Part 4
Penny gave her name and Louise's, adding that they were seeking lodging for the night.
"We'll pay, of course," she added.
The old woman scrutinized the girls for so long that they were certain she would send them away. But when she spoke, her voice was friendly.
"Well, well," she cackled, "anybody that's a friend of Silas is a friend of mine. You're welcome to bed and board fer as long as you want to stay."
Penny thanked her and stepped closer to the kettle. "We've not had anything to eat since noon," she said suggestively. "My, whatever you're cooking looks good!" She sniffed at the steam arising from the iron pot and backed hastily away.
Old Mrs. Lear broke into cackling laughter. "You gals don't want none o' that! This here is soap and I'm head over heels in it. That's why I'm workin' so late."
"Soap," repeated Penny with deep respect. "Why, I thought soap was made in a factory."
Mrs. Lear was pleased at the girl's interest. "Most of it is," she said, "but not my soap. This here is homemade soap and I wouldn't trade a cake of it for all the store soap ye can lug home--not for heavy cleanin', I wouldn't."
Moving near enough to the fire to see the greasy mixture bubbling in the kettle, Penny asked Mrs. Lear if she would explain how soap was made.
"Bless you, yes," the old lady replied with enthusiasm. "You are the first gal I ever ran across that was interested in anything as old fashioned as soap makin'. Why, when I was young every girl knew how to make soap and was proud of it. But nowdays! All the girls think about is gaddin' and dancin' and having dates with some worthless good-for-nothin'. Come right up to the fire and I'll show you something about soap makin'."
Mrs. Lear poked the glowing logs beneath the kettle.
"First thing," she explained, "is to get your fire good and hot. Then you add your scrap grease."
"What is scrap grease?" Louise asked, greatly intrigued.
"Why, bless you, child, that's the odds and ends of cookin' that most folks throw away. Not me though. I make soap of it. Even if it ain't so good smellin' it's better soap than you can buy."
The girls looked over the rim of the steaming kettle and saw a quantity of bubbling fats. With surprising dexterity for one of her age, Mrs. Lear inserted a long-handled hoe-shaped paddle and stirred the mixture vigorously.
"Next thing ye do is to cook in the lye," she instructed. "Then you let it cool off and slice it to any size you want. This mess'll soon be ready."
"And that's all there is to making soap," Penny said, a bit amazed in spite of herself.
"All but a little elbow grease and some git up and git!" the old lady chuckled. "Them two commodities are mighty scarce these days."
While the girls watched, Mrs. Lear poured off the soap mixture. She would not allow them to help lest they burn themselves.
"I kin tell that you girls are all tuckered out," she said when the task was finished. "Just put your horses in the barn and toss 'em some corn and hay. While you're gone I'll clean up these soap makin' things and start a mess o' victuals cookin'."
Mrs. Lear waved a bony hand toward a large, unpainted outbuilding. Louise and Penny led their horses to it, opening the creaking old barn door somewhat cautiously. A sound they could not instantly identify greeted their ears.
"What was that?" Louise whispered, holding back.
"Only a horse gnawing corn!" Penny chuckled. "Mrs. Lear must keep a steed of her own."
It was dark in the barn even with the doors left wide open. Groping their way to empty stalls, the girls unsaddled and tied the horses up for the night. Mrs. Lear's animal, they noted, was a high-spirited animal, evidently a thoroughbred.
"A riding horse too," Penny remarked. "Wonder how she can afford to keep it?"
Finding corn in the bin, the girls fed Bones and White Foot, and forked them an ample supply of hay.
"Now to feed ourselves," Penny sighed as they left the barn. "My stomach feels as empty as the Grand Canyon!"
The girls had visions of a bountiful supper cooked over the camp fire. However, Mrs. Lear was putting out the glowing coals with a bucket of water.
"Come into the house," she urged. "It won't take me long to git a meal knocked up. That is, if you ain't too particular."
"Anything suits us," Louise assured her.
"And the more of it, the better," Penny muttered, though under her breath.
Mrs. Lear led the way to the house, advising the girls to wait at the door until she could light a kerosene lamp. By its ruddy glow they saw a kitchen, very meagerly furnished with old-fashioned cook stove, a homemade table and a few chairs.
"While you're washin' up I'll put on some victuals to cook," Mrs. Lear said, showing the girls a wash basin and pitcher. "It won't take me a minute."
