“Your memory is better on the ground than in the air!”
“Pish! likewise, tush! You don’t intend to wait till I finish training or anything like that, before coming across with that clue that will help us land those birds in jail?”
“Why should I?”
“I don’t know. Thought maybe you might figure my interest in landing the gang would take my mind off flying—”
Bill took a long, refreshing drink of the iced liquid at his elbow. “You’re on the wrong track. I’m simply biding my time and keeping a finger on the pulse of the robbery, as it were.”
“Do you mean that?”
“I’m in deadly earnest,” he assured her, although his eyes twinkled mischievously.
“Then all I can say,” exclaimed Dorothy, “is that you’re one up on everybody else who is working on the case.”
“How come?”
“Why? you know as well as I do that when the Packard rolled out of the alley by the bank, in all probability carrying three people and the loot, it disappeared completely. And it’s stayed that way ever since, hasn’t it? That’s two weeks ago tonight.”
“Any new clues lately?”
“Nary a one. The police traced the red-headed girl’s finger prints to Sarah Martinelli, better known as Staten Island Sadie. They sent Dad her record—I saw it—believe me, that lady is a ripe egg!”
“How beautifully expressive.”
Dorothy raised her eyes from her compact’s tiny mirror.
“Well, she must be!—Are you trying to kid me?”
Bill finished his ginger ale. “Come on, tell me the rest.”
Dorothy grinned. “That’s all there is, there isn’t any more, my child. Don’t imagine those police are efficient, do you? None of the missing bonds have been found, and as for the money, those chaps have probably spent it by this time. I feel awfully sorry for Daddy, though,” she continued in a changed voice, “—that Mrs. Hamberfield is still raising the roof about her diamond necklace. Serves her right for being such a mutt, I say.”
“Tough on both parties, I should think.”
“Nothing of the kind. Daddy says that her husband, Stonington Hamberfield, made his coin profiteering during the war. What do you think his name really is?”
“You tell me.”
“Steinburg Hammerfeld—isn’t that a hot one?”
“A Hun, eh?”
“Well, if he isn’t—I’m President Hindenburg, San Francisco Harbor and the Statue of Liberty all in one!”
Bill smiled appreciatively at this sally, then changed the subject. “Let’s go to the movies this evening?”
“Can’t. It’s Pen and Pencil Club night.”
“What on earth is that?”
“Oh, about a year ago, a bunch of us at high school, girls and fellows, started a club to write short stories. We meet every other Tuesday night at some member’s house. Everybody has to write a story at least one a month, or they’re fined a quarter. We read aloud and discuss them at the meeting. Come with me after supper and pay my quarter.”
“Nothing doing. That kind of thing is my idea of a perfectly terrible evening.”
Dorothy slipped the compact into a pocket of her jodhpurs and got to her feet.
“That’s where you’re all wrong, Bill. Noel Sainsbury, the writer, is our adviser. He makes it awfully interesting—we have lots of fun. He was a naval aviator during the war. You two should have lots in common. Do come along and meet him.”
“Why I dined at his place, Little Windows, last night!”
“Oh, you do know him?”
“Naturally. Where would I be if it weren’t for him? Look at the books he’s written about me. Noel Sainsbury brought Dad and me to New Canaan. We’re awfully fond of him and his wife and little girl.”
“Yes, Winks is a darling and Mrs. Sainsbury is a peach—” Dorothy agreed. “She comes to our meetings, too. I’m named for her, you know.”
“Really? That’s interesting.”
“You bet. Then you’ll come tonight?”
“I’d like to, very much.”
“All right. The meeting is at Betty Mayo’s, in White Oak Shade. I’ll be here about eight in my car and drive you down there.”
“I’ll be ready—so long!”
“So long!”
* * * *
It was nearly quarter to nine before they got started, as things turned out. Mr. Dixon had gone to New York for the day on business, had been detained in town, and Dorothy waited dinner for him.
