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The Banner Boy Scouts Mystery
Jack nodded and wondered what Paul had been up to now. “What this fellow, Paul, did?” continued the chief. “He went with three men to take Harriman into custody. Well, this fellow put up a tough battle. To make a long story short, he came out of the rear of his store, barricaded himself and fired shot for shot. They might still be there shooting it out if it wasn’t for this fellow. He sneaked up on his rear, jumped the gangster, and bingo! there he was all captured and no longer tough and fighting.”
Mr. Grey laughed heartily. “These fellows,” he remarked, “are showing us all up. Did I say before you ought to make them honorary members of your force? I take it back. They would show your men up so, the whole force would soon be plagued with an inferiority complex.”
The chief roared and slapped his knee. “That’s a good one,” he cried.
Jack said, “By the way, where are Ken and Paul?”
“They are in the detectives’ room. Shall I call them? Do you want them?”
“Well, it’s about time we went home.”
Mr. Grey laughed. “Notice how calm and nonchalant he is and with what poise he said that,” commented the government agent. “The job is done, nothing else to do, so it’s about time to go home, just like that.”
Jack blushed and Chief Bates laughed. “Well,” he said, “there is really no reason why the boys should not go home.”
“No, I guess not. I think they deserve it.”
“Yes.” The chief winked to the government agent. “I think I will send them home in an official car.”
“Oh, that isn’t necessary at all,” cried Jack. “We can just as well walk home.”
He rose to his feet as if he intended to leave. “Now you just sit there,” said the chief. Opening the door of his office, he called his secretary to have the boys come in.
Chief Bates and the government agent continued their joking. A minute later Jack and Ken and Walters entered. “Oh, there you are,” cried Paul. “We didn’t know where you were and what happened to you.”
“Yes,” added Ken, “we were waiting for you.”
“Well, here I am,” Jack informed his friends, “and I think it’s time we went home.”
Chief Bates, addressing the detective, said, “Walters, will you please take the boys home?”
“Oh, that isn’t necessary at all,” cried Paul. “Thanks all the same. But we can walk home.”
“Notice the modesty of them,” remarked Mr. Grey. “It’s really funny.”
The chief laughed. “All right,” said Walters, “if you’re ready, let’s go.”
Chief Bates came around the desk and shook hands with them. “Any time I can do anything for you boys,” he said seriously, “don’t forget to call on me.”
“And when you want some good detective work done,” intervened Mr. Grey, “you call on them.”
The boys were beginning to feel uncomfortable. The government agent rose and approached them. “Well, boys,” he said, “it was a real pleasure to work with you.” He paused for a second, then added, “The only trouble of collaborating with you is that you do all the work and leave the other fellow nothing to do.”
There was laughter all around. Then Jack said, “Mr. Grey, you must not forget that we want to talk some things over with you. There are a couple of mysterious details that we think, you can clear up for us.”
The man bowed low and replied, “I am at your disposal, sir.”
“Perhaps you might visit us tonight at my house,” added Paul. “Then you could tell us everything.”
“That’s right,” nodded Ken. “How about it?”
“I shall be there at eight sharp, gentlemen.”
The boys smiled at the man’s behavior. He was really lots of fun. They said goodbye all around and left, accompanied by Walters.
CHAPTER XXVI
Trouble at HomeThe boys got into the official car with Walters at the wheel. Jack and Ken sat in the back while Paul sat in the front with the driver. Paul remarked, “Now that all that is done, our real work begins.”
“What do you mean?” asked Ken.
“Do you remember what we originally started out to solve?” Paul asked.
“I was just thinking of that,” muttered Jack. “We have gotten as far away from the original mystery as we could.”
“What are you kids talking about?” asked Walters.
“Well,” said Paul for the detective’s information, “we happened to discover the gang of counterfeiters by....”
“You don’t mean to tell me that it was you fellows who discovered them!” exclaimed the detective.
“Well, in a small way, yes.”
“That’s a rich one,” was Walters’ retort. “But go on with what you were saying.”
“What I was going to say,” continued Paul, “was that some maniac has been roaming through town and doing things, always leaving a white card to mark his visit there.”
“You don’t say!” remarked Walters. “And you’re trying to track him down?”
“That’s right.”
“How did you find out about this fellow with the white card?”
“Well, do you remember when Ken’s little sister, Betty, was reported missing for about an hour and then turned up again?”
