The Trail of the Green Doll
Page 18
CHAPTER XVII More Secrets
They waited until the hymn was over and then tiptoed quietly out of thebig Sunday school room. A moment later the quiet was shattered as thechildren rushed off to their individual classrooms. The Dran boyshurried in through the outside door. They were both out of breath.
“Are we late?” the older boy asked Judy.
“I’m afraid so.”
“Oh dear!” the younger one lamented. “We missed the singing and that’sthe best part. We wanted Penny and Paul to come with us, but Peter saidtheir mother would worry—”
“Thank the Lord,” gasped Mrs. Riker.
She looked about ready to faint. The Dran boys stared at her.
“She’s their mother,” Judy explained. “She’s been worried sick. But it’sall right now. We can all be thankful they’re safe. But where werethey?”
“At our house,” the boys said matter-of-factly.
“They wanted to sign up for the magic show,” Timothy, the older of thetwo, explained. “Didn’t they tell you where they were going, Mrs.Riker?”
“No,” she replied rather uncertainly as if she wanted to say more. Shelooked at Judy, who should have introduced them. In the excitement shehad forgotten to do so.
“It’s all right. Peter brought them back and gave us a ride,” Timothysaid.
“He didn’t wait for you. I guess he didn’t know you were here,” Barry,the little one, added.
Having explained everything, the Dran boys ran off to their classeswhich were somewhere in the basement rooms of the church.
“Penny and Paul would have enjoyed this. Maybe I’ll let them come nextSunday,” Helen Riker remarked as they left to walk home.
“Next Sunday?” Judy questioned.
Was Mrs. Riker planning to stay all winter? What were her plans? Judyknew she couldn’t ask her new friend to leave when she didn’t haveanywhere to go, or any money, but she hadn’t counted on taking in awhole family.
“If I’m here,” Mrs. Riker replied. “I haven’t decided anything. But atleast I have something to be thankful for. The children are all right.”
When they reached Judy’s home they found Penny and Paul helping Petermake pancakes. He had discovered the batter and the griddle ready, andhad appointed himself chef in Judy’s absence.
“Pancakes coming up!” he announced. “Pitch right in, everybody. Knowwhere we’re going as soon as we finish, Angel?”
“No, where?” Judy asked.
But before Peter could tell her, Mrs. Riker said what she wanted to knowwas where the children had been and why they hadn’t told her they weregoing out.
The answer to the last question was simple enough. She had been asleepwhen they left.
“It was very early,” Paul explained. “We had to wake everybody up. Mr.Brown didn’t like it, but when we went to Timmy Dran’s house themagician didn’t mind.”
“The magician!” their mother said in shocked surprise.
“Is that where you were?” asked Judy. “I might have known it! Where doesthis magician live?”
“With Barry and Timothy Dran. He’s the nicest man, just like Daddy, onlyhe isn’t. It’s all right if we go there,” Paul hurried on. “Peter knowshim. They got real well acquainted, and we joined the club and Penny hasa part in the magic show. She and Anne changed places because now she’sthe littlest. Wally said it was all right.”
“I disappear,” Penny announced proudly.
“Not again,” her mother protested.
“It’s all right. I’ll come back.”
Mrs. Riker sighed.
“Well, I hope so. At least you’re safe now. The next time you leave thehouse you must tell me, so I won’t worry,” she continued. “You know howmuch I’ve had on my mind.”
“I wish I did,” Judy thought.
“We know. But it’s going to be different now, isn’t it, Penny?” Paulasked.
“Oooh, yes!” she squealed.
“More secrets!” Judy said, holding up her hands in mock despair.“Haven’t we enough already!”
She still had Mrs. Riker’s problems to solve and they weren’t easy. Asthey did the dishes together she encouraged the young woman to talk. Thetruth came out unexpectedly when Mrs. Riker commented that their kitchenused to be almost as nice as Judy’s.
“You’d never think it to look at it now, but when we lived in thecaretaker’s cottage on the Riker estate, it was the coziest, warmestlittle place you ever saw. The boys used to come down whenever Mothermade cookies—”
“The boys?” Judy questioned.
“My husband Philip, and his brother Paul. I liked Paul best then,” shecontinued in a voice that told Judy she had decided to take her into herconfidence. “We were children, of course, but I used to think it wasPaul I would marry. And then, suddenly, everything changed. After weleft the caretaker’s cottage and went to live in the city, it was Philipwho wrote to me.”
“But what happened to Paul?” Judy asked.
“I never saw him again,” Helen said, “but Philip came to New York andlooked me up. He said he and Paul had quarreled and that he, Philip, hadbeen disinherited. Their money never mattered to me, anyway. I lovedthem both—”
She stopped, but Judy made no comment. She was afraid of breaking thespell. It was almost as if Helen Riker were reliving her past.
“Maybe I shouldn’t have said that, but it’s true!” she declared. “Itused to break my heart when they quarreled. Philip was jealous of Paulbecause their uncle favored him and called Philip a little thief. He didtake things to give away. Uncle Paul had so much, Phil thought it didn’tmatter. They were only there on a visit, but it was the happiest summerin my whole life. Afterwards—but why talk about it? It’s all in the pastand I have the future to think about.”
“Could there be a link?” asked Judy, thinking fast.
“How do you mean?”
“I mean if one of the presents Philip gave you happened to be in thepocketbook that was stolen—”
Mrs. Riker’s face went white.
“How did you know?” she questioned.
Judy smiled, taking the dish the other had nearly dropped.
“It was just a guess. Your little daughter Penny is like her mother. Sheisn’t very good at keeping secrets. A green doll would be a greengoddess, wouldn’t it? Possibly a jade goddess worth quite a bit to athief who had the mate—”
“Rama!” Helen gasped. “Paul always said it was bad luck to separatethem!”