The Clue in the Jewel Box
“That must be Dorrance’s double—the pickpocket!” Nancy thought excitedly.
She decided to follow him. The man did not pause until he reached the revolving doors of the Monroe office building.
Nancy quickened her pace. Suddenly the suspect halted. Half turning, but keeping his face slightly averted, he waved a white handkerchief.
“Wrong again!” Nancy thought in disgust, coming to a stop.
She recovered quickly from the unpleasant surprise and called Mr. Dorrance’s name. Instead of replying, the man went inside.
Disappointed, Nancy retraced her way down the street. She had gone only fifty feet when she saw Mr. Faber running in her direction.
“I’ve been robbed! The thief went this way!”
CHAPTER XIII
Wanted—A Clue
THE antique dealer paused as he recognized Nancy. He was so excited it was difficult to understand what he was saying. She gathered, however, that a few minutes earlier a valuable gold-and-enamel penknife had disappeared from his show counter.
Mr. Faber cried, “Never can I replace it!”
“How was it taken?” Nancy asked quickly.
“Several customers were in my shop. A fellow asked to see the penknife. He took so long to decide I waited on the others.”
Suddenly Mr. Faber pointed to a man who was coming out of a store across the street. “There he is now!”
The suspect resembled David Dorrance. This time Nancy had no doubt but that he was the long-sought pickpocket. Dorrance was some distance away in the Monroe Building.
“Mr. Faber, you must telephone the police!” Nancy advised. “I’ll trail the thief!”
She tried to cross the street, but the traffic was heavy. Nancy found herself stranded in a center safety zone. The man identified by Faber was still in sight, but before she could reach him, he leaped into a taxi.
“Wait!” Nancy shouted to the driver.
He did not hear her, but the passenger turned his head. Upon seeing Nancy, he took a handkerchief from his pocket and waved it! Then the taxi sped on.
Nancy was completely bewildered. “Dorrance could not have spent more than a few seconds in the office building,” she said to herself. “Why would he duck in and out so quickly? It doesn’t make sense.”
Many thoughts raced through her mind as she recrossed the street to Mr. Faber’s shop. She was convinced that Dorrance had not gone from one place to the other.
“They were two different men!” she said. “But they both waved handkerchiefs and they look alike and wear the same kind of clothes.”
Had the thief learned the method of identification that Dorrance used when seeing Nancy?
“That first man didn’t give me the signal right away,” she reflected. “So the second one must have been Dorrance.”
A police car rushed up to Mr. Faber’s shop. The elderly man was so upset he was glad to have Nancy tell the story. She started it by asking the two officers to go with her at once to the Monroe Building.
“We may not be too late to nab the thief, if a hunch of mine is correct,” she said.
They searched the building but without success. Discouraged, the three returned to the antique shop, where Faber described the stolen penknife.
“It was set with pearls,” he concluded.
“We’ll do what we can to locate it,” one of the policemen promised. “That pickpocket is slippery. We’ve had that apartment house on Water Street watched constantly, but no one resembling the thief has turned up yet.”
The following morning Nancy attended a final rehearsal of the fashion show. Early in the afternoon she arrived at the Woman’s Club for the first performance. Katherine, pale and nervous, came in a few minutes later, accompanied by Helen Archer.
“Did you bring the hair ornament?” Nancy asked.
“Safe and sound.” Helen laughed, producing the ruby-and-diamond piece.
With care Nancy put on the blue-flowered gown. The skirt with its short train swung gracefully to the floor.
“How do I look?” Nancy asked.
“Like the prettiest picture in a fashion book!” Helen complimented her.
Soon the dressing room was crowded with excited, chattering models. Everyone praised Nancy’s costume. A few minutes before the show was scheduled to start, Bess and George came backstage.
“Nearly everyone of importance in River Heights is here,” George told Nancy. “Even the Mayor!”
“Mrs. Alexandra came too with Anna,” Bess added.