With a speed that was amazing, the old lady lighted the cook stove and soon had a bed of glowing coals. She warmed up a pan of potatoes, fried salt pork and hominy. From a pantry shelf she brought wild grape jelly and a loaf of homemade bread. To complete the meal she set before the girls a pitcher of milk and a great glass dish brimming with canned peaches.
"It ain't much," she apologized.
"Food never looked better," Penny declared, drawing a chair to the kitchen table.
"It's a marvelous supper!" Louise added, her eyes fairly caressing the food.
Mrs. Lear sat down at the table with the girls and seemed to take keen delight in watching them eat. Whenever their appetites lagged for an instant she would pass them another dish.
"Now that you've et, tell me who you are and why you came," Mrs. Lear urged after the girls had finished. "You say Silas sent you?"
Good food had stimulated Penny and Louise and made them in a talkative mood. They told of their long trip from Riverview and almost before they realized it, had spoken of the Headless Horseman. Mrs. Lear listened attentively, her watery blue eyes dancing with interest. Suddenly Penny cut her story short, conscious that the old lady deliberately was pumping her of information.
"So you'd like to collect Mr. Burmaster's reward?" Mrs. Lear chuckled.
"We shouldn't mind," Penny admitted. "Besides, we'd be doing the Burmasters a good turn to help them get rid of their ghost rider."
"That you would," agreed the old lady exactly as if the Burmasters were her best friends. "Yes, indeed, you've come in a good cause."
"Then perhaps you can help us," Louise said eagerly. "You must have heard about the Headless Horseman."
Mrs. Lear nodded brightly.
"Perhaps you know who the person is," Penny added.
"Maybe, maybe not." Mrs. Lear shrugged, and getting quickly up, began to carry the dishes to the sink. The firm tilt of her thin chin warned the girls that so far as she was concerned, the topic was closed.
Rather baffled, Penny and Louise made a feeble attempt to reopen the conversation. Failing, they offered to wipe the dishes for their hostess.
"Oh, it ain't no bother to do 'em myself," Mrs. Lear said, shooing them away. "You both look tired enough to drop. Just go up to the spare bedroom and slip beneath the covers."
Louise and Penny needed no further urging. Carrying their knapsacks and a lamp Mrs. Lear gave them, they stumbled up the stairs. The spare bedroom was a huge, rather cold chamber, furnished with a giant fourposter bed and a chest of drawers. The only floor covering was a homemade rag rug.
Louise quickly undressed and left Penny to blow out the light. The latter, moving to the latticed window, stood for a moment gazing out across the moonlit fields toward the Burmaster estate.
"Nothing makes sense about this trip," she remarked.
From the bed came a muffled: "Now you're talking!"
Ignoring the jibe, Penny resumed: "Did you notice how Mrs. Lear acted just as if the Burmasters were her friends."
"Perhaps she did that to throw us off the track. She asked us plenty of questions but she didn't tell us one thing!"
"Yet she knows plenty. I'm convinced of that."
"Oh, come on to bed," Louise pleaded, yawning. "Can't you do your speculating in the morning?"
With a laugh, Penny leaped into the very center of the feather bed, missing her chum's anatomy by inches.
Soon Mrs. Lear came upstairs. She tapped softly on the door and inquired if the girls had plenty of covers. Assured that they were comfortable, she went on down the hall to her own room.
Worn from the long horseback ride, Louise fell asleep almost at once. Penny felt too excited to be drowsy. She lay staring up at the ceiling, reflecting upon the day's events. So far, the journey to the Valley had netted little more than sore muscles.
"Yet there's mystery and intrigue here--I know it!" Penny thought. "If only I could get a little tangible information!"
An hour elapsed and still the girl could not sleep. As she stirred restlessly, she heard Mrs. Lear's bedroom door softly creak. In the hallway boards began to tremble. Penny stiffened, listening. Distinctly, she could hear someone tiptoeing past her door to the stairway.
"That must be Mrs. Lear," she thought. "But what can she be doing up at this time of night?"
The question did not long remain unanswered. Boards squeaked steadily as the old lady descended the stairs. A little silence. Then Penny heard two long rings and a short one.
"Mrs. Lear is calling someone on the old-fashioned party-line telephone!" she identified the sound.
Mrs. Lear's squeaky voice carried clearly up the stairway through the half open bedroom door.
"That you, Silas?" Penny heard her say. "Well, those gals got here, just as you said they would! First off they asked me about the Headless Horseman."
