Riddle of the Storm

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Riddle of the Storm Page 11

by Roy J. Snell


  CHAPTER XI THE CLUE

  The room Curlie Carson occupied while he stayed at the Prince George atEdmonton was on the second floor. It was reached by a very narrowelevator. There were probably stairways leading up. Curlie had nevertaken the trouble to look into that.

  On this particular night, after he had tried in vain to study out themysterious message, he retired early. He fell asleep the moment his headstruck his pillow.

  Since it was one of those silent nights of intense cold, he left hiswindow open only a crack.

  Late in the night he awoke with a feeling that a sudden draft of air hadblown across his face.

  "Wind's coming up." He shuddered with cold as he crept from his bed withthe intention of shutting the window. Still not fully awake, he foundhimself bewildered by the facts that presented themselves to his mind.The wind had not risen. There was no draft. Yet the room was icy cold.

  "As if the window had been wide open," he thought.

  Throwing up the shade, he looked out. At the back of the hotel was anarrow court and an alley. Down that alley a man was walking. He was talland seemed rather gaunt.

  "Probably some watchman been in for coffee," he told himself.

  Just then the man turned his head. He looked back and up. Then it seemedto the boy that he resisted with difficulty an impulse to bolt down thealley.

  "Been into something," Curlie decided. "None of my business, though."

  Having drawn the shade once more, he turned about and would have beenunder the covers in another ten seconds had not his bare foot come intocontact with something soft and furry.

  A surprised downward glance revealed a large mitten lying close to thewindow.

  "That," he whispered excitedly, "is not my mitten. No one's been here butJerry. It's not his either. How--"

  He broke off. Fully awake now, he was beginning to put facts together. Hehad awakened with a sense of cold. The room was frigid; yet the windowwas open only a crack. No gale was blowing. And now here was a mittenbelonging to no one he knew. And it lay by the window.

  "Some one has been in this room," he told himself. "He lost his mitten.I've been robbed!" A thrill shot up his spine. "But in Edmonton of allplaces! The police are speedy and successful in their work. If I've beenrobbed I'll--"

  Once more he broke off. He had not been robbed; at least his mostvaluable possessions, his purse and his watch, had not been taken.

  "The mystery deepens." He searched his mind for some motive and found itat once.

  "The paper, the copy of that message taken from the pigeon!" he exclaimedbreathlessly.

  He thrust nervous fingers into his inner coat pocket.

  "Right at last. It _is_ gone!

  "And now," he thought, sitting down upon his bed, "what's next?

  "I might call the office and tell them what has happened. They would callthe police. There would be an investigation. The police would askquestions. I had been robbed? What of? A paper? What paper? A message?What message? How did you come by it? How indeed? And how much right hadI to copy a message taken from a carrier pigeon?"

  To this last question he could form no adequate answer.

  At once his mind was in a whirl. He was from the United States. Havingread all his life of the efficiency of the Mounted Police (and to a boyall Canadian officers are "Mounties"), he held those officers in greatawe.

  "I'll not notify the office." He crept back into bed. "I'll handle thisaffair myself."

  Holding the mitten up before him, he examined it closely. It was a largemitten made of long-haired fur. The fur was on the outside. It was gray.First impressions made him believe it was wolf's fur. A more carefulexamination caused him to doubt it. "Some foreign fur, perhaps," heconcluded.

  "This mitten," he told himself, "is a clue. Find the other mitten in someone's pocket. That's the man.

  "This mitten," he began enlarging on the idea, "this mitten is fromSiberia. The man is a Russian. For some reason, not known to us, he andhis friends of the flying 'Gray Streak' have entered this land bycrossing Bering Straits and Alaska. They have treasure. They arenegotiating some secret treaty. They--there's no knowing their mission.But this is the man to find.

  "All of which," he told himself soberly a moment later, "is probablyentirely wrong. But who flies the 'Gray Streak'? Who sent that message?Who stole my copy? These are questions I mean to answer if I can."

  At that he fell asleep.

  Next morning, somewhat to his surprise, he found the gray mitten stilllying by his bed. And the mysterious message was still missing.

 

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