<p>But afterward, when they had adjourned to a suite that had now been
given them, and which included a cosy little sitting room, and after
the Colonel had been ordered to light his cigar, which always composed
his nerves, the O'Gorman girl suddenly turned serious and from the
depths of an easy chair, with her hands clasped behind her red head,
she said:</p>
<p>"Now to business. Begin at the beginning and tell me all there is to
tell."</p>
<p>"Haven't I written you something about Alora, Josie?" asked Mary
Louise.</p>
<p>"Never mind whether you have or haven't. Imagine I've forgotten it.
I want every detail of the girl's history."</p>
<p>So Mary Louise told it, with a few comments from her grandfather.
She began with their first meeting with Alora and her eccentric father
in Italy, and related not only all the details of their acquaintance
but such facts as Alora had confided to her of her mother's death and
her subsequent unhappy relations with her father and guardian. Alora
had often talked freely to Mary Louise, venting in her presence much
bitterness and resentment over her cruel fate—as she deemed it.
So, knowing Josie's desire to obtain the most seemingly trifling detail
of a case, Mary Louise told the story as connectedly and
comprehensively as possible, avoiding all personal comment so as to
leave Josie's mind free from prejudice.</p>
<p>During the recital Josie sat very still, with closed eyes, reclining
lazily in her chair and refraining from any interruption.</p>
<p>"Now, Colonel," she said, "tell me all that Mary Louise has
forgotten to mention."</p>
<p>"She has told you more than I knew myself," he declared. "Of course
we informed the police of our friend's disappearance and they sent a
detective here who went into the affair very carefully. Yet, so
far——"</p>
<p>"I know," said Josie, nodding. "I called at the police station
before I came here, on leaving the train. The detective is Al Howard,
and he's a nice fellow but rather stupid. You mustn't expect any
results from that source. To be sure, the department might stumble on a
clew, but the chances are they wouldn't recognize it, even then."</p>
<p>"I'm certainly surprised to hear that!" said the Colonel.</p>
<p>"Because you are ignorant of police methods. They mean well, but
have so much to handle, in a big city like this, that they exist in a
state of perpetual bewilderment."</p>
<p>"But what are we to do?" pleaded Mary Louise. "Tell us, Josie!"</p>
<p>"How do <i>I</i> know?" asked the girl, with a smile. "I'm just
Josie O'Gorman, a student detective, who makes as many
blunders—alas!—as a full-fledged 'tec.' But I thought I'd
be able to help, or I wouldn't have come. I've a personal interest in
this case, Mary Louise, because it's your case and I love you. So let's
get to work. Have you a photograph of Alora Jones?"</p>
<p>"No," was the reply.</p>
<p>"Then give me a word picture of her."</p>
<p>Both Mary Louise and the Colonel tried to do, this, and Josie seemed
satisfied.</p>
<p>"Now, then," she said, rising, "let's go to her room. I hope it
hasn't been disturbed since she left it."</p>
<p>"The police have taken the key and forbidden anyone to enter the
room."</p>
<p>"Quite proper. But we'll go there, just the same."</p>
<p>The room was but a few steps away, in the same corridor, and when
they arrived there Josie drew a bunch of slender keys from her purse
and unlocked the door with no difficulty. Having entered, she turned on
the electric lights and cast a curious glance around.</p>
<p>"Let's read Alora's room," said she, while her companions stood
listening. "To begin with, we see her night-dress nicely folded and her
toilet articles arranged in neat order on the dresser. Chambermaid did
that, for Alora is not neat. Proving that her stuff was just strewn
around and the orderly maid put things straight. Which leads to the
supposition that Alora was led away rather suddenly."</p>
<p>"Oh, do you think so?"</p>
<p>"She left the door ajar, but took the key. Intended, of course, to
lock her room, but was so agitated by what she saw or heard that she
forgot and just walked away."</p>
<p>"But no one saw her leave the hotel," observed Mary Louise.</p>
<p>"Then she didn't pass through the office, but through the less used
Ladies' Entrance at the side."</p>
<p>"That was not unlocked, they told me, until after seven
o'clock."</p>
<p>"Then she left by the servants' entrance."</p>
<p>"The servants'!"</p>
<p>"Quite likely. You'll say she didn't know anything about it, or
where it was; but the fact remains that Alora left the hotel. I'd like
to see that chambermaid. I believe you told me she comes on duty at six
