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The attendant shot her a peculiar glance and gave an answer which was equally strange.
"It's not a dining room. I can't tell you what it is."
"A c.o.c.ktail room perhaps?"
"Listen, I told you I don't know," the boy answered.
"You work here, don't you?"
"Sure I do," he said with emphasis. "And I aim to keep my job for awhile.
If you want to know anything about the Green Room ask at the desk!"
CHAPTER 7 _THE GREEN DOOR_
Before Penny could ask another question, the signal board flashed a summons, and the attendant slammed shut the door of the elevator. He shot the cage up to the fifth floor and did not return.
Hesitating a moment, Penny wandered over to the desk.
"How does one go about obtaining a card for the Green Room?" she inquired casually.
"You're not a guest here?" questioned the clerk.
"No."
"You'll have to talk with the manager. Oh, Mr. Fergus!"
Penny had not meant to have the matter go so far, but there was no retreating. The hotel manager came out of his office, and recognizing her, smiled ingratiatingly.
"Ah, good afternoon, Miss--" He groped for her name but Penny did not supply it. "So you decided to pay us a visit after all."
"This young lady asked about the Green Room," said the clerk significantly.
Mr. Fergus bestowed a shrewd, appraising look upon Penny.
"Oh, yes," he said to give himself more time, "Oh, yes, I see. What was it you wished to know?"
"How does one obtain a card of admission?"
"It is very simple. That is, if you have the proper recommendations and bank credit."
"Recommendations?" Penny asked blankly. "Just what is the Green Room anyway?"
Ralph Fergus and the clerk exchanged a quick glance which was not lost upon the girl.
"I see you are not familiar with the little service which is offered hotel guests," Mr. Fergus said suavely. "I shall be most happy to explain it to you at some later time when I am not quite so busy."
He bowed and went hurriedly back into the office.
"I guess I shouldn't have inquired about the Green Room," Penny observed aloud. "There seems to be a deep mystery connected with it."
"No mystery," corrected the clerk. "If you will leave your name and address I am sure everything can be arranged within a few days."
"Thank you, I don't believe I'll bother."
Penny turned and nearly ran into Francine Sellberg. Too late, she realized that the girl reporter probably had been standing by the desk for some time, listening to her conversation.
"h.e.l.lo, Francine," she said carelessly.
The girl returned a haughty stare. "I don't believe I know you, Miss,"
she said, and walked on across the lobby.
Penny was rather stunned by the unexpected snub. She took a step as if to follow Francine and demand an explanation, but her sense of humor came to her rescue.
"Who cares?" she asked herself with a shrug. "If she doesn't care to know me, it's perfectly all right. I can manage to bear up."
After Francine had left the hotel, Penny made up her mind that she would try to learn a little more about the Green Room. Her interest was steadily mounting and she could not imagine what "service" might be offered guests in this particular part of the hotel.
Choosing a moment when no one appeared to be watching, Penny mounted the stairway to the second floor. She followed a long corridor to its end but did not locate Room 22. Returning to the elevator, she started in the opposite direction. The numbers ended at 20.
While Penny was trying to figure it out, a group of four men and women came down the hall. They were well dressed individuals but their manner did not stamp them as persons of good breeding. One of the women who carried a jeweled handbag was talking in a loud, excited tone:
"Oh, Herbert, wait until you see it! I shall weep my eyes out if you don't agree to buy it for me at once. And the price! Ridiculously cheap!
We'll never run into bargains like these in New York."
"We'll see, Sally," replied the man. "I'm not satisfied yet that this isn't a flim-flam game."
He opened a door which bore no number, and stood aside for the others to pa.s.s ahead of him. Penny caught a glimpse of a long, empty hallway.
"That must be the way to Room 22," she thought.
She waited until the men and women had gone ahead, and then cautiously opened the door which had closed behind them. No one questioned her as she moved noiselessly down the corridor. At its very end loomed a green painted door, its top edge gracefully circular. Beside it at a small table sat a man who evidently was stationed there as a guard.
Penny walked slowly, watching the men and women ahead. They paused at the table and showed slips of cardboards. The guard then opened the green door and allowed them to pa.s.s through.
It looked so very easy that Penny decided to try her luck. She drew closer.
"Your card please," requested the doorman.
"I am afraid I haven't mine with me," said Penny, flas.h.i.+ng her most beguiling smile.
The smile was entirely lost upon the man. "Then I can't let you in," he said.
"Not even if I have lost my card?"