Penny listened calmly to the woman’s
tirade, making no move to obey the impolite command.
“I am sorry, Mrs. Dillon,”
she said, “but I do not intend to leave this
house until you have answered my questions.”
“I shall call my servant.
You are an insolent, impudent girl!”
“I should advise you not to
call anyone until we have talked together,”
Penny said undisturbed. “After all, you
know I have it in my power to cause your arrest.”
Mrs. Dillon grew pale. “What do you mean?”
she demanded.
“It is useless to pretend.
I know that you bought the Rembrandt and have it
secreted in your library. Unless you tell me
where you purchased the painting, I shall feel it
my duty to go to the police.”
“And if I do tell you?”
“Perhaps I can help you.
You should be able to escape arrest for the Rembrandt
isn’t genuine.”
As she had anticipated, her words
brought an astonished glint into Mrs. Dillon’s
eyes. Without thinking she exclaimed:
“The painting is genuine. I paid ”
“How much did you pay for it?”
Penny questioned, smiling at Mrs. Dillon’s confusion.
“Well, since you seem to be
so familiar with my private affairs, I suppose I shall
have to tell you all about it. The painting is
genuine and I bought it with the sole intention of
returning it to the museum.”
Penny made no comment, although she
did not believe a word of the story. Mrs. Dillon
was only trying to build up a defense for herself.
“How much did you pay for the
picture?” she repeated, determined to tie the
woman to facts.
“Two thousand dollars,”
Mrs. Dillon answered grudgingly. “But that
is only the first payment. The next installment
will soon be due.”
Penny thought exultingly: “If
Mrs. Dillon will only cooperate, it should be possible
to catch the dealer who cheated her.” Aloud
she said: “Then you will see the dealer
again the man from whom you purchased the
picture?”
“Not the dealer. His agent.”
“Tell me the name of the persons from whom you
bought the painting.”
“I can’t.”
“You are unwilling to do so, you mean?”
“I don’t know the dealer’s name.
I never dealt with him personally.”
“You bought the picture through a third party?”
“Yes, and the agent is very
well known to me. A gentleman of high standing.”
Penny could not restrain a smile.
She had her own opinion of a man who would negotiate
a deal for a stolen painting.
“Who is this agent, Mrs. Dillon?”
“That I cannot tell you. I promised never
to reveal his name.”
“But it is your duty to do so,”
Penny urged. “I have every reason to believe
that this man has cheated you.”
“I will not give his name,” Mrs. Dillon
repeated firmly.
“He is a special friend of yours?”
“Perhaps.”
“I appreciate your motive in
trying to shield him,” Penny said, “but
the matter is serious. This man has sold you
a worthless picture, representing it to be a stolen
Rembrandt.”
“The painting is genuine,” Mrs. Dillon
insisted. “I have proof of it.”
“What proof, may I ask?”
“The picture was viewed by an
expert a man whose judgment I trust implicitly.
He assured me that it was genuine.”
“This expert looked at your
picture since it was delivered to the house?”
“No, at the studio.”
“What studio?” Penny asked quickly.
“I will tell you if you promise not to betray
me to the police.”
“I came here today because I
wanted to help you, Mrs. Dillon. I have no intention
of going to the authorities if it can be avoided.”
“The studio is on Franklyn Street,”
the woman informed. “On an upper floor.”
“Do you have the exact number of the building?”
Penny asked quickly.
“Yes, somewhere.”
Mrs. Dillon went to her desk and after
examining a number of papers found an old envelope
upon which she had written the address. Penny
glanced at it and a look of disappointment came over
her face.
“Oh, this clue will do no good!”
she exclaimed. “I know about this place.
The men have gone. They moved out last night secretly.”
The address was the same building
which Penny had investigated that afternoon.
“Can you describe the person
or persons whom you met in the studio?”
Mrs. Dillon shook her head.
“I did not meet the men personally.
My friend took me there and showed me the picture.”
“This same expert to whom you referred?”
“Yes.”
“And yet you feel that his judgment was unbiased?”
“I do,” Mrs. Dillon maintained
loyally, “but I did not depend entirely upon
his opinion. I am a very good judge of pictures
myself.”
“Has it occurred to you that
possibly you did not receive the same painting which
you purchased? I understand that sometimes art
thieves prey upon innocent buyers by showing them
a genuine picture and then delivering into their hands
only a cheap copy.”
“I am too shrewd to be so easily
duped,” Mrs. Dillon retorted. “I
don’t mind telling you that I protected myself
against just such trickery.”
“How?”
“When I viewed the picture and
satisfied myself as to its quality, I marked the back
of the canvas with a tiny symbol. In that way
you see, another painting could not be substituted,
for the marking would be absent.”
“The symbol might be duplicated.”
“No, I would instantly detect the difference.”
Penny sat lost in thought for a moment.
She now understood the significance of the strange
marking on the back of the Rembrandt which had puzzled
Amy and herself. Was it possible that the Coulter
girl had been mistaken in the quality of the painting?