A slight pause followed before Mrs. Lear added: "Don't you worry none, Silas. Just count on me! They'll handle soft as kittens!"
And as she ended the telephone conversation, the old lady broke into cackling laughter.
CHAPTER 8 _A RICH MAN'S TROUBLES_
Rain was drumming on the roof when Penny awakened the next morning. Yawning sleepily, she sat up in bed. Beside her, Louise, curled into a tight ball, slumbered undisturbed. But not for long. Penny tickled an exposed foot until she opened her eyes.
"Get up, Lou!" she ordered pleasantly. "We've overslept."
"Oh, it's still night," Louise grumbled, trying to snuggle beneath the covers again.
Penny stripped off all the blankets and pulled her chum from the bed. "It's only so dark because it's raining," she explained. "Anyway, I have something important to tell you."
As the girls dressed in the cold bedroom, Penny told Louise of the telephone conversation she had heard the previous night.
"Mrs. Lear was talking to Silas Malcom I'm sure," she concluded. "And about us too! She said we'd handle very easily."
Louise's eyes opened a trifle wider. "Then you figure Silas Malcom intended to get us here on purpose!"
"I'm beginning to think so."
"But why?"
"Don't ask me," Penny said with a shrug. "These Valley folk aren't simple by any means! Unless we watch our step they may take us for a merry ride."
"Not with the Headless Horseman, I hope," Louise chuckled. "Why don't we go home this morning and forget the whole silly affair?"
Penny shook her head. "I'm sticking until I find out what's going on here," she announced. "It might mean a story for Dad's paper!"
"Oh, that's only your excuse," Louise teased. "You know you never could resist a mystery, and this one certainly has baffling angles."
The girls washed in a basin of cold water and then went downstairs. Mrs. Lear was baking pancakes in the warm kitchen. She flipped one neatly as she reached with the other hand to remove the coffee pot from the stove.
"Good morning," she chirped. "Did you sleep right last night?"
Penny and Louise agreed that they had and edged close to the stove for warmth. An old-fashioned clock on the mantel showed that it was only eight o'clock. But eight o'clock for Mrs. Lear was a late hour, judging by the amount of work she had done. A row of glass jars stood on the table, filled with canned plums and peaches.
"You haven't put up all that fruit this morning?" gasped Louise.
Mrs. Lear admitted that she had. "But that ain't much," she added modestly. "Only a bushel and a half. Won't hardly last no time at all."
Mrs. Lear cleared off the kitchen table, set it in a twinkling, and placed before the girls a huge mound of stacked cakes.
"Now eat hearty," she advised. "I had mine hours ago."
As Penny ate, she sought to draw a little information from the eccentric old woman. Deliberately, she brought up the subject of the Burmaster family.
"What is it you want to know?" Mrs. Lear asked, smiling wisely.
"Why is Mrs. Burmaster so disliked in the community?"
"Because she's a scheming, trouble maker if there ever was one!" the old lady replied promptly. "Mr. Burmaster ain't so bad, only he's pulled around by the nose by that weepin', whinin' wife of his."
"Mrs. Burmaster seems to think that the valley folk treat her cruelly."
"She should talk about being cruel!" Mrs. Lear's dark eyes flashed. "You know what them Burmasters done?"
"Only in a general way."
"Well, they come here, and forced folks to git off the land."
"Didn't Mr. Burmaster pay for what he bought?"
"Oh, it was done legal," Mrs. Lear admitted grudgingly. "You see, most o' this valley was owned by a man in the East. He rented it out in parcels, an' never bothered anyone even if they was behind in their payments."
"Then Mr. Burmaster bought the entire track of land from the Eastern owner?" inquired Penny.
"That's right. All except these here four acres where my house sets. They ain't nothin' in this world that will git me in a mood to sell to that old skinflint. He's tried every trick in the bag already."
Penny thoughtfully reached for another pancake. As an impartial judge she could see that there was something to be said on both sides of the question. Mr. Burmaster had purchased his land legally, and so could not be blamed for asking the former renters to move. Yet she sympathized with the farmers who for so many years had considered the valley their own.
"This house o' mine ain't much to look at," Mrs. Lear commented reflectively, "but it's been home fer a long time. Ain't nobody going to get me out o' here."
"You own your own land?" inquired Louise.
"That I do," nodded Mrs. Lear proudly. "I got the deed hid under my bed mattress."