“Why, yes, I remember the case. And I don’t think anything was done about it.”
“No,” said Paul. “But that’s how we began our investigation that led up to the discovery of 752 York Street.”
“Now that’s very interesting,” commented the detective. “How did it happen?”
“Well, you see, Jack found her all the way out on Leonard Street. Questioning her, she told him that a man bought her candy and then took her for a walk and left her there.”
“And then what?”
“Well, the man also gave her a white card. And that’s how our investigation began.”
“Wait a minute,” cried Jack, flushed with excitement. “Do you remember that all along we have been thinking that Mr. Grey was that man and that is why we were following him and all that, just waiting to jump on him?”
Ken exclaimed, “Why that is right, come to think of it.”
Walters laughed. “So Mr. Grey is the guilty party. That’s good.”
And he laughed some more. “What are we going to do, Paul?”
“We will just have to ask him, I guess,” was the reply. “I imagine he will be able to clear up a lot of details for us.”
“Yes,” said Ken, “but you don’t think he was responsible for the fires and the robbery at Professor Link’s, do you?”
“What about the fires and that robbery you are talking about?” asked Walters.
“We found that there have lately been more than an average number of fires in town.”
“That’s right,” agreed the detective. “I remember that Captain Bob has spoken to the chief about it and I think that a detective has been put on the case. I’ll find out who it is and tell him to look you up.”
The detective treated it as a good joke. While he was still laughing Paul remarked, “Yes, send him over. We may be able to give him some valuable information.”
The detective was still more amused and the boys laughed too. “That’s right, Walters,” echoed Ken, “some day when you have a case you can’t solve, call on us.”
“I think we have been talking too much,” replied the detective.
The car pulled up to the curb in front of the Morrison home. Paul and Ken, who lived across the street, jumped out. They waved to Jack and Walters as the car sped away to deliver the last of the trio home.
Paul rushed into the house and upstairs to his room. His mother as yet knew nothing about her son’s adventure. Later on, she called him to dinner. Dr. Morrison walked in. Seeing his son, he exclaimed, “Well, well! Permit me to congratulate you, my boy. I didn’t know we had a hero in the family.”
Paul blushed and became very busy with his grape fruit. Mrs. Morrison asked innocently, “A hero in the family? What are you talking about?”
Dr. Morrison waved a newspaper. “Just take a look at the evening paper and you’ll see. His picture is in there and the whole story of how he and his friends captured a gang of counterfeiters.”
Paul’s head sunk lower. So his picture was in the paper! He wondered how the reporters got it and whether Jack’s and Ken’s pictures were also in the paper. He was itching to read what the papers had to say about the affair. But his mother grabbed the newspaper and read it breathlessly. A minute later she looked up and demanded, “Paul Morrison! Will you please tell me what this is all about?”
Paul shook his head meekly. “Why nothing, Mother,” he whispered. “It just happened that I....”
He faltered and his mother said, “It just happened! I will be very glad to see you go off to college. You will be too busy there to get into mischief.”
But the next moment she smiled sweetly and and came around the table and kissed him. Dr. Morrison was beaming. He had always been proud of his son. He said, addressing his wife, “He is all right; he is one boy who can take care of himself.”
“I’m sure of that,” answered Mrs. Morrison, “but for my peace of mind I wish he would keep out of trouble. I hope college will do that—keep him out of mischief.”
Just then the maid entered and announced that Paul was wanted on the telephone. He went into the foyer and picked up the receiver. It was Jack. “Hello.”
“Hello, Paul. Are you in trouble with your family about the affair?”
“A little.”
“Well, so am I. Goodbye.”
Paul went back to the dining room. His father said, “Now, since you were a participant, do you mind telling us a few of the details?” So Paul started in to relate the whole story.
At the Armstrong home, it happened a little differently. Ken entered the house and went to wash up. Soon his father returned home from the office, carrying an evening paper. Looking around for his son, he found the boy in the library reading a story to his little sister Betty. Mr. Armstrong walked in, stood over the boy for several seconds, pretending that he was going to give him a good verbal thrashing, then exclaimed, “So! So you have decided to become a detective!”
“What’s a defective?” Betty asked innocently.
Ken and his father burst out laughing. Mr. Armstrong bent down and said to the child, “Detective, honey. The word is detective.”