o'clock in the morning. All right. I'll catch her at six a. m. to-
morrow."</p>
<p>"The detective interviewed her," stated Colonel.</p>
<p>"I know, and she answered all his questions. My questions will be
different. If Alora used the servants' entrance, she went out with a
servant or with someone who knew the ways of the hotel intimately."</p>
<p>"I don't see that," objected Mary Louise.</p>
<p>"Nor do I, but there lies our trail. Alora didn't pass out through
the office, nor did she make her exit through the less public Ladies'
Entrance. There are only two other ways to get out of here: through the
baggage door and by the servants' entrance at the rear, which lets into
an alley. The head porter will know whether Alora went out the baggage
door, but as it's usually very high—on a level with the platform
of a baggage-wagon—I don't believe she jumped it. That leaves the
servants' entrance as the probable exit for our missing one, and as she
was a perfect stranger to the arrangements of this hotel, she couldn't
have gone that way unless someone guided her. So our course is clear,
Mary Louise. Find out who enticed Alora from the hotel and it won't be
difficult to trace her and discover what has become of her."</p>
<p>"Enticed, Josie?"</p>
<p>"Had force been used, she would have screamed and attracted
attention. Let us say she was decoyed."</p>
<p>"You think, then, that Alora was kidnapped?"</p>
<p>"Let us reason. The girl couldn't have had an enemy in Chicago,
according to her history, for she was only eleven when she left here
and no one hates an eleven year old child. Having no enemy, she has
doubtless escaped personal harm. But Alora is an heiress, and a lot of
people in Chicago know that. You suggest kidnapping. Well, perhaps
that's the solution: held for ransom."</p>
<p>"That would be the first idea of Jason Jones!" exclaimed Mary
Louise. "He has always seemed afraid of such a thing."</p>
<p>"In that case, however, I do not believe her father would pay a
ransom," declared Colonel Hathaway.</p>
<p>"Oh, indeed he would!" asserted Mary Louise, emphatically; "we
mustn't forget that if Alora isn't found and restored to him within a
given time he will lose all her income for the next three years."</p>
<p>Josie looked at her friend admiringly. Then she laughed.</p>
<p>"You're a better detective than any of us," she remarked. "What I've
been groping for is the <i>object</i> of the abduction, and you've hit
the nail squarely on the head. Now we're getting down to brass tacks,
so to speak. The whole thing is explained by the one
word—'blackmail.' Girl disappears; papa is threatened with the
lose of thousands. Very well, Papa! pay up. Relinquish a part of the
income and you may keep the rest. Refuse, and you lose it all. Ergo,
papa pays."</p>
<p>"That certainly seems a logical conclusion," admitted the
Colonel.</p>
<p>"Then," said Josie, thoughtfully, "we must decide whether to put it
up to Mr. Jones, and let him pay, or to go on with the search."</p>
<p>"We'll go on!" exclaimed Mary Louise. "We may be wrong, and poor
Alora may be in danger, or suffering. We must rescue her as soon as
possible."</p>
<p>"The girl was in my care," said the Colonel, "and I feel responsible
for her safety. Moreover blackmail is a crime against society, and the
plot should be foiled even were we not interested in the victim of it.
I am anxious to find Alora before her father is approached."</p>
<p>"Then," Josie decided, "we will leave no stone unturned in our
efforts to locate and recover her. If we have diagnosed the case
correctly, we have to deal with a shrewd and unprincipled, if not
clever person. Cleverness, too, we may encounter, and then our task
will be doubly hard."</p>
<p>"Poor, dear Alora!" sighed Mary Louise. "It's a shame she should
suffer because some cruel person wants her father's money. The fortune
her mother left her has been a <i>mis</i>fortune to her daughter,
instead of a blessing."</p>
<p>"Money," said Josie sententiously, "is a dangerous thing. Its
possession, or the lack of it, leads to four-fifths of the world's
crimes. The other one-fifth is charged to hatred and jealousy.
But—dear me!—here I am philosophizing, when I ought to be
thinking."</p>
<p>"Then think, Josie, and think to some purpose," pleaded Mary
Louise.</p>
<p>"If our hastily constructed theory is correct," remarked John
O'Gorman's daughter, "Papa Jones will soon hear from Alora's abductor,
with a financial proposition."</p>
<p>"I hope we shall find her before then," returned the Colonel
earnestly. "We ought not to delay an instant, with that idea in view.
