, but it gave me a real shock when I saw Cousin David's face
+materialize on the canvas. It was the absolute image of him--or rather of
+a picture Mrs. Weems once showed me."
+
+A startled expression came over Penny's face. Without explanation, she
+sprang to her feet and ran to the kitchen.
+
+"Mrs. Weems," she cried, "did you ever get it back? Your picture!"
+
+"What picture, Penny?" The housekeeper scarcely glanced up as she
+vigorously scrubbed carrots.
+
+"I mean the one of Cousin David. You allowed a photographer to take it
+for enlargement."
+
+"It hasn't been returned," Mrs. Weems admitted. "I can't imagine why the
+work takes so long."
+
+"I think I can," announced Penny. "But you never would believe me if I
+told you, so I won't."
+
+Racing to the porch, she revealed to her father what she thought had
+occurred. It was her theory that the agent who had called at the Parker
+home days earlier had in actuality been one of Al Gepper's assistants.
+
+"Don't you see, Dad!" she cried. "The man obtained a picture of Cousin
+David, and probably turned it over to the medium." Her face fell
+slightly. "Of course, that still doesn't explain how the painting slowly
+materialized."
+
+"Nor does it explain the ghost or the banjo. Penny, couldn't Gepper have
+painted the picture himself in the darkness?"
+
+"There wasn't time, Dad. Besides, he held a flashlight on the painting.
+No human hand touched it."
+
+"You say, too, that the banjo was high overhead when it played?"
+
+"That's right, Dad. Gepper couldn't have reached the strings. The
+instrument floated free in the air."
+
+"Sounds fantastic."
+
+"Believe me, it was, Dad. It's no wonder Gepper is gaining such influence
+over Mrs. Weems. He's as slick as a greased fox!"
+
+"I'll have Jerry go to the house and try to learn how the fellow
+operates," declared Mr. Parker. "We can't break the story until we have
+absolute evidence that Gepper has obtained money under false pretenses."
+
+The next day Penny remained close at home. Mrs. Weems still treated her
+somewhat distantly, leaving the house immediately after lunch and
+declining to explain where she was going. Penny was quite certain that
+her destination was the Hodges' cottage.
+
+"Guess I'll run over and see Louise," she thought restlessly. "Nothing to
+do here."
+
+Before she could leave the house, the doorbell rang. A man of perhaps
+thirty, well dressed, with a leather briefcase tucked under his arm,
+stood on the front porch. He bowed politely to Penny.
+
+"This is where Mrs. Weems resides, I believe?"
+
+"Yes, but she isn't here now."
+
+"When will she be home?"
+
+"I can't say," replied Penny. "Are you an agent?"
+
+The man's appearance displeased her although she could not have said
+exactly why. His smile was too ingratiating, his eyes calculating and
+hard.
+
+"My name is Bierkamp," he explained. "I represent the Harold G. Bierkamp
+Investment Company."
+
+Penny stiffened. She glared at the agent. "You mean you represent the Al
+Gepper Spookus Company," she said in a cutting voice. "Well, Mrs. Weems
+doesn't want any of your wonderful eight per cent stocks! She'll not see
+you, so don't come here again!"
+
+"And who are you to speak for her?" the man retorted.
+
+"If you come here again, I'll call the police," Penny threatened. "Now
+get out!"
+
+Without another word, the man retreated down the street. Penny watched
+until he turned a corner and was lost to view. She was a trifle worried
+as to what she had done.
+
+"If Mrs. Weems learns about this she'll never forgive me," she thought
+uneasily. "But he was a crook sent by Al Gepper. I know it."
+
+Wandering upstairs, she entered the bathroom, intending to wash before
+going to Louise's home. On the tiled floor lay a velvet ribbon with a key
+attached. At once, Penny realized that Mrs. Weems had left it there
+inadvertently.
+
+"It's the key to her desk," she reflected, picking it up. "And she
+insists that her money is kept in a safe place! I have a notion to play a
+joke on her."
+
+The longer Penny considered the idea, the more it pleased her.
+Jubilantly, she set forth for the Sidell home. Taking Louise into her
+confidence, she visited a novelty shop and purchased a supply of fake
+money.
+
+Returning home, she then unlocked the drawer of Mrs. Weems' desk and,
+removing the six thousand dollars, replaced it with neat stacks of
+imitation bills. Louise watched her with misgiving.
+
+"Penny, this joke of yours isn't likely to strike Mrs. Weems as very
+funny," she warned. "You're always doing things which get you into
+trouble."
+
+"This is in a good cause, Lou. I am protecting Mrs. Weems from her own
+folly."
+
+"What will you do with the money?"
+
+"Deposit it in a bank."
+
+"You are taking matters into your hands with a vengeance! Suppose you're
+robbed on the way downtown?"
+
+"That would complicate my life. Upon second thought, I'll send for an
+armored truck."
+
+To Louise's amazement, Penny actually carried through her plan. A heavily
+guarded express truck presently drew up before the Parker residence, and
+Mrs. Weems' money was turned over to the two armed men who promised that
+it would be delivered safely to the First National Bank.
+
+"There, that's a load off my mind," said Penny. "Just let Al Gepper try
+to steal Mrs. Weems' money now!"
+
+Louise shook her head sadly. "You may be accused of stealing yourself. I
+wouldn't be in your slippers when Mrs. Weems learns about this."
+
+"Oh, I'll be able to explain," laughed Penny.
+
+The joke she had played did not seem quite so funny an hour later. Mrs.
+Weems returned home and without comment recovered the key which had been
+replaced on the lavatory floor. She did not open her desk or mention the
+money.
+
+At dinner Penny was so subdued that the housekeeper inquired if she were
+ill.
+
+"Not yet," the girl answered. "I'm just thinking about the future. It's
+so depressing."
+
+"Perhaps a picture show would cheer us all," proposed Mr. Parker.
+
+Mrs. Weems displayed interest, and Penny, without enthusiasm, agreed to
+go. Eight o'clock found them at the Avalon, a neighborhood theatre. The
+show was not to Penny's liking, although her father and the housekeeper
+seemed to enjoy it. She squirmed restlessly, and finally whispered to her
+father that she was returning home.
+
+In truth, as Penny well knew, she was suffering from an acute case of
+"conscience." Now that it was too late, she regretted having meddled with
+Mrs. Weems' money.
+
+Gloomily she walked home alone. As she entered, she heard the telephone
+ringing, but before she could answer, the party hung up. With a sigh
+Penny locked the front door again, switched out the lights and went to
+bed.
+
+For a long while she lay staring at a patch of moonlight on the bedroom
+carpet. Although she felt tired she could not sleep.
+
+"It's just as Louise said," she reflected. "I'm always getting myself
+into hot water and for no good reason, either!"
+
+Her morose thoughts were interrupted as a hard object thudded against a
+nearby wall. Penny sat up, listening. She believed that the sound had
+come from Mrs. Weems' room, yet she knew she was alone in the house.
+
+Rolling from bed, she groped for a robe, and without turning on the
+lights, tiptoed down the hall. Mrs. Weems' door stood open. Was some
+intruder hidden in that room?
+
+Peering inside, Penny at first noticed nothing amiss. Then her gaze
+fastened on the window sill, plainly visible in the moonlight. Two iron
+hooks, evenly spaced, had been clamped over the ledge!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 16
+ _OVER THE WINDOW LEDGE_
+
+
+As Penny flattened herself against the wall, the head and shoulders of a
+man slowly rose into view. Although his body was plainly silhouetted in
+the moonlight, she could not see his face.
+
+The intruder raised the sash, making no sound. He hesitated, listening a
+moment, then dropped lightly into the bedroom.
+
+Without turning on a flashlight which he carried, he went directly to
+Mrs. Weems' desk. So deliberate was the action that Penny instantly
+decided the fellow had come for a particular purpose and knew the lay-out
+of the entire house.
+
+"He means to steal Mrs. Weems' money!" she thought.
+
+Opening the desk, the man tried the drawer where the inheritance funds
+had been hidden. Failing to unlock it with a key, he took a tool from his
+pocket and in a moment had broken the lock.
+
+Removing the stack of fake bills which Penny had substituted, he thrust
+them into his coat. Taking no interest in anything else in the room, he
+moved stealthily toward the window.
+
+Penny knew there was no one within calling distance and that the man
+probably was armed. Wisdom dictated that she remain in hiding, but she
+was determined the thief should not escape. Hoping to take him by
+surprise, she stalked forward.
+
+A board creaked. With a muttered exclamation the man whirled around. At
+the same instant Penny flung herself upon him, diving low in imitation of
+a football tackle.
+
+The thief reeled, but instead of falling he recovered his balance and
+gave Penny a tremendous shove which sent her sprawling backwards. Before
+she could regain her feet, he ran to the window. Swinging himself over
+the ledge, he vanished from view.
+
+By the time Penny reached the window there was no sign of the intruder.
+He had disappeared as if into thin air. However, she knew that the man
+must have descended by means of a ladder which he had hastily removed.
+
+She ran her hand over the window ledge. The iron hooks no longer were
+there, only the scars which had been cut in the wood.
+
+"This undoubtedly was the same fellow who broke into the Kohl apartment!"
+she thought. "But how did he escape so quickly?"
+
+Penny started for a telephone, intending to notify the police. However,
+when it occurred to her that her father might not wish the matter made
+public, she changed her mind and ran downstairs.
+
+Unlocking the rear door, she glanced carefully about the yard. There was
+no one in sight, no movement behind any of the shrubbery.
+
+"He's gone, of course," she thought.
+
+Penny wore no shoes. Finding a pair of old galoshes on the porch, she
+protected her feet with them, and hobbled into the yard.
+
+The grass beneath Mrs. Weems' window had been trampled, but at first
+glance there was no clue to indicate how the burglar had gained entrance
+to the house.
+
+"Obviously he used a ladder," she reasoned. "But how did he descend so
+quickly? And what became of the ladder? I know he never had time to carry
+away one of the ordinary type."
+
+A dark object lying on the grass attracted Penny's attention. Picking it
+up, she carried it to the porch and switched on a light that she might
+see to better advantage. In her hand she held a torn strand of black silk
+rope.
+
+"This may be an important clue!" she thought excitedly. "I know now how
+the man entered the house!"
