The Mystery of the Missing Heiress

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The Mystery of the Missing Heiress Page 10

by Campbell, Julie


  For a split second, she froze; then she darted toward the house.

  Immediately Bob-Whites, running from every direction, converged on the patio.

  Trixie was the first to reach Bobby.

  “I dropped my sack with my treasures,” he howled. “And I broked my egg!” He held up a dripping paper bag. “It’s awful sticky.”

  Reddy growled low in his throat.

  “What happened to make you call for Trixie?” his father asked.

  “It was that man... that man in a car...

  “I heard a car stop down the road,” Trixie said. “What did the man do?” she asked Bobby.

  “He had a growly voice,” Bobby said. “Worse than Reddy’s, ’n he said... he said—”

  “Yes. Go on!” his father prodded.

  “He said did I know where Mrs. Vanderpoel lived,” Bobby whimpered.

  “Is that all, for pete’s sake?” Mart asked.

  “Did you tell the man where she lived?” Mrs. Belden asked. “Brian, you and Jim go and see if the car is still there. It does seem to me a simple question to ask.”

  “What did I say about the Belden family making a big production over nothing?” Mart asked when the other boys came back and reported no car on Glen Road.

  “It’s not... exactly... nothing,” Trixie said thoughtfully. “It’s a little odd.”

  “What’s odd about a man asking a simple direction?” Mart asked.

  “Just this,” Trixie answered. “All the lights were on at our house. If he really wanted to know where Mrs. Vanderpoel lived, why didn’t he stop here and ask?”

  “Maybe that’s just the reason. Maybe he thought it was a party,” Mart said. “Maybe he didn’t want to get out of his car when a dog growled at him. Maybe half a dozen things. One sure thing, there was nothing mysterious about it, Trixie. The treasure hunt is all shot now. I vote we give the transistor radio to Janie.”

  “To remember the treasure hunt that didn’t click.” Honey giggled. “I’d like her to have it, anyway.”

  “Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!” the Bob-Whites agreed. Miss Trask placed the radio in Janie’s lap. Janie, protesting but delighted, examined the little set enthusiastically.

  “How about getting your guitar, Mart?” Diana begged. “We can have a hootenanny all our own. Didn’t you say Janie taught you an English ballad? Will you sing it for us, Janie? Is everyone here?” Trixie gazed around the picnic table, where they had all gathered. “Where’s Juliana?”

  “She went through the apple orchard, where I told her,” Bobby said. “I thought she could get the apple core there. There she comes now.”

  “Why all the excitement?” Jim’s cousin asked, dropping down on the bench near him. “All I found was an apple. Maybe Bobby will eat it down to the core for me.”

  “Didn’t you hear him yelling?” Mart asked, and handed his guitar to Janie. “He broke up the treasure hunt.”

  “It was someone asking the way to Mrs. Vanderpoel’s house. It was nothing. Bobby got a little excited,” Brian said.

  “All that fuss about someone asking a direction?” Juliana asked. “It doesn’t take much to upset Bobby.”

  “Do sing your song, Janie. Mart said it was a lovely ballad,” Trixie urged. She thought, If you knew it was “all that fuss,” you must have heard it. Did you hear it and pretend you didn’t? If so, why? It’s odd, no matter what Mart says.

  Janie twanged a few chords and in a low voice sang plaintively:

  “In Camelot, where Arthur died,

  The mist hangs low and cold.

  In fading light, Round Table Knights

  Are ghosts, who once were bold.

  For nothing’s left of that dear age

  Of grace and chivalry,

  Save wild wind racing through the crags

  In mournful threnody.

  Alas!

  The wild wind races through the crags

  In mournful threnody.”

  “Ugh! That’s not only sad; it’s grisly, too,” Juliana said, shuddering.

  “Most English ballads are sad. They run to minor chords. They’re neat!” Mart said.

  “Maybe English ballads have to be sad,” Juliana insisted, “but for a ‘cheer-up’ party....”

  “She has a point there,” Jim agreed. “Mart, how about that Catskill song we sang on the towboat on the Mississippi?”

