<h2 id="c16">CHAPTER XVI. <br/><span class="small">A NEW “CASE” FOR BOBS</span></h2>
<p>The outer office of the Fourth Avenue Branch of
the Burns Detective Agency was vacant when the
girl entered, but almost instantly the door of
the inner office opened and Mr. Jewett himself stood
there. His pleasant face brightened when he saw
his visitor. Advancing with his right hand extended,
he exclaimed: “Miss Vandergrift, I am
almost surprised to see you. I really feared that you
had deserted your new profession.”</p>
<p>“But—Mr. Jewett—I—that is—my name. I told
you that it was Miss Dolittle.”</p>
<p>The young man drew forward a chair for her,
then seated himself at his desk, and again Roberta
realized that, although his face was serious, his gray-blue
eyes were smiling.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_132">[132]</div>
<p>“The letter I sent to you was addressed to Miss
Roberta Vandergrift,” he said, “and, since you have
replied in person, am I not justified in believing that
to be your real name?”</p>
<p>Bobs flushed. “I’ll have to acknowledge that it is,”
she said, “but the other day when you asked me my
name, I didn’t quite like to give that of our family
and so, at random, I chose one.” Then the girl
smiled frankly at him. “I couldn’t have chosen a
worse one, it seems. Miss Dolittle did not impress
my late employer as being a good name for a clerk.”</p>
<p>“You are wrong there,” the young man told her,
and at last there was no mistaking the fact that he
was amused. “Mr. Queerwitz decided that you did
too much and not too little. I don’t know when I
have been so pleased as I was over the fact, which
so disturbs him, that you were able to drive the
better bargain. Mr. Queerwitz has excelled in that
line, and to have a mere slip of a girl obtain one
thousand dollars for a book, the mate of which
brought him but five hundred dollars, is humiliating
to say the least.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_133">[133]</div>
<p>Then, leaning forward, the young man said, with
evident interest: “Miss Vandergrift, will you tell
me what happened?”</p>
<p>Roberta’s expression was sphynx-like. “I understand,
Mr. Jewett,” she replied, “that one need not
give incriminating evidence against oneself.”</p>
<p>Then her eyes twinkled. “And what is more,”
she told him, “I don’t believe that it is necessary.
This office seems to have ferreted out the facts.”</p>
<p>“You are right,” the young man confessed, “and
now I will tell you just what happened. It seems
that while you were out for lunch Mr. Queerwitz,
or one of his assistants, discovered that the rare
book was missing. He phoned me at once and reported
that his head clerk believed that you had
taken the book. She had found you so absorbed in
it earlier in the day that you had not even been
conscious of her presence.</p>
<p>“I assured Mr. Queerwitz that I believed he was
on the wrong trail, but he insisted that a detective be
sent to watch your actions. This was done, and that
night the report delivered to this office was that you
had visited an old second-hand book shop on Third
Avenue; that from there you had mailed one book,
and had then taken another to Mr. Van Loon, sold
it, and had delivered the money to the old bookseller.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_134">[134]</div>
<p>“Our natural conclusion was that the stolen book
was the one that you had sold, but when Mr. Van
Loon was reached by telephone, he stated that the
first of the volumes was the one that he had purchased
for one thousand dollars.</p>
<p>“We said nothing of all this to Mr. Queerwitz, as
we wished to see if the book that you had mailed was
the one that had been taken from the antique shop.</p>
<p>“It was not until the following noon that the book
was delivered, and almost immediately afterward
Mr. Van Loon appeared and purchased it for five
hundred dollars during the absence of Mr. Queerwitz.</p>
<p>“We were then forced to conclude that the old
bookseller on Third Avenue had been the thief, and
we sent at once to his shop to have him arrested,
only to discover that with his wife, Marlitta, he had
sailed for Europe at daybreak.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_135">[135]</div>
<p>“However, our detective reported that Miss Dolittle
was at the shop, having all of the old books
heaped upon a cart. Being truly puzzled by the case,
I decided to follow it up myself, which I did, reaching
the place in my closed car just as you were being
driven away on the book-laden truck. I followed,
unobserved, and when you descended in front of the
Pensinger mansion, with which place I am familiar,
I decided that you lived there. To verify this I
visited the grocer who has charge of the place.</p>
<p>“I made a few purchases and then said casually
to the grocer: ‘I see the old Pensinger mansion is
occupied. People been there long?’</p>
<p>“Mr. Tenowitz, as I hoped, was garrulous and
told me all he knew about the three Vandergrift girls
who had taken possession of the place. He said
the one answering to your description was called
Roberta.</p>
<p>“Of course the grocer really knew little about you,
but it was not hard for a detective to learn much
more about a family that, for generations, has been
so well known in New York. But there is one thing
I do not understand, and that is your evident interest
in that old second-hand dealer in books.”</p>
<p>“I will tell you gladly,” Roberta said, and she
recounted the story from the moment when she had
caught a first glimpse of the spray of lilacs, unconsciously
telling him more than her words did of how
touched her heart was by the poverty and sorrow
that she was seeing for the first time.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_136">[136]</div>
<p>When she paused, he looked thoughtfully out of
the window. “I don’t know that I ought to permit
you to continue in this line of work,” he said. “A
girl brought up as you have been can know nothing,
really, of the dangers that lurk everywhere in this
great city.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Jewett!” Bobs was eager, “please let me
try just once more; then, if I fail again I will endeavor
to find a profession for which I am better
fitted.”</p>
<p>“Very well, I will,” was the smiling reply, “for
this case cannot lead you into places that might be
unwise for you to visit. In fact, I am sure that it is
a case that will greatly interest a young girl.”</p>
<p>Mr. Jewett paused to take a note book from his
pocket. While he was scanning the pages Roberta
leaned forward, waiting, almost breathlessly eager.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_137">[137]</div>
<p>Mr. Jewett, glancing up from his note book,
smiled to see Bobs’ eager, interested expression.
