Behind the Green Door - LightNovelsOnl.com
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CHAPTER 2 _A RIVAL REPORTER_
Penny presently edged the sedan into a parking s.p.a.ce across the street from the Riverview Hotel. As she switched off the ignition her father said:
"Better come along with me and wait in the lobby. It's cold out here."
Penny followed her father into the building. The hotel was an elegant one with many services available for guests. She noticed a florist shop, a candy store, a dry cleaning establishment, and even a small brokerage office opening off the lobby.
"Oh, yes," said Mr. Parker as Penny called his attention to the brokerage. "Maxwell hasn't overlooked anything. The hotel has a special leased wire which I've been told gives him a direct connection with his other places."
Walking over to the desk, Mr. Parker mentioned his name and asked the clerk if he might see Harvey Maxwell.
"Mr. Maxwell is not here," replied the man with an insolent air.
"When will he be at the hotel?"
"Mr. Maxwell has left the city on business. He does not expect to return until the end of next month."
Mr. Parker could not hide his annoyance.
"Let me have his address then," he said in a resigned voice. "I'll write him."
The clerk shook his head. "I have been instructed not to give you Mr.
Maxwell's address. If you wish to deal with him you will have to see his lawyer, Gorman S. Railey."
"So Maxwell was expecting me to come here to make a deal with him?"
demanded Mr. Parker. "Well, I've changed my mind. I'll make a deal all right, but it will be in court. Good day!"
Angrily, the newspaper man strode from the lobby. Penny hurried to keep pace with him.
"That settles it," he said tersely as they climbed into the sedan again.
"This libel suit will be a fight to the finish. And maybe my finish at that!"
"Oh, Dad, I'm sure you'll win. But it's a pity all this had to come up just when you had planned a fine vacation. Mrs. Downey will be disappointed, too."
"Yes, she will, Penny. And there's Mrs. Weems to be thought about. I promised her a two weeks' trip while we were gone."
They drove in silence for a few blocks. As the car pa.s.sed the Sidell residence, Penny's father said thoughtfully:
"I suppose I could send you out to Pine Top alone, Penny. Or perhaps you might be able to induce your chum, Louise, to go along. Would you like that?"
"It would be more fun if you went also."
"That's out of the picture now. If everything goes well I might be able to join you for Christmas weekend."
"I'm not sure Louise could go," said Penny doubtfully. "But I can find out right away."
After dinner that night, she lost no time in running over to the Sidell home. At first Louise was thrown into a state of ecstasy at the thought of making a trip to Pine Top and then her face became gloomy.
"I would love it, Penny! But it's practically a waste of words to ask Mother. We're going to my grandmother's farm in Vermont for the holidays, and I'll have to tag along."
Since grade school days the two girls had been inseparable friends.
Between them there was perfect understanding and they made an excellent pair, for Louise exerted a subduing effect upon the more impulsive, excitable Penny.
Inactivity bored Penny, and wherever she went she usually managed to start things moving. When nothing better offered, she tried her hand at writing newspaper stories for her father's paper. Several of these reportorial experiences had satisfied even Penny's deep craving for excitement.
Three truly "big" stories had rolled from her typewriter through the thundering presses of the _Riverview Star_: Tale of the Witch Doll, The Vanis.h.i.+ng Houseboat, and Danger at the Drawbridge. Even now, months after her last astonis.h.i.+ng adventure, friends liked to tease her about a humorous encounter with a certain Mr. Kippenberg's alligator.
"Pine Top won't be any fun without you, Lou," Penny complained.
"Oh, yes it will," contradicted her chum. "I know you'll manage to stir up plenty of excitement. You'll probably pull a mysterious Eskimo out of a snow bank or save Santa Claus from being kidnaped! That's the way you operate."
"Pine Top is an out of the way place, close to the Canadian border. All one can do there is eat, sleep, and ski."
"You mean, that's all one is supposed to do," corrected Louise with a laugh. "But you'll run into some big story or else you're slipping!"
"There isn't a newspaper within fifty miles. No railroad either. The only way in and out of the valley is by airplane, and bob-sled, of course."
"That may cramp your style a little, but I doubt it," declared Louise. "I do wish I could go along."
The girls talked with Mrs. Sidell, but as they both had expected, it was not practical for Louise to make the trip.
"I'll come to the airport to see you off on your plane," Louise promised as Penny left the house. "You're starting Thursday, aren't you?"
"Yes, at ten-thirty unless there's bad weather. But I'll see you again before that."
All the next day Penny packed furiously. Mr. Parker was unusually busy at the office, but he bought his daughter's ticket and made all arrangements for the trip to Pine Top. Since Mrs. Weems also planned to leave Riverview the following day, the house was in a constant state of turmoil.
"I feel sorry for Dad being left here alone," remarked Penny. "He'll never make his bed, and he'll probably exist on strong coffee and those wretched raw beef sandwiches they serve at the beanery across from the _Star_ office."
"I ought to give up my vacation," declared Mrs. Weems. "It seems selfish of me not to stay here."
Mr. Parker would not hear of such an arrangement, and so plans moved forward just as if his own trip had not been postponed.
"Dad, you'll honestly try to come to Pine Top for Christmas?" Penny pleaded.
"I'll do my best," he promised soberly. "I have a hunch that Harvey Maxwell may still be in town, despite what we were told at the hotel. I intend to busy myself making a complete investigation of the man."
"If I could help, I'd be tickled to stay, Dad."
"There's nothing you can do, Penny. Just go out there and have a nice vacation."
Mr. Parker had not intended to go to the office Thursday morning until after Penny's plane had departed, but at breakfast time a call came from DeWitt, the city editor, urging his presence at once. Before leaving, he gave his daughter her ticket and travelers checks.
"Now I expect to be at the airport to see you off," he promised. "Until then, good-bye."