“Mrs. Dillon,” she said
after a long silence, “you confidently believe
that your painting is the same one which was stolen
from the Gage Galleries?”
“All I know is that my picture
is a genuine Rembrandt. I did not learn that
a picture had been stolen from the museum until after
I had made my purchase. I do not know even now
that I have this same painting.”
“In the event that it is the
same, you wish to return it to the museum?”
Mrs. Dillon glared at Penny in frank
dislike. She had been fairly trapped and knew
it.
“Of course,” she replied
coldly. “I hope you do not think I would
intentionally keep stolen property?”
“I thought you would see it
that way,” Penny declared, smiling. “And
with your cooperation, the police should be able to
capture the real culprits.”
“What do you want me to do?”
“When will you see this agent with whom you
dealt?”
“He is coming either today or tomorrow for the
second payment.”
“I don’t need to advise
you to refuse to give him any more money. But
I wish you would try to learn from him the names of
the original dealers who handled the picture.”
“I’ll try to find out.”
“And another thing, Mrs. Dillon.
You must notify the Gage Galleries immediately that
you have the Rembrandt.”
The woman made no response.
“You will do that?” Penny asked.
“Yes,” Mrs. Dillon answered harshly.
“I’ll see you again tomorrow,”
Penny said, arising to depart. “Until
then you have my promise that I will not talk with
the police.”
“I have nothing to fear from them,” Mrs.
Dillon announced proudly.
“Not if you show a willingness
to cooperate,” Penny agreed. “When
you think the matter over, I believe you will decide
to reveal the name of your friend the agent
who negotiated the sale.”
She waited an instant, hoping that
Mrs. Dillon would reconsider. When the woman
did not speak, she turned and walked from the living
room, letting herself out the front door.
Emerging upon the street, Penny’s
first thought was to find a good hiding place where
she could wait to view Mrs. Dillon’s expected
caller.
“I may have a tedious time of
it,” she reflected, “but if I learn the
identity of the agent with whom she dealt it will be
worth all the trouble.”
A half block away she noticed a large
truck parked along the curbing. The vehicle had
been abandoned, a cracked-up front wheel giving mute
evidence that it had been in an accident. The
truck was of the closed cab type and it dawned upon
Penny that if she could get inside, she would have
a perfect observation post.
Luckily the cab of the truck had not
been locked and she slipped into the driver’s
seat, slamming the door shut.
An hour passed. The job of watching
Mrs. Dillon’s house became irksome. No
one had called except a peddler and a delivery boy
from a laundry.
Penny tried to pass the time by examining
the many gadgets with which the great truck was equipped.
She imagined that it might be loads of fun to drive
such a powerful machine.
Suddenly her attention was arrested
by an automobile which with a shrill screeching of
brakes came to a halt in front of the Dillon residence.
A well-dressed middle-aged man, carrying a black leather
brief case, got out of the car.
Penny was sure she had never seen
him before. She observed him closely as he emerged
from his automobile. He crossed the street with
a quick, energetic stride as if he knew just where
he was going and what he intended doing after he arrived.
She saw him standing patiently at Mrs. Dillon’s
door, waiting for a servant to answer his ring.
Was the man the agent Mrs. Dillon
had mentioned? The rogue who had sold the fake
painting to the gullible woman? He certainly
did not look like a crook, Penny thought, nor did
he act like one. Just one more reason, she decided,
why she must take nothing for granted. She produced
a notebook and pencil from her purse and made a careful
notation of the stranger’s automobile license
number as well as its make and model.
For perhaps forty-five minutes the
man remained inside the house. When he crossed
the street to his car he skipped along with an agility
surprising in a man of his years. He smiled broadly
as if his mission, whatever it may have been, was
successful. Scarcely had he driven away when
another automobile swung into the same parking space.
From her place of advantage, Penny
fixed her attention on the newcomer, but before she
could see his face, she was startled by a gruff voice,
almost in her ear:
“Hey there! Come down out of that!”
A roughly dressed truck driver stood
on the running board, gesturing angrily. “What
do you think this truck is?” he demanded.
“A free park seat?”
Penny hastily climbed out of the cab,
making an offhand apology for her presence.
“Okay Miss,” the truck
driver said, “seein’ as you’re a
gal. But if you had been a man, I would have
taken a fall out of ya. It’s a crime
that a man can’t go for help without having some
strange sister cuddle down in his cab.”
The trucker’s loud, gruff voice
had attracted the attention of the man in the parked
automobile. He stepped from his car and came
toward the couple.
“What’s the idea of abusing
a helpless young girl?” he asked.
Penny recognized the voice, and resisted
an impulse to turn her head. She knew that the
newcomer was Hanley Cron. He had come to call
upon Mrs. Dillon. That was plain. She
must not let him discover that she was watching the
house. Quickly, before either of the men were
aware of her intention, she darted behind the truck
and fled down the street.