Ghost Beyond the Gate - novelonlinefull.com
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"I remember that I was taken by two men in a taxicab. They pretended to be my friends. As soon as we were well away from Mrs. Botts' home, they robbed me of my money and portfolio. Then they pushed me out of the cab.
I started walking. I kept on until I came here."
"You're cold and tired," said Salt, trying to guide him toward the taxi.
"Who are you?" Mr. Parker demanded suspiciously. "Why should I let you take me away? You'll only try to rob me--"
"Oh, Dad, you don't understand," Penny murmured. "You're sick."
"Come along, sir," urged Salt. "We're your friends. We'll take you to the doctor."
Mr. Parker planted his feet firmly on the ground.
"I'm not going a step!" he announced. "Not a step!"
"Sorry, sir, but if you're so set about it, we'll have to do it this way."
Salt nodded to Joe. Before Mr. Parker knew what was coming, they caught him firmly by the arms and legs. Although he resisted, they carried him to the cab.
"Take us home as fast as you can!" Penny directed Joe. "Then I'll want you to go for Doctor Greer, the brain specialist. Dad's in very serious condition."
"Serious, my eye!" snorted the publisher. He struggled to free himself from Salt's grip. "Let me out of here!"
"Dad, everything will be all right now," Penny tried to soothe him.
"You're with friends. You're going home."
"I'm being kidnaped!" Mr. Parker complained. "Twice in one night! If I were strong enough to get out of here--"
Again he tried to free himself. Failing, he edged into a corner of the seat and averted his face.
CHAPTER 23 _FORGOTTEN EVENTS_
In the upstairs bedroom, Penny moved with velvet tread. Noiselessly she rearranged a vase of flowers and closed the slat of a Venetian blind.
"You needn't be so quiet," said Mr. Parker from the bed. "I've been awake a long time now."
Penny went swiftly to his side. "How are you feeling this afternoon, Dad?"
"Afternoon?" Mr. Parker demanded, sitting up. "How long have I been sleeping?"
"Roughly, about two days."
Mr. Parker threw off the covers.
"Oh, no, you don't," said Penny, pressing him back against the pillow.
"Doctor Greer says you are to have absolute bed rest for several days.
It's part of the treatment."
"Treatment for what?" grumbled Mr. Parker. "I feel fine!"
"That's wonderful," declared Penny, with a deep sigh of relief. "I'll have Mrs. Weems bring up something for you to eat."
She called down the stairway to the housekeeper, and then returned to the bedside. Her father looked more like his former self than at any time since the strange motor accident which had caused him to lose his memory.
His voice too, was more natural.
"Guess I must have had a bad dream," Mr. Parker murmured, his gaze roving slowly about the room. "I seem to recall riding around in a taxi, and being pushed out into the snow."
"You know where you are now, don't you?" asked Penny.
"Certainly. I'm at home."
Mrs. Weems came into the room bearing a tray of food. Hearing Mr.
Parker's words, she looked at Penny and tears sprang to her eyes.
"Doctor Greer was right," she whispered. "His memory is slowly coming back. How thankful I am!"
"What's all this?" Mr. Parker inquired alertly. "Will someone kindly tell me why I am being imprisoned in this bed?"
"Because you've been very, very sick," Penny said, arranging the food in front of him. "You know who I am now, don't you?"
"Why, certainly," replied Mr. Parker indignantly. "You're my daughter.
Your name is--now let me think--"
"Penny."
"To be sure," agreed Mr. Parker, in confusion. "Fancy forgetting my own daughter's name!"
"You've forgotten a number of other things too, Dad. But events gradually are coming back to you. Suppose you tell me your name."
"My name?" Mr. Parker looked bewildered. "Why, I don't remember. It's not Jones. I took that name because I couldn't think of my own. What's wrong with me?"
Penny tucked a napkin beneath her father's chin and offered him a spoonful of beef broth.
"What's wrong with me?" Mr. Parker demanded again. "Am I a lunatic? Can't either of you tell me the truth?"
"You're recovering from a severe case of amnesia," revealed Penny. "The doctor says it was brought on by overwork in combination with the shock of being in an auto accident. Since you were hurt you've not remembered what happened before that time."
"I do recall the auto mishap," Mr. Parker said slowly. "Another car crowded me off the road. The crash stunned me, and my mind was a sort of blank. Then a pleasant woman took me to her home."
"A pleasant woman, Dad?"
"Why, yes, Mrs. Botts gave me a nice room and good food. I liked it there. But one night a girl broke in--could that have been you, Penny?"
"Indeed, it was."
"When Mrs. Botts came home she was very excited," Mr. Parker resumed meditatively. "She said I had to leave. She hustled me out of the house with two strangers."