"Sorry," he said, again, "but there"s no other way. Does that mean you"re going to give me the pin?"
Iris nodded acquiescence, and he stipulated, "The real one?"
Again she nodded, salving her conscience by the thought that her falsehood was told in self-defence.
"Where is it? No, you needn"t speak yet, indicate where it is, and I"ll get it."
Iris nodded her head toward the desk, and the man went to it. He ran his fingers lightly over the various compartments, watching her the while, and as he touched one, she nodded.
She had remembered a small packet of papers, pinned with an old and somewhat rusty pin, and she determined to pa.s.s this pin off on him, if she could make herself dramatically convincing.
"I"ve always thought I could be an actress," the poor child said to herself, "now"s my time to make good."
So, by dint of indicative nods and glances, she easily made her visitor discover the packet and the pin. The papers were valueless, and the pin, which held a paper band round them, was an ordinary, dull, old-looking one.
It was Iris" clever play of her eyes and her hands,--that betokened a great unwillingness to part with it, but did so under duress--that succeeded in making the thief believe it was the pin he was after. He scrutinized the papers, and threw them aside.
"A good hiding-place," he said, putting the papers back where they had been. "As obvious as Poe"s "Purloined Letter." I don"t ask you if this is _the_ pin, for your speaking countenance has told me it is. I only bid you a very good evening."
He rose quickly, and without a further glance at Iris, he turned off the electric light on the table, and she heard him step softly through the living room, and out of one of the low windows that gave on to the verandah.
She sat where he had left her, not really in pain, but in some discomfort. Then, lifting her hands she managed to untie the handkerchief gag. It wasn"t difficult, though the tight knot took a few moments to loosen.
She was tempted to turn on the light, and look at the silk handkerchief still in her hand, but she feared her visitor might discover the fraud and return.
She crept softly into the living room, closed and locked the window through which she had heard him go, and wondered whether it had been left unfastened or he had forced the catch. But that could wait till morning. She locked the living-room door on the hall side, for further safety, and returned to her room, determined to have additional bolts and bars attached here and there the next day.
Then she remembered the house was not hers, and though she might suggest she could not dictate.
Hours she lay awake, thinking it all over. In the security of her own room, she felt no fear and the dawn had begun to show before she slept.
"He"s a crazy man," she told herself, finally, just as, at last, slumber came to her. "But it"s queer the same mania attacked two people at the same time."
Next day she told Lucille Darrel the story.
"No, I don"t think he was crazy," Miss Darrel said, "I think he"s an agent of that other man, and they wanted to find out if you had given the first man the right pin. You see, when you made the second man--what"s his name, Ashton?----"
"Yes, and the first was Pollock."
"Well, when Pollock doubted that you"d given him the right pin, he sent Ashton to find out, and then when you were so clever as to fool Ashton so fully, he thought you had been frightened into it, at last."
"But what do they want the pin _for_?"
"Just as Pollock said; to add to a collection of such things. You know that dime and pin joke is in all the papers. Everybody knows about it."
"But why so desperately anxious to get the very one? If they did have another, n.o.body would ever be the wiser."
"Not unless you withheld the real one, and then gave it or sold it to somebody else later. That would make Pollock"s pin a fraud. Now, he"s sure he has the very pin."
"Well, of all rubbish! But, you"re right. I suppose friend Ashton went to the gate post, and not finding it there, he hovered around the house hoping to get in and hunt for himself."
"Just that. And he did get in--I"m not sure he wouldn"t have taken something more valuable than the pin, if you hadn"t caught him."
"I don"t know; he didn"t seem at all like an ordinary thief. Now, I"m going to see if Polly knows anything about the real pin."
It was nearly time for the Sunday dinner, and Iris, going to the kitchen, found the old cook busy with her preparations.
"Oh, don"t bother me "bout that now, Miss Iris," Polly said; "I"ve gotter set this custard----"
"Behave yourself, Polly! It won"t hurt your old custard to take one minute to answer my question. Did you take a pin out of the under side of Agnes" pincushion?"
"Come outside here," and the cook drew Iris out to the kitchen porch.
"Now," she whispered, "don"t you talk so free "bout that pin. Yes, Miss Iris, I got it, and you kin be mighty glad. That"s a vallyble pin, that is, and don"t you fergit it!"
"Valuable, how? And where is it?"
"Well, you know, Mrs. Pell, she set great store by that pin. Many"s the time, when she"s been goin" to New York or somewhere, she"s said to me, "Polly, you keep this safe till I get home," and she"d hand me that self-same pin. And would I guard it? Well, wouldn"t I!"
"But why, _why_, Polly, did she set such store by it?"
"It was her Luck, Miss Iris----"
"Luck, fiddlesticks! Aunt Ursula wasn"t a fool! If she"d kept that pin for luck, she"d have stuck it away and left it alone."
"Now, you know there"s no telling _what_ Mrs. Pell would do! Anybody else might have done this or that, but there"s no use sayin" _she_ would. She was a law unto herself. But, anyway, that pin"s valuable, and it don"t matter for what reason! So, I got it away from Agnes, who hasn"t a mite of right to it, and saved it for you. Why, Miss Iris, didn"t your aunt, time and again, say she was goin" to leave you a valuable pin? Her little joke was neither here nor there. She said she"d leave you a _valuable_ pin--and she did!"
"You"re crazy too, Polly. Well, give me the pin; let me see if I can discover its great value. Perhaps if I rub it a Slave of the Pin will appear, to grant my wishes!"
"Here it is, Miss Iris," and Polly drew a pin from her bodice, "but for the land"s sake be careful of it! Do, now!"
"I will, honest, I will," and Iris smiled as she took the common pin from the trembling fingers of the old woman.
"Lemme keep it for you, Miss Iris, dear. Won"t you?"
"Maybe I will, later, Polly. I"ll enjoy my valuable possession awhile, myself, first."
Iris went around the lawn toward the side door of the house. As she went, she looked curiously at the pin and then stuck it carefully in her shirtwaist frill.
As she neared the side door, she noticed a small motor car standing there. It was empty, and even as she looked, someone came up stealthily behind her, threw a thick, dark cloth over her head, picked her up and lifted her into the little car, and drove rapidly away.
She tried to scream, but a hand was held tightly over her mouth, and try as she would she could make no sound. She felt the familiar curve as they drove through the gateway, and turned off on the road that led away from the village, and Iris realized she was being kidnapped.
CHAPTER X