+
+As Penny examined the piece of rope, automobile headlight beams cut a
+path across the yard. The Parker car drew up on the driveway and both
+Mrs. Weems and Mr. Parker alighted.
+
+"Dad, come here quickly!" Penny called as he started to open the garage
+doors.
+
+"What's wrong, Penny?"
+
+Both the publisher and Mrs. Weems came toward the porch.
+
+"We've had a burglar," Penny announced. "He broke into Mrs. Weems' room,
+smashing the lock on the desk--"
+
+"My money!" the housekeeper exclaimed in horror. "Oh, Penny, don't tell
+me that it's gone!"
+
+"He escaped with the contents of the drawer."
+
+Mrs. Weems gave a moan of anguish. "Haven't you called the police?" she
+demanded. "When did it happen? Tell me everything!"
+
+"First, I'll set your mind at rest," Penny replied. "Your money is safe."
+
+"Oh! I never was so relieved in all my born days." Mrs. Weems sagged
+weakly into a porch rocker. "Penny, how could you torture me by letting
+me think the money was stolen?"
+
+"Because I have a confession to make, Mrs. Weems. You left the key to
+your desk lying on the bathroom floor. I thought it might be a good joke
+to move the money to another place."
+
+"Oh, you darling blessed girl!" laughed Mrs. Weems. "Where did you hide
+it, Penny? Are you sure it's safe?"
+
+"It should be. I had it taken to the First National Bank and deposited in
+your name. The thief carried off a package of fake money."
+
+"Rather high-handed weren't you?" commented her father.
+
+"Now don't you scold her," spoke Mrs. Weems quickly. "I am glad Penny
+acted as she did. Otherwise, I might have lost my entire inheritance."
+
+Penny drew a deep breath. "I'm relieved you feel that way about it. I
+wish I could see the burglar's face when he discovers he stole worthless
+money!"
+
+Both the housekeeper and Mr. Parker pressed her with questions. She
+revealed exactly what had occurred during their absence, showing them the
+strand of black silk rope.
+
+"Dad, I think this may be a valuable clue," she declared. "What does it
+suggest to you?"
+
+"Not much of anything, I am afraid."
+
+"You remember that when the Kohls were robbed the police couldn't figure
+out how the burglar gained entrance?"
+
+"Yes, I recall the story."
+
+"Well, I believe the same man committed both burglaries."
+
+"Why do you think so, Penny?"
+
+"At the Kohl's the police found two marks on the window ledge apparently
+made by iron hooks. Similar marks are on the sill in Mrs. Weems' room.
+For that matter, I distinctly saw the iron pieces bite into the wood."
+
+"Let's look at them," proposed Mr. Parker.
+
+"Only the marks are there now, Dad. The man jerked the hooks loose after
+he descended. They must have been attached to his ladder."
+
+"I thought you said he had none, Penny."
+
+"There was no time for him to have carried away an ordinary, heavy
+ladder. I think the one he used must have been made of silk."
+
+"And this is a piece of it!" Mr. Parker exclaimed, examining the twisted
+strand with new interest. "Your theory sounds plausible. It would be
+possible for a man to scale a wall with such a ladder."
+
+"He could jerk loose the hooks in an instant, too, Dad. The ladder would
+fit into a small suitcase, or even his pocket!"
+
+"There's one objection to your theory, Penny. How could such a ladder be
+raised to the window ledge? It naturally would be limp."
+
+"That part has me puzzled, I'll admit."
+
+"I never even heard of a silken ladder," said Mrs. Weems doubtfully.
+
+"I once saw one being made," declared Penny with deliberate emphasis. "At
+a Japanese Shop on Dorr Street."
+
+"That's right, you spoke of it!" exclaimed her father. "Penny, you may
+have something!"
+
+"I think so, Dad. This strand of twisted silk may lead straight to Kano's
+Curio Shop."
+
+"And from there?"
+
+Penny hesitated, glancing at Mrs. Weems. She knew that the housekeeper
+might take offense, but she answered quietly:
+
+"My guess would be to Al Gepper, Dad. Who but he or an accomplice could
+have known where the money was hidden?"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 17
+ _KANO'S CURIO SHOP_
+
+
+As Penny had anticipated, Mrs. Weems indignantly declared that she did
+not believe Mr. Gepper could have had any connection with the attempted
+robbery. Yet, even as she made the assertion, a startled expression came
+over her face.
+
+"Think back, Mrs. Weems," urged Mr. Parker. "How many persons knew where
+you had secreted the money?"
+
+"I told Mrs. Hodges."
+
+"And Al Gepper?" Penny probed.
+
+"Well--" The housekeeper looked ill at ease. "He may have heard me
+talking with Mrs. Hodges. I remember he passed through the hall while we
+were together."
+
+"What day was that?" inquired Penny.
+
+"Yesterday. After the seance. But I can't believe that Mr. Gepper would
+try to steal the money. I just can't!"
+
+"From what Penny has told me of the man, I should judge that he is a
+schemer," contributed Mr. Parker. "You know the _Star_ has started a
+vigorous campaign directed against such mediums as Al Gepper."
+
+"But he told me such remarkable things about Cousin David," protested
+Mrs. Weems. "Facts which couldn't be faked."
+
+"Oh, Gepper doesn't make many false moves," acknowledged Penny. "He's a
+smooth worker. All the same, he's a fake."
+
+"How could he have faked Cousin David's message? You forget we actually
+saw the picture of my relative painted without the aid of a human hand."
+
+"Did the picture closely resemble your cousin?" inquired Mr. Parker.
+
+"Oh, yes, indeed. It looked exactly as I saw him many years ago."
+
+"Isn't that rather odd?" demanded Penny. "One would expect Cousin David
+to age a little."
+
+"Penny believes that a photographer's agent who came here a few days ago
+was sent by Gepper to obtain a picture of your relative," explained Mr.
+Parker. "Did the man ask you many questions about your cousin?"
+
+"Well, yes, he did," Mrs. Weems admitted unwillingly. "I made a mistake
+giving him the photograph."
+
+"It seems fairly evident that the picture was used by Gepper," Mr. Parker
+commented. "Whether he plotted to steal your money remains to be proven.
+Penny, you saw the man plainly?"
+
+"No, I didn't, Dad. Not his face. He was about the same build as Gepper."
+
+"That's not much to go on."
+
+"From the first Gepper was determined to get Mrs. Weems' money, Dad. He
+sent a man here who pretended to be from the Bierkamp Investment
+Company."
+
+"You didn't tell me that," said Mrs. Weems.
+
+"Well, no I didn't. I was afraid you would invest your money with him, so
+I drove the man away. He must have been Gepper's accomplice. Failing to
+acquire the money by that means, he plotted the burglary."
+
+"Surely you don't agree with Penny?" the housekeeper asked Mr. Parker
+unhappily.
+
+"In general, I am afraid I do. Mr. Gepper is an undesirable character,
+and I should like nothing better than to send him to jail."
+
+"Come upstairs, Mrs. Weems," urged Penny. "I'll show you the desk."
+
+Both the housekeeper and Mr. Parker followed her to the second floor. An
+examination of the bedroom disclosed no additional clues, but after
+studying the marks on the window ledge, the publisher favored Penny's
+theory that a silk ladder had been utilized.
+
+"It was unwise of me to keep my money here," Mrs. Weems remarked in a
+crestfallen tone. "I--I've been silly about everything, I guess."
+
+Penny gave her a quick hug. "No, you haven't. Anyone might have been
+taken in by Al Gepper."
+
+"I shall never attend another of his seances. I'll urge Mrs. Hodges to
+turn him from her house."
+
+"Mrs. Weems, are you willing to help get evidence against him?" asked Mr.
+Parker abruptly.
+
+"Why, yes, if I can."
+
+"Then go to the Hodges' exactly as you have in the past," instructed the
+publisher. "Penny has been warned by Gepper not to attend any of the
+seances, but you'll still be welcome. Learn everything you can and report
+to me."
+
+"I'll be glad to do it, Mr. Parker."
+
+"Don't allow him to guess that you have become suspicious. Above all,
+never withdraw your money from the bank at his suggestion."
+
+"You may be sure I won't. This has taught me a bitter lesson."
+
+"Haven't you an assignment for me, Dad?" inquired Penny. "How about
+Kano's Curio Shop?"
+
+"Early tomorrow I'll send Jerry there to question the old Jap."
+
+"Will you notify the police?"
+
+"Not for the present. If we can crack this story I'd like to get it ahead
+of the _Record_."
+
+"I wish you would send me to Kano's instead of Jerry."
+
+"Dorr Street is no place for you, Penny," Mr. Parker replied, dismissing
+the matter. "Shall we get to bed now? It's nearly midnight."
+
+After the doors had been locked once more Penny went to her room, but she
+did not immediately fall asleep. Instead, she kept mulling over the
+events of the night. The more she thought about it the more firmly she
+became convinced that both the Kohl home and her own had been entered by
+the same person.
+
+"The telephone was ringing when I came from the movie," she recalled.
+"Now I wonder who called? It may have been a trick of the thief to learn
+if anyone were in the house. When no one answered, the assumption would
+be that the coast was clear."
+
+Penny felt rather well satisfied with the way matters had developed. In
+one bold stroke she had saved Mrs. Weems' inheritance, convinced the
+housekeeper that Al Gepper was not to be trusted, and had made definite
+progress in gaining evidence to be used in her father's campaign against
+the charlatan invaders of Riverview. Yet it annoyed her that the story,
+now that it had reached an active stage, was to be turned over to Jerry.
+
+"I have a notion to visit the Kano Curio Shop ahead of him," she thought.
+"That's exactly what I'll do!"
+
+Having made up her mind, she rolled over and promptly fell asleep.
+
+In the morning Penny ate breakfast and wiped the dishes with a speed
+which astonished Mrs. Weems. Shortly after her father left for the
+office, she backed her own maroon car from the garage, and offering only
+a vague explanation, departed for Kano's Curio Shop.
+
+Dorr Street was quite deserted at such an early hour, and the Japanese
+shop owner had just unlocked his doors. He was sweeping the floor as
+Penny boldly entered.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Kano," she greeted him. "You remember me, I believe?"
+
+Mr. Kano bowed, regarding her warily. "Yes," he replied. "You are the
+young lady whose curiosity is very large."
+
+Penny smiled. "You are right, Mr. Kano. It is very large, especially
+about a certain silken ladder."