“She made the effort for Katherine’s sake,” Nancy said.
“Mrs. Alexandra like you very much too, Nancy,” Katherine put in.
The orchestra had begun to play, and the models were told to take their places. One after another they stepped out from the wings.
“Now!” Katherine whispered, her voice tense.
The moment had arrived for her model to walk out upon the stage! Nancy made an effective entrance, carrying herself well. Each model had been greeted with a polite ripple of applause. Now the handclapping was loud and spontaneous.
Gracefully Nancy approached the carpeted steps which would carry her to the level of the audience. She saw Mrs. Alexandra’s beaming face, and below her in the front row, Mr. Ellington, the artist. He nodded approvingly.
“He likes the gown!” she thought joyously.
Keeping perfect time to the music, Nancy moved down the first two steps. As she reached the third, there was a sudden sideways movement of the board beneath the carpet. Nancy tried to keep her balance. Instead she plunged headlong toward the floor!
As Nancy pitched forward, Mr. Ellington jumped up. Nancy fell directly into the young man’s outstretched arms.
“Oh!” she cried, embarrassed.
There had been an audible gasp from the audience, and the music had ceased abruptly. Many feared the model had been injured.
“Are you hurt?” Mr. Ellington asked as he helped Nancy regain her balance.
Nancy shook her head, trying to recover her poise. She felt sick at heart, not so much for herself as for Katherine. Any chance of the young designer winning a prize was gone, she felt sure.
“Don’t let this disturb you,” Mr. Ellington whispered kindly. “It wasn’t your fault!”
Thus encouraged, Nancy smiled bravely. The orchestra began to play again. She glided down the center aisle and back. During the intermission carpenters repaired the faulty step.
“Oh Katherine, I knew I would ruin your chances!” Nancy cried when she met the designer. “Why did I have to stumble?”
“It wasn’t your fault,” Helen interjected.
Nancy fell directly into the young man’s arms
“No, indeed,” echoed Katherine. “Tomorrow you make a grand entrance!”
Although everyone declared that the accident had been unavoidable, the three girls did not feel very cheerful. They brightened, however, when Mr. Ellington sought out Katherine to tell her that he considered her design the most original one entered in the show.
“If I were one of the judges, I’d vote to give you first prize,” he declared warmly.
Katherine blushed and became flustered. He talked for a long while. It was obvious to Nancy that his interest was more than a professional one.
“What a grand couple they would make!” she remarked to Helen.
“Mr. Ellington is very charming,” Helen agreed. “Isn’t it a pity Michael couldn’t—”
“Sh!” Nancy warned suddenly.
Mrs. Alexandra was approaching, followed by Anna. “You were charming, Nancy,” the former queen said. “Will you have luncheon with me at one o’clock tomorrow? As you say in America, we have some unfinished business.”
“Thank you, but I’m afraid I can’t. I am due here before three for the afternoon showing.”
“I shall see that you are not late.”
Nancy was still hesitant about accepting the invitation. Her last meeting with Michael had been unpleasant, and she feared he might
create a scene should he find her a guest in his home.
“Michael will not be there,” Anna whispered.
“I’ll be delighted to come, Mrs. Alexandra,” Nancy accepted at once.
After the former queen and Anna had gone, Michael again became the topic of conversation. Katherine, who had rejoined the girls, admitted that the young man had called her several times.
“He annoy me with attentions I do not like! He send me flowers ! He ask me for dates! Always I say No, but it does no good.”
“I’d give anything if I never had traced him for Mrs. Alexandra,” Nancy said soberly.
When she appeared at the woman’s home the next day, the topic of Michael was studiously avoided. A delicious luncheon was served during which biscuits were passed in a quaint wooden basket with a royal crown on the handle.
At the close of the meal Mrs. Alexandra asked Anna to bring the Footman jewel box to her. Tenderly the former queen held the quaint porcelain and enamel figure.