“Well, we won’t have missed much,” she explained to Bill as her car breasted the Marvin Ridge Road. “The first half hour is always taken up with the minutes of the last meeting and all that parliamentary stuff. I love driving in the twilight, anyway. Next place on the left is where we’re bound. We’ll be there in a jiffy.”
They rounded a bend and came upon a Packard parked at the roadside. The hood was up and a man looked up from tinkering with the engine as their lights outlined his figure.
“Pull up! pull up!” Bill’s tense whisper sounded in her ears. “Where are your eyes, girl?”
But Dorothy needed no second warning. She shot home the brake, for she too had seen the great, misshapen boot that the dapper little motorist wore on his left foot.
CHAPTER XI
FOLLOW THE LEADER
“Need any help?” inquired Bill, as Dorothy drew up opposite the Packard.
“Thanks! This thing has got me stumped. I’m not much of a mechanician,” returned the lame man ruefully. “Do you know anything about motors?”
“Making them behave is my long suit,” was Bill’s glib retort as he alighted from the car and crossed the road. “Let’s see if I can locate your trouble. Got plenty of gas?”
“Lots of it. I just looked to see.”
“Then let me have your flashlight while I give her the once over.”
“Wait a minute—” called Dorothy, “I’ll swing this car round and put my lights on the engine. There—is that better?” she ended, trying to keep the excitement out of her voice.
“Nothing could be sweeter!” sang out Bill without turning his head. “Hold her as you are.”
Dorothy’s offer had not been quite so altruistic as it sounded, for now her lights brilliantly illuminated the two figures bending over the Packard’s engine. While Bill went over the motor with the sureness of an expert, keeping up a desultory conversation with the stranger, Dorothy used her eyes to good advantage.
But after a while she grew impatient. Why didn’t Bill capture the man at once so they could haul him off to the police station? Why did he continue to go on with his pretended inspection of the engine? He couldn’t really be in earnest, for if he found the trouble and fixed it, the lame man would simply get in his car and drive away. Could it be that Bill wasn’t sure of his quarry? Of course, he was clean shaven, although Lizzie had described him as having a small mustache. Naturally, he’d shave it off. By this time he must know that his description had been broadcast. And so far as she could see the earrings were missing too. But that was to be expected. And he spoke good English with a slight Italian accent.
What was the matter with Bill! He was big enough to take care of the man with one hand, when all he did was tinker and jabber. What was the use of that?
“Your engine seems to be in A-1 condition,” Bill was saying. “Doesn’t look as if you’d been running the car lately.”
“I haven’t,” replied the lame man. “She ran like a charm when I drove down here earlier this evening. Then all of a sudden she stops—and won’t go on.”
“Ah! here we are!” Bill exclaimed a moment later. “You’ve got a choked jet. I’ll fix that in a jiffy.”
“You are very kind,” beamed the Italian. “Is that a serious trouble?”
“Not so bad. Buy better gas and have your carburetor well looked over. I’ll fix it so the car will move, though.”
“Do you think she will run fifty miles?”
“Sure—but
there are plenty of garages nearer than that if you want to fix it.”
“I’ll wait until I reach home. My friend—he will give the engine a thorough going over. He understands very well such things.”
“Good enough.” Bill straightened his back and closed the hood. “You’re O.K. now. She’ll run.”
“Then thank you so much. You have been very kind.”
“Don’t mention it.” Bill waved farewell and crossed the road as the lame man climbed into his car and drove off in the direction of New Canaan village.
“What ever is the matter with you?” Dorothy broke out in a fever of angry disappointment. “Why didn’t you nab him while you had the chance? Now he’ll get away and—”
“Hush, sister! Likewise calm yourself,” cut in Bill. “Move over. I’m going to drive. This business isn’t finished by a long shot. It has only just begun.”
Dorothy, flabbergasted by his high-handed manner, slid across the seat as he directed, and Bill sprang in behind the wheel. The tail light of the Packard disappeared around the bend of the road.
“What’s the idea?” she fumed.