+
+Mr. Kano frowned as he leaned on his broom. "I am very sorry," he said.
+"I am a merchant, not one who answers what you call the quiz-bee."
+
+Penny understood that the Japanese never would tell her what she wished
+to know save under compulsion. She decided to adopt firm tactics.
+
+"Mr. Kano," she said, "my father is the owner of the _Riverview Star_ and
+he intends to expose certain crooks who have been robbing wealthy persons
+such as the Kohls. You read in the paper that their home was entered?"
+
+"Yes, I read," the Japanese shrugged.
+
+"My own theory is that the thief gained entrance by means of a silk
+ladder," Penny declared. "_A ladder made in this shop!_"
+
+The shopkeeper's eyes narrowed. "I know nothing," he replied. "Nothing.
+You go now, please."
+
+"If I go," said Penny, "I'll return with the police. You would not like
+that, I take it?" Her voice was crisp and full of menace.
+
+Mr. Kano lost some of his poise. "No!" he answered sharply. "I am an
+honest man and want no sad trouble with the police."
+
+Chancing to glance toward the street, Penny observed Jerry Livingston
+standing on the opposite corner. He was gazing thoughtfully toward the
+Curio Shop, and she knew that he must have been sent by her father to
+interview Mr. Kano. Inspired, she turned again to the old Japanese.
+
+"You see that young man yonder?" she asked, indicating Jerry. "I have but
+to summon him and he'll come here."
+
+"Detective?" demanded Mr. Kano, peering anxiously through the window. "Do
+not call him! I am an honest man. I will answer your questions."
+
+"Then tell me about the silken ladder."
+
+"I know little," the shopkeeper insisted. "I made the rope for a man who
+said: 'Do this or we will burn your shop down, Mr. Kano.' So I made the
+ladder and he paid me well for fashioning it."
+
+"And what was the man's name?"
+
+"His name I do not know. But his eyes were small and evil. His skin was
+dark, his nose crooked."
+
+Mr. Kano ceased speaking with an abruptness which caused Penny to glance
+toward the door. Her first thought was that Jerry had entered. Instead a
+strange young man stood there, regarding her suspiciously.
+
+As she stared at him he quickly retreated, but not before she had caught
+a fleeting impression of a face which matched Mr. Kano's description with
+startling accuracy.
+
+"Was he the one?" she demanded as the door slammed. "The man for whom you
+made the ladder?"
+
+"No, no!" denied the Japanese.
+
+His words failed to convince Penny. Darting to the door, she saw that the
+young man already was far down the street, walking rapidly.
+
+"He is the one," she thought. "I'll follow him."
+
+"Wait," called the Japanese as she started away, "I have more to tell
+you."
+
+It was a ruse to detain her, Penny knew. Pushing past the shopkeeper who
+sought to bar the exit, she reached the street and ran toward Jerry
+Livingston.
+
+"Why, Penny!" he exclaimed in surprise. "What are you doing in this part
+of town?"
+
+"Never mind that," she answered hastily. "If you're after a story, come
+along with me. We're trailing the man who just left Kano's Shop."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 18
+ _THE BELL TOWER_
+
+
+Jerry fell into step with Penny. As they walked along, she told him of
+her conversation with Mr. Kano.
+
+"I believe this man we're following is the same one who entered our house
+last night," she declared. "He's the same build as the fellow I grabbed.
+Besides, he fits Kano's description of the person who bought the silken
+ladder."
+
+"Here's hoping you're right," replied Jerry. "If I muff this assignment,
+I may wake up looking for another job."
+
+Fearing that the man ahead would discover he was being followed, Jerry
+and Penny dropped farther and farther behind. Presently they saw him
+enter a pawnshop.
+
+"I know that place," commented Jerry. "It's run by Spike Weiser, a
+notorious _fence_. He buys stolen goods and gets rid of it at a profit.
+Has a swell home on Clarmont Drive."
+
+"Why don't the police arrest him?"
+
+"Oh, they watch the place, but Spike is too smart to be caught. He has a
+system for handling _hot_ goods."
+
+"I'll venture some of the Kohl loot was sold through him, Jerry."
+
+"It wouldn't surprise me. But if the police search the place they won't
+find a thing."
+
+Loitering on the opposite side of the street, Penny and the reporter kept
+close watch of the pawnbroker's shop. Thirty minutes elapsed. The man
+whom they had trailed, did not reappear.
+
+"He must have slipped out the back door," Jerry remarked. "Probably knew
+he was being watched."
+
+"I'm beginning to think so myself."
+
+Jerry glanced at his watch. "I can't take any more time," he said. "I'll
+have to get back to the office."
+
+"I'll watch a few minutes longer," answered Penny. "If anything develops
+I'll try to telephone."
+
+Jerry walked hurriedly away. Scarcely had he disappeared when the door of
+the pawnshop opened, and the young man who had entered a half hour
+earlier, appeared. Penny hastily moved back into the vestibule of an
+office building.
+
+Without observing her, the stranger crossed the street and walked briskly
+toward an intersecting boulevard. There was no opportunity for Penny to
+telephone the _Star_ office. Following, she was hard pressed to keep the
+man within view.
+
+Not until they reached the entrance of Butternut Lane did it dawn upon
+her that the Celestial Temple might be their destination. Then, indeed,
+her pulse stepped up a pace.
+
+"It's exactly as I guessed!" she thought triumphantly. "He's connected
+with Al Gepper and the other mediums!"
+
+Not wishing to attract attention in the deserted lane, Penny took a short
+cut through the cemetery, emerging at the rear of the Celestial Temple.
+There was no door on that side of the building but a window had been left
+raised. Placed beneath it, as if for her particular convenience, was a
+large rock.
+
+Penny stood on it, peering into the Temple. The room was unoccupied.
+However, as she waited, the same man she had trailed, quietly let himself
+in through the front entrance, using a key. He glanced about and called
+in a low voice: "Pete! Pete! Anyone here?"
+
+There was no answer, which seemed to please the young man. He moved
+quickly down the aisle, crossed the platform to a door which opened into
+the bell tower. Kneeling he began to fit keys into the lock, seeking one
+which would serve.
+
+As Penny watched, the young man suddenly straightened. Apparently he had
+heard footsteps in the vestibule for he moved away from the bell tower
+door.
+
+A middle-aged woman with dyed hair and a skin of unusual pallor entered
+the Temple. She stopped short as she saw the young man.
+
+"You here, Slippery?" she commented, gazing at him with distrust.
+"Where's Pete?"
+
+"Hello, Sade. I was wonderin' about Pete myself. Just got here a minute
+ago."
+
+The woman's gaze fastened upon the key which had been left in the bell
+tower door.
+
+"Say, what's coming off here?" she demanded. "You were trying to get
+inside!"
+
+"Now don't ruffle your feathers, Sade," the man said soothingly. "I was
+only testing the door to make sure it was locked."
+
+"I'll bet! You were aiming to break in! Slippery, they sure named you
+right. Why, you'd double-cross your own mother!"
+
+"Oh, quiet down," the man retorted angrily. "I only came here to make
+sure Pete was on the job. The lazy loafer has skipped out and left the
+place unguarded."
+
+The woman deliberately seated herself in a chair beside the bell tower
+door.
+
+"I'm parking here until Pete shows up," she announced. "Maybe you're on
+the square, Slippery, but I don't trust you."
+
+"Thanks for your flattering opinion," the man responded mockingly. "You
+give me a pain, Sade. I do all the dangerous work, and what do I get? A
+measly ten per cent."
+
+"Plus what you stick in your pocket when you're on a job," the woman shot
+back with rising anger. "You've been doing pretty well for yourself,
+Slippery--you and Al. But the boys are getting wise. From now on it may
+not be so easy. Better play fair with the rest of us--or else."
+
+"You always did have a wagging tongue," the man retorted. "Always trying
+to stir up trouble. Don't you realize we've got to work together or we'll
+be jailed separately? Our ranks must be united."
+
+"Gettin' sort of jittery, ain't you?"
+
+"Maybe you haven't been reading those editorials in the _Star_."
+
+"Sure, I read them and get a big laugh. This guy Parker has to blow off
+steam. Nothing will come of it."
+
+"The police have visited this place once already."
+
+"And what did they find? Nothing."
+
+"That's no guarantee they won't try again. I tell you this town is
+getting too hot for comfort."
+
+"Figurin' on blowing?" the woman inquired, watching him shrewdly.
+
+Slippery's laughter had an unpleasant edge. "You sure do get ideas, Sade.
+Don't start peddling that line of talk. Understand?"
+
+"I hear."
+
+Suddenly losing his temper, the man strode nearer, seizing her arm.
+
+"Just start something and see where you wake up!" he said harshly. "One
+word to Pete or any of the boys and you won't do any more pretty fortune
+telling!"
+
+The woman jerked her arm free, gazing at the man in sullen silence. Nor
+did she speak as he left the Temple, slamming the door behind him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 19
+ _PENNY INVESTIGATES_
+
+
+Penny debated whether or not to follow Slippery. Deciding that she should
+try to keep him within sight, she abandoned her post beneath the window
+and ran to the front of the building.
+
+Already the young man was far down the lane, walking rapidly. Before
+Penny could overtake him he hailed a taxi and drove away. By the time she
+obtained another cab, pursuit was futile.
+
+"To the _Star_ office," Penny ordered the driver.
+
+Although Slippery had eluded her, she did not feel that her morning's
+work had been wasted. She believed that her father would be very much
+interested in a report of her findings.
+
+"It's evident that Slippery is connected with Al Gepper and various
+mediums of the Celestial Temple," she reflected. "I am sure, too, that
+he's the one who broke into our house, but to prove it may not be so
+easy."
+
+Penny had not fully understood the conversation which she had overheard
+between Slippery and Sade. That they distrusted each other was evident,
+but why had the woman feared Slippery might break into the bell tower
+during the guard's absence?
+
+"Something of great value to the organization must be kept there," she
+reasoned. "But what can it be?"
+
+Penny believed that her father would not delay in requesting police to
+search the bell tower of the Celestial Temple. However, a disappointment
+awaited her.
+
+Upon arriving at the newspaper office DeWitt stopped her as she went past
+his desk.
+
+"Don't go in there," he said, jerking his thumb toward Mr. Parker's
+private room.
