The Merriweather Girls and the Mystery of the Queen's Fan - LightNovelsOnl.com
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CHAPTER XV
UNDER SUSPICION
Bet Baxter insisted that Phil Gordon was not mistaken when he said he had put the ivory fan on her father's desk. But the detective shook his head and later in a talk to Chief Baldwin said:
"It looks bad for that young man, Chief. He was the last to have it.
He acknowledges he's hard up, and he knew its value."
"You're barking up the wrong tree, Longworth. Everybody knows Phil Gordon and would trust him anywhere."
"All the more reason why he can act so brazen and innocent in the matter. It looks bad," Detective Longworth announced. "I've seen so many cases just like it. I'll keep my eye on that young fellow and I bet I'll get the goods on him."
The detective's suspicions travelled at a lively rate around the village and before twenty-four hours it came to the ears of the Merriweather Girls. It was Edith Whalen and her shadow, Vivian Long, who pa.s.sed on the gossip to Joy Evans.
"Now what do you think of your friend Phil Gordon?" asked Edith. "I guess Bet didn't know she was a.s.sociating with a thief. I saw him with that fan at the party and he was acting in a suspicious way. Lots of folks are sure he stole it."
"Who says Phil took the fan?" demanded Joy.
"Everybody's saying it! And the detective seems to think he has the clue pretty well run down and expects to arrest Phil any time now."
Edith a.s.serted with venom in her voice.
"I don't believe a word of it!" snapped Joy.
Indignation was at its highest pitch when Joy told Bet and her chums what Edith had said.
"Now we've just got to do something!" exclaimed s.h.i.+rley. "We must clear Phil and that's all there is about it!"
"All right, what will we do first?" Kit jumped to her feet, ready for action.
"Who would have any interest in the fan, besides your father?" s.h.i.+rley questioned Bet.
"Another antique dealer might, but no one would know he had it," Bet's eyes were bright and intense with anxiety.
"What about Peter Gruff?" cried Kit. "I never trusted that old man!
And he _was_ interested in that picture of the fan."
"But he's interested in all old things, and you heard him say that it was a common type and had no particular value," said s.h.i.+rley. "No, I don't believe old Peter would want it that badly."
"I'm not so sure. I wasn't impressed with Peter Gruff, as you know.
I'm going to prowl around his shop and see what I can see," laughed Kit as she grabbed her hat and coat.
"Wait a minute and we'll go down to s.h.i.+rley's Shop," cried Bet. "I can't believe such a thing of old Peter but we won't leave anything undone."
And as soon as the girls reached the shop, Kit went over to Peter Gruff's store. She asked to see samplers. "We'd like to have a few for our shop," she remarked to the old man.
"No samplers!" muttered Peter. "I don't keep any. No money in samplers."
"Let me see some pewter pitchers, then." Kit was enjoying the musty old store with its strange collection of odds and ends, piled everyway about the dust-laden store.
Peter Gruff didn't have any pewter pitchers.
"Then, do you happen to have any fans?" exclaimed Kit suddenly, hoping to surprise the old man into looking guilty.
"No money in fans. I don't sell fans."
And Kit had to acknowledge that there was not the slightest change of expression in his hard blue eyes.
But as she poked her way about the place she saw a gla.s.s case and inside among bottles, books, old china and other objects, she saw several fans. She edged closer to the case and glanced through the a.s.sortment, but the fan she wanted was not there.
Of course she hardly expected to find it. If Peter had taken the fan, he would hide it away for a while at least.
"But there is something suspicious about him. Saying he didn't have any fans, when they were right there all the time," Kit confided to the chums when she returned to the shop.
"It does look suspicious!" Joy cried. "Girls, I do believe we are hot on the trail."
"I wish I could believe it!" Bet was not optimistic. "I don't believe he did it. He's heard of the theft of the fan and acts a little embarra.s.sed. I do wish Dad were here!"
"I don't. I want to find that fan before he returns," announced s.h.i.+rley with quiet decision.
"I hope we do!" said Bet.
"We're Merriweather Girls and we must find a way out of this difficulty. Lady Betty saved the Manor in her day, now we will do the same!" Kit said decidedly.
"Yes, but how?" groaned Bet. "I've thought and thought about it until my head whirls."
The more the girls puzzled over the mystery, the less light appeared.
Kit made daily visits to the antique shop, hoping to find something suspicious. She made friends with Jacques, the freckled-faced little French boy who worked for Peter. He was shy at first, but Kit soon put him at ease with her kindly smile. He gazed up at her with big, dark eyes that expressed his devotion. Kit had won his heart, and the girls saw him often staring up from the bas.e.m.e.nt window, hoping to get a glimpse of her.
One day when Kit was looking over the a.s.sortment in the gla.s.s case of Peter's shop, she was surprised to find that the fans had been removed.
She was about to ask Jacques where they were when Old Peter Gruff returned.
"You know, Mr. Gruff, I just love your shop! I hope you don't mind me prowling around and looking at things."
She got only a curt grunt in reply, but Kit didn't mind. She went on: "That's awfully kind of you! I'm going to come often."
Kit always returned from her visits with new suspicions. Although she had found no clue, she insisted that the old man was guilty.
"Kit, I'm surprised at you!" declared the gentle s.h.i.+rley. "He's a harmless old man, and I don't believe he would steal from Colonel Baxter."
"Maybe he wouldn't," Kit returned with a frown, "but I still have my doubts. I wish I had his shop to myself for half a day, then I'd make sure the fan was not hidden there.--Or I'd find it."
"Why couldn't you send him up to the Manor to fix a chair or something?" exclaimed Joy.
"He'd probably see through it. Peter Gruff is foxy," replied Bet.
"Anyway I had orders long ago never to let the old man in the house when Dad was away."
"So your father didn't trust him?" cried Kit exultantly.