"Won't you tell us about Mr. Burmaster's difficulty with the Headless Horseman," Penny urged, feeling that the old lady was in a talkative mood.
"What do you want to know?" Mrs. Lear asked cautiously.
"Is there really such a thing or is it just a story?"
"If you girls stay in this valley long enough you'll learn fer yourselves," Mrs. Lear chuckled. "I'll warrant you'll see that Horseman."
"And you know who the prankster is!" Penny ventured daringly.
"Maybe I do," Mrs. Lear admitted with a chuckle. "But a ten-mule team couldn't pry it out o' me, and neither can you!"
Before Penny could resume the subject, chickens began to squawk and scatter in the barn yard. A large, expensive looking car pulled up near the side door. Mrs. Lear peeped out of a window and her jaw set in a firm, hard line.
"That's Mr. Burmaster now," she announced in a stage whisper. "Well, he ain't goin' to pressure me. No sir! I'll give him as good as he sends!"
After Mr. Burmaster pounded on the kitchen door, the old lady took her time before she let him in.
"Good morning," he said brightly.
"Humph! What's good about it?" Mrs. Lear shot back. "It's rainin', ain't it? And if we git much more o' it this fall, the dam up Huntley way's goin' to let go shore as I'm a standin' here."
"Nonsense!" replied the estate owner impatiently. He stepped into the kitchen. Seeing Penny and Louise, he looked rather surprised and a trifle embarrassed.
"Go on and say what you come to say," Mrs. Lear encouraged. "Don't stand on no ceremony jus' cause I got city visitors."
Obviously Mr. Burmaster did not like to speak before strangers, but there was no other way.
"You know why I am here, Mrs. Lear," he began. "I've already made several offers for your property--"
"And I've turned 'em all down."
"Yes, but this time I hope you'll listen to reason. Last night my wife had a near collapse after a boy rode a horse across the bridge by our house. All this stupid talk about Headless Horsemen has inspired the community to do mischief. Now every boy in the Valley is trying pranks."
"Then why not ketch the Horseman and put an end to it?" Mrs. Lear asked impudently.
"Nothing would please me better. But we've had no success. My wife can't endure the strain much longer. It's driving her to a frenzy."
"I'm sorry about that," replied Mrs. Lear stonily. "There ain't nothin' I can do."
"I want you to sell this property," Mr. Burmaster pleaded. "At least that will remove one irritation. You see, my wife considers the place an eyesore. She can see your house from our living room window. It ruins an otherwise perfect view of the valley."
"Now ain't that too bad!" Mrs. Lear's tone was sarcastic. "Well, let me tell you somethin'. That place o' yorn spoils my view too!"
"I'm afraid I haven't made myself clear," Mr. Burmaster said hastily. "It's a matter of my wife's health."
"Your wife ain't no more ailin' than I be," Mrs. Lear retorted. "If she didn't have my house to bother her it would be somethin' else. I ain't goin' to sell and that's all there is to it!"
"You've not heard my offer. I'll give you two thousand dollars for this place--cash."
Mrs. Lear looked a trifle stunned.
"At best the place isn't worth five hundred," Mr. Burmaster resumed. "But I aim to be generous."
"I won't sell," Mrs. Lear said firmly. "Not at any price. Them's my final words."
Mr. Burmaster had kept his voice carefully controlled but the old lady's decision angered him.
"You'll regret this!" he said in a harsh tone. "I've been very patient but I warn you! From now on I shall act in my own interests."
"Have you ever acted in any other?" drawled a voice from behind the estate owner.
Everyone turned quickly. Joe Quigley, the young station agent, stood framed in the open doorway. Smiling at Burmaster in a grim way, he came slowly into the kitchen.
CHAPTER 9 _STRAIGHT FROM THE SHOULDER_
A silence had fallen upon those in the room. Joe Quigley shook rain drops from his overcoat. Deliberately he took his time hanging the coat over a chair in front of the cook stove. Then, still smiling in an ironic way, he faced Burmaster.
"I repeat," he challenged, "did you ever act in any manner except for your own interest?"
"You are insulting! Insolent!" Mr. Burmaster snapped. "But I'll not be drawn into an argument with you. Good morning!"
Quigley blocked the door. "Not so fast," he drawled. "Matter of fact, I was on my way to your house. Saw your car standing in Mrs. Lear's yard, so I figured you were here."
"If you have a telegram for me I'll take it."