+
+"Why not?" asked Penny in surprise. "Is Dad having a conference?"
+
+DeWitt nodded as he composed a two column headline. "With J. P. Henley."
+
+"The _Star's_ Sugar Daddy?"
+
+"Our biggest advertiser. He's threatening to go over to the _Record_."
+
+"Why, that's serious!"
+
+"It is if he quits the _Star_. The old man--Mr. Parker--" DeWitt
+corrected hastily, "has been trying to soften him up for the past two
+hours. Whatever you do, don't bust in there now."
+
+"I won't, Mr. DeWitt, but I did wish to see Dad."
+
+"Anything I can do for you?"
+
+Penny hesitated. "Well, I wanted to talk to him about something I learned
+today at the Celestial Temple."
+
+"Oh, yes," nodded the city editor, his attention on a sheet of copy. "Mr.
+Parker is handling the campaign personally. Sorry I can't be of service."
+
+Rather startled by DeWitt's unusual politeness, Penny glanced hopefully
+toward Jerry Livingston's desk. It was littered with papers, but quite
+deserted.
+
+With a sigh she left the building and walked to Dorr Street where she had
+left her maroon car. Upon reaching home she found that Mrs. Weems was not
+there and she had forgotten her own key. For a time she sat
+disconsolately on the front porch. Then she decided to go to the Hudell
+Garage where Leaping Lena had been left for repairs three days earlier.
+
+The car was ready, and with it a bill for eight dollars and forty-two
+cents.
+
+"I'll have to give you a dollar on account and pay the remainder next
+week," said Penny. "Or would you rather keep the car as a deposit?"
+
+"Give me the dollar," said the garage man hastily.
+
+Penny became even more depressed as she drove the automobile home. Not
+for the world would she openly admit that she had made a mistake in
+repurchasing Lena. Secretly she acknowledged that two cars were an
+unbearable financial drain upon slender resources.
+
+Turning into her own street, Penny saw Mrs. Weems walking toward home,
+and stopped for her.
+
+"I've just come from the Hodges'," the housekeeper commented, climbing
+into the car.
+
+"You have?" inquired Penny eagerly. "Did you learn anything?"
+
+"No, I didn't. Mr. Gepper seemed very unwilling to conduct another
+seance. He acted so different this time--almost as if he bore me a
+personal grudge."
+
+"He's probably provoked because your inheritance eluded him."
+
+"He did tell Mrs. Hodges that he doubted I had any money," Mrs. Weems
+responded.
+
+"What happened at the seance?"
+
+"Why, nothing. The table moved and we heard a few raps. That was all."
+
+"No message from Cousin David?"
+
+"Not a word or a sign. Mr. Gepper seemed very indifferent about it all.
+He said he couldn't give me another appointment unless I paid for it."
+
+"What do you think about him now?" Penny asked curiously. "Don't you
+agree with Dad and me that he was after your money?"
+
+"Yes, I was very silly," the housekeeper acknowledged. "Mrs. Hodges has
+begun to lose faith in him, too. She says he's been bringing all sorts of
+folks to her place. When she told him she didn't care to have the house
+over-run with strangers, he became very unpleasant."
+
+"You mean he threatened her?"
+
+"In a mild way. He told her that he would stay as long as he pleased and
+she could do nothing about it. Mrs. Hodges is afraid to go to the police
+for fear she'll be arrested with Mr. Gepper."
+
+"I wonder if he ever has charged for his seances?" Penny said
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I am sure he has, Penny. Of course I have no proof."
+
+"Mrs. Weems, you must go there again this afternoon," Penny urged.
+"Insist upon another seance, and pay him for it! Then you'll be able to
+testify as a witness against him!"
+
+"But I don't wish to go into court," the housekeeper protested. "Besides,
+Mr. Gepper won't be at the cottage this afternoon."
+
+"Where is he going?" Penny questioned alertly.
+
+"I don't know. I heard him tell Mrs. Hodges he would be gone this
+afternoon, but would return for an eight o'clock seance."
+
+"Why, that's fine--wonderful!" chuckled Penny.
+
+Mrs. Weems gazed at the girl with sudden suspicion. "Now what have you
+thought up?" she demanded.
+
+"Nothing alarming," grinned Penny. "I merely plan to visit Mr. Gepper's
+studio during his absence. Who knows, I may yet master a few of the finer
+points of ghost-making!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 20
+ _INSIDE THE CABINET_
+
+
+Despite Mrs. Weems' protests, Penny remained firm in her decision to
+investigate Mr. Gepper's studio. She ate a belatedly prepared lunch and
+did not reach the Hodges' cottage until nearly four o'clock, having
+driven there in Lena.
+
+The doors were closed and Penny knocked several times without receiving a
+response.
+
+"Everyone must have gone away," she thought. "Oh, dear, now what shall I
+do?"
+
+Penny reasoned that it was of vital importance for her to inspect Al
+Gepper's room during his absence. She might never have another
+opportunity. Yet she hesitated to enter the house while the Hodges were
+away, even though she felt certain the seamstress would not mind.
+
+Walking to the rear, Penny noticed that the porch screen had been left
+unfastened. Entering the kitchen, she called Mrs. Hodges' name but
+received no answer.
+
+"If I wait for her to come home it may be too late," decided Penny. "This
+is an emergency."
+
+Her mind made up, she took the stairs two at a time to Al Gepper's room.
+Her knock went unanswered. Satisfied that he was not there, she tried the
+door and found it unlocked.
+
+Penny raised a blind to flood light into the darkened room. Save that a
+film of dust covered the furniture, everything was approximately the same
+as she had last seen it.
+
+Her gaze fell upon two suitcases which had been pushed beneath the bed.
+The first contained only miscellaneous clothing. The second merited a
+more careful inspection.
+
+Almost at once Penny came upon an old faded picture, the one of Cousin
+David which Mrs. Weems had given to the photographer's "agent."
+
+"So that was how it was done!" she thought. "Al Gepper sent one of his
+confederates to see Mrs. Weems and obtain information about her cousin.
+The painting which appeared so miraculously during the seance was merely
+a copy of this! Even so, how was it painted so quickly?"
+
+Forgetting the picture for a moment, Penny picked up several newspaper
+clippings which were fastened together with a rubber band. All had been
+taken from the obituary column and concerned the death of well-to-do
+Riverview persons.
+
+"Al Gepper and his pals are ghouls!" Penny told herself. "They prey upon
+the relatives of persons who have died, realizing that at such a time it
+will be much easier to interest them in trying to communicate with the
+departed!"
+
+Lifting a tray from the suitcase, her attention focused upon a small red
+booklet. As she turned rapidly through it, a folded sheet of paper fell
+to the floor.
+
+Examining it, Penny saw a long list of names, together with pertinent
+information about each person. Not only was the address and financial
+standing of the individual given, but the deceased relatives in each
+family and other facts of a personal nature. The list had been
+mimeographed.
+
+"This must be a 'sucker' list!" thought Penny. "No wonder it's easy for a
+medium to find victims and tell them astonishing facts."
+
+Thrusting the paper into her pocket, she turned her attention to the
+wardrobe closet. Al Gepper's clothes hung in orderly rows from the
+hangers. Behind them, half hidden from view, was a small box.
+
+Pulling it to the window, Penny examined the contents. There were many
+bottles filled with chemicals, the names of which were unfamiliar. She
+noted a bottle of varnish, another of zinc white, and some photographic
+paper in a sealed envelope.
+
+A glance satisfying her, she replaced the box and next turned her
+attention to the cabinet behind the large circular table. Here she was
+richly rewarded as her gaze fell upon a banjo.
+
+"The same one which played during Mrs. Weems' seance!" she thought. "We
+were able to see it in the dark because it's covered with luminous paint.
+But what made it rise into the air, and how could it play without the aid
+of human hands?"
+
+Penny examined the instrument closely. She chuckled as she discovered a
+tiny phonograph with a record built into its back side. As she pressed a
+control lever, it began a stringed version of "Down Upon the Swanee
+River."
+
+Quickly turning it off, she inspected other objects in the cabinet. At
+once she found a rod which could be extended to a height of five feet.
+
+"That's how the banjo was raised!" she reasoned. "And by use of this rod
+it would be easy to make a ghost appear to float high overhead. This
+luminous material must have been used."
+
+Penny picked up a filmy robe, shaking out the many folds. While it was
+clear to her that Al Gepper had employed the garment to materialize the
+so-called spirit of Cousin David, she could only guess how he had made it
+enlarge from a mere spot to a full sized figure.
+
+"He must have wadded the cloth in his hand, and held it above his head,"
+she mused. "Then he could have slowly shaken it out until it covered his
+entire body. Thus the figure would appear to grow in size."
+
+In one corner of the cabinet Penny came upon a luminous slate.
+
+"This was used for Cousin David's message," she thought. "Al probably had
+an assistant who wrote on it and thrust it through the curtain."
+
+While many questions remained unanswered, Penny had obtained sufficient
+evidence to indicate that Al Gepper was only a clever trickster. Greatly
+elated, she decided to hasten to the _Star_ office to report her
+findings.
+
+Noticing that she had neglected to return the two suitcases to their
+former places, Penny pushed them under the bed again. As she
+straightened, a door slammed on the lower floor.
+
+For an instant she hoped that it was Mrs. Hodges or her husband who had
+come home. Then she heard footsteps on the stairs, and their rapidity
+warned her that they could belong only to a young person.
+
+Frantically, she gazed about the room. The cabinet seemed to offer the
+safest hiding place. Slipping into it, she pulled the black curtain
+across the opening.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 21
+ _STARTLING INFORMATION_
+
+
+Scarcely had Penny hidden herself when Al Gepper entered the room. With
+him was the hook-nosed young man known as Slippery.
+
+"I tell you, Al," the latter was saying, "this town is getting too hot
+for comfort. We've got to blow."
+
+"It was that Parker girl who queered everything," muttered Gepper. "How
+could I know that her father was a newspaper publisher? He's stirred up
+folks with his editorials."
+
+"You never should have let her in here. We had a swell set-up, but now we
+can expect a raid any day."
+
+"I tell you I thought she was just a smart-aleck kid, a friend of the
+Hodges'. Didn't learn until yesterday who she was."
+
+"We've got to blow, Al. Sade's threatening to make trouble, too. She
+thinks we're holding out on the others."
