Part 23 (1/2)
”Maybe so,” Mr. b.u.t.terworth grinned. ”My lips, they are sealed.”
”Sealed?”
”I promise Mrs. Marborough I tell nothing of what I see in the house.”
”Then there is something mysterious going on there!” Penny exclaimed.
”Tell me, why did you go to the house?”
”Mrs. Marborough sent for me.”
”But why?” Penny demanded, exasperated because she could learn nothing of importance. ”Did Mrs. Marborough sell you something?”
”Maybe so, maybe not,” the second-hand man answered, climbing into his overloaded car. ”You ask her.”
Penny watched him drive away, and then returned to her own doorstep. She was listlessly throwing acorns at a squirrel when Louise Sidell came down the street, dressed in her Sunday best.
”What's the matter, Penny?” she inquired, roving over to the porch. ”How do you feel this morning?”
”Lower than the center of the earth. I've lost my reputation with Dad, my allowance, and my initiative. If I had a nickel I'd go drown myself in a c.o.ke!”
”What you need is a nice adventure,” Louise said mischievously. ”How about a trip out to Mrs. Marborough's tomorrow night?”
”I've had enough of wells!”
”Penny, you don't mean it!” Louise grinned. ”After discovering those loose bricks, you'll just forget about them?”
”Why not?” Penny demanded wildly. ”Dad won't let me leave the house at night any more without a six thousand page report on where I am going. If I so much as mention Mrs. Marborough's well, he'll clap on a double punishment.”
”You can manage it somehow,” Louise declared with confidence. ”I'll meet you tomorrow night about eight-thirty.”
”Maybe,” Penny said gloomily.
Throughout the day she tried to win favor with both Mrs. Weems and her father by doing small things to please them. When the housekeeper came home from church, dinner awaited her. Penny insisted upon doing the dishes. She straightened the kitchen, she brought her father his bedroom slippers, and refrained from turning on the radio while he was reading.
The schedule was a trying one for her, but she kept it up faithfully all day Sunday and until after dinner on Monday. Then came the denouement upon which she pinned her hopes.
”Dad,” she said demurely, leaning on the chair arm and stroking his hair, ”with your kind permission I should like to absent myself from the house for a few minutes.”
”Where do you plan to go?” he asked, trying to act stern.
Penny was prepared for the question. From her pocket she whisked a lengthy typewritten paper, handsomely decorated with a diagram.
”What's this?” Mr. Parker asked, his lips twitching slightly.
”Merely a report on my proposed movements for the next hour. At eight-thirty I hope to be at Louise's house. Eight thirty-four should find me on Adams Street, moving southward. At eight thirty-eight I pa.s.s Gulbert Park--”
”Never mind,” Mr. Parker interrupted. ”I see by this lengthy doc.u.ment that your ultimate destination is Mrs. Marborough's estate. Isn't it rather late to pay a social call?”
”Eight-thirty?”
”What does this X on the map represent?” the publisher asked, his interest s.h.i.+fting.
”Oh that?” smiled Penny. ”Merely one of the fixtures in Mrs. Marborough's yard. Louise and I think treasure may be hidden there.”