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"She poked her head in at the door and asked what the trouble was," began Sim. "Then she came in and asked if the men had gone and laughed when we told her they had," she finished.
"That covers everyone and everything," Arden remarked putting the top on the fountain pen she had been using. "And from it all, the only conclusion we can come to is that two separate sets of workmen were frightened away by something they claim they saw or didn't see. While we only heard sounds."
"You'll have to admit, though, that it was very strange that the horses should be so frightened _before_ we came out. That is, we are _reasonably_ certain that we did not frighten them ourselves," Terry suggested smartly.
"There's something in that," agreed Sim, "and also don't forget the number of people who heard the same kind of noises and claim they saw the same thing at the same time."
Arden stacked the sheets of paper containing the history of "The Jockey Hollow Case," as she had called it, and suggested that they be put in a safe place so more could be added. All the girls felt that there was much more to come and hoped to get new evidence from Granny Howe when they took tea with her.
Sim took the papers, locked them in a small drawer in the desk, and took the key.
"I'll put the key on a chain and wear it around my neck. Then it will be safe." She looked at her friends with s.h.i.+ning eyes. It was so exciting to be in the very center of a thrilling mystery.
The girls nodded their approval and began talking brightly of all they had done and seen as though they might have forgotten something important. But on the whole they were well pleased with their work and agreed it was very clever of Arden to suggest it; one useful fact remembered from reading countless detective tales had come their way.
CHAPTER VIII The Ghost of Patience
"Move over, Terry, give me a look!" demanded Sim, elbowing her way nearer to the long mirror before which Terry was admiring herself.
"There's plenty of room and at least two more mirrors within easy walking distance," Terry replied. "Why we all have to congregate in here, I don't know."
"It's more fun, that's why," Arden crisply replied. "And we can talk better. Moselle can hear every word we say if we call to each other from room to room. Don't forget _she's_ under suspicion too."
"As far as I can see, the only person who isn't is Dorothy Keene, daughter of Rita Keene the distinguished comedienne," Terry remarked, successfully maneuvering Sim away from the gla.s.s again. "We saw her get off the train ourselves. You're the only innocent one among us, Dot, but you don't look it in that sw.a.n.ky dress."
"Do you think we're dressing up too much? We wouldn't want to embarra.s.s Granny Howe," Dorothy considered.
The girls were all in Sim's big blue-and-white bedroom, laughing and talking as they dressed. It was the afternoon following the "trial by jury." Sim had lately gone "modern," and the room showed it. The walls were a cream-white edged in dark blue; light fixtures were star shaped, and the twin beds were covered with a dark-blue satin spread with Sim's monogram in white-satin letters on the fold. It was all glorious.
Fooling around until the last possible minute, they were now making up for lost time by all hurriedly dressing in Sim's room; getting ready for the visit to Granny Howe.
After talking it over they had decided that the old lady, though she was spry and active, might better enjoy the little party if they did put on a little style and dressed up. So they were wearing soft dresses and high-heeled shoes and had put on other dainty accessories.
The day was rather dark, a slate-colored sky promising snow before night, but the balmy air contradicted the warning, and Sim, with the top of the roadster down, urged the girls to hurry. A glance at her watch showed three-thirty, and their first call should not keep Granny waiting.
They were ready at last and piled in the car, Sim letting the clutch in so fast that the sudden start snapped their heads back and jerked the car forward as though Sim was just learning to drive. They went off in a gale of laughter but not in a cloud of dust, for the frozen ground of the driveway refused to part with any of its surface.
Sim drove as near as she could to the little white house where Hannah Howe lived. The cottage-like place was behind the more stately Sycamore Hall and to the left of the lane. The lane was a mere path just tunneled with trees.
Four small pillars, more like posts, supported the s.h.i.+ngled roof of the low porch, and behind it were two square windows with a door in between.
The girls stood in dignified silence waiting for Granny to answer Arden's knock, but she didn't keep them long.
"Come in, my dears!" exclaimed the elderly lady like a grandmother in a fairy tale. "I'm glad to see you all looking so well and happy."