Ken still laughed. He thought his little sister was cunning in the way she had said it. Turning to his son, Mr. Armstrong asked, “Well, what is it all about?”
“What does the paper say?” asked Ken.
“Here, see for yourself.” And Mr. Armstrong gave the evening paper to his son. “Your picture is in it and Chief Bates is quoted as saying that you were real heroes. Imagine it, my son a hero!”
“Well, what’s wrong with that, Dad?” asked Ken.
Just then Mrs. Armstrong entered.
Mr. Armstrong said, “Will you come here a second, Mother? I want to tell you something.” She came into the library. “Did you know that your son is a hero?” asked her husband.
“What did he do now?” she inquired calmly.
“Give your mother the newspaper, Ken.”
Mrs. Armstrong took the paper and glanced at the headlines and the pictures. She said calmly, “Nothing surprises me. What these boys can’t get into has not been invented yet. Come to dinner.”
They rose to comply. Mr. Armstrong put an arm around the boy’s shoulder and said, “You’re all right, son. But I do hope college will tame you and your friends a bit.”
They went into the dining room. When they were about half through the meal Ken was called to the telephone. It was Jack. “Hello, Ken.”
“Hello, Jack. What’s up?”
“Are you having trouble with your family about that affair?”
“No, not really. My father and mother took it very well.”
“Well, I am. Goodbye.”
Jack’s reception had been different. When he got into the house, he found his mother waiting for him. One of the neighbors, who had been out shopping returned home with an afternoon newspaper. She immediately ran over to show Mrs. Stormways the headlines and the pictures of Jack and his friends. Jack’s mother first became frightened, and was on the point of calling Chief Bates to inquire further into the matter. But then she thought it would be better to wait until her son returned. It was evident that no harm had come to him, or it would have been in the paper.
She waited for her son. At last he came and she asked him, “Well, Jack Stormways, what is this all about?”
“What is what about, Mother?”
He really did not know that the story was in the afternoon papers and that his mother knew the situation. She showed him the paper with the headlines and the pictures. His first comment was, “Not such a bad picture of me and the boys, is it, Mother?”
The remark took her breath away for a moment. His calmness and self-assurance overwhelmed her. She smiled. “Is that all you can say for yourself?” she asked.
He went over and kissed her. “What can I say, Mother?” he replied. “The story is right here and I guess I am guilty. But there was really nothing to it. I merely helped a little to capture the gang.”
“Just helped a little!” commented Mrs. Stormways. “You’re always taking some sort of risk. I don’t know what will ever happen to you.”
“Now, Mother,” pleaded Jack, “you know I can take care of myself.”
“That’s just the trouble,” she replied. “You can take care of yourself too well.”
Just then Jack’s younger brother, aged thirteen, burst into the house. Seeing Jack with his mother, he cried, “Say, I heard you were playing cops and robbers; is it true?”
Jack and his mother laughed. “Come on, Jack, tell me about it,” insisted the boy.
But Jack paid no attention to his brother. His mother said, “I just wonder what your father will say when he comes home.”
She walked out into the kitchen to continue her preparations for dinner. In due time, Mr. Stormways came home carrying an evening paper with him. As soon as he stepped into the house, his younger son cried, “Did you hear, Dad? Jack has been playing cops and robbers.”
“Yes, son, I heard all about it. Too much, in fact. What do you think we ought to do about it?”
“I think you ought to make him tell us all about it, Dad,” answered the boy. “He wouldn’t tell me anything.”
“All right, we’ll see what we can do about that. Where is he, by the way?”
“He is upstairs in his room. Shall I call him?”
“Yes, do, son. Tell him to come down for dinner. I shall be in the dining room.”
Jack came downstairs. His father was at the table. As soon as he walked into the room, his father rose and bowing, said, “May I congratulate you? Will you please tell us how it feels to be a hero?”
Jack blushed. “Oh, don’t do, that, Dad,” pleaded Jack.
But Mr. Stormways was enjoying himself. “Sit down, my hero,” he said. He led Jack to the head of the table and sat him down there, saying, “Since you are now a hero, you shall preside over the dinner table.” As Mrs. Stormways came in her husband called out, “An extra portion of everything for the hero, my dear.”
“Ah, Dad, don’t,” pleaded Jack.
