CHAPTER XX
THE GRILL
Ruth did not go back to her chums until, under Mother Paisley’s comforting influence, she had recovered a measure of her self-possession. The old actress asked no questions as to the cause of Ruth’s state of mind. She had seen too many hysterical girls to feel that the cause of her patient’s breakdown was at all important.
“You just cry all you want to, deary. Right here on Mother Paisley’s shoulder. Crying will do you good. It is the Good Lord’s way of giving us women an outlet for all our troubles. When the last tear is squeezed out much of the pain goes with it.”
Ruth was not ordinarily a crying girl. She had wept more of late, beginning with that day at the Red Mill when her scenario manuscript had been stolen, than in all her life before.
Her tears were now in part an expression of anger and indignation. She was as mad as she could be at this man who called himself “John, the hermit.” For, whether he was the person who had actually stolen her manuscript, he very well knew that his scenario offered to Mr. Hammond was not original with him.
The worst of it was, he had mangled her scenario. Ruth could look upon it in no other way. His changes had merely muddied the plot and cheapened her main idea. She could not forgive that!
The other girls were drowsy when Ruth kissed Mother Paisley good-night and entered the small shack. She was glad to escape any interrogation. By morning she had gained control of herself, but her eyes betrayed the fact that she had not slept.
“You certainly do not look as though you were enjoying yourself down here,” Tom Cameron said to her at breakfast time, and with suspicion. “Maybe we did come to the wrong place for our vacation after all. How about it, Ruth? Shall we start off in the cars again and seek pastures new?”
“Not now, Tom,” she told him, hastily. “I must stay right here.”
“Why?”
“Because——”
“That is no sensible reason.”
“Let me finish,” she said rather crossly. “Because I must see what sort of scenario Mr. Hammond finds—if he finds any—in this contest.”
“Humph! And you said you and scenarios were done forever! I fancy Mr. Hammond is taking advantage of your good nature.”
“He is not.”
“You are positively snappish, Ruth,” complained Tom. “You’ve changed your mind——”
“Isn’t that a girl’s privilege?”
“Very well, Miladi!” he said, with a deep bow as they rose from the table. “However, you need not give all your attention to these prize stories, need you? Let’s do something besides follow these sun-worshippers around to-day.”
“All right, Tommy-boy,” acclaimed his sister. “What do you suggest?”
“A run along the coast to Reef Harbor where there are a lot of folks we know,” Tom promptly replied.
“Not in that old Tocsin,” cried Jennie. “She’s so small I can’t take off my sweater without tipping her over.”
“Oh, what a whopper!” gasped Helen.
“Never mind,” grinned her twin. “Let Jennie run to the superlatives if she likes. Anyway, I would not dream of going so far as the Harbor in that dinky little Tocsin. I’ve got my eye on just the craft, and I can get her over here in an hour by telephoning to the port. It’s the Stazy.”
“Goody!” exclaimed Jennie Stone. “That big blue yacht! And she’s got a regular crew—and everything. Aunty won’t be afraid to go with us in her.”
“That’s fine, Tom,” said his sister with appreciation.
Even Ruth seemed to take some interest. But she suggested:
“Be sure there is gasoline enough, Tom. That Stazy doesn’t spread a foot of canvas, and we are not likely to find a gas station out there in the ocean, the way we did in the hills of Massachusetts.”
“Don’t fear, Miss Fidget,” he rejoined. “Are you all game?”
They were. The girls went to “doll up,” to quote the slangy Tom, for Reef Harbor was one of the most fashionable of Maine coast resorts and the knockabout clothing they had been wearing at Beach Plum Point would never do at the Harbor hotels.
The Stazy was a comfortable and fast motor-yacht. As to her sea-worthiness even Tom could not say, but she looked all right. And to the eyes of the members of Ruth Fielding’s party there was no threat of bad weather. So why worry about the pleasure-craft’s balance and her ability to sail the high seas?
“It is only a short run, anyway,” Tom said.