“Wait till we get going, Dot.” Bill threw in the reverse and started to turn the car in the direction from which they had come a quarter of an hour before.
“Don’t call me ‘Dot’! You know I won’t stand for it. Aren’t you the limit—Going to try to trail him, I suppose, when you could have nailed him right here!”
“Don’t get peeved!” Bill swung the little car onto the road and switching off his lights brought his foot down on the accelerator. “I know what I’m doing.”
“Well, maybe you do.” Her voice was full of sarcasm. “But we might just as well go back to the Pen and Pencil meeting. You’ll never catch up with his bus.”
“Shan’t try to. There’s his tail light now!” They rounded the turn and Bill sent the car streaking along the black road like a terrified cat up a back alley. “There’s no need to get snippy,” he added. “You heard what our friend said about his friend—who understands all about engines? On a bet, that’s the lad who wore the chauffeur’s cap and beaned the night watchman. He said he’d let him look over the carburetor when he got home, didn’t he? And like as not that ripe egg lady—the one with the red head—will be there too!”
“Staten Island Sadie?”
“Sure thing.”
“Perhaps,” admitted Dorothy. “The lame man was alone in his car. But you stand a good chance of losing him, even if he doesn’t see us. We’ll have to switch on the lights going through towns.”
“But, you see, I’m pretty sure I know where he’s bound for.”
“You do?” Her surprise drove all petulance from her tone.
“That’s what I’ve kept up my sleeve. If he takes the Ridgefield Road, out of New Canaan, then I’m certain of it.”
“Better switch on the glims again,” she advised. “We’ll crash or get a ticket running without them in this South Main Street traffic—we’re nearly in the village now. I can spot the Packard ahead there.” Then, contritely, she continued: “Sorry I was peeved, Bill, old thing. I didn’t understand. Forgive me—and let’s hear all about it.”
“Of course—hello!” he cried. “He’s slowed down. Confound it, anyway. That comes of talking and not keeping my mind on the job. I’ll bet he has his suspicions. Wants to see if we’re following—nothing dumb about that bird. I shouldn’t have driven so close. He’ll tumble to a certainty if we slow up too.”
“What are you going to do?”
“Give me time—” he answered grimly. “Confound again! There goes the red light on the Library corner! Now we’re in for it.”
“P’raps he won’t notice us,” said Dorothy hopefully as they drew up behind the Packard.
“Not a chance. But we’ll fool him yet. Let me do the talking,” he whispered as the lame man thrust his head out of the car and looked back at them.
“Hello, there!” cried Bill cheerfully. “I see you’ve got this far without another breakdown!”
“Good evening, my friend,” replied the Italian. “This is a surprise. I thought you were going the other way.”
“Oh, no. Just ran down there to leave a message.” Bill’s tone was affability itself. “You must have come pretty slowly. How’s the car running?”
“Nicely, thank you.”
“Don’t be afraid to let her out. Well—there’s the light. Excuse me if I pass you,” he said airly. “We’re in a hurry. So long.”
“Au revoir…” Dorothy added gaily and waved her hand as Bill swung to the left, then headed up Main Street in advance of the Packard.
“Aren’t you smart! You’ll get us into a heap of trouble yet with your ‘au revoirs’!”
“Hey, there”—she cried. They were rolling swiftly up the hill past the bank.
“You should have turned right then left, for Ridgefield—back at the last corner!”
Bill laughed. “Old Angel Face did just as I figured,” he informed her, still chuckling. “I spotted him making the turn, in the glass.”
“Where are we going? Sure you haven’t lost him?”
“Listen. That chap is heading for Ridgefield. From there he will run another ten miles up to Danbury. Unless I’m completely wet, his objective is a certain house in the hills on a back road, over toward the New York borderline about twenty-five miles north. It’s a rough, wild stretch of country, with Pawling, N. Y., to the west and New Milford, Connecticut, on the east, that he’s heading for. Nice riding too, dirt roads, mere trails that haven’t had a scraper on them since the Revolution. That house I just told you about is a good ten miles from a railroad as a plane flies—probably twice as far by road.”