But Mr. Stormways was not to be dissuaded. Sitting down, he said, “Now tell me, did you capture the gang all by yourself, or did someone help you a little?”
Jack smiled. He thought he might as well join in with his father’s humor. “Well,” he answered, “Paul and Ken did help a little, but very little.”
“Just what I thought,” remarked his father. “And tell me another thing,” continued Mr. Stormways, “did the gangsters run just as soon as they saw you or did they hesitate for a little while?”
“They immediately surrendered,” was the reply.
“Now let me think,” mused his dad, “what else was there I wanted to ask you. Oh, yes. I suppose, that as a reward for your bravery, the president himself will no doubt come here to congratulate you and bestow upon you the Congressional Medal of Honor, is that so?”
“Well, I don’t know about that, Dad,” replied Jack. “I imagine that he may be too busy to do that. But I am sure he will send a representative.”
There was a silent pause for a few seconds, then Mr. Stormways burst out laughing. “Well, seriously, fellow,” he said, “don’t you think that you ought to stop keeping company with gangsters and all that?”
“I’ll try, Dad.”
Just then Jack’s younger brother spoke up and asked for details of the story and Jack complied by telling all of it.
CHAPTER XXVII
Mystery of the White CardThe boys were at the Morrison home waiting for Mr. Grey to appear. They had hundreds of questions to ask him and they hoped that he would clear up the mystery of the white card. But if he did not, they would be at a loss as to what to do next. They would either have to give up or commence their investigation all over again, and they were rather tired of the thing by now. Jack remarked, “I still can’t understand how we happened to come upon Mr. Grey and follow him. I don’t suppose he had anything to do with the mystery of the white card.”
“But it was you who originally began to follow him,” said Ken.
“That’s right. But now that I think of it, I can’t understand how I happened to pick on him.”
“Betty described the man who took her for a walk as tall and thin,” interposed Paul.
“Yes, but there are many tall, thin men in town,” argued Jack.
“And we came to the conclusion that the man who would start fires and steal a single book must be a maniac of some sort.”
Jack laughed. “Well, does Mr. Grey look like a maniac?” he asked.
Paul smiled and remarked, “Well, he does look rather odd, tall and thin as he is.”
“All that doesn’t get us anywhere,” said Jack.
“Well, let’s not come to any conclusions but wait until Mr. Grey comes,” remarked Paul.
“Yes, he’ll clear it all up for us.”
About ten minutes later, the government agent arrived. He looked like a changed man, dressed in a summer linen suit and his hair combed neatly back. “Hello, fellows,” he greeted as he entered.
“Hello, Mr. Grey,” returned Paul. “Won’t you sit down?”
“Well, I’ll try,” he said as he took a seat, “but I’m afraid you fellows are going to question me so much, you’ll have me standing on my head.”
“Then we’ll turn you over and sit you down again,” spoke up Jack.
“Now, Mr. Grey,” began Paul, “and by the way, is that your real name?”
“No, of course not. My name is George Wilson.”
“Well, Mr. Wilson, we are mystified by a certain little thing,” continued Paul, “and I wonder if you can clear it for us.”
“Try me and we’ll see.”
“The mystery of the white card,” Jack blurted out. “What is it all about?”
“What white card?” asked the agent mystified.
“You don’t know?” cried Ken.
The man shook his head in complete ignorance. “I’ll faint,” cried Jack, falling back in his chair and pretending that he was actually fainting.
“Tell me what it is all about,” asked the government agent. “I don’t even know what you are talking about.”
“And we thought that you could give us the solution,” commented Jack. “Now what are we going to do?”
“Will you please let me in on it?” Mr. Wilson asked for the second time.
“It’s like this,” began Paul, again explaining the whole thing, this time for the benefit of Mr. Wilson. “About ten days ago, Ken’s little sister, Betty, disappeared. Jack happened to find her all the way out on Leonard Street. Questioning her, he found that a man had bought her candy, taken her for a walk and left her there after he gave her a blank white card.”
“May I see the card?” asked Mr. Wilson.
Paul took it out of his pocket and showed it to him. The agent glanced at it and then said, “Go on.”
“Well, several days later there happened to be a fire on Water Street and I rushed into the building. To make the story short, inside that burning house I found another white card, an exact duplicate of the first one.”
“What?” asked Mr. Wilson, his curiosity now aroused. “And then what?”