“I shall now open it for you,” she said to Nancy. “Can you guess how it is done?”
“By a secret spring?”
“Yes. First I press the little fellow here.”
Mrs. Alexandra touched the Footman’s left hand. To Nancy’s amazement, the black coat of the figure loosened, enabling the woman to remove it. She pressed another spring and a panel slid open. Inside were a ruby ring, an unset emerald, a necklace of matched pearls, and two diamond bracelets.
“All that remain of my jewels,” Mrs. Alexandra said. “Piece by piece I sold the others.”
“These are exquisite,” Nancy replied. “Did the box ever contain anything except jewelry?”
“No, it has always been used for that purpose. You are disappointed, perhaps?”
“I’m not disappointed, Mrs. Alexandra. I’ll admit, though, that the little nightingale’s words led me to believe this box might contain something else of importance.
“Katherine has told me the people of your country have many secrets,” Nancy went on. “One of them is a process for making noncrackable enamel. I admit I wondered if the Footman might be hiding the lost formula.”
Mrs. Alexandra tried to suppress a smile. “My dear,” she said kindly, “I wonder if the song of the nightingale has not been misinterpreted. The words are so indistinct.”
“Perhaps, but we know the song was added long after the Easter egg was made,” Nancy remarked.
“Until Mr. Faber told you differently, I assumed that the nightingale was exactly as it had been created for me.”
“You have no idea when the addition was made?”
“It must have been during the early days of the Revolution. I was away from the palace when the trouble started. There was such turmoil that I could not get back for some time.”
“Then the song may have been added while you were away,” Nancy suggested. “Perhaps someone tried to provide you with an important clue —a clue meant for no other person. Who besides yourself had access to the Easter egg, Mrs. Alexandra?”
“Only a few trusted servants in the palace.”
“Who in your country was skillful at making music boxes?” Nancy asked eagerly.
“Conrad Nicholas,” Mrs. Alexandra said, “the husband of Nada’s sister. Nada was the nurse of my grandson Michael.”
“Could she have borrowed the Easter egg?”
“Yes.”
“Why, it all fits in beautifully!” Nancy exclaimed. “Mrs. Alexandra, I’m convinced some jewel box contains a vital clue, and it must be this Footman. Maybe it holds a secret greater than all your jewels! The box may have another opening, perhaps in the legs of the Footman.”
“But I have already examined the little statue from his head to the top of his boots! The secret, if there is one, has been cleverly hidden.”
“Mrs. Alexandra, do you mind if I try?”
Smiling, the former queen placed the jewel box in Nancy’s hands. With trembling fingers the young detective began to explore the porcelain and enamel figure inch by inch.
CHAPTER XIV
A Question of Honesty
ALTHOUGH Nancy carefully ran her fingers over the Footman figurine, pressing here and there, she did not discover a spring or release mechanism. The only opening appeared to be the one under the black coat.
“I can’t find it.” Sighing, Nancy returned the figurine to her hostess. “Someday, with your permission, I would like to try again.”
“By all means.”
A clock chimed the hour of two-thirty. Reminded that she should leave at once for the fashion show, Nancy hurried away.
A few minutes later, upon reaching the Woman’s Club, she was surprised to see an excited crowd near the main entrance. A policeman had placed someone under arrest.
Approaching closer, Nancy observed that the suspect, who was arguing with the officer, closely resembled David Dorrance. At once the man turned and recognized her.
“Miss Drew, tell this policeman he’s made a mistake!” he pleaded.
“I’m not sure-” she began.
“Sure, you recognize met See!”
He gave the familiar white handkerchief signal. Nancy had but a moment to spare, because she was late now. She did not know what to say. As she hesitated, Dorrance added:
“I came here to see the show.”
Nancy was convinced that he was the man who had come to her home. The policeman knew Nancy and asked her for a definite identification. She hesitated to answer, because she had not forgotten the double handkerchief episode on Main Street. Finally she told the officer she could not identify Dorrance as the wanted pickpocket.