Then he told her about the case. “A certain Mrs.
Waring-Winston, who is prominent in society, has
a daughter who, although brought up in a convent,
is determined to go upon the stage. Her mother has
tried every form of persuasion to prevent this unfortunate
step, and at last she decided that a year of
travel in Europe might have the desired effect, and
so she engaged passage upon a steamer which is to
sail next week.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Waring-Winston believed that if she could
interest the girl in other things just now, on their
return to this country she might entirely abandon
her determination to become a chorus girl. The
mother assured me that Winnie, her daughter, is not
talented enough to advance beyond that point.</p>
<p>“But the girl, it would seem, has more determination
and self-will than she has talent, for when her
mother informed her of the plans she had made,
although outwardly seeming to acquiesce, she was
inwardly rebellious as her subsequent actions proved,
for that night she disappeared.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_138">[138]</div>
<p>“Three days have passed and she has not returned.
Mrs. Waring-Winston did not report the
matter at once, believing that Winnie must have gone
to stay with girl friends in the suburbs; but yesterday,
having inquired at all possible places where her
daughter might visit without having found a trace
of her whereabouts, Mrs. Waring-Winston, in desperation,
appealed to us, imploring us forever to keep
the matter secret. We, of course, agreed to do this,
and it was then that I determined to send for you,
believing that a young girl could find Winnie sooner
than one of our men.”</p>
<p>“Do you think, Mr. Jewett, that the daughter of
Mrs. Waring-Winston has joined a theatrical troupe
in this city?” Bobs inquired.</p>
<p>“I think that it is more possible that she has joined
a troupe that either has or soon will leave town to
tour the country, but of course we must first visit
the playhouses in the city. I have two other women
working on the case, as I wish if possible to cover
all of the theaters today. I have assigned to you a
group of Broadway playhouses that you can easily
visit during the matinee performances. Here is a
photograph of the missing girl.”</p>
<p>Roberta looked at the pictured face. “How lovely
she is!” was her comment. “I do not wonder that
her mother wants to protect her. How I do hope
that I will be able to find Winnie and persuade her
to wait, at least, until she is eighteen years of age
before choosing a profession.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_139">[139]</div>
<p>The girl rose. “It is one-thirty,” she said. “Perhaps
I had better be starting. Do I have to have
a pass or something of that sort in order to be
admitted to the theaters?”</p>
<p>Mr. Jewett also rose and pinned a badge under
the lapel of the girl’s jacket. “Show that,” he told
her, “and it will be all the pass that you will need.”</p>
<p>Then as he held open the door, he smilingly added,
“Good luck to you, Miss Dolittle Vandergrift.”</p>
<p>Bobs flashed a merry smile back at the young man.
“I sincerely hope that I will do more than I did last
time,” she said, but, when she was seated in the taxi
which was to take her to her destination on Broadway,
her thoughts were not of the little would-be
actress, but of Gwendolyn. Day after day Roberta
had noted that, try as she might to be cheerful, her
oldest sister, the one who had been Mother to them
all, grew sadder and more troubled.</p>
<p>“Glow will not be really happy,” Bobs was thinking,
“until Gwen comes back to us. I cannot see
where she can be, for she had only one month’s
allowance with her and she could not live long on
that.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_140">[140]</div>
<p>Bobs’ reverie was suddenly interrupted by the
stopping of the taxi, and, looking up, the girl found
that they were in front of one of the festively
adorned theaters. With a rapidly beating heart, she
descended to the walk, made her way through the
throng, showed her badge and was admitted. At
her request an usher led her behind the scenes.</p>
<p>Bobs felt as though she were on the brink of some
momentous discovery.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_141">[141]</div>
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