As for Colonel Marchand, he had not the first idea about ships or sailing. He admitted that only continued fair weather and a smooth sea had kept him on deck coming over from France with Jennie and Helen.
At the present time he and Jennie Stone were much too deeply engrossed in each other to think of anything but their own two selves. In a fortnight now, both the Frenchman and Tom would have to return to the battle lines. And they were, deep in their hearts, eager to go back; for they did not dream at this time that the German navy would revolt, that the High Command and the army had lost their morale, and that the end of the Great War was near.
Within Tom’s specified hour the party got under way, boarding the Stazy from a small boat that came to the camp dock for them. It was not until the yacht was gone with Ruth Fielding and her party that Mr. Hammond set on foot the investigation he had determined upon the night before.
The president of the Alectrion Film Corporation thought a great deal of the girl of the Red Mill. Their friendship was based on something more than a business association. But he knew, too, that after her recent experiences in France and elsewhere, her health was in rather a precarious state.
At least, he was quite sure that Ruth’s nerves were “all out of tune,” as he expressed it, and he believed she was not entirely responsible for what she had said.
The girl had allowed her mind to dwell so much upon that scenario she had lost that it might be she was not altogether clear upon the subject. Mr. Hammond had talked with Tom about the robbery at the Red Mill, and it looked to the moving picture producer as though there might be some considerable doubt of Ruth’s having been robbed at all.
In that terrific wind and rain storm almost anything might have blown away. Tom admitted he had seen a barrel sailing through the air at the height of the storm.
“Why couldn’t the papers and note books have been caught up by a gust of wind and carried into the river?” Mr. Hammond asked himself. “The river was right there, and it possesses a strong current.”
The president of the Alectrion Film Corporation knew the Lumano, and the vicinity of the Red Mill as well. It seemed to him very probable that the scenario had been lost. And the gold-mounted fountain pen? Why, that might have easily rolled down a crack in the summer-house floor.
The whole thing was a matter so fortuitous that Mr. Hammond could not accept Ruth’s version of the loss without some doubt, in any case. And then, her suddenly finding in the only good scenario submitted to him by any of his company, one that she believed was plagiarized from her lost story, seemed to put a cap on the whole matter. Ruth might be just a little “off soundings,” as the fishermen about Herringport would say. Mr. Hammond was afraid that she had been carried into a situation of mind where suspicion took the place of certainty.
She had absolutely nothing with which to corroborate her statement. Nobody had seen Ruth’s scenario nor had she discussed the plot with any person. Secrecy necessary to the successful production of anything new in the line of picture plays was all right. Mr. Hammond advised it. But in this case it seemed that the scenario writer had been altogether too secret.
Had Ruth not chanced to read the hermit’s script before making her accusation, Mr. Hammond would have felt differently. Better, had she been willing to relate to him in the first place the story of the plot of her scenario and how she had treated it, her present accusation might have seemed more reasonable.
But, having read the really good story scrawled on the scraps of brown paper that John, the hermit, had put in the manager’s hands, the girl had suddenly claimed the authorship of the story. There was nothing to prove her claim. It looked dubious at the best.
John, the hermit, was a grim old man. No matter whether he was some old actor hiding away here on Beach Plum Point or not, he was not a man to give up easily anything that he had once said was his.
The manager was far too wise to accuse the hermit openly, as Ruth had accused him. They would not get far with the old fellow that way, he was sure.
First of all he called the company together and asked if there were any more scenarios to be submitted. “No,” being the answer, he told them briefly that out of the twenty-odd stories he had accepted one that might be whipped into shape for filming—and one only.
Each story submitted had been numbered and the number given to its author. The scripts could now be obtained by the presentation of the numbers. He did not tell them which number had proved successful. Nor did he let it be known that he proposed to try to film the hermit’s production.