"The only message I have is a verbal one," answered Quigley. "Our mayor from Delta, Bradley Mason, asked me to talk to you about the Huntley Dam."
"The subject doesn't interest me."
"It should interest every man, woman and child in this valley!" Quigley retorted. "If the dam gives way flood waters will sweep straight down the valley. Your house would be destroyed before you knew there was any danger!"
"Really?" Mr. Burmaster's smile was a sneer. "Let me worry about my own property."
"As a matter of record, I don't lose any sleep over you," Quigley responded heatedly. "But I am thinking about Mrs. Lear and the people living in Delta. Not to mention the towns on down the line which would be in the direct path of the flood."
"If the good people of Delta are endangered why don't they repair the dam themselves?"
"For the reason that we can't raise the money. We've tried."
"Then the State should act in the matter. I'm willing to write my senator--"
"Repairs are needed now, not three months later. Mr. Burmaster, you have the money and you'd be doing the community a great service to lend help. We're not asking for a donation. It's as much to your interest as ours to protect the valley."
"There's no danger," Burmaster said angrily. "Not a particle. It's only a scheme to shake me down for money."
Brushing past the station agent, the man went out into the rain. In driving out of the yard he turned the car so sharply that it skidded on its wheels.
"Well, that's that," Quigley remarked with a shrug. "I should have saved my breath."
"I'm glad _he's_ gone," Mrs. Lear announced tartly. "Will you have a bite o' breakfast, Joe?"
"No, thanks," the young station agent replied. "I'm due for my trick at the Depot in twenty minutes. Have to run along."
The girls were sorry to see Joe Quigley go so soon for they had hoped to have a long talk with him. After he had disappeared into the rain they tried without much success to draw more information from Mrs. Lear. The old lady was in no mood to discuss the Burmasters, but she did have a great deal to say about flood danger to the valley.
"'Tain't usual that we have so much rain," she declared. "Not at this time o' year. Old Red River's floodin' to the brim, an keeps pourin' more and more into the Huntley Lake basin. The dam there was built years ago and it wasn't much to brag on from the start."
"Haven't authorities inspected the dam recently?" Penny inquired thoughtfully.
"Oh, some young whippersnapper come here a month ago and took a quick look and said the dam would hold," Mrs. Lear replied, tossing her head.
"But he ain't livin' in the Valley. We want repairs made and we want 'em quick--not next year."
"Since Mr. Burmaster refuses to help is there nothing that can be done?"
"There's some as thinks a little piece in the city papers might help," Mrs. Lear said, giving Penny a quick, shrewd glance. "Your pa's a newspaper owner, ain't he?"
"Yes, he owns the _Riverview Star_."
Penny gazed across the table at Louise. It struck both girls that Mrs. Lear was very well informed about their affairs. How had the old lady learned that Mr. Parker was a newspaper man if not from Silas Malcom? More than ever Penny was convinced that she had been lured to Red Valley, perhaps for the purpose of interesting her famous father in the Huntley Dam project.
"You've been very kind, Mrs. Lear," she said, abruptly arising from the table. "Louise and I appreciate your hospitality. However, we want to pay for our room and meals before we go."
"You don't owe me a penny," the old lady laughed. "Furthermore, you ain't leavin' yet."
"We must. There's an afternoon train--"
"And there'll be another along tomorrow. Why, you'd catch your death o' cold ridin' hoss back all the way to Hobostein."
"The rain should let up soon."
"It should, but it won't," Mrs. Lear declared. "Why don't you stay until tomorror anyhow? Then you could go to the barn dance tonight at Silas' place."
At the moment, the girls were not greatly intrigued at the prospect of attending a barn dance. The steady rain had depressed them. Though the long journey to Red Valley had proven interesting, it scarcely seemed worth the exhausting effort. They had learned very little about the so-called Headless Horseman and doubted that any truly valuable information would come their way.
"If you stay over maybe you'll git a chance to see that hoss-ridin' ghost," Mrs. Lear said slyly. "Seems like it's mostly on bad nights that he does his prowlin'."
The girls helped with the dishes. They made the bed and watched Mrs. Lear sew on a rag rug. At intervals they wandered to the windows. Rain fell steadily, showing not the slightest sign of a let up.
"Didn't I tell you," Mrs. Lear said gleefully. "It's settlin' for a good healthy pour. You might jest as well calculate on stayin' another night."
"But our parents will be expecting us home," Louise protested.