Indeed, our theory may be quite wrong and Alora be in desperate need of
immediate assistance."</p>
<p>"Correct, sir," agreed Josie. "But we won't abandon our theory until
we evolve a better one and in following this lead we must first
discover who in Chicago is aware of the terms of the will of Antoinette
Seaver Jones. Also who is familiar enough with Papa Jones' love of
money to believe he can be successfully blackmailed. What information
can either of you give me along those lines?"</p>
<p>"Alora has talked to Irene a good deal about that dreadful will,"
replied Mary Louise, "Irene has repeated many of her statements to me.
Also Alora has frankly spoken to me, at times, and her queer history
has interested us all. But I cannot remember that any such person as
you describe is in any way mixed up with the story. Judge Bernsted drew
up the will for Alora's mother. He was her lawyer, and she trusted him
fully."</p>
<p>"She was justified," declared Josie. "I know of Judge Bernsted, by
reputation. He died a year ago."</p>
<p>"Then," continued Mary Louise, reflectively, "there was Mrs. Jones'
doctor, who was very kind to Alora and who also enjoyed her mother's
confidence. His name was Anstruther—Dr. Anstruther."</p>
<p>"He is a prominent physician in Chicago," declared Josie, who seemed
to know every important person of every locality, for this had been
part of her education. "It is impossible that Dr. Anstruther could have
any knowledge of this plot. Moreover, it doesn't seem to me like a
man's plot. I don't believe Alora would have accompanied a strange man,
under any circumstances, for she's knocked around the world enough to
have learned prudence. The crime is feminine. What woman knew of this
will, and was an intimate friend of Mrs. Jones, or of Mr. Jones?"</p>
<p>"Really," said Mary Louise, "I don't know."</p>
<p>"Nor you, Colonel?"</p>
<p>"I do not recollect hearing of any woman connected with the Jones
history—except Alora's former governess, a Miss Gorham, who was
discharged by Mr. Jones at the time he took his daughter from Chicago
to New York."</p>
<p>"That isn't such a bad clew!" Josie quickly returned, sitting up
straight and staring reflectively at the old gentleman. "Miss Gorham,
eh? Now, how long had she been Alora's governess?"</p>
<p>"For some years, I believe." It was Mary Louise who answered this
question.</p>
<p>"Then she doubtless knew the family secrets. Was Alora fond of
her?"</p>
<p>"I think not. She has told me that at the time they separated she
was glad to be rid of the woman."</p>
<p>"Then the woman may be the kind that would resort to blackmail.
Discharged from a good place, where she had drawn pay for years, she
would be angry. Brooded during the last four years on her imagined
wrongs and figured out a neat revenge. Had sized up Papa Jones and knew
he clung to money with a desperate grip and would pay some rather than
lose all. Couldn't get another job; was poor; had no money to chase up
Jones, but figured he would some time return to Chicago and give her an
opportunity play her game. Discovered that Alora had arrived at this
hotel, and——See here! What would prevent the former
governess, now in reduced circumstances, from being employed as a
servant in this very hotel? Perhaps as a night chambermaid. May have
seen Alora enter her room and recognized her former pupil. During the
long night she figured and planned how to take advantage of the
fortunate circumstances. Early in the morning, before she left here,
went to Alora and in some way induced the girl to go out with her.
Alora would accompany her old governess without suspicion.
So—there's the whole story, in a nutshell, rather cleverly
figured out."</p>
<p>"Oh, Josie, it must be true!" cried Mary Louise, who had eagerly
followed this plausible reasoning.</p>
<p>"And it may not," laughed Josie. "It's just a theory, and good
detectives distrust theories, which often befog clever brains. Still,
the deduction sounds mighty logical. I'm going to my room, now, to give
the suggestion some serious thought. I'll try to tear it to pieces, or
at least to pick holes in it. When I came away Daddy said to me:
'Josie, beware that imagination of yours. If it asserts itself, sit on
it.' Daddy was glad to have me tackle the case, and try to help you,
for these little affairs give me practice; but he hates to have me make
a flat failure. So, for dear old Daddy's sake, I'm not going to let any
good-looking theory lead me astray. Good night. You'd both better go to
bed, for I can see you had little sleep last night. But your strain
must now relax, for you've pushed the responsibility onto my poor
little shoulders and now it's up to me to worry."</p>
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