  “Okay, if you’ll all sing along.” Mart ran through a verse of chords, then sang out lustily:

  “We’ll sing you a song of the Catskills, oh,

  A song of the mountain men, oh.

  “Rip Van Winkle, on a stormy night,

  Left his wife and went up to the height

  Of the Catskill range, where Hudson’s men

  Played ninepins merrily, but when

  They gave him a drink, he drank so deep

  It sent him into a twenty-year sleep.

  “We’ll sing you a song of the Catskills, oh,

  A song of the mountain men, oh.

  “When Rip awakened, he yawned and said, ‘Twenty years?’ then rubbed his head,

  Took up his stick and called his dog,

  Set off for town in the morning fog,

  Singing:

  “ “Now, many a man’s been twenty years wed, And many a man’s been twenty years dead,

  I’ll take the second, you take the first,

  Of all man’s troubles, a wife’s the worst.’

  “We’ve sung you a song of the Catskills, oh,

  A song of the mountain men, oh.”

  “All together, now,” Brian said, clapping and laughing, “another chorus!”

  “We’ve sung you a song of the Catskills, oh,

  A song of the mountain men, oh.”

  Trixie, swinging her arms in rhythm, noticed suddenly that Janie wasn’t singing with them, not even humming the tune. A strange expression had crept over her face.

  “Play it again, please!” Janie begged Mart when the singing had stopped. “It almost seemed... it was when I was in college....”

  Juliana jumped to her feet. “It’s all too utterly morbid! Gruesome! I’m going home. I had no idea of the time. Cousin Jim, will you take me to Mrs. Vanderpoel’s house?”

  She’s done it again, Trixie thought. She’s broken the spell. Why does she always interrupt when Janie is about to remember? Does she do it on purpose? That’s too fantastic! But—

  Jim left with Juliana.

  Mart put some dance records on the player.

  “Dibs on dancing with Janie!” Brian shouted and swung her out into the center of the patio.

  Soon Mart and Diana and Trixie and Dan followed, arms and legs flying, shouting to the beat and melody as the disk whirled. Reddy, yipping joyfully, ran in and out among the dancers, Bobby in close pursuit.

  The frenzy and tempo increased as record followed record.

  Where can Jim be? Trixie thought. What’s keeping him so long?

  As though in answer to her question, the lights of the station wagon shone across the patio.

  Jim came running across the lawn, and the dancing stopped.

  “A car was parked at Mrs. Vanderpoels when I got there,” he burst out. “A green Buick.”

  “That was the growly man who told me where did Mrs. Vanderpoel live,” Bobby said.

  “Who was it?” Trixie asked.

  “You can search me. I was going to walk to the house with Juliana, but she closed the car door before I could get out and told me not to bother. I watched through the window. All I could see was a man sitting in the car. I couldn’t tell who he was—probably wouldn’t know, anyway. Then—get this—Juliana didn’t go into Mrs. Vanderpoel’s house at all. She got in that car! She drove off with that guy. The whole thing seemed kooky to me.”

  “Aha!” Mart said, twirling an imaginary moustache. “So you are seeing mysteries, too!”

  Jim didn’t answer Mart. “All I can say,” he said, “is that I wish Spider Webster still lived at Mrs. Vanderpoels house. He’d know if
something funny was going on.”

  “Yeah,” Brian said, “Sergeant Molinson wasn’t thinking straight when he let Spider leave the Sleepyside police force... even if he would have had to raise his salary.”

  “He was a friend to the Bob-Whites, all right, when we were in the jam with the thieves who tried to steal our antiques at the show.” Trixie sighed. “We could use him now.”

  “You can say that again,” Dan agreed. “He didn’t think we were imagining things, especially Trixie and Honey, the way Sergeant Molinson does.” ‘“Yeah,” Jim said. “You’d think he’d learn sometime, wouldn’t you? The number of times Trixie has solved his cases for him!”

  The Warning Signs are Gone! • 12

  MOMS, where’s Janie?”

  Trixie, in her Candy Striper uniform, came racing down the stairs.

  Mrs. Belden put a sheet of cookies in the oven, closed the door, and answered, “I do wish you wouldn’t run everyplace, Trixie. Can’t you ever walk down the stairs?”