“Interesting—but why are we heading this way?”
“Simply because it is too dangerous to follow that lad just now. He smells a rat and is sure to park in some dark spot along the way to make certain he’s not being followed.”
“Then what are we going to do?”
“I’m going to run west over to Bedford, New York. Then north from there through Golden Bridge and Croton Falls to Brewster. From Brewster I’ll keep to the same state road north toward Pawling. But just before I get to Patterson, there’s a dirt road that turns off into the hills to the northeast. That’s the one I’ll follow. Eventually, I’ll get to the house. Angel Face’s route is shorter—but I’ll get there soon after he does, if he stops along the way to see if anyone’s after him. First of all I’ll drop you at your house and get myself a gat.”
“You’d better get two—for I’m coming with you.”
“Sorry, my girl—this is a man’s job.”
Dorothy turned and stared at him. “Well—of all the consummate nerve—” she began.
“Sorry, Dot—it just can’t be. I’ve got no right to let you run the risk.”
“Don’t you dare to ‘Dot’ me again!” Miss Dixon was distinctly irritated. “And what’s more, if you try to ditch me, I’ll phone the police station and spill everything. They’ll pick you up at Bedford and horn in, of course—and like as not, they’ll gum it all.”
“If you talk that way, I suppose I’ll have to take you.”
“Of course you will. Say, Bill, that was only a bluff, wasn’t it?”
Bill smiled. “Perhaps. But it’s a risky business.”
“No worse than learning to fly, is it?”
“Fifty-fifty, I should say.”
“That’s settled, then. What I can’t understand is why you didn’t corral that gang long before this—or at least put the police on to them, if you knew where they were all the time.”
“But that’s just it—they haven’t been in the house since the robbery. I’ve driven up there several times and reconnoitered from the air as well.”
“Then what makes you think you’ll corner the gang at the house now?”
The car turned in the Dixon’s drive and came to a stop by the side entrance.
“You’ll have to wait till the next chapter
for that,” he laughed. “Time is worth more than money now. I’ll tell you all about it when we get going again. Beat it upstairs now and change that light dress for breeches and a dark sweater or coat. I’ll run across the road for something more suitable and less conspicuous than white flannels.”
“O.K.” Dorothy sprang out of the car. “Don’t forget our armory.”
“Not a chance. Now forget the prinking and make it snappy,” he sang out, backing down the driveway.
CHAPTER XII
THE HOUSE IN THE HILLS
“Don’t tell me it takes a girl long to change her clothes!” was Dorothy’s salutation, as Bill drove up to the side entrance again. “You’ve kept me waiting here exactly three minutes and a half.”
“Sorry,” he said in mock contrition. “Fact is, I thought we’d better use my own bus tonight and I had to go out to the garage to get it.”
“What’s the big idea?” Dorothy sprang in beside him, looking very trim and boyish in jodhpurs and dark flannel shirt over which she wore a thin brown sweater. “Isn’t my car good enough for you?”
“This boat has a full tank,” he replied tersely. “Can’t waste time tonight picking up gas.”
They had reversed the car down the drive and were now speeding along the tree-lined road in the direction of Bedford.
“Got my gun?” she asked.
“Surest thing you know!” Bill passed over a small revolver in a holster. “Tie yourself to that! It’s a Colt .32 and it’s loaded. Know how to use it?”
“Certainly. What do you expect me to do—release the safety catch and pull the trigger to see if it works?” Her tone flared hotly with indignation.
Bill whistled a tuneless air, but the whistle developed into a laugh and the laugh continued until Dorothy snapped:
“Don’t cackle like a billygoat!”
“Billygoats don’t—” he began but broke off, changing his bantering tone. “Then why do you tie the leg-strap around your waist?” he asked seriously enough.
The Second Girl Detective Megapack: 23 Classic Mystery Novels for Girls Page 167