“That isn’t all,” continued Paul. “The next day a robbery occurred at Professor Link’s and all that was taken was a single book out of the library. And what’s more, the same white card was left.”
“But the point of the story is,” intervened Ken, “we thought all along that you were the guilty person and that is how Jack began to follow you.”
“I!” cried the agent, aghast. “How do I come in on this?”
“Well, sir,” spoke up Jack, “it was really all my fault. After talking the thing over, we came to the conclusion that only a,—er,—a maniac sort of person would do anything like that.”
“And you took me for a maniac?” cried the agent, bursting out laughing. “That’s a good one.”
“I don’t think so,” replied Jack.
“No, I agree with you,” said Mr. Wilson. “I don’t think it’s quite the thing to be taken for a maniac. But go on.”
“Well, sir,” continued Jack, “I began to follow you. And the first night I followed you out to Waters Street, to the exact spot where the fire occurred, and …”
“But you must be wrong,” cried Mr. Wilson, “because I don’t even know where Waters Street is.”
“You don’t know?” demanded Jack leaping out of his seat.
The other boys also were by now out of their seats and staring dumbly at Mr. Wilson. The agent said, “I remember that I was once followed by one of you, I couldn’t say who. But I shook him off quickly. Then I also remember that Paul approached me one day and asked me where Jones Street was and I told him.”
“My God!” cried Jack, “I have followed the wrong man all the time.”
“Wait a minute,” Paul said tensely. “You haven’t followed the wrong man. On the contrary. You know what?” They all looked at him curiously. “There is a man in this town who looks very much like you, Mr. Wilson, and I am convinced that he is the guilty party.”
“Now that is interesting,” commented the agent. “I should certainly like to meet him.”
“Now let me ask you this,” said Paul. “You don’t know anything about the fires nor about the robbery at Professor Link’s, do you?”
“I most certainly don’t.”
“Was it you who saved us when Jack and I were prisoners in the cellar?”
“Yes, that was me.”
“Well, wait a minute,” interrupted Ken. “Suppose you tell us how you knew that the boys were being held there and how you came to know Harriman and how you came to be a member of the gang?”
“It’s this way, fellows,” began Mr. Wilson. “I was put on this case and I followed the gang to this town. Looking around for a room I hired one over the grocery store, from Harriman. At the time I did not know that he was a member of the gang, but I soon found it out. Through him, I came upon the gang. I became friends with Harriman and did him a few favors. From then on, he trusted me. After I got on their trail, I waited to get them with the goods—that is, they were then only experimenting and not yet turning out counterfeit money. Just as soon as they ran off some fake greenbacks, I got into action.”
“How did you know, then, that we were being held in the cellar of the empty house?” asked Paul.
“You see, the gang had a room in the hotel. And I had a room next door. And when Joe came and told Moonshine Charlie of holding you prisoners, I rushed down and freed you.”
“That’s plenty funny,” commented Jack. “If it was not you whom I was following all the time, who then was it?”
“That is something I should like to know myself,” replied the agent.
“Another thing, Mr. Wilson,” said Paul. “Four days ago, I followed Harriman. On the street, I noticed you—or was it you—passing him and you nodded to each other. Now was it you or was it not you?”
“No, it could not have been me,” was the answer, “because I remember distinctly that I was at the hotel at the time listening in on Moonshine and his gang.”
“That’s right,” continued Paul. “Harriman did lead me to Main Street where he met Moonshine, Joe and Pete. But if it was not you who nodded to Harriman, then I am more convinced than ever that there is a man in this town who looks very much like you. In fact he looks so much like you that even Harriman mistook him for you.”
“Now that is very interesting,” Mr. Wilson said. “We will have to do something about it.”
“But here is something that is very suspicious, Mr. Wilson,” Paul said. “You say that at the time you were at the hotel, but you or the person that looks like you, walked out of the corner house, that is, Harriman’s house, only about fifteen minutes before the grocery store keeper himself came out. How do you figure that out?”
“You have me puzzled, Paul, if that was the case. I can’t figure it out.”
The four of them leaned back in their seats and kept quiet. The boys appeared exhausted from the ordeal. They thought that at last everything would be cleared up and now they discovered that it still remained a mystery. “At last,” muttered Jack, “we are back where we started. Hooray!” Paul sighed and kept silent. Ken asked sadly, “Now what are we going to do?”