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Caspian. And so I was, except for a minute. I went to look for you, in a back room. You were not there. You must have gone upstairs----"
"I did, to see a table Miss Robinson spoke of," I admitted.
"Only Mr. Storm was in the back room. He had in his hand the box, with a large date carved in the wood. If he bought it I am not sure, for I went away quickly when I saw he was alone. And after, there was nothing in his hand. But maybe when he wanted an old box with a date of 1669--yes, that _particular_ date of _all_ others!--he remembered, and went back to Bennington--or sent."
"Good gracious, but why a box of that 'particular' date?" I wanted to know. Which was stupid of me. I ought to have recalled at once the fact that Captain Kidd was supposed to be burying treasure in 1669.
"It was the year of Captain Kidd!" Pat reminded me; and went on, as if in desperation: "In the hole of _our_ cave, to-day, was _that_ box, from Miss Robinson's house in Bennington. There was no lock to it; and I suppose Mr. Storm could not wait to have one made. He was in a hurry. I understand why, but I cannot tell you that. All I can tell is, _it was there_. I pulled it out from the hole--it was not so heavy!--and not more than thirty centimetres long. Inside was sand, and mixed up with the sand many, many jewels--oh, a fortune in jewels. I know, because I took the box to my room--n.o.body was up, so no one saw me. I spread on the floor a bed-coverlet and poured out the sand on it. Then I could count the beautiful stones without the fear they would roll away. There are a hundred pearls, oh, but large ones, big as peas; and some rubies, and diamonds in the dozen--emeralds, too. I do not know too much of such things, but they must all have cost ten, twenty, or maybe more thousands of dollars."
As she finished, breathless, Pat looked from one to the other of us. And Jack and I dared not look at each other, or our eyes would have said, "Told you so!"
"He put these things to make us rich, where we would think they were _ours_," the girl went on. "It was n.o.ble. He would never have confessed--never let us know what we owed to him. If you and me had not seen him last night--and if I had not known the box--we should have believed. We should have sold the jewels and paid our debts. And I--but what use to think of what I could have done? What I _must_ do, is to tell him I _know_--yes, the _minute_ he comes back to our house. It will be to-day, for now we can guess what has kept him so busy. He has somehow got these jewels--not set, so they may seem to be very old. But how--_how_ did he get them--a poor man like him?"
"However he got them, it's all _right_," Jack soothed her.
"I am sure!" she said proudly. "He was to try and find money. He told me that at Bretton Woods. He finds it. But he does not keep. He gives it to me, like this! Of course it does no good. Of course I cannot take. I wish I could see him _here_ at this house, with you to help me talk of last night."
Well, so it was arranged, according to her wish: that we should send over to his "diggings," as he calls them, and see if Peter had arrived.
The car was despatched with the chauffeur and a hasty note from me; and Patty waited with us for news. But there was no news. Mr. Storm had not come, and his landlady, the village dressmaker, knew nothing of his movements.
There, my dear, I must leave my story. About this episode you now know as much as I do, or any of us. But doesn't it make you love Peter? When he told me his _secret_, he never breathed a word of this intention.
If only one chance in a million hadn't placed his best girl and two of his best friends within spying distance, the poor fellow's plan would have been a brilliant success. No doubt his idea was to propose (as if jokingly) to Larry a search for Captain Kidd's alleged treasure, to replenish the family fortunes after the fire. They would have been indebted to no one for what the cave might yield. A rich Larry and Patty could have arisen like a pair of phoenixes hand in hand from their own ashes, and flown high above Caspian and Shuster level!
The thing is now to let Peter know his plan has failed before he begins talking about buried treasure. We must manage it somehow. By the p.r.i.c.king in my thumbs, I feel he'll come this afternoon! And luckily, if all is well, the treasure troving won't be his only errand.
To-morrow I shall perhaps be able to let you into the whole secret. If he but realizes that time is the great object now!
Your MOLLY IN SUSPENSE.
P. S. I _do_ think it was fun about the box from Miss Robinson's, don't you?
x.x.xIII
MOLLY WINSTON TO MERCeDES LANE
_Awepesha._
DEAREST:
I believe that, next to the day Jack proposed to me at Taormina, and the day we were married in London, this has been the most exciting day of my life. I expected excitement, but nothing to what we have had!