+
+"We have picked up a little extra coin now and then."
+
+"Sure, Al, but we've always been the brains of the outfit. We take most
+of the risk, plan all the big jobs, so why shouldn't we have more?"
+
+"It's time we cut loose from 'em, Slippery."
+
+"Now you're talking! But we can't pull out until the Henley job comes
+off. I've had a tip that the house is likely to be deserted tonight.
+Let's make the haul and then skip."
+
+"Okay," agreed Gepper. "I have some suckers coming for a seance at eight.
+I'll get rid of them in quick time, and be waiting. So long, Slippery."
+
+A door slammed, telling Penny that the hook-nosed man had left. She was
+somewhat stunned by what she had overheard, believing that the Henley who
+had been mentioned must be her father's chief advertiser.
+
+Nervously she waited inside the cabinet, wishing that she might take her
+information to the police. To her intense annoyance, Al Gepper did not
+leave the room even for a moment.
+
+Instead he threw himself on the bed and read a tabloid newspaper. After
+an hour, he arose and began to prepare his supper on an electric grill.
+
+Penny shifted from one position to another, growing more impatient. Every
+time the man came toward the cabinet her heart beat a trifle faster. She
+was quite sure the Hodges had not yet returned home, and should Al Gepper
+discover her, he would not treat her kindly.
+
+The medium finished his supper and stacked the dishes in the closet
+without washing them. Then he started to get ready for the night's
+seance.
+
+Peeping from between the cracks of the curtain, Penny saw him seat
+himself before the easel. With painstaking care he painted a picture of a
+woman, using a photograph as a model. After a coating of varnish had been
+applied, he allowed it to dry and afterwards covered the entire picture
+with zinc white. The original painting was entirely hidden.
+
+Penny knew that hours had elapsed. The room gradually darkened, and Al
+Gepper turned on the lights.
+
+"Oh, dear, I must get out of here soon!" the girl thought desperately.
+"But if I make a break for it he'll be sure to see me. That will ruin all
+my plans."
+
+Eight o'clock came. Al Gepper put on his coat, combed his hair and was
+alertly waiting when the doorbell rang. However, instead of descending
+the stairs he shouted an invitation for the visitors to come up.
+
+Two women in their early forties were ushered into the seance chamber, to
+be followed almost immediately by an elderly man.
+
+"We will start at once if you please," said Al Gepper brusquely. "I have
+another engagement tonight. However, before the seance is undertaken I
+must ask that each of you pay the required fee, five dollars."
+
+The money was paid, and the three persons seated themselves at the table.
+Gepper switched off the lights.
+
+The seance began in much the same manner as the one Penny had attended.
+The medium called upon the spirit of a woman named Flora to appear.
+
+"Now concentrate hard--everyone," he instructed. "Flora, where are you?
+Can you not show yourself that we may know it is truly your spirit which
+communicates with us?"
+
+From the cabinet, so close to Al Gepper that she could have touched his
+hand, Penny was able to see his every move. Yet so swift was his next
+action, that she barely discerned it.
+
+Taking a wet sponge from his pocket he wiped it across the painting
+previously prepared. The picture immediately became visible to the
+audience as Gepper focused his flashlight on the canvas.
+
+"That wasn't the way he made Mrs. Weems' picture appear," thought Penny.
+"The fellow must have a great repertoire of tricks!"
+
+The seance had become so interesting that she no longer thought of
+escape. Nevertheless, she came to a sudden realization of her precarious
+position as she heard the medium say that he would next endeavor to
+persuade the Spirit of Flora to take actual shape. With a shock it dawned
+upon her that in another moment the man would enter the cabinet to make
+use of the luminous gauze robe and other paraphernalia.
+
+Knowing that she could not hide from him, Penny decided upon a bold break
+for freedom. Dropping the ghostly robe over her face and shoulders, she
+pulled aside the dark curtain and flitted into the room.
+
+Her dramatic entrance brought gasps of astonishment from the persons who
+sat at the circular table. The medium, as dumbfounded as his audience
+muttered: "What the dickens!" and pushed back his chair, his legs rasping
+on the floor.
+
+Penny did not linger, but darted past the group and groped for the door.
+In the darkness she could not immediately find it. Her shining robe, on
+the other hand, made her an easy target for Al Gepper.
+
+Angrily the medium strode across the room, seizing her arm. She jerked
+away, but he grasped a fold of the robe. It tore and was left behind.
+
+At that critical instant, Penny's hand encountered the door. She swung it
+open, and bounded down the stairway.
+
+In the seance chamber a light went on, then the hallway became
+brilliantly illuminated. But by that time the girl was in the dining
+room.
+
+She could hear Al Gepper clattering down the steps, intent upon capturing
+her. Penny was determined that he should never learn her identity.
+
+Letting herself out of the house by way of the kitchen door, she decided
+that if she attempted to cross the yard, the medium certainly would
+recognize her. The woodpile offered a hiding place and she crouched
+behind it.
+
+Scarcely had she secreted herself, when Al Gepper ran into the yard. He
+glanced about carefully and circled the house twice.
+
+Finally, convinced that the "ghost" had escaped he came back to the
+porch. His customers, greatly agitated by what had occurred, were
+demanding explanations.
+
+"Someone played a prank," Gepper explained briefly. "It will be
+impossible to resume the seance for the spirits are offended. You will
+leave, please."
+
+The customers departed and the medium locked himself in the house. He did
+not bother to lower the upstairs hall blind, and Penny caught occasional
+glimpses of him as he moved to and fro.
+
+"He's packing to leave!" she observed. "Unless I act in double-quick
+time, he'll skip town! I must notify Dad and the police without an
+instant's delay!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 22
+ _SCALING THE WALL_
+
+
+The nearest drugstore with a public telephone was two blocks away. Penny
+ran the distance, and slipping into the booth, she dialed the _Star_
+office. Informed by the building switchboard operator that neither her
+father nor DeWitt was available, she inquired for Jerry Livingston, and
+to her relief was connected with him.
+
+"Listen, Jerry, this is Penny!" she began excitedly. "I haven't time to
+explain, but the lid is blowing off the fake spiritualist story! Rush the
+police out to the Hodges' cottage and demand Al Gepper's arrest! Send
+another squad or some private detectives to Mr. Henley's home."
+
+"Henley!" Jerry exclaimed. "Say, have you gone loco?"
+
+"I'm not making any mistakes," Penny replied tersely. "If you act quickly
+we may prevent a robbery. I'm on my way there now to warn Mr. Henley! Oh,
+yes, try to find Dad or DeWitt and warn them a big story is breaking!"
+
+"Penny, what's this all about?" the reporter demanded. "I can't go to the
+police unless I know what I am doing."
+
+"You must, Jerry. I have plenty of evidence against Gepper and his crowd,
+but unless you take the police to the Hodges' in the next fifteen minutes
+it will be too late!"
+
+Without giving Jerry opportunity to delay her with other questions, Penny
+hung up the receiver. Hastening to the street, she gazed frantically
+about for a taxi. None was to be had.
+
+"I'll get to the Henley place quicker in Lena than by waiting for a cab
+to come along," she thought.
+
+The battered old car had been parked a short distance from the Hodges'
+cottage. Hurrying there, Penny jumped into the ancient vehicle and
+started the motor. As usual it made a loud clatter, but she did not
+suspect that the sound carried far up the street. Nor did she guess that
+Al Gepper stood at the darkened window of his room, watching her.
+
+Penny drove as fast as she could to the Henley home in the southern
+section of Riverview. Lights blazed from the downstairs windows.
+
+Abandoning her car in the driveway, she rang the doorbell. After a long
+wait, a maid appeared.
+
+"Is Mr. Henley here?" Penny asked breathlessly. "Or Mrs. Henley? It's
+most important that I talk with them at once."
+
+"Mrs. Henley has been at the seashore for a month," the maid replied in
+an agitated voice. "Mr. Henley is somewhere downtown. I've been trying to
+get him, but the telephone wire has been cut!"
+
+"The house hasn't been robbed?"
+
+"Mrs. Henley's jewelry has been taken! I don't know what else."
+
+"When did it happen?" Penny asked.
+
+"It must have been during the last half hour. I went to the corner store
+for a book of stamps. When I came back five minutes ago I discovered what
+had occurred. I ought to call the police, but I am afraid to do it until
+I've talked with my employer."
+
+"The police already have been notified," said Penny. "They'll be here any
+minute."
+
+"But how did you know--?" the maid began in astonishment.
+
+Penny had turned away. She was convinced that the burglary had been
+committed by Slippery. Perhaps, by this time he had fled town, but she
+did not believe he would leave without his pal, Al Gepper.
+
+Climbing into the car again, Penny debated. It was reasonable to suppose
+that, having accomplished the burglary, Slippery would return to the
+Hodges' cottage to meet the medium.
+
+"If he does, the police should be on hand to seize him," she thought. "At
+least, he and Al will be held for questioning. But there's one place I
+forgot to cover--the Celestial Temple."
+
+Like a flash came the recollection that Slippery had been deeply
+interested in something which was guarded in the bell tower. Was it not
+possible that he might return there before leaving Riverview?
+
+Shifting gears, Penny turned the car and headed for Butternut Lane.
+Anxiously, she glanced at the gasoline gauge. It registered less than a
+gallon of fuel and she had used her last dime in the telephone booth.
+
+"If I coast on all the downgrades I should just make it," she estimated.
+
+In starting for the Celestial Temple Penny was acting upon a "hunch."
+However, it disturbed her that the Henley burglary had been accomplished,
+and she was afraid she might again be wasting precious time. Now that it
+was too late, she wondered if it would not have been wiser to remain at
+the Hodges' cottage until the police arrived.
+
+"I only hope that end of the affair isn't bungled," she thought. "I'll
+never get over it if Al and Slippery both escape."
+
+Penny had reached the entrance to Butternut Lane. Parking at the side of
+the road, she continued afoot toward the Celestial Temple.
+
+From a distance the building appeared dark. However, as she drew closer
+she could distinguish a dim light. Inside the Temple, a stout man wearing
+a hat sat with his chair tilted against the door of the bell tower room.
+
+"He must be the guard," thought Penny. "Probably the one they call Pete."