Mr. Hooley was using old John on this day in a character part. For these “types” the director usually paid ten or fifteen dollars a day; but John was so successful in every part he was given that Mr. Hooley always paid him an extra five dollars for his work. Money seemed to make no difference in the hermit’s appearance, however. He wore just as shabby clothing and lived just as plainly as he had when the picture company had come on to the lot.
When work was over for the day, Hooley sent the old man to Mr. Hammond’s office. The president of the company invited the hermit into his shack and gave him a seat. He scrutinized the man sharply as he thus greeted him. It was quite true that the hermit did not wholly fit the character he assumed as a longshore waif.
In the first place, his skin was not tanned to the proper leathery look. His eyes were not those of a man used to looking off over the sea. His hands were too soft and unscarred for a sailor’s. He had never pulled on ropes and handled an oar!
Now that Ruth Fielding had suggested that his character was a disguise, Mr. Hammond saw plainly that she must be right. As he was a good actor of other parts before the camera, so he was a good actor in his part of “hermit.”
“How long have you lived over there on the point, John?” asked Mr. Hammond carelessly.
“A good many years, sir, in summer.”
“How did you come to live there first?”
“I wandered down this way, found the hut empty, turned to and fixed it up, and stayed on.”
He said it quite simply and without the first show of confusion. But this tale of his occupancy of the seaside hut he had repeated frequently, as Mr. Hammond very well knew.
“Where do you go in the winter, John?” the latter asked.
“To where it’s a sight warmer. I don’t have to ask anybody where I shall go,” and now the man’s tone was a trifle defiant.
“I would like to know something more about you,” Mr. Hammond said, quite frankly. “I may be able to do something with your story. We like to know about the person who submits a scenario——”
“That don’t go!” snapped the hermit grimly. “You offered five hundred for a story you could use. If you can use mine, I want the five hundred. And I don’t aim to give you the history of my past along with the story. It’s nobody’s business what or who I am, or where I came from, or where I am going.”
“Hoity-toity!” exclaimed Mr. Hammond. “You are quite sudden, aren’t you? Now, just calm yourself. I haven’t got to take your scenario and pay you five hundred dollars for it——”
“Then somebody else will,” said the hermit, getting up.
“Ah! You are quite sure you have a good story here, are you?”
“I know I have.”
“And how do you know so much?” sharply demanded the moving picture magnate.
“I’ve seen enough of this thing you are doing, now—this ‘Seaside Idyl’ stuff—to know that mine is a hundred per cent. better,” sneered the hermit.
“Whew! You’ve a good opinion of your story, haven’t you?” asked Mr. Hammond. “Did you ever write a scenario before?”
“What is that to you?” returned the other. “I don’t get you at all, Mr. Hammond. All this cross-examination——”
“That will do now!” snapped the manager. “I am not obliged to take your story. You can try it elsewhere if you like,” and he shoved the newspaper-wrapped package toward the end of his desk and nearer the hermit’s hand. “I tell you frankly that I won’t take any story without knowing all about the author. There are too many comebacks in this game.”
“What do you mean?” demanded the other stiffly.
“I don’t know that your story is original. Frankly, I have some doubt about that very point.”
The old man did not change color at all. His gray eyes blazed and he was not at all pleasant looking. But the accusation did not seem to surprise him.
“Are you trying to get it away from me for less than you offered?” he demanded.
“You are an old man,” said Mr. Hammond hotly, “and that lets you get away with such a suggestion as that without punishment. I begin to believe that there is something dead wrong with you, John—or whatever your name is.”
He drew back the packet of manuscript, opened a drawer, put it within, and locked the drawer.
“I’ll think this over a little longer,” he said grimly. “At least, until you are willing to be a little more communicative about yourself. I would be glad to use your story with some fixing up, if I was convinced you really wrote it all. But you have got to show me—or give me proper references.”
“Give me back the scenario, then!” exclaimed the old man, his eyes blazing hotly.
“No. Not yet. I can take my time in deciding upon the manuscripts submitted in this contest. You will have to wait until I decide,” said Mr. Hammond, waving the man out of his office.