"Oh, we're all right."
"Are you lonesome, away from your family?"
"No, not lonesome, though I'd like to see them. Tell Midget there are two hundred incubator chicks now."
"Well, that is a lot! Now, good-by, Kitsie; I can't run up too big a telephone bill for your father. We all send love. Be a good girl. Good-by."
Cousin Jack hung up the receiver and buried his face in his hands. It had been a great strain on his nerves to appear gay and carefree to Kitty, and the implied assurance that Marjorie was not there nearly made him give way.
"She isn't there," he said, dully, as he repeated to the family what Kitty had said. And then the telephone rang, and it was the police department.
Mr. Maynard took the receiver.
"We've traced her," came the news, and the father's face grew white with suspense. "She bought a ticket to New York, and went there on the three-o'clock train yesterday afternoon. Nothing further is known, as yet, but as soon as we can get in touch with the conductor of that train, we will."
"New York! Impossible!" cried Cousin Ethel, when she heard the message, and Mrs. Maynard fainted away.
Marjorie! on a train, going to New York alone!
"Come on, King," said Cousin Jack, abruptly, and leaving the others to care for Mrs. Maynard, these two strode off again. Straight to the railroad station they went to interview the agent themselves.
He corroborated the story. He did not know Marjorie's name, but he described the child so exactly that there was no room for doubt of her identity.
But he could tell them no more. She had bought her ticket and taken the train in a quiet, matter-of-fact way, as any passenger would do.
"Did she look as if she had been crying?" asked King, almost crying himself.
"Why, yes, now you speak of it, her face did look so. Her eyes was red, and she looked sorter sad. But she didn't say nothin', 'cept to ask for a ticket to New York."
"Return ticket?" put in Mr. Bryant.
"No, sir; a single ticket. Just one way."
The conductor couldn't be seen until afternoon, as his run was a long one, and his home far away.
"I can't understand it," said King, as they walked homeward; "and I can't believe it. If Midget went to New York alone, she had lost her mind,—that's all."
But when they reached home, they found the Maynards quite hopeful. It had occurred to them that, by some strange freak, Marjorie had decided to visit Grandma Maynard, and had started off there alone.
"I'm trying to get them on the long-distance," Mr. Maynard announced, quite cheerily, as they entered.
"Let me take it," said Cousin Jack. "If she isn't there, we don't want to alarm them, either."
"That's so!" said Mr. Maynard. "All right, Jack, take it. Bless you, old fellow, for your help."
But when connection had been made, and Cousin Jack found himself in communication with Grandma Maynard, he didn't know what to say. He caught at the first pretext he could think of, and said:
"How do you do, Mrs. Maynard? You don't know me, but I'm Jack Bryant, a guest at Ed Maynard's house in Seacote. Now, won't you tell me when Marjorie's birthday comes?"
"Ah, I've heard of you, Mr. Bryant," said Grandma Maynard, pleasantly. "I suppose you want to surprise the child with a present or a party. Well, her birthday is next week,—the fifteenth of July."
"Oh, thank you. She is getting a big girl, isn't she? When,—when did you see her last?"
Cousin Jack's voice faltered, but the unsuspecting lady, listening, didn't notice it.
"About two months ago. They were here in May. I love Marjorie, and I wish I could see her again, but there's little hope of it. She wrote to me last week that they would be in Seacote all summer."
"Yes, that is their plan," said Cousin Jack.
He could say no more, and dropped the receiver without even a good-by.
But though Grandma Maynard might think him rude or uncourteous, she could not feel frightened or alarmed for Marjorie's safety, because of anything he had said.
"She isn't there," he said, quietly; "but I still think she started for there, and now we have a direction in which to look."
But what a direction! Marjorie, alone, going to New York, endeavoring to find Grandma Maynard's house, and not getting there! Where had she been all night? Where was she now?
There were no answers to these questions. And now Mr. Maynard took the helm. He cast off the apathy that had seemed to paralyze him, and, rising, he began to talk quickly.
"Helen," he said, "try to rouse yourself, darling. Keep up a good hope, and be brave, as you have always been. King, I am going out to find Marjorie. You cannot go with me, for I want to leave your mother in your care. You have proved yourself manly in your search for your sister, continue to do so in caring for your mother. Ethel, I'd be glad if you would stay here with Helen, and, Jack,—will you come with me?"
"Of course," replied Mr. Bryant.
"And, King," his father went on, "keep within sound of the telephone. I may call you at any moment. Get your sleep, my boy,—if I should be gone over night,—but sleep here on the library couch, and then the bell will waken you."
"Yes, Father, I'll look after Mother, and I'll be right here if you call me. Where are you going?"
"I don't know, my son. I only know I must hunt for Marjorie with such help and such advice as I can procure. Come on, Jack."
After affectionate farewells, the two men went away.
"First for that conductor," said Mr. Maynard. "I cannot wait till afternoon; I shall try to reach him by telephone or go to his home."
At length he learned that the conductor lived in Asbury Park. He was off duty at that hour, and Mr. Maynard tried to get him by telephone, but the line was out of order.
"To his house we go, then," and the two men boarded the first possible train.
At Asbury Park they found his house, but the conductor's wife, Mrs. Fischer, said her husband was asleep and she never disturbed him at that hour of the day, as he had a long run before him, and needed his rest.
But after a few words of explanation of their quest, the good lady became sympathetic and helpful.
"Of course I'll call him," she cried; "oh, the poor mother! my heart aches for her!"
Mr. Fischer came downstairs, rubbing his eyes. It was about noon, and he was accustomed to sleep soundly until two o'clock.
"Why, yes," he said, in answer to their queries. "I remember that girl. I didn't think much about her,—for a good many children travel alone between stations on the shore road. But, somehow, I don't think that child went to New York,—no, I don't think she did."
"Where did she get off?" asked Mr. Maynard, eagerly.