Ghost Beyond the Gate - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"Yes," Penny went on relentlessly, "this is a serious matter. It will do you no good to bluff."
The woman gave up trying to unlock the gate. Setting her basket down in the snow she said weakly: "You advertised a reward--"
"I'll still be glad to pay it for worthwhile information. What do you know about my father?"
The woman drew a deep breath. "Well, I picked him up in my car after the accident."
"You did?" Penny became jubilant. "Where is he now?"
"I can't tell you that. Mr. Parker asked me to take him to Mercy Hospital. I let him off at the entrance to the grounds. That's the last I saw of him."
"My father entered the hospital?"
"I don't know. I didn't remain to watch."
The story was disappointing. If true, Mr. Parker's disappearance remained as mysterious as ever. Penny was silent a moment and then she asked the woman why she had fled from the cemetery.
"Because I saw a police car parked behind the bushes," the other answered defiantly. "And those detectives chased me, too! I only intended to be helpful and maybe win a reward. Now I want nothing to do with the case.
I've told you everything I know."
The woman unlocked the gate and started to enter the grounds.
"You're not Mrs. Deming?" Penny asked quickly.
"Who I am is my own business."
"I suppose the ghost is your own affair too!"
"Ghost? What ghost?"
"You live here, yet you haven't learned that the grounds are haunted?"
Penny inquired significantly. "Nearly every night a man in white wanders back and forth in the garden."
"I don't know anything about it!" the woman said nervously. "I'll not answer any more questions either!"
Plainly frightened, she snapped shut the padlock of the gate and fled into the house.
CHAPTER 17 _ADVENTURE BY MOONLIGHT_
A moment Penny stood gazing at the estate house. She considered climbing the iron fence and trying to gain entrance to the dwelling. Then, deciding that nothing would be achieved by again accosting the strange woman, she returned to the waiting taxi.
"Where to?" asked the cabman.
"It's still the police station," directed Penny, repeating an earlier order. "I have twice as much to report now."
As the cab pulled away, she noticed a movement of curtains at the front of the estate house. Evidently the woman who had fled, was watching.
Joe made a quick trip to Riverview, depositing Penny at the doorstep of Central Station.
"Will you need me any more?" he asked hopefully.
"I may."
"Okay," said Joe, slamming the cab door. "I'll stick around. You know, I kinda like this job."
Once inside the police station, Penny inquired for Chief Jalman. Unable to see him, she asked to speak to the two detectives who had been a.s.signed to her father's case. Both men were away from the building.
"Why not talk to Carl Burns?" suggested the desk sergeant. "He's familiar with the case."
Penny was sent to see a heavy-set man who warmed himself by a steaming radiator. Evidently he had spent several hours in an unheated police car for he stamped his feet to restore circulation.
"Mr. Burns?" inquired Penny.
The man turned, staring at her. Penny returned the stare. She had seen the officer before and the recollection was not entirely pleasant. He was the same officer she had met near Mattie's garage on the night of the blizzard.
"What may I do for you?" he asked.
Uncomfortably aware of the officer's scrutiny, Penny began to tell of her visit to the Williams' garage. She stammered a bit and lost confidence.
"You say you saw some big boxes at the garage," he demanded. "What's so suspicious about that?"
Penny tried to explain about the tunnel of boxes which led to a hidden storage room. Even to her own ears the story had a fantastic sound.
"What you _think_ or _surmise_ doesn't go in this business!" the officer said rather rudely. "Did you actually see any stolen tires?"
"Well, no, I didn't," Penny admitted. "The door was locked."
"Are you willing to swear out a warrant charging Mattie and her partner with dealing in stolen merchandise?"
"I don't suppose I'd dare do that. I thought if police would investigate--"
"We can't go on suspicions, Miss Parker. We act only on sound evidence."
"Well, it doesn't matter so much about the stolen tires," Penny said desperately. "I have another clue--a really important one. I've found the woman who eluded Detectives Brandon and Fuller at the cemetery!"
"Now we may get somewhere," replied the officer. "Who is the woman? Where did you see her?"
Penny told everything she knew about the woman who had taken her father to Mercy Hospital. Word for word she repeated their recent conversation together.
"I'll turn this evidence over to Detective Fuller," the policeman promised. "He'll probably want to question the woman himself."
"I hope he does it right away," replied Penny. "She may take it into her head to skip out of town."
Officer Burns smiled wearily. "Just trust us to handle the case," he said. "We know our business."