Granny herself looked well and at least temporarily happy. She wore a long-sleeved, high-necked dress, dark-blue color with little pink flowers dotted over it. At her throat, precisely in the middle, glowed with sullen brightness the soft purple of an antique amethyst brooch. Her thick white hair accentuated the smooth tan of her skin, as she smiled a welcome.
The party trooped inside the little old house, and they were at once struck by the charm and quaintness of the little place.
With admiring "Ohs!" and "Ahs!" the visitors looked eagerly about, and Granny, pleased with their young enthusiasm, explained and pointed out the interesting features.
The fireplace, with a pot in place and hooks for holding others, was especially fascinating.
"Imagine cooking over an open fire!" exclaimed Sim, "and Moselle complains about the oven in our new gas range."
"Years ago the fireplace served a double purpose," Granny explained: "that of heat and a stove. And as someone has said, they were truly the heart of the home. Many a lone winter night Patience Howe sat by this one, keeping the fire alive, wondering would she ever see her father and brothers again."
On a low maple table in front of the old Colonial davenport, Granny was putting out the "best china": thin cups and saucers with a pink wild-rose pattern. With unfeigned interest, Arden watched her dainty movements. She seemed as much a part of the place as did the pewter plates on the mantel. The little company had settled down to chat with the abruptness of old friends. After the first greetings were over, they all felt they had known this little lady all their lives. But it was Sim who first broached the subject uppermost in the minds of all.
"It was Patience who hid the wounded soldier, wasn't it?" she asked, nibbling at a tiny bread-and-b.u.t.ter sandwich.
"Her picture still hangs in the Hall, doesn't it?" Terry inquired, following Sim's lead.
"What a brave girl she must have been," remarked Arden, hoping Granny would take the cue and tell them about her.
Handing Dorothy a cup of tea and settling herself in a quaint high-backed rocker, the old lady nodded her head and smiled.
"I can see you are all burning with curiosity," she laughed. "Of course, I'll tell you about her, I'm very proud of her, and as you say, my dear, she was indeed very brave." Granny glanced at the girls sitting around her, sipping their tea and patiently waiting for her story. Then she began:
"In the year when Was.h.i.+ngton's troops were retreating from New York, Patience refused to leave her home to seek shelter with relatives at Philadelphia. This was her home: the big house, I mean, of course," she explained. "This tiny place was for the servants. But Patience decided to stay and help with the work of the farm; so many of the working men had joined the troops. There was plenty of work, and it was bitter cold, too.
One day, as the poor, tired army was forced to go still farther back beyond the advancing British troops, a wounded soldier was carried into the house. Nathaniel Greene, his name was, and his comrades begged Patience to take him in and keep him, for he would surely die if made to march in the bitter cold. Patience hid him in her own room, disguised herself as an old servant, and moved out here to live."
"What a-girl!" breathed Arden, as Granny paused a moment.
"Imagine waiting on a wounded soldier," followed up Terry.
"And imagine the danger she was in," concluded Sim.
Granny, gratified that the story of her famous relative should gain so much honor through her own simple telling, finally continued.
"When the British took possession of the house Patience declared the wounded man was a raving lunatic, and so she kept him out of harm's way.
Until spring she hid him successfully, and by that time the soldier and the maid had fallen in love."
The girls waited while Granny shook her head sorrowfully.
"But he contracted pneumonia and died," she murmured. "Patience never married but gave herself up to her country's cause and became a nurse for wounded soldiers. That was her candle holder; she used it to light her way along a secret pa.s.sage from the big house to this one."
Granny indicated a pewter candlestick on the mantel between two plates.
Their eyes lingered on it lovingly. A moment later Granny went on with her story.
"I have an old letter telling about it, but when the place was remodeled the pa.s.sage must have been walled up. d.i.c.k and Betty have never been able to find any trace of it. Although, I dare say, it will come to light when the house is torn down." Granny finished her recital and sat looking straight before her, her bright eyes dimmed with tears. She sighed and attempted a little smile.
Arden's heart skipped a beat, and a lump rose in her throat.