“I don’t believe this is the man you want. At least, he’s not the one who stole Mr. Baum’s wallet.”
“Go on in, then,” he told the man. “Sorry.”
Dorrance would have lingered to chat with Nancy, but she had no time. She hastened to the dressing room and donned the Renaissance gown just as the orchestra began to play.
“I’ll try to do better than yesterday,” she said to Katherine when it was her turn on stage.
With perfect composure and the grace of a professional model, Nancy went through her simple routine. She returned to the wings amid thunderous applause.
“You were a sensation!” Helen exclaimed. “You and that gorgeous gown are the talk of the show!”
During a brief intermission Nancy wandered out into the audience. Before she got all the way down the center aisle, a woman close by uttered a piercing wail.
“My pocketbook! It’s been stolen!”
Immediately the entire room was thrown into confusion. In the resulting excitement, Nancy spied David Dorrance slipping out the exit.
Forgetting her part in the show, Nancy sped after the fleeing man. When she reached the door, he was hurrying toward an alley.
“Wait!” she called.
The man turned, but did not pause. Nancy spied two little boys directly ahead and shouted:
“Stop that man! Don’t let him get away!”
The boys attempted to block his path, but he shoved them away angrily. Nancy ran after him as fast as she could. The long evening gown impeded her progress.
Nevertheless, she began to gain on the thief. At the end of the alley, the man darted around a corner. He saw a long coil of barbed wire lying on the ground. Seizing it, he threw it in such a way that Nancy could not fail to run against the sharp barbs.
Unsuspecting, she ran straight into the wire. Her gown caught in a dozen places, tearing badly. Aghast, she halted.
“Oh, this beautiful gown!” she thought, seeing that it had been torn beyond repair. “I’ve ruined Katherine’s chances completely!”
Out of breath and disheveled, Nancy returned to the clubhouse. It was time for the second half of the fashion show to begin.
Suddenly in the throng Nancy saw David Dor rance!
“Why, Miss Drew, what has happened to you?” he asked, walking over to her.
The man was perfectly composed. There was
no indication, either in his breathing or the color of his face, that he had been running.
“I mistook him again for the pickpocket!” Nancy thought, chagrined.
“Just a little accident,” she replied, and dashed to the dressing room. A sudden thought came to her.
“It’s uncanny that Dorrance and the thief are so often in the same place! I’m going to talk to the police about it!”
Nancy found Katherine and Helen waiting for her. When they saw the ruined gown, they were dismayed.
“Oh, Nancy, how did it happen?” Helen managed to say at last.
Nancy told about pursuing the pickpocket. “I ought to stick to sleuthing and give up trying to model in fashion shows,” she concluded grimly. “The two certainly don’t mix.”
“What are we to do?” Helen asked, sinking into a chair. “The dress can’t be mended.”
“I don’t appear in the show again until tomorrow afternoon. That gives us twenty-four hours. Couldn’t you duplicate the dress, Katherine? You had a good bit of material left over.”
“In so short time! No, no.”
“Maybe part of it could be saved,” Nancy added. “The sleeves are in perfect condition.”
“And so is all the back except the train,” Helen encouraged her. “Couldn’t you just make a new front and replace the train, Katherine?”
“I could sew all night, if necessary,” Nancy offered.
The designer made a hasty examination of the gown. A minute later her eyes lighted up. “I can do it!”
The girls hastened to Katherine’s shop. For two hours they sewed steadily. By then it was evident that the work could be finished in time.
“We go home now and rest,” Katherine urged. “I finish the dress tomorrow.”
The young designer locked the shop, and the three girls walked down the street. At the comer Nancy left the others to go to police headquarters. There she reported her suspicions regarding Dorrance and his double.
“It seems strange to me that those two men should always be in the same place at the same time,” she said to Chief McGinnis.