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"Miss Dodge?" she inquired as Jennings held open the portieres and she entered the library where Elaine and Aunt Josephine were.
If Elaine had only known, it was the domino girl of the night before who handed her a note and sat down, looking about so demurely, while Elaine read:
MY DEAR MISS DODGE,
The bearer, Miss Bertholdi, is an operative of mine. I would appreciate it if you would employ her in some capacity in your house, as I have reason to believe that certain foreign agents will soon make another attempt to find Kennedy's lost torpedo model.
Sincerely, M. DEL MAR.
Elaine looked up from reading the note. Miss Bertholdi was good to look at, and Elaine liked pretty girls about her.
"Jennings," she ordered, "call Marie."
To the butler and her maid, Elaine gave the most careful instructions regarding Miss Bertholdi. "She can help you finish the packing, first,"
she concluded.
The girl thanked her and went out with Jennings and Marie, asking Jennings to pay her taxicab driver with money she gave him, which he did, bringing her grip into the house.
Later in the day, Elaine had both Marie and Bertholdi carrying armsful of her dresses from the closets in her room up to the attic where the last of her trunks were being packed. On one of the many trips, Bertholdi came alone into the attic, her arms full as usual. Before her were two trunks, very much alike, open and nearly packed. She laid her armful of clothes on a chair near-by and pulled one of the trunks forward. On the floor lay the trays of both trunks already packed.
Bertholdi began packing her burden in one trunk which was marked in big white letters, "E. Dodge."
Down in Elaine's room at the time Jennings entered. "The expressman for the trunks is here, Miss Elaine," he announced.
"Is he? I wonder whether they are all ready," Elaine replied hurrying out of the room. "Tell him to wait."
In the attic, Bertholdi was still at work, keeping her eyes open to execute the mission on which Del Mar had sent her.
Rusty, forgotten in the excitement by Jennings, had roamed at will through the house and seemed quite interested. For this was the trunk behind which he had his cache of treasures.
As Bertholdi started to move behind the trunk, Rusty could stand it no longer. He darted ahead of her into his hiding-place. Among the dog biscuit and bones was the torpedo model which he had dug up from the palm pot in the conservatory. He seized it in his mouth and turned to carry it off.
There, in his path, was his enemy, the new girl. Quick as a flash, she saw what it was Rusty had, and grabbed at it.
"Get out!" she ordered, looking at her prize in triumph and turning it over and over in her hands.
At that moment she heard Elaine on the stairs. What should she do? She must hide it. She looked about. There was the tray, packed and lying on the floor near the trunk marked, "E. Dodge." She thrust it hastily into the tray pulling a garment over it.
"Nearly through?" panted Elaine.
"Yes, Miss Dodge."
"Then please tell the expressman to come up."
Bertholdi hesitated, chagrined. Yet there was nothing to do but obey.
She looked at the trunk by the tray to fix it in her mind, then went down-stairs.
As she left the room, Elaine lifted the tray into the trunk and tried to close the lid. But the tray was too high. She looked puzzled. On the floor was another tray almost identical.
"The wrong trunk," she smiled to herself, lifting the tray out and putting the other one in, while she placed the first tray with the torpedo concealed in the other, unmarked, trunk where it belonged. Then she closed the first trunk.
A moment later the expressman entered, with Bertholdi.
"You may take that one," indicated Elaine.
"Miss Dodge, here's something else to go in," said Bertholdi in desperation, picking up a dress.
"Never mind. Put it in the other trunk."
Bertholdi was baffled, but she managed to control herself. She must get word to Del Mar about that trunk marked "E. Dodge."
Late that afternoon, before a cheap restaurant might have been seen our old friend who had posed as Bailey and as the Mexican. He entered the restaurant and made his way to the first of a row of booths on one side.
"h.e.l.lo," he nodded to a girl in the booth.
Bertholdi nodded back and he took his seat. She had begged an hour or two off on some pretext.
Outside the restaurant, a heavily-bearded man had been standing looking intently at nothing in particular when Bertholdi entered. As Bailey came along, he followed and took the next booth, his hat pulled over his eyes. In a moment he was listening, his ear close up to the part.i.tion.
"Well, what luck?" asked Bailey. "Did you get a clue?"
"I had the torpedo model in my hands," she replied, excitedly telling the story. "It is in a trunk marked 'E. Dodge.'"
All this and more the bearded stranger drank in eagerly.
A moment later Bailey and Bertholdi left the booth and went out of the restaurant followed cautiously by the stranger. On the street the two emissaries of Del Mar stopped a moment to talk.
"All right, I'll telephone him," she said as they parted in opposite directions.
The stranger took an instant to make up his mind, then followed the girl. She continued down the street until she came to a store with telephone booths. The bearded stranger followed still, into the next booth but did not call a number. He had his ear to the wall.
He could hear her call Del Mar, and although he could not hear Del Mar's answers, she repeated enough for him to catch the drift. Finally, she came out, and the stranger, instead of following her further, took the other direction hurriedly.
Del Mar himself received the news with keen excitement. Quickly he gave instructions and prepared to leave his rooms.
A short time later his car pulled up before the La Coste and, in a long duster and cap, Del Mar jumped in, and was off.
Scarcely had his car swung up the avenue when, from an alleyway down the street from the hotel, the chug-chug of a motor-cycle sounded. A bearded man, his face further hidden by a pair of goggles, ran out with his machine, climbed on and followed.
On out into the country Del Mar's car sped. At every turn the motor-cycle dropped back a bit, observed the turn, then crept up and took it, too. So they went for some time.
On the level of the Grand Central where the trains left for the Connecticut sh.o.r.e where Elaine's summer home was located, Bailey was now edging his way through the late crowd down the platform. He paused before the baggage-car just as one of the baggage motor trucks rolled up loaded high with trunks and bags. He stepped back as the men loaded the luggage on the car, watching carefully.
As they tossed on one trunk marked "E. Dodge," he turned with a subtle look and walked away. Finally he squirmed around to the other platform.