“I know, but this is important. I think I’m on the track of a discovery. And Mrs. Weinberger has promised to look after me.”
“Does she know that you suspect her daughter, Mary Louise?”
“No, because I don’t suspect her any longer. Or her new husband either. My clues point in another direction. This time I’m not going to say anything about them till I find out how they work out.”
“I suppose it will be all right, then,” agreed Mrs. Hilliard reluctantly… “What are your immediate plans, dear?”
“I’m going to sleep now till six o’clock, because it’s possible I may be awake most of the night. I’ll have my dinner here with you then, or with the Walder girls, and after that I’m going to a show with Max. About nine-thirty I’ll get to the Bellevue – Mrs. Weinberger is going to wait up for me and go to my room with me.”
“I’m afraid something may happen to you!” protested the good woman.
Mary Louise laughed.
“Mrs. Hilliard, you aren’t a bit like an employer to the detective she has hired. Instead, you treat me like a daughter. And you mustn’t. I shan’t be a bit of use to you if you don’t help me go ahead and work hard.”
“I suppose you’re right, Mary Louise,” sighed Mrs. Hilliard. “But I had no idea what a lovable child you were when I told your father I didn’t mind hiring anybody so young as long as she got results.”
“I only hope I do!” exclaimed Mary Louise fervently.
She went to her own room, packed only her toilet articles in her handbag – for she had no intention of going to bed that night – and lay down for her nap. It was dark when she awakened.
Dressing hurriedly, and taking her hat and coat with her, she met the Walder girls in the lobby and accepted their invitation to eat dinner with them. Immediately afterwards Max arrived at the hotel, and the young couple went directly to a movie.
When it was over, the young man suggested that they go somewhere to eat and dance.
Mary Louise shook her head.
“I’m sorry, Max – I’d like to, but I can’t. This is all I can be with you tonight. I want you to take me to the Bellevue now. I’m spending the night there.”
“What in thunder are you doing that for?” he stormed.
“Please calm down, Max!” she begged. “It’s perfectly all right: Mrs. Weinberger is going to meet me and look after me. But I’d rather you didn’t say anything about it to Mother – I can explain better when I get home.”
“Still, I don’t like it,” he muttered.
Nevertheless, he took her to the hotel and waited with her until Mrs. Weinberger came downstairs.
“Don’t forget to be back home for the dance a week from tonight, Mary Lou!” he said at parting.
Mary Louise turned to Mrs. Weinberger.
“Have you seen the girls – Pauline Brooks and Mary Green?” she asked. She had explained over the telephone why she wanted to stay at the Bellevue.
“No, I haven’t,” replied the older woman. “But then, I have been in my own room.”
“How late do you expect to stay up tonight, Mrs. Weinberger?”
“Till about eleven, I suppose.”
“Will you bring your knitting or your magazine to my room till you’re ready to go to bed?”
“Certainly – I’ll be glad to have your company, my dear.”
Mr. Hayden, the hotel detective, stepped out of the elevator and came to join them.
“There’s a sitting room on the sixth floor,” he said. “Suppose I go there about midnight, Miss Gay? I’m going to have a nap now, but my assistant is in charge, and if you need him, notify the desk, and he’ll be with you immediately. Is that O.K.?”
“Perfectly satisfactory,” agreed Mary Louise.
Taking the key to her room, she and Mrs. Weinberger went up together.
Pauline’s room was apparently dark, but Mary Louise left her own door open so that Mrs. Weinberger could watch for the girls. She herself took up a position where she could not be seen from the doorway. She turned on the room radio, and a couple of hours passed pleasantly.
At eleven o’clock Mrs. Weinberger decided to go to her own room and go to bed. When she had gone, Mary Louise turned off the light and the radio and closed her door. Pulling a comfortable chair close beside the keyhole, she sat down to wait and to listen for Pauline’s and Mary’s return.
The elevators clicked more frequently as midnight approached; more and more guests returned to their rooms. Mary Louise watched them all until she saw Pauline Brooks and Mary Green come along the passageway. They were in high spirits, laughing and talking noisily without any regard for the sleepers in the hotel. Even through the thick walls, Mary Louise could hear them as they prepared for bed.
But in half an hour all was quiet. Both girls were asleep, no doubt – and Mary Louise believed that she had had all her trouble for nothing. She sighed and dozed in her chair.
However, she was not used to sleeping sitting up, and every little noise in the hall aroused her attention. She heard a man come along at two o’clock, and another at half-past. And a little after three she identified the muffled sound of the door of the next room opening!
Leaning forward tensely, she glued her eye to the keyhole. Two young men emerged from the girls’ room and staggered about unsteadily, as if they were drunk. Two very small men, who somehow looked more like masqueraders than real men, although they were correctly dressed, except for the fact that they wore their caps instead of hats and had not taken them off in the hotel.
In spite of their apparently intoxicated condition they walked silently across the hall to room 614. Very cautiously one of them took a key from his pocket, and after a moment or two, he opened the door. Both young men entered the room, but Mary Louise saw that they did not turn on the light as they went in.
“There’s something queer about that,” she thought. And then she remembered the burglar who had entered her own room at Stoddard House and had stolen her watch. He was very like these young men – short and slight and wore a cap. Perhaps these were Pauline’s accomplices!
Cautiously she moved her chair aside and slipped out of her room. In another moment she had reached the sitting room where Mr. Hayden, the detective, was dozing over a newspaper.
“Come with me!” she said briefly, leading him to room 614. “I saw two young men enter this room a couple of minutes ago.”
The detective knocked gently on the door. There was no reply. He knocked again.
The startled voice of a man called out, “What do you want?”
“I’m the hotel detective,” answered Mr. Hayden. “I’m sorry to disturb you, but please open the door.”
A light flashed on in the room, and an elderly man, now clad in his dressing gown, admitted Mary Louise and Mr. Hayden.
“This young lady thinks she saw two young men come in here five minutes ago,” explained the latter. “Were you asleep, sir?”
“Yes,” was the reply. “Your knock waked me up.”
“Then, if you don’t mind, we’ll search the room. Have you anything valuable here?”
“I certainly have! A wallet with five hundred dollars, and a set of diamond shirt studs.”
Mr. Hayden went straight to the closet and turned on the light. Feminine giggles greeted his action.