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Table of Contents
Title Page Copyright Page
CHAPTER I - A Strange Fragrance CHAPTER
II - Mysterious Numbers CHAPTER III - Work on a Code CHAPTER IV - A Switch in Jobs CHAPTER V - Money, Money !
CHAPTER
VI - A Worrisome
Journey CHAPTER VII -
Nature Cult CHAPTER VIII -
Hillside Ghosts
CHAPTER
IX - Black Snake Colony
Member CHAPTER X -
Plan of Attack
CHAPTER XI - A Midnight Message CHAPTER
XII - Secret Service Agents CHAPTER XIII - A Hesitant Hitchhiker CHAPTER XIV - Disturbing Gossip CHAPTER XV - Masqueraders CHAPTER XVI - Startling Commands CHAPTER XVII - Tense Moments CHAPTER XVIII - Prisoners CHAPTER XIX - Destroyed Evidence CHAPTER XX - A Final Hunch
Match Wits with Super Sleuth Nancy Drew!
Collect
the Complete
Nancy
Drew Mystery Stories®
by Carolyn Keene
Celebrate over 7O
years with the World’s Best Detective!
If only there was enough time to copy the code !
Copyright © 1989, 1961, 1931
by Simon & Schuster, Inc. All rights reserved.
Published by
Grosset & Dunlap, Inc., a member of The Putnam & Grosset Group,
New York. Published simultaneously in Canada. .S.A.
NANCY DREW MYSTERY STORIES® is a registered trademark of Simon &
Schuster, Inc.
GROSSET & DUNLAP is a trademark of Grosset & Dunlap, Inc. eISBN : 978-1-44067369-6
CHAPTER I
A Strange Fragrance
“THAT Oriental-looking clerk in the perfume
shop certainly acted mysterious,” Bess Marvin declared, as she and her two
friends ended their shopping trip and hurried down the street to the railroad
station.
“Yes,” Nancy Drew answered thoughtfully.
“I wonder why she didn’t want you to buy that bottle of Blue Jade?”
“The
price would have discouraged me,” spoke up Bess’s cousin, dark-haired George Fayne. Her boyish
name fitted her slim build and straightforward, breezy manner. “Twenty dollars an ounce!”
Blond, pretty Bess, who had a love for
feminine luxuries, laughed. “I was extravagant,
but I just couldn’t resist such yummy perfume. After all, Dad gave me money to
buy something frivolous, so I did!”
Nancy by this time was some distance
ahead. “Hurry, girls, or we’ll miss
the next train to River Heights!” In her active life the attractive,
titian-haired young sleuth had
learned that being on time was important.
The three eighteen-year-old girls continued their
frantic pace until the railroad station finally came into view.
Once at the station, they set down their
packages to rest their arms. “Whew!”
Bess sighed, looking at her watch. “I didn’t think we’d make it, but we have two
minutes to spare. And this would be one of July’s hottest days!”
Nancy was pensive, still contemplating
their encounter with the mysterious woman in the Oriental perfume shop. She had
realized the Blue Jade was much too expensive, and the unwillingness of the
young woman to part with it had stimulated her interest. Instinct had told
Nancy that there must be some special reason why the saleswoman had been so
reluctant to sell the Blue Jade.
Then another idea struck her. “You know,” she said
aloud, “it’s possible that saleswoman deliberately raised the price of the
perfume.”
George frowned. “But why? You’d think she’d be
thrilled to make such a good sale.”
“Yes,” Nancy agreed. “That’s what perplexes me.
There’s something very strange about it and I’d certainly like to know what it
is!”
“Oh, Nancy,” teased George, “there you go again,
dreaming up another mystery!”
Nancy’s blue eyes sparkled as she thought of the prospect. The
young sleuth had already solved several mysteries, some of them for her father,
Carson Drew, a famous criminal lawyer.
Among the cases on which Nancy had worked were The Secret in the Old Clock and The Secret of Shadow
Ranch.
The girls heard the train approaching
the station. As it came to a halt they quickly gathered up their packages and
hurried aboard.