  “I'll try. But where’s Janie? Look at the time... almost one o’clock. Jim and Honey will stop by for me in a minute. He’s taking us to the hospital today, because the brake on Honey’s bike has to be fixed. Where is Janie, Moms?”

  “I don’t ask Janie to register in and out, dear. I imagine she’s in the garden. Or have you looked in her room?”

  T just called down the hall. Didn’t you hear me? We’ll be late at the hospital if she doesn’t show up. If we’re late we’ll get demerits and spoil everything. She’s supposed to be here.”

  “Why is Janie supposed to be here now?”

  “She wanted to go to the hospital with us, to visit with the nurses and maybe Dr. Gregory. It was the last thing she said last night. I haven’t even seen her since breakfast, have you?”

  “Yes... let me think... she wanted to help me with the baking, and I told her I had almost finished, and then—dear me, Trixie, I don’t remember what she said then. I think she said she was going to take a walk. She spends a lot of time in the woods. Just be a little patient; she’ll be here.”

  “She’d better hurry. Jim and Honey are stopping the station wagon out there right now. She’s forgotten, that’s what. She’s forgotten all about it. Oh, well, she’ll have to go with us another day. Bye, Moms.” At the door Trixie met Honey coming in. “Why, Honey, what’s the matter?”

  Honey threw herself down on a chair in the kitchen.

  “Jim has me worried, and I’d like to hear what your mom thinks about it. He says he shouldn’t have left Juliana last night till he was sure she was safe in the house. He didn’t like that business of that green Buick out in front of Mrs. Vanderpoel’s house. He didn’t like it at all. He says he should have found out who it was.”

  “Oh, Juliana probably had a date with someone. She’s over twenty-one. Why was he so bothered? What did he do about it?” said Mrs. Belden.

  “This morning he went over to Mrs. Vanderpoel’s. He wanted to make sure Juliana was all right. She is his cousin, after all. And she doesn’t have any friends in Sleepyside—at least, we didn’t think she had.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Just this: Juliana wasn’t home, and it wasn’t even nine o’clock in the morning. Mrs. Vanderpoel said she had gone out, that someone had called her and she left.”

  “Was it a man or a woman?”

  “That’s what Jim asked, and Mrs. Vanderpoel said she didn’t know, because Juliana answered the telephone. I don’t think we need to worry about any lack of friends for Juliana. Mrs. Vanderpoel said she always gets to the telephone first to answer it and that ninety-nine percent of the calls are for her.”

  Trixie nodded her head. “Of course, she is awfully attractive, and she did live for a long time in the Bronx. She probably knows a lot of people there. It isn’t so far away.”

  “That isn’t all,” Honey went on. “Mrs. Vanderpoel told Jim our party must have lasted pretty late last night, because Juliana still hadn’t come home at one o’clock in the morning.”

  “Well, see? She went someplace with that man in the green Buick,” Trixie said.

  “I think I may have to remind you, Honey, of the same thing I spoke to Trixie about,” Mrs. Belden said. “She’s been worried because Janie isn’t here to go to the hospital with you, and Jim is concerned about Juliana’s actions. Both of these girls are over twenty-one, and I don’t imagine they want anyone to monitor their movements. In a way, I think it s rather funny.”

  “What’s funny?” Jim asked from the doorway. “I didn’t know you were going to make a visit here, Honey. It’s time we were moving. Say, what’s so funny, Mrs. Belden?”

  “The fact that ever since each one of you has passed from twelve to teen, Brian and Mart, too, your greatest obsession has been: ‘Don’t keep track of me every minute. I can take care of myself.’ Now look at you. Juliana is somewhere going about her business, and Janie probably forgot it was Candy Striper day and went off into the woods. Sometimes she takes a sandwich and stays for hours. She loves the woods as much as we do, who were born right here.

  “Just go ahead to the hospital, girls. From what Trixie said, too, Jim, Juliana left in a huff last night and probably wants to be left alone. I’m sure she’s anxious for some word from Holland, so she can finish her business here and be off to join her friends.”

