The Clock Strikes Thirteen - BestLightNovel.com
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"Hard to say," the reporter answered. "He's a rough and ready sort, but that's not against him. There's no real reason to believe he's crooked--just a hunch of mine."
Having been a.s.signed to cover a board meeting, Jerry hurriedly said goodbye to Penny. Left to herself, she drove slowly toward Riverview.
"Since I am so near Seth McGuire's place, I may as well stop for a minute or two," she thought impulsively.
Despite many exciting events, Penny had not lost interest in the Hubell clock. Although it seemed reasonable that a faulty mechanism had caused it to strike thirteen, such an explanation did not completely satisfy her. She was eager to learn from the former caretaker if the difficulty had been corrected.
Leaving her car by the main road, Penny went directly to the shop. The door was closed and locked. However, as she turned away, she distinctly heard a voice inside the building. Although she could not make out the words, she was certain that a child had called.
"Who is it?" she shouted.
"Help! Let me out!" came the plaintive cry from inside the shop.
Penny ran to the window and peered into the dark interior. She scarcely was able to believe what she saw. A little girl, her face streaked with tears and dirt, pounded fiercely on the heavy door, seeking release.
"It's Adelle!" she gasped. "How in the world did she get locked in Mr.
McGuire's shop?"
CHAPTER 13 _AN EXTRA STROKE_
With all the windows and the door of the shop locked, Penny did not know how to free the imprisoned child. However, as she considered the problem, Seth McGuire appeared on the porch of the cottage.
"Good morning," he greeted her pleasantly.
"Oh, Mr. McGuire!" Penny exclaimed. "Did you know there is a child locked inside your shop?"
"A child!" the old man exclaimed, coming quickly down the steps. "Why bless me! How can that be?"
"I don't understand how she got inside, but she's there! Officials of the Riverview Orphans' Home have been searching for Adelle Hanover since last night."
"Wait until I get my key," the old man said in an agitated voice. "I hope you don't think I locked the child into the shop!"
Knowing Mr. McGuire as she did, Penny entertained no such thought. Waving encouragingly to Adelle through the window, she waited for the old man to return.
"I locked the door about eleven o'clock last night," he explained, fumbling nervously with the key. "The little girl must have stolen in there sometime between six o'clock and that hour."
The old man's hand shook so that he could not unlock the door. Taking the key, Penny did it for him. Adelle, her hair flying wildly about her face, stumbled out of the shop.
"I'm hungry," she sobbed. "It was cold in there, and a big rat kept running around. Why did you lock me inside?"
"Why, bless you," Mr. McGuire murmured, "I never dreamed anyone was inside the shop! How did you get in there?"
"I went inside last night and hid," Adelle explained in a calmer voice.
"It was cold outside and I had to have some place to sleep."
"You never should have run away from the Home," Penny reproved. "Why did you do it?"
"Because I don't like it there," the child answered defiantly. "I'll never be adopted like the other children."
"Why, how silly!" Penny answered. "Of course someone will adopt you."
Adelle shook her head. "Miss Anderson says I won't be--I heard her tell the matron. It's on account of a nervous 'fliction. I'm afraid of things, 'specially cars."
"That's very natural, everything considered," Penny replied, thinking of the story Miss Anderson had told her. "Now I'll take you to the Home."
Adelle drew away, and as if seeking protection, crowded close beside Mr.
McGuire.
"I'm never going back, even if I freeze and starve!" she announced. "I'll find me a cave and live on berries. It would be more fun than being an orphan."
Penny gazed despairingly at the old bell maker. With a chuckle, he took the child by the hand and led her toward the cottage.
"We'll have lunch and talk things over," he proposed. "How will that be?"
"I'm awful hungry," Adelle admitted, smiling up at him. "But you won't give me any old boiled potatoes, will you? We have 'em every single day at the Home."
"No potatoes," he laughed. "We'll have the very nicest things I can find in the icebox, and maybe a stick of candy to top it off."
While Mr. McGuire pottered about the kitchen preparing a warm meal, Penny washed Adelle and combed her tangled hair. Afterwards, she telephoned officials of the Home, telling them that the child had been found.
"I'll bring her there within an hour," she promised. "Just as soon as she has had her lunch."
Adelle was ravenous. She was not a pretty child, but her face had an elfin quality when she smiled. Her brown eyes, roving about the spick and span little dinette, took in every detail.
"This is almost as nice as it was at our home," she remarked. "I mean my real home, when Daddy and Mother were alive."
"You'll have a nice place again when you are adopted," Penny a.s.sured her kindly.
"I'd like to stay here," Adelle said, looking thoughtfully at the old man. "Would your wife let me?"
"Why, bless you, I haven't a wife," he answered in embarra.s.sment. "I'm a bachelor."
"Wouldn't you like a little girl?" Adelle persisted. "I could do your dishes for you and sweep the floor. I'd be real good."
"Well, now I've often thought I would like a nice little girl," he replied, smiling.
"Then you can have me!" Adelle cried, jumping up from her chair. "You can tell the Home I won't be back!"
"Not so fast, not so fast," Mr. McGuire said hastily. "I'd like a little girl, but I am afraid I can't afford one. You see, I don't make much money any more and there are other reasons--"
"Oh, I won't eat much," Adelle promised. "Please keep me, Mr. McGuire."
The old man was so distressed that Penny tried to come to his rescue.
However, despite repeated explanations, Adelle refused to understand why she could not immediately become Mr. McGuire's little girl.