“What a day!” Bess exclaimed as she
pushed on through the cars. The train was crowded, and the girls walked through
several cars before they found any vacant seats.
George and Bess began discussing their
many purchases. Bess gloated in particular over the bottle of exotic perfume.
Even though the package was wrapped, it gave off a slight fragrance which was
very pleasant.
George took a quick inventory of their
purchases, then laughed. “Bess, it’s a
good thing we got you to leave that last department store or you wouldn’t have
had enough money left to buy your ticket home,”
she stated bluntly. “You should practice self-control, the way I do.”
“Self-control!”
Bess retorted. “I suppose you call a new hat, two dresses,
three pairs of stockings, and a handbag
self-control!”
George mustered a smile and decided to
drop the subject.
Nancy leaned her head back against the cushion, and
as she relaxed, studied the faces of the nearby passengers. She thought that
the thin, sweet-looking girl who occupied the seat just opposite looked very
tired, worried, and even ill. Nancy judged the girl to be her own age.
“Why
are you so quiet, Nancy?”
Bess demanded suddenly.
“Just resting,” Nancy returned.
She did not tell her friends that she had become
interested in the nearby passenger, for George and Bess often teased her about
her habit of scrutinizing strange faces. However,
it was Nancy’s lively
interest in people
that was largely responsible for involving her in
unusual adventures, and she was always on the alert for a new mystery.
Bess eyed her perfume package longingly and finally
ripped off the paper. “I can’t stand it any longer.”
She sighed. “I must try some of this delicious-smelling stuff!” She opened the bottle and dabbed a couple of drops behind
each ear. Then she offered
it to George. “Try some. It’s really lovely—makes me think I’m in
the mystic Orient.”
George could not keep from making a
face. “No thank you!” she replied
firmly. “It’s not my type!”
Nancy and Bess laughed. Then Bess
offered some to Nancy, who accepted willingly. Bess again took out the stopper
and was leaning over to put some perfume on Nancy when the train lurched and
jogged her arm.
“Oh!”
Bess cried in horror.
The perfume sprayed
over Nancy, as the bottle fell to the floor.
“Such a waste of money!” George muttered
as she picked up the half-empty container.
“What
a shame!” Nancy exclaimed. “It’s your perfume, Bess, and now I have a lot of it on me.”
Bess groaned. “I should’ve waited till I was home
to open the bottle. I’m lucky there’s some left!” Carefully she placed the
small vial in her handbag.
By now the concentrated odor of Blue
Jade had permeated the car, and passengers in nearby seats flung open the
windows.
“I’m glad we’re getting off at the next
stop.” Nancy giggled. “Everyone is laughing at
us.”
Nancy had become so engrossed with the spilled
perfume that she had forgotten about the pale young woman who occupied the
opposite seat. Now, as Nancy turned her head, she was startled to see that the girl had slumped
down in a dejected heap.
“She’s fainted!” Nancy exclaimed, moving
quickly across the aisle.
She shook the girl gently, but there was no response
from the frail figure.
“Bess! Ask if there is a doctor in the car!” Nancy cried urgently.
By this time other passengers in the car were aware
that something had happened, and were
crowding about, asking
unnecessary questions and getting in the way.
Nancy politely asked them to move back.
There did not appear to be a doctor in the coach,
but as Nancy rubbed the girl’s wrists, she was relieved to see that she was
showing signs of recovering
consciousness.
George quickly
raised the window so that the fresh air fanned the girl’s face.
Leaning against the seat, she looked deathly
pale. “What can I do?” George asked.
“Stay here while I get some water,” Nancy answered.
“She’s coming around now. I think she’ll be all right in a few minutes.”
Nancy hurried to the water cooler at the far end of
the car. As she was trying to fill
the paper cup, a man who had been standing near the doorway came toward her. He made a pretense of waiting his turn to get a drink, yet she realized by the intent look on his face
that something had startled him. He was deliberately studying her! Was it because of the perfume?
She fairly reeked
with it!
Nancy was not prepared, however,
for what came next. The man edged
closer to her, glanced quickly
about to see that no one was close by, and
muttered in a guttural tone:
“She’s fainted!” Nancy exclaimed
“Any word from the Chief?”