I wrote you yesterday morning, after Pat went home to the boxful of sand and jewels which not even Larry was to know about. The note I wrote to Peter Storm had been left at his lodgings, so when he returned he would know that he was wanted at our house. The trouble was, we had no idea _when_ he would return; and that poor child Pat was trembling in her extremely high-heeled shoes (she never wears boots to tremble in) lest Caspian should reappear upon the scene. I hardly dared hope that the letter Jack had sent to Mr. Strickland's office would reach Peter; but it was that which did the trick. Mr. Strickland _was_ the lawyer he had been consulting about his complicated affairs, and when the note arrived, Mr. S. knew where to send it. No sooner was it read, than Peter bolted from New York to Long Island, and had the happy thought of coming to see us, to pick up the latest news from the front. I was so pleased to see him walk in, I could almost have kissed him! But I didn't stop to talk long. I ordered Hiawatha, and dashed off to fetch Pat. I was afraid if I merely _sent_ for her, something might happen to keep the girl at home, or Caspian might have turned up, and insist on coming with her.
As it happened, I wasn't far wrong. Caspian _had_ indeed turned up, bringing a strange man with him, and both were closeted with Larry. I whisked Pat away before she could be called into the council chamber.
The poor child insisted on carrying the "Captain Kidd" box, wrapped in a silk tablecloth from Como! She wanted to place it in the hands of its owner and donor without delay, and Peter and she were to be given some moments alone together, Jack having prepared the mind of P. S.
meanwhile.
The two men were in the library when I opened the door and walked in upon them. Jack had finished telling the tale of the night, and I felt pity as well as affection for Peter. He doesn't show his emotions easily, but I could see that he was pained and humiliated by the failure of his romantic scheme. I said not a word to him about it, but mentioned that Patsey was in my boudoir. "I think she has something to say to you," I added.
"I'll go to her at once, if I may!" he exclaimed.
"You not only may but must," I enjoined; then stopped him at the door.
"I hope you're ready to tell her everything now?"
"I'm ready, yes," he answered promptly. "But is it the best time----"
"It's the only time there is!" I cut him short.
"She's right," Jack backed me up.
"Very well," said Peter. "If you both say it's the supreme moment, it is. But I shall have to go through with what she's got for me first."
With that, he went out and shut the door. And I confess to you, Mercedes, I should have liked to be a fly on the wall in my boudoir during the scene between those two. A fly has no conscientious scruples against eavesdropping, which is fortunate for it, as nature has equipped it so well for indulgence in that pursuit. As I couldn't be a fly on a ceiling, looking at Peter and Pat upside down, I went and sat on Jack's lap.
"Dearest," said I, "you tell me what _you'd_ say if you were Peter, and I'll tell you what _I'd_ say if I were Pat."
"I wouldn't say anything," replied Jack without an instant's hesitation.
"I should just take you in my arms, and hug you hard. I should also kiss you. And one kiss leads to another, you know."
"I do know," I admitted. "By experience. You taught me that. It's one of the lessons of life."
"I'll bet Patricia Moore is learning it at this instant," Jack remarked thoughtfully. And we kissed each other in sheer vividness of imagination.
"But she's still engaged to Ed Caspian," I reminded him.
"d.a.m.n Caspian!" said Jack; and then jumped, staring at something over the back of my head.
I bounded off his lap as if a Jack Johnson had exploded at my feet.
Wheeling round to stare where he stared, I saw the most deadly reputable of my dear late cousin's servants ushering into the room the person apostrophized. Behind that person followed one I had never seen before.
Behind both lurked Larry Moore, for once in his life ill at ease; and by his side, urging him in, was Mrs. Shuster.
"How do you do?" I exclaimed, trying to look as if I had never seen Jack's knee, and feeling as if my _toes_ were blus.h.i.+ng.
What Jack did I don't know; but I suspect he put on a nonchalant air of "Well, we _are_ married, anyhow!"
"I'm sorry to interrupt a conversation evidently not meant for _my_ ear," began Caspian. (Trust him always to do and say the wrong thing!) "But I understand Mrs. Winston called at Kidd's Pines and took Miss Moore away at a moment when both I and her father wanted her particularly. That being the case, I thought I had better come here and let her kind host and hostess learn the news at the same time."
"Meaning us?" I inquired, feeling dangerous.
"Meaning you and Captain Winston. The news will interest you both. It is about two dear friends of yours, Marcel Moncourt and--his son."
"We've never had the pleasure of meeting Marcel Moncourt Junior," said Jack.
"Oh, yes, you have, begging your pardon," said Ed. "Only you know him by another name. By the way, may I ask, before I go further, where is Patricia?"