+
+Suddenly she paused, retreating into a clump of elder bushes near the
+walk. From the direction of the cemetery a figure emerged. At first, all
+that Penny could distinguish was a man carrying a suitcase. As he drew
+closer, her pulse quickened. Unmistakably, it was Slippery.
+
+Without passing the bushes where the girl had taken refuge, the man
+walked on toward the Temple. Presently he halted. Glancing carefully
+about to assure himself that he was unobserved, he shoved his suitcase
+into the tall weeds which lined the walk. Then he moved to one of the
+Temple windows, peering into the gloomy interior.
+
+"Now what?" thought Penny, watching alertly. "This should prove
+interesting."
+
+Slippery remained beneath the window a minute or two. Instead of entering
+the Temple, he presently returned to the high weeds, stooping to remove
+some object from his suitcase. Hiding it under his coat, he circled the
+building and approached the side adjoining the cemetery.
+
+Thoroughly mystified, Penny cautiously followed, taking care that her
+body cast no shadow which would attract Slippery's attention.
+
+The man seemed deeply engrossed in the task he had set for himself. From
+his coat he took a collapsible rod which he extended to the approximate
+length of a fish pole. To its end he attached a trailing silken ladder.
+
+Deftly the man raised the ladder until two metal hooks bit into a
+projection of the bell tower. He tested the ropes to make certain they
+would bear his weight then, with the agility of a cat, mounted the silken
+rungs. Penny saw him disappear into the bell tower.
+
+"Now why did he climb up there?" she asked herself. "He must be after
+something hidden in the belfry."
+
+Penny knew that she was a long distance from police aid, but it was
+unthinkable that Slippery should be allowed to escape. Impulsively, she
+moved from her hiding place to the base of the tower.
+
+Grasping the silken ladder, she gave it a quick jerk which dislodged the
+two iron hooks. Down it tumbled into her arms, leaving the man trapped in
+the turret.
+
+"He'll never dare call for help when he discovers what has happened,"
+reasoned Penny. "If he does, the guard, Pete, will have something to
+say!"
+
+Rolling the ladder into a small bundle, she started across the clearing,
+intending to seek the nearest telephone. With no thought of lurking
+danger, she brushed past a clump of bushes. A hand reached out and
+grasped her arm.
+
+Penny screamed in terror and tried to break free. The hand help her in a
+grip of steel.
+
+As she struggled, her captor emerged from the shelter of leaves. It was
+Al Gepper.
+
+"I thought I might find you here, my little one," he said grimly. "You
+have had your fun. Now you must pay, and the entertainment shall be
+mine!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 23
+ _A PRISONER IN THE BELFRY_
+
+
+Penny tried to scream, only to have Al Gepper clamp his hand over her
+mouth.
+
+"None of that!" he said harshly. "Behave yourself or you'll get rough
+treatment."
+
+Inside the Temple, lights suddenly were turned on, for the brief struggle
+had been heard by Pete. The squat, stupid-faced man appeared in the
+doorway of the building, peering down the lane.
+
+"Who's there?" he demanded suspiciously.
+
+Al Gepper uttered an angry word beneath his breath. It was not to his
+liking that Pete should be drawn into the affair. However, he could not
+avoid detection.
+
+"It's Al!" he called softly. "This girl broke up my seance tonight, and I
+trailed her here. She was prowling around the bell tower."
+
+As he spoke, he dragged Penny toward the Temple entrance. His words
+convinced her that he had not observed her remove the silken ladder from
+the belfry wall, nor was he aware that Slippery was a prisoner in the
+tower.
+
+"Let's have a look at her," said Pete. He flashed a light directly into
+Penny's face.
+
+"She's the Parker girl--daughter of the publisher," informed Al.
+
+"Yeah," commented Pete. "I saw her at one of our meetings. Another girl
+was with her. How much has she learned?"
+
+"Enough to get us all run out of town. The question is, what shall we do
+with her?"
+
+"Bring her inside, and we'll talk it over," said Pete. "Maybe we ought to
+call a meeting."
+
+"No," replied Al Gepper impatiently, shoving Penny through the doorway.
+"We can take care of this ourselves."
+
+The door was locked from the inside. Al pushed Penny into a chair on the
+front platform.
+
+"Now sit there," he ordered. "One peep out of you and we'll tie you up
+and tape your mouth. Understand?"
+
+"_Oui, oui, Monsieur_," said Penny, mockingly.
+
+The two men stepped a few paces away and began to whisper together. Pete
+seemed to protest at Al's proposals.
+
+Penny watched them uneasily, speculating upon their final decision.
+Whatever it was, she would never be given an opportunity to report to the
+police until it was too late to apprehend members of the Temple.
+
+"I was stupid not to realize that Gepper might trail me," she told
+herself. "If only I had used an ounce of caution, I might have brought
+about the capture of the entire gang. Not to mention a grand scoop for
+Dad's paper."
+
+Penny slumped lower in her chair. Her own predicament concerned her far
+less than the knowledge that she had bungled a golden opportunity.
+
+Speculatively, her gaze shifted toward the bell tower room. The door was
+closed and she believed that it must be locked. There was no sound from
+the belfry, adding to her conviction that the man imprisoned there was
+fearful of attracting attention to his plight.
+
+Al Gepper and Pete came toward her. With no explanation, the medium
+seized her arm and ordered her to walk toward the exit.
+
+"Where are you taking me?" Penny asked.
+
+"Never mind. You'll find out in good time."
+
+"Wait!" exclaimed Penny, bracing her legs and refusing to be pushed. "If
+you'll let me go, I'll tell you something very much worth your while."
+
+Deliberately, she allowed the silken ladder to slip from beneath her
+coat. The men would not have heeded her words, but the familiar object
+served its purpose.
+
+"Where did you get that ladder?" demanded Al Gepper.
+
+"So you would like to know what became of your friend, Slippery?"
+responded Penny evenly. "You'll be surprised when I tell you that he has
+double-crossed you both!"
+
+"You're lying," accused Gepper.
+
+Penny shrugged and did not speak.
+
+"What were you going to say?" Gepper prodded in a moment. "Out with it!
+How did you get Slippery's ladder?"
+
+"It fell into my hands, literally and figuratively."
+
+"Stalling for time will get you nowhere," snapped Gepper, losing
+patience. "If you know anything about Slippery spill it fast or you'll
+not have another chance."
+
+"Your friend tried to double-cross you," declared Penny. She decided to
+make a shrewd guess. "Tonight, after he robbed the Henley home he came
+here intending to loot the bell tower."
+
+"Why, the dirty sneak!" exclaimed Pete.
+
+"Weren't you here on guard all evening?" Gepper demanded, turning to him.
+
+"Sure, I was. I never set foot outside the building."
+
+"Slippery wasn't here?"
+
+"Haven't seen him since yesterday morning."
+
+"Then the girl is lying!"
+
+"Oh, no, the girl isn't," refuted Penny. "If you care for proof you'll
+find it in the tower."
+
+"Proof?"
+
+"I mean Slippery. He's hiding in the belfry now, hoping you'll not
+discover him there. You see, he scaled the wall by means of this silk
+ladder. I removed the ladder, and I assume he's still up there."
+
+"Why, the low-down skunk!" Pete exclaimed wrathfully. "So he planned to
+rob us! I'll get him!"
+
+Leaving Al to watch Penny, the guard ran to the tower room door and
+unlocked it. Stealthily he crept up the iron stairway which led to the
+belfry.
+
+Suddenly those below heard a cry of rage, followed by the sound of
+scuffling. Al Gepper listened tensely, yet made no move to join the
+fight. He remained standing between Penny and the outside door.
+
+"You were right," he admitted in a stunned voice. "Slippery's up there.
+He meant to get all the swag for himself."
+
+The fight increased in intensity as the two men struggled on the belfry
+steps. Over and over they rolled, first one delivering a hard blow, and
+then the other. Still locked, they finally toppled to the floor, but even
+then Al Gepper remained a bystander.
+
+Penny was less concerned with the fight than with thoughts of escape. She
+had hoped that Al, too, would join the battle. Apparently, he was taking
+no chance of letting her get away.
+
+She considered attempting a sudden break for freedom, but immediately
+abandoned it. The outside door had been locked by Pete. Before she could
+turn the key, Al would be upon her. As for the windows, none were open.
+While they might not be locked, it was out of the question to reach one
+quickly enough.
+
+Penny's gaze roved to the tower room once more, and the struggling men.
+High above their heads she saw something which previously had not drawn
+her attention. It was a loop of rope, hanging from the belfry.
+
+"Why, that must be attached to the old church bell!" thought Penny. "If
+only I could reach it, I might be able to bring help here."
+
+However, the rope dangled high overhead. Even if she were able to reach
+the room leading to the tower, there was nothing upon which she could
+stand to grasp the loop. Obviously the rope had been cut short years
+before to prevent anyone from ringing the bell.
+
+Penny glanced toward Al Gepper. The medium's gaze was upon the two
+struggling men, not her. A golden opportunity presented itself, if only
+she had the wits to make use of it.
+
+Almost at the girl's feet lay the tangle of silken ladder. As she stared
+at it, a sudden idea took possession of her. The iron hooks would serve
+her purpose, but dared she try it? If she failed--and the chances were
+against her--punishment would be certain.
+
+Yet, if she did nothing and merely waited, it was likely that Al Gepper
+and his pals never would be brought to justice. She must take the chance,
+no matter how great the personal risk.
+
+For a moment Penny remained inactive, planning what she must do. If she
+made a single mistake, fumbled at the critical instant, everything would
+be lost. Above all, her aim must be accurate. If she missed the loop--
+
+Slippery and Pete were beginning to tire, their blows becoming futile and
+ineffective. Further delay in executing her plan only increased the
+danger. She must act now or never.
+
+Her mind made up, Penny no longer hesitated. With a quick movement she
+seized the silken ladder and darted to the doorway of the bell tower.
+
+"Hey!" shouted Al Gepper, starting after her.
+
+Penny slammed the door in his face. Taking careful aim, she hurled the
+silken ladder upward. One of the iron hooks caught in the loop of the
+rope. She jerked on it, and to her joy, the bell began to ring.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 24
+ _THE WOODEN BOX_
+
+
+Penny pulled the rope again and again, causing the huge bell to sway back
+and forth violently. It rang many times before Al Gepper succeeded in
+opening the tower room door.