Nancy was taken completely by surprise. She knew
she had never seen the man before, for she would not have forgotten such a
cruel face. His steel-gray eyes bored straight
into her. Nancy was so bewildered she could think of nothing to say.
The stranger realized at once that he had made a
mistake. “Excuse me, miss. My error,” he murmured, starting for the car ahead.
“But that perfume—Well, never mind!”
CHAPTER II
Mysterious Numbers
NANCY stared after the
stranger and wondered what he could have meant. “Evidently he mistook me for somebody
else,” she thought.
“But even so, his
actions certainly were peculiar.”
What message had he expected
to receive from her? Who was the Chief? How strange that the man should speak of the perfume as though it had been the cause of his mistake!
If Nancy’s mind had not been occupied
with the frail girl’s condition, she might have wondered more over the strange
encounter. She dismissed it for the moment. Quickly filling a cup with ice
water, she rushed back to George and Bess, who were giving first aid to the
girl.
“Do you feel better now?” Nancy asked. “Here, drink this.”
“Thank you,” the girl murmured, gratefully taking the cup. “I feel much better now,” she added quietly. “It was very kind of you to help me.”
“It must have been the perfume that made
you faint,” George declared. “A little is all right, but half a bottle is
overpowering.”
“I’m
sure it wasn’t
the perfume,” the girl returned
quickly. “I haven’t felt well
since I first boarded the train early this
morning.”
“What a shame,” Bess said. “I’ll get you some more water.”
She soon returned with a second cup.
“By the way, Nancy”—Bess turned to her
friend—“who was that man who spoke to you at the water cooler?”
“You noticed
him?” Nancy asked, surprised. “Yes,” Bess said, “but I didn’t
recognize him.”
“Nor did I,”
Nancy remarked. “The whole thing was quite mysterious. He simply approached me
and said: ‘Any word from the Chief?’”
“The Chief!” Bess
and George chorused. “What Chief?”
“I have no idea,” the young sleuth admitted. “But evidently it was this strange
perfume that attracted his attention, or so he
said.”
“I wonder what the perfume
could have to do with it?” Bess looked perplexed.
By this time the train was slowing down as it
approached the River Heights station, and Nancy and her friends realized they
must hurry or they would miss their stop.
“I’m afraid that we must interrupt this
conversation and say good-by,” Nancy told the girl reluctantly. “We get off at River Heights.”
“River Heights!” The girl glanced
anxiously out the window. “I get off here too! I had no idea we were so close.”
“We’ll help
you,” Nancy offered.
“Do you really feel well enough to walk?”
“Yes, I’m all right now.”
George and Bess collected the miscellaneous
packages, while Nancy helped the stranger along the aisle. The girl hesitated
uncertainly as she stepped from the train.
“I’m not very familiar with River Heights,” she
said to Nancy. “Which direction should I take to go to the center of town?”
“You’re still
too shaky to walk any distance,” George
spoke up. “Have
you no friend here to meet you?”
The girl shook her head.
“Then why don’t you come home for a snack with us?”
Nancy suggested. “I left my car parked here by the station, and I can drive you
back.”
The girl started to protest, but Nancy
and the others urged her on, and soon they were all settled in Nancy’s blue
convertible.
“I haven’t even told you my name,”
the strange girl said, leaning
back wearily. “I’m Joanne Byrd.
I live with my grandmother at Red Gate Farm about ten miles from Round Valley. That’s where I
took the train.”
Nancy introduced herself and her friends
as she started the car and headed it toward the Drew residence in another
section of the city.
“How nice it must be to live on a farm!”
Bess remarked. “And Red Gate is such a pleasant-sounding name.”
“Red Gate is a lovely place,” Joanne said feelingly. “I’ve lived there with my
grandmother ever since I can remember. We don’t have the money, though, to
keep up the farm. That’s why I left home today—to find work here.” “Do you have something in mind?”
Bess questioned.
“I came in response to a particular advertisement,” Joanne replied,
but did not say what it was. A faraway look came into her eyes. “We simply must raise enough money to pay the longstanding interest due on the mortgage
of our farm or Gram will lose it.”