  “Okay, I guess you’re right,” Jim said sheepishly. “We aren’t too consistent, are we? If you were in a thing about Trixie not showing up someplace, we’d think you were the prize worrywart. Okay, come on, kids.”

  It was after five o’clock when the girls came back from the hospital. They found Mrs. Belden really disturbed.

  “Janie hasn’t shown up yet,” she said. “I should have paid more attention to your concern about her when she wasn’t here to go to the hospital with you, Trixie.”

  “Was Bobby with her? She always takes him.”

  “Bobby wasn’t with her.” Mrs. Beldens strained voice showed her anxiety. “He’s spending the day with Terry and Larry Lynch.”

  At the sound of Bobby’s name, Reddy barked sharply, startling Trixie. “Then he isn’t with her, either.” Trixie put her hand on the setter’s red head. “Jim?” she said, looking expectantly at Honey’s brother.

  “Where are Brian and Mart?” he asked abruptly.

  “I sent them off to the woods to look for Janie. I couldn’t wait any longer. They just left. They haven’t been gone long, and if you want to catch them, Jim, I think you can.”

  ‘TU go, too,” Trixie said quickly. “I’ll get a flashlight.”

  “Me, too,” Honey added. “There are other flashlights in the station wagon. I’ll get them.”

  “Hurry,” Mrs. Belden said. “If you’re going, go now and at least catch up with Jim. It’s better if you are with one of the boys.”

  “Keep Reddy here, please, Moms,” Trixie called back to her mother. “We’d only have to spend half our time rounding him up.”

  Near Mr. Maypenny’s house, the trio caught up with Brian and Mart. They were talking with Dan.

  “I know the place she most always goes,” Dan told them. “There’s a stump there, and the grass is all tramped down. I’ve seen Janie sitting there reading a book. Follow me.”

  They set off on the well-worn trail, but when they reached the stump, there was no Janie.

  A paperback book of Robert Frost’s poems was there, though, opened and turned facedown. Janie’s wristwatch was there, too, turned faceup.

  “Honey,” said Trixie shakily, “Janie had been watching the time! She had intended to be back to go to the hospital with us!” One of the poems was marked. As Trixie read the last line, “And miles to go before I sleep,” fear tightened its fingers around her heart.

  Just past the place where Janie had rested, the trail narrowed and circled, leading to the top, high above the river. Shafts of pinkish light from the lowering sun outlined the tall, rough trunks of rugged pines. Their rustling green needles in the eerie quiet se
nt chills up Trixie’s spine.

  Nobody spoke a word. Dan led the way, and Brian, Mart, Trixie, Honey, and Jim followed.

  From time to time one of them broke the silence to call out sharply, “Janie! Janie! Janie!”

  “She may have lost her way,” Dan said, whispering as one does when fearful and worried. “You go that way, Mart, you and Brian and Honey. Hunt for her back farther in the woods. Keep calling! We’ll go this way, Jim and Trixie and I. Farther along, the two paths come together.”

  “Aren’t they liable to get lost themselves?” Trixie asked as they separated.

  “They can’t,” Dan said. “They’ll see the signs.” The signs! At a sudden realization, Trixie’s heart almost stopped beating. There aren’t any signs anywhere!

  Dan and Jim had spurted ahead.

  “Dan!” Trixie screamed. “Jim!” The boys stopped. “The warning signs! They aren’t here!” Trixie cried. “Janie couldn’t have seen them. She wouldn’t have known that the ground breaks away at the edge of the cliff. And you won’t be any good to anyone if you go diving over the cliff.”

  “She’s right,” Dan said. “Beyond here that layer of earth is so thin that we’d just go down, head over heels.”

  “But we have to look over that edge somehow,” Jim insisted. “Janie may be down there and hurt.”

  “Have you found her?” Mart called, bursting through the undergrowth where the two paths came together.

  “What’s the matter with everyone?” Honey, following Mart, asked in a shaking voice.

  “The signs have been taken away,” Trixie groaned. “Janie didn’t know. She didn’t know!”

  “The first thing to do,” Dan said quietly, “is to climb down the trail here—the one we use to go to the marsh. Trixie, you and Honey stay here and keep calling.”

 

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