+
+His face was crimson with fury when he seized the girl, hurling her away
+from the rope. With one quick toss he released the hooks of the silken
+ladder, stuffing the soft strands beneath his coat. The bell made a final
+clang and became silent.
+
+Penny retreated against the wall, anticipating severe punishment for her
+act. However, Al and his companions were more concerned with thoughts of
+escape than with her.
+
+"We've got to get out of here," muttered Al. "Come on!"
+
+The two men on the floor had ceased their struggles. Painfully they
+regained their feet. In this sudden emergency they had forgotten their
+differences.
+
+"What shall we do about the box in the tower?" Pete demanded, nursing a
+swollen eye.
+
+"Leave it here," returned Al. "We can't save anything now. The police are
+apt to swoop down on us any minute."
+
+Turning, he fled to the street. Pete and Slippery hesitated, then
+followed. Penny heard a key turn in the lock. Even before she tested the
+door she knew she had been imprisoned in the tower room.
+
+"They've escaped after all," she thought dismally. "But I may have saved
+some of the loot. I'll take a look."
+
+Quickly she climbed the iron stairs to the belfry. From the turret she
+obtained a perfect view of the entire Lane. Al Gepper was running down
+the street, while Pete and Slippery had turned toward the cemetery.
+
+There were no other persons in the vicinity, Penny thought at first
+glance. Then her heart leaped as she saw three men entering the Lane at
+its junction with the main street. They, too, were running.
+
+"They must have heard the bell!" she told herself. "Oh, if only I can
+make them understand what has happened!"
+
+Her best means of attracting attention was by ringing the bell. She
+pushed against it and was rewarded by a deafening clang.
+
+The men stopped short, staring toward the belfry. Penny cupped her hands
+and shouted. Her words did not carry plainly, but the newcomers seemed to
+gain an inkling of what was amiss, for they wheeled and began to pursue
+the two who had taken refuge in the cemetery.
+
+From her high perch, Penny saw Al Gepper nearing the end of the Lane,
+unobserved by all save herself. Tapping the bell again, she called:
+
+"Get him, too! At the end of the street!"
+
+One of the pursuers halted, turning toward the tower. In the moonlight
+Penny saw his face and recognized Jerry Livingston. He was close enough
+now to hear her voice.
+
+"It's Al Gepper!" she shouted. "Don't let him escape!"
+
+The reporter turned, but as he started off in the new direction, both he
+and Penny saw the fleeing man climbing into Leaping Lena. With a grinding
+of gears, he drove away. Jerry stopped, thinking that he never could
+overtake the car.
+
+"Keep after him, Jerry!" encouraged Penny. "The gas tank is almost empty.
+He can't possibly go more than three or four blocks!"
+
+As the reporter again took up the chase, she began tolling the bell once
+more, determined to arouse everyone within a mile of the Temple.
+
+Her energy was rewarded, for in another minute she heard the familiar
+wail of a siren. A police cruiser swerved alongside the tower, stopping
+with a lurch.
+
+"What's the idea of ringing that bell?" demanded an officer, leaping to
+the ground.
+
+Tersely Penny explained the situation. The two policemen took a short-cut
+through a vacant lot, circling the cemetery. Darkness swallowed them, but
+presently there came a muffled command to halt, followed by a revolver
+shot.
+
+So excited was Penny that she nearly tumbled from the bell tower.
+Recovering her balance, she sat on the stone ledge, trying to remain
+calm. Her nerves were jumpy and on edge.
+
+"If only Jerry captures Al Gepper--that's all I ask!" she breathed.
+
+As the minutes elapsed, it occurred to her that she had not yet searched
+for the loot which she believed to be hidden in the belfry. With questing
+fingers she groped beneath the ledge. For a short distance she felt
+nothing. Then she encountered a long wooden box.
+
+Before she could open it, she heard shouts from the direction of the
+cemetery. Four men, two of them police officers, were marching Slippery
+and Pete toward the Temple. As they came nearer she received another
+pleasant surprise. The two who had aided in the capture were her father
+and Salt Sommers, a photographer for the _Star_.
+
+"Dad!" shouted Penny. "Can you get me down from this pigeon roost?"
+
+Mr. Parker, separating from the others, came to the foot of the bell
+tower.
+
+"So it was you who sounded the alarm!" he exclaimed. "I might have known!
+How did you get up there?"
+
+"I'm locked in. Dad, send the police to help Jerry. He's after Al Gepper
+who rode off in my car."
+
+The police cruiser was dispatched, leaving one officer to guard the two
+prisoners. Mr. Parker unlocked the door of the tower room, releasing his
+daughter.
+
+"You're all right?" he asked anxiously.
+
+"Of course. Here's a little present for you." Penny thrust the wooden box
+into his hands.
+
+"What's this?"
+
+"I don't know yet. I found it hidden in the belfry."
+
+"Penny, if you fell into a river you would come up with a chest of gold!"
+exclaimed the publisher admiringly.
+
+"Open it quick, Dad."
+
+Mr. Parker required no urging. The box was locked but he pried off the
+cover hinges, exposing the contents.
+
+"A real treasure!" exclaimed Penny.
+
+The box contained several bracelets, one of them set with rubies and
+diamonds, countless rings, four watches, and several strings of matched
+pearls.
+
+"Stolen loot!" ejaculated the publisher.
+
+"And what a collection!" chuckled Penny as she examined the separate
+pieces. "There's enough plunder here to start a jewelry store."
+
+"Likewise sufficient evidence to put this Celestial Temple gang out of
+circulation for a long, long time," added her father.
+
+"I learned a lot tonight, Dad. Wait until I tell you!"
+
+"A scoop for the _Star_?"
+
+"You'll be able to use your largest, blackest headlines."
+
+Penny began to tell her story, interrupting only when Slippery and Pete
+were brought into the building handcuffed together. Starting again, she
+made her charges, accusing Slippery not only of having committed the
+Henley burglary, but also of having robbed the Kohls and many prominent
+Riverview families.
+
+After inspecting the jewelry found in the wooden box, one of the police
+officers definitely identified several of the pieces as stolen goods. He
+expressed an opinion that the jewelry had been hidden in the belfry
+because it was too "hot" to be disposed of by fences.
+
+"The organization members had an agreement by which all shared in the
+loot," added Penny. "That caused trouble. Al Gepper and Slippery thought
+they were taking most of the risk without sufficient return. So they
+pulled a few extra jobs of their own."
+
+Before she could reveal more, the police car was heard outside the
+Temple. From the window Penny saw that Jerry and the policeman were
+returning with Al Gepper who had been handcuffed.
+
+"They've caught him!" she cried jubilantly.
+
+The prisoner was brought into the Temple to be identified. He had been
+captured when Leaping Lena had stalled for lack of gasoline.
+
+As Gepper was searched, the silken ladder, and various small objects were
+removed from his coat. Penny noticed two tiny rubber suction cups no
+larger than dimes, and immediately made up her mind that later she would
+try to obtain them. She was quite certain she knew their purpose.
+
+Penny told her story and learned, in turn, that after she had telephoned
+Jerry, he had traced her father, and with the police both had hastened to
+the Hodges' cottage. Arriving there, they discovered that Gepper had
+fled. Jerry, Mr. Parker, and Salt Sommers had immediately proceeded to
+the Celestial Temple.
+
+"It was lucky you rang that bell, Penny," chuckled Jerry. "If you hadn't,
+we never would have arrived here in time."
+
+"It was lucky, too, that Mr. Gepper tried to escape in Lena," she
+laughed. "I guess my old rattle-trap has redeemed itself."
+
+One of the officers picked up the silken ladder, examining it with
+critical interest. He agreed that it had undoubtedly been used in many
+mysterious burglaries committed during the past month.
+
+"It's obvious that Slippery approached the houses on the 'blind' side,
+and scaled the wall after hooking his ladder into a window ledge," Penny
+remarked. "I suppose he reasoned that second-story windows nearly always
+are left unlocked. But how did he learn the houses were deserted? By
+telephoning?"
+
+"That would be my opinion," nodded the policeman. "If someone answered,
+he could hang up. Otherwise, he would be fairly sure the house was
+empty."
+
+"One night at the theatre I saw a man who resembled Slippery noting down
+the license number of the Kohl car. But the house was robbed within a few
+hours after that. How could he have obtained the name and address?"
+
+"Easily. There are 'information fences' who supply such data to fellow
+members of the underworld. It is also possible that Slippery previously
+had watched the Kohl house, obtained the car license number, and then
+watched for it later at the theatre."
+
+Jerry already had supplied police with the name of the fence whose
+establishment Slippery had visited earlier in the day. Later, a raid
+staged there brought to light much loot taken from various Riverview
+homes.
+
+However, for the moment, police were most interested in gaining complete
+information which could be used in rounding up all members of the
+Celestial Temple Society who had not fled the city.
+
+Searching Slippery they found, not only jewelry stolen from the Henley
+residence, but a booklet containing many names and telephone numbers.
+
+"Sadie Beardsell," Penny read. "She's one of the members, I am sure."
+
+Lest Mr. and Mrs. Hodges might also be arrested, she explained that the
+old couple had been an innocent dupe of Al Gepper. Turning to the medium
+she said:
+
+"I think I know how you accomplished most of your tricks. Of course, you
+were the one who sent Mrs. Hodges a letter with six dollars. Undoubtedly,
+you had it mailed by an accomplice from New York at exactly the hour you
+specified. Then at that same hour you slipped up to the Hodges' cottage,
+and rapped six times on the bedroom wall."
+
+"You seem to have everything figured out," Al Gepper responded
+sarcastically. "Clever girl!"
+
+"I saw how you made the spirit painting tonight at the seance," resumed
+Penny. "May I ask if that same method was used in regard to Mrs. Weem's
+picture of Cousin David?"
+
+She did not dream that the medium would answer her question. With a shrug
+which implied that the entire matter was very boring, he replied:
+
+"No, the picture was painted with a solution of sulphocyanid of potassium
+and other chemicals, invisible until brought out with a re-agent. During
+the seance, an assistant sprayed the back of the canvas with an atomizer,
+bringing out the colors one by one."
+
+"And how was the paint made to appear wet?"
+
+"Poppy oil."
+
+"One more question, Mr. Gepper. I never could understand how you were
+able to raise the kitchen table at Mrs. Hodges' cottage."
+
+"No?" Al Gepper smiled mockingly. "I assure you I had nothing to do with
+that demonstration. It was a true spirit manifestation."
+
+"I'll never believe that," declared Penny.
+
+"Then figure it out for yourself," replied the medium. "You are such a
+very brilliant child."
+
+Before the prisoners were led to the police car, Salt Sommers set up his
+camera and took a number of flashlight pictures for the _Star_.
+
+"How about it, Mr. Parker?" inquired Jerry eagerly. "Are we putting out
+an extra?"
+
+"We are," said the publisher crisply. "This is the big break I've been
+hoping we would get! We should beat the _Record_ on the story by at least
+a half hour."
+
+The three men hurriedly left the Celestial Temple, with Penny trailing
+behind them. At the main street intersection they finally obtained a
+taxicab.
+
+"To the _Star_ office," Mr. Parker ordered. "An extra dollar if you step
+on it."
+
+"How about my pictures?" Salt Sommers asked, as the cab rocked around a
+corner. "They ought to be dandies."
+
+"Rush them through as soon as we get to the office," Mr. Parker
+instructed. "If they're any good we'll run 'em on page one. Jerry, you
+handle the story--play it for all it's worth."
+
+Jerry glanced at Penny who sat very still between her father and Salt.
+Their eyes met.
+
+"Chief," he said, "there's a sort of fraternity among reporters--an
+unwritten rule that we never chisel on each other's work."
+
+"What's that?" Mr. Parker asked, startled. "I don't get it."
+
+Then his glance fell upon his daughter, and he smiled.
+
+"Oh, so it's that way! You think Penny should write the story?"
+
+"I do, Chief. It's hers from the ground floor up."
+
+"Please, Dad, may I?" Penny pleaded.
+
+The cab rolled up to the _Star_ office, stopping with a jerk. Mr. Parker
+swung open the door, helping her alight.
+
+"The story is yours, Penny," he said. "That is, if you can crack it out
+fast enough to make the extra."
+
+"I'll do it or die in the attempt."
+
+"Keep to the facts and write terse, simple English--" Mr. Parker began,
+but Penny did not wait to hear his instructions.
+
+With a triumphant laugh, she ran ahead into the _Star_ office. Her entry
+into the newsroom was both dramatic and noisy.
+
+"Big scoop, Mr. DeWitt," she called cheerily. "Start the old print
+factory running full blast!"
+
+Dropping into a chair behind the nearest typewriter, she began to write.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+ 25
+ _EXTRA!_
+
+
+Penny stood at the window of her father's office, listening to the
+newsboys crying their wares on the street.
+
+"_Extra! Extra! Read all about it! Police Capture Three in Raid on
+Celestial Temple! Extra! Extra!_"
+
+Mr. Parker rocked back in his swivel chair, smiling at his daughter.
+
+"Your story was first-class, Penny," he said. "Thanks to you we scooped
+the _Record_. Tired?"
+
+"I do feel rather washed out," Penny admitted. "Writing at high speed
+with a deadline jabbing you in the back is worse than facing a gang of
+crooks. But it was exciting."
+
+"You turned in a good story," her father praised again. "In fact, you may
+as well take credit for breaking up that outfit of fake spiritualists."
+
+"So far the police have only captured Al Gepper, Slippery and Pete.
+There's not much evidence against the others."
+
+"True, but rest assured those who aren't rounded up will leave Riverview.
+The backbone of the organization has been smashed."
+
+Penny sank wearily into a chair, picking up a copy of the _Star_ which
+lay on her father's desk. Two-inch, black headlines proclaimed the
+capture, and opening from the banner was her own story tagged with a
+credit line: _by Penelope Parker_. Salt Sommer's photographs had made the
+front page, too, and there was a brief contribution by Jerry telling of
+Al Gepper's attempted flight in Leaping Lena.
+
+"Dad, you must admit that it was a stroke of genius when I bought back
+that old car," remarked Penny. "Why, if it hadn't been for Lena, Al
+Gepper surely would have escaped."
+
+"That and the fact you always run your cars on an empty tank," responded
+Mr. Parker. "I suppose you foresaw the future when you made your
+brilliant purchase?"
+
+"Not exactly. It was just a feeling I had--the same sort of hunch which
+came to me when I found the silken ladder at Kano's Curio Shop. If I
+depended upon a mere brain to solve mysteries, why I'd be no better than
+the police."
+
+"Your modesty overwhelms me," chuckled her father. "I'm thankful my other
+reporters aren't guided by their instincts. Otherwise I might have a
+scoop a day."
+
+"There's one thing which annoys me," Penny said, frowning.
+
+"And what is that?"
+
+"Two of Al Gepper's tricks haven't been explained. How was he able to
+raise a table and read a message in a sealed envelope?"
+
+"I was talking to the Chief of Police about that letter trick only this
+morning, Penny. Magicians often employ it. Wasn't the message written on
+a pad of paper before it was placed in the envelope?"
+
+"Yes, it was."
+
+"Then very likely Gepper read the message from the pad. He could have
+placed carbon paper beneath the second or third sheets. Possibly he
+resorted to a thin covering of paraffin wax which would be less
+noticeable."
+
+"Now that I recall it, he did glance at the pad! How would you guess he
+lifted the table?"
+
+"Were his hands held high above it, Penny?"
+
+"Only an inch or two. However, he never touched the table. I was able to
+see that."
+
+"Could he have used sharp, steel pins held between his fingers?"
+
+"I doubt it. But I think I know what he may have used! Did you notice two
+small suction cups which were taken from his pockets by the police?"
+
+"Well, no, I didn't, Penny."
+
+"The longer I mull over it, the more I'm convinced he used them to raise
+the table. They could be held between the fingers and wouldn't be
+observed in a darkened room. Dad, if I can get those rubber cups from the
+police, I'll have some fun!"
+
+The telephone rang. It was Mrs. Weems calling to ask if Penny were safe.
+Mr. Parker replied in the affirmative and handed the receiver to his
+daughter.
+
+"Penny, I just read your story in the paper," the housekeeper scolded.
+"You never should have pitted yourself against those dangerous men! I
+declare, you need someone to watch you every minute."
+
+"I need you," said Penny. "And so does Dad. Why not promise to stay with
+us instead of going away on a trip?"
+
+"Of course, I'll remain," came Mrs. Weems' surprising answer. "I made up
+my mind to that two days ago. You and your father never could take care
+of yourselves."
+
+"What will you do with your inheritance, Mrs. Weems?"
+
+"I hope your father will invest it for me," replied the housekeeper
+meekly. "One thing I know. No medium will tell me what to do with it."
+
+The hour was late. Penny felt relieved when her father locked his desk in
+preparation for leaving the office.
+
+They walked through the newsroom, down the stairway to the street. A
+middle-aged man in a brown suit and derby hat alighted from a taxi,
+pausing as he saw them.
+
+"Mr. Parker!" he called. "May I speak with you?"
+
+The publisher turned, recognizing him. "Mr. Henley!" he exclaimed.
+
+"I have just come from the police station," the advertiser said in an
+agitated voice. "I was told that your daughter is responsible for the
+capture of the men who robbed our home tonight."
+
+"Yes, Penny managed to have a rather busy evening," smiled Mr. Parker. "I
+hope you suffered no loss."
+
+"Everything was recovered, thanks to your daughter. Miss Parker, I
+realize I never can properly express my appreciation."
+
+"I was sorry I couldn't prevent the burglary," replied Penny stiffly. "As
+it turned out, the capture of the crooks was mostly due to luck."
+
+"You are too modest," protested Mr. Henley. "I've talked with the police,
+you know. I am truly grateful."
+
+The man hesitated, evidently wishing to say more, yet scarcely knowing
+how to shape his words. Penny and her father started to move away.
+
+"Oh, about that contract we were discussing today," the advertiser said
+quickly.
+
+"Yes?" Mr. Parker paused.
+
+"I've been thinking it over. I acted too hastily in deciding to cancel."
+
+"Mr. Henley, please do not feel that you are under obligation," said the
+publisher quietly. "Even though Penny accidentally did you a favor--"
+
+"It's not that," Mr. Henley interrupted. "The _Star_ is a good paper."
+
+"The best in Riverview," said Penny softly.
+
+"Yes, it is!" Mr. Henley declared with sudden emphasis. "I tell you,
+Parker, I was irritated because of a trivial mistake in my firm's copy.
+I've cooled off now. Suppose we talk over the matter tomorrow at lunch."
+
+"Very well," agreed Mr. Parker. "The Commodore Hotel at one."
+
+Bowing to Penny, Mr. Henley retreated into a waiting taxi and drove away.
+
+"How do you like that, Dad?" Penny inquired after a moment's silence.
+
+"I like it," answered Mr. Parker. "The _Star_ could have limped along
+without Mr. Henley. But the going would have been tough."
+
+"He'll renew the old contract?"
+
+"Oh, yes, and probably give us a better one. Stealing Mr. Henley's words,
+I am truly grateful."
+
+Penny gazed at her father with twinkling eyes.
+
+"Are those idle words, Dad? Or are you willing to back them in a material
+way?"
+
+"I might," grinned Mr. Parker. "Present your bill."
+
+"Well, Dad, I've discovered to my sorrow that I can't support two cars on
+my present allowance. I need a generous raise."
+
+"You could get rid of Lena."
+
+"Why, Dad! After her noble work tonight!"
+
+"No, I suppose not," sighed Mr. Parker. "You've earned an increase, and I
+may as well grant it."
+
+"Retroactive to the time I started working on the story," added Penny. "I
+figure if you pay back allowance, I'll be solvent once more!"
+
+"You drive a hard bargain," chuckled the publisher. "But I'll agree."
+
+Arm in arm, they started on down the street. Rounding a corner of the
+_Star_ building they abruptly paused before the plate-glass window to
+watch a long, unbroken sheet of white paper feed through the thundering
+press. Freshly inked newspapers, cut and folded, slid out one upon the
+other to be borne away for distribution.
+
+"It's modern magic, isn't it, Dad?" Penny said reflectively as the great
+machine pounded in steady rhythm.
+
+"Yes, Penny," her father agreed. "And for this edition, at least, you
+were the master magician!"
+
+ 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 Clue of the Silken Ladder, by Mildred A. Wirt
+
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