“Surely no one would be mean enough to take over
your farm,” Bess murmured sympathetically.
“A bank holds the mortgage. It has no
choice. Gram knows very little about money matters, so she takes anyone’s advice. Years ago she was advised to buy another farm and sell it at a
high price. All at once values crashed and she couldn’t meet the payments on
her extra farm, so it went back to the original owners. Then she had to put a heavy mortgage on Red Gate, too, and if she loses
that, she’ll be penniless.”
As
Joanne finished her story, Nancy
turned the car into the Drews’ driveway. “Come
in, everybody,” she invited. “Perhaps we can think of a way to help
Joanne.”
The three girls followed Nancy into the house, where they were greeted by the
Drews’ pleasant housekeeper. Hannah Gruen had been like a mother to Nancy ever
since the death of Mrs. Drew when Nancy was a child. Nancy asked Hannah to make
some sandwiches for them all, then led the girls to the living room.
“You must be nearly starved,” Nancy said to Joanne a moment later. “I know I am.”
“I am rather hungry,” Joanne confessed.
“I haven’t had anything to eat since last night.”
“What!” the other girls chorused.
“It was my own fault,”
Joanne said hastily. “I was too excited this morning to think about food.”
“It’s no wonder you fainted,” Nancy
said. “I’ll ask Hannah to fix you something hot.”
Nancy returned from the kitchen with a
tray of appetizing sandwiches and a bowl of soup. Joanne ate heartily. Nancy
and her friends joined in, for they had had only a light snack while on their
shopping expedition.
“I do feel better,” Joanne announced when she had
finished. “It was so good of you to bring me here.”
“Not at all,” Nancy said softly. “We’d
like to help you all we can.”
“Thank you, but I believe everything will work out
all right if only I get this position.” Joanne glanced anxiously at the clock.
“I’ll really have to go now or I’ll be too late to make the call this
afternoon. Could you tell me how to get to this address?”
She handed a folded scrap of newspaper
to Nancy. “This particular ad for an
office girl caught my eye since it asks for someone who has had experience on a
farm.”
Nancy
found the advertisement to be rather
conventional, but it was the name
at the bottom of the paragraph that held her
attention.
“Why, this ad says Riverside Heights!”
she exclaimed. “You should have stayed on the train until the next stop!”
“I thought Riverside
Heights and River Heights were the same place!” Joanne Byrd cried in distressed surprise.
“Riverside Heights is only a few miles away,” Nancy
explained, “and the names are confusing even to people who live near here, so
it’s a natural mistake.”
“Oh, dear,
I don’t know what to do now,” Joanne
said anxiously. “If I don’t apply for that position
this afternoon, I’ll probably lose my chance of getting
it.”
Nancy had taken a liking to the girl and
wanted to help her. Not only was Joanne half sick from lack of food, but she
had worked herself into a nervous state.
“You must let me drive you to Riverside Heights,” Nancy
insisted. “It’ll only take fifteen minutes and you’ll have plenty of time to
apply for the position.”
Joanne’s face brightened instantly, but
she was reluctant to accept the favor. “I’ve really troubled you enough.”
“Nonsense! We’ll start
right away!” Nancy
turned to Bess and George.
“Want to come along?”
Bess and George both declined, since they were
expected home. The cousins gathered up their packages and all the girls went to the car. Nancy dropped
Bess and George at their own homes, then took the highway leading
to the next city.
“I do hope I get there in time,” Joanne said
worriedly. “The job will mean so much to Gram and me!”
“You’ll get there,” Nancy assured her. “Have you
ever applied for a job before?”
“No. I’ve always helped Gram run the
farm until now,” Joanne explained. “I felt I was more needed there than
anywhere else. We keep a farm hand, but a great deal of the work still falls
upon me.”
The girls soon reached Riverside
Heights, and Nancy had no trouble finding the address mentioned in the
advertisement. It was in a run-down section of the city, but Nancy did not
mention this to her companion.
“Here we are,” Nancy said cheerfully,
stopping the car in front of a dingy- looking office building.
Joanne made no move to get out of the
car, but sat nervously pressing her hands together.
“I’m a terrible
coward,” she confessed. “I don’t know what in the world to say when I go in. I wish you’d come with me.”
“I’ll be glad to,” said Nancy, as she turned off the ignition and
locked the car. They entered the building. There was no elevator, so the girls climbed the dimly
lighted stairway to the third floor. Soon they came to Room 305, which had been
mentioned in the advertisement.
“There’s no name on the door,” Nancy observed, “but
this must be the right place.”
As they stepped into the reception room, Nancy
noted that it was dirty and drab. The two girls glanced at each other,
exchanging expressions of disappointment.
At that moment a man came from the inner
office and surveyed the girls sharply. He was tall and wiry, with hostile, penetrating
eyes and harsh features. His suit was bold in pattern and color, and his
necktie was gaudy.
“Well?” he demanded coldly.
Joanne found sufficient courage to take
the advertisement from her pocket. “I—I saw this in the paper,” she stammered.
“I came to apply for the
position.”
The man stared at
Joanne critically, then at Nancy.
“You lookin’ for
the job too?” he asked.
Nancy shook her
head. “No. I’m here with my friend.”
The man looked
at Joanne again and said with a shrug of his shoulders, “Go on in the other
room. I’ll talk to you in a minute.”
Joanne cast
Nancy a doubtful glance and obediently stepped into the inner office.
“Look here,” the man addressed Nancy,
“wouldn’t you like that job? I could use a good-lookin’ girl like you.”
“I’m not looking
for work, thank you,” Nancy returned aloofly.
The man was about to make a retort when the telephone rang. He scowled
and went over to the table
to answer it. As he lifted the receiver he looked nervously back toward Nancy.
“Hello,” he growled into the phone.
“This is Al. Shoot!”
Nancy listened to his end of the unbusinesslike conversation and watched him reach for paper and pencil and begin
to scribble down a line of figures. This in itself would not have seemed so peculiar, except that he continued to eye Nancy suspiciously.
He
kept on copying figures. All the while Nancy watched him curiously. “O.K.,
Hank,” he muttered just before he hung up. “You say you’ve found a
girl?
... Fine! We can’t be too careful in this business!”
All this time Nancy was wondering what kind of
transactions went on in this office. There had been no indication on the door
of what business the man was engaged in and nothing in the room gave her any
clue. She realized now that Joanne’s chances of getting the position were slim,
and Nancy was actually relieved. She was very suspicious of the whole setup.
“I was just taking down some stock-market
quotations,” the man remarked lightly as he crossed the room toward Nancy.
“This isn’t an investment house, is it?”
she asked.
“No, you
wouldn’t call it that exactly,” he answered with a smirk. “We run a
manufacturing business.”
“I see,” Nancy
murmured, though she really did not understand at all. “What do you
manufacture?”
The man pretended not to hear and moved on to the inner
office where Joanne
was waiting. In haste to escape further
questions, he forgot to pick up the sheet of paper with the numbers on it.
Nancy was curious about the telephone conversation
and could not resist the temptation to take a peek at the notation. She stepped
silently over to the telephone table and glanced at the sheet.
Strung out across
the top and bottom of the page were numbers. The top row read:
1653 112 129 1562 16 882 091 5618
“Stock quotations, like fun!” Nancy told herself.
“Why did he lie about
it? He must have been afraid
I’d discover something!” As usual, Nancy was intrigued at any hint of a mystery. She studied the row of odd figures.
Suddenly it dawned on her that they might be a message
in code!
Nancy looked quickly toward the inner office. The door
was open, but the man sat with his back toward her. She did not dare pick up
the paper. If only there was enough time to copy the code!
With one eye on the office, Nancy took a
sheet of paper and frantically scribbled the numbers, carefully keeping them in
their right order. She could hear Joanne’s soft voice, then her prospective
employer talking loudly, and realized the interview was coming to an end.
She had copied only the top row of
numbers, but dared not spend any more time at it. She put the copy into her bag
and slipped back into her chair just a moment before Joanne and the man emerged
from the inner room. He glanced toward the telephone, gave a start, