Part 22 (1/2)
”Now do you see what that means?” asked the girl. ”He is trying to make me feel that it would be better to produce Wren than to keep her away from the lawyers, because it looks 'odd.' Well, I'll take my chances on the odds,” she said with a laugh; ”and Wren Salvey will be 'produced' when I am sure that the motor girls' strange promise will be kept. We have those smart men just where we want them now, and if they want Wren they must give us that table.”
”You think they know where the table is?” asked Hazel.
”I am not so sure of that,” responded Clip, putting away the paper and preparing to place upon the center table some of the contents of her satchel. ”But I do know that this man, Reed, is Mrs. Salvey's second cousin. She told me he was always interfering between Wren and the popular grandfather. Now, if the table contained the will, as Wren declares, and if that same table was sold at auction, by this man, Reed, or through his management, it seems more than likely that he could trace it.”
”But if he could find it, why would he not do so, and destroy the doc.u.ment?” asked Paul.
”Bright boy!” declared the girl. ”That only goes to show, Hazel, that when a girl gets a thought she stops. When a boy gets one he looks for another. I think now that perhaps the old table is safe in some unthought-of place, and that perhaps--”
”That is why they wanted to get the promise book, to find if any clue to its whereabouts might be within its pages,” put in Hazel. ”Well, I know that Cora Kimball will find that table if it is in any house around here. She vowed when she started out she would either bring back the table or acknowledge herself beaten. The latter possibility is actually beyond serious attention.”
”Whew!” Paul almost whistled. ”But our little sister is progressing.
Talk about professions, Clip. I rather fancy there will be more than one to report at the final meeting of the Motor Girls' Club.”
CHAPTER XX
AT THE MAHOGANY SHOP
It was Duncan Bennet who suggested the auto meet. The town of Breakwater had never gone beyond the annual dog show, and this progressive young man confided to his cousin Daisy that on a certain day next week he expected several of his friends from out of town, who were sure to come in autos, and:
”Why not tell them to 'slick up' their machines, and you girls could do the same? Then, oh, then!” he exclaimed, ”we could run a real up-to-date auto meet. I can round up fifteen machines at least. And the girls! Why, the fame of the motor girls will then be a.s.sured. You will actually have to appoint a press agent.”
The cousins were strolling through the splendid gardens of Bennet Blade, as Duncan called the long, narrow strip of family property that, for years, had been famous for its splendid gardens, not flower beds, but patches of things to eat.
”I think it would be perfectly splendid,” declared Daisy, her eyes full of admiration for her good-looking cousin. ”And I know the girls will like it.”
That settled it. Duncan Bennet went straight to his room, scribbled off a number of notes, threw himself astride his horse Mercury (called Ivy for short), and was on his way to the post-office before Daisy had time to stop the exclamation gaps in the girls' faces with the correct answers to their varied questions.
Some days lay between the proposition and the fete, and this time was to be spent on the road, as the girls had yet some miles to cover before they would turn back toward Chelton.
There was a visit to be made at a ruins in Clayton; this was an underlined note of Ray's on the itinerary. Then Maud wanted so much to see a real watering place in full swing. This was put down as Ebbinflow, and would take up at least an entire afternoon. Tillie had a craze for antiques, and there was a noted shop only twenty miles from Breakwater. So when Cora facetiously suggested that the party start out from a given point, go their separate ways and get back to Chelton for the auto meet, the girls realized that they would have to ”boil down their plans” to fit the time allotted for the tour.
The trip to the Clayton ruins occupied a whole day. The girls started early and took their lunch, which Bess said would be eaten in a crumbling, moss-covered and ivy-entwined tower. The ruins fully came up to expectations, and the girls, leaving their machines at the roadside, began their explorations.
”Isn't it just perfect!” exclaimed Ray. ”I wish I had my sketch book along.”
”She wants to outdo Was.h.i.+ngton Irving,” called Cora, poising on a tottering stone.
”Look out!” suddenly called Bess. ”That stone, Cora--”
A scream from Cora interrupted her, for the stone began to roll over, and Cora only saved herself by a little jump, while the piece of masonry toppled down upon a pile of bricks and mortar.
”My! That was a narrow escape!” gasped Maud. ”You might have sprained your ankle.”
”Which would have been all the more romantic,” added Cora, smiling faintly. ”It would have been material for Ray's sketchbook.”
”Never, Cora!” cried Ray. ”But come on. Let's go to some less dangerous part of this ruin. You know they say this was once a church, but was made into a sort of castle by an eccentric individual--”
”Who did dark and b.l.o.o.d.y deeds and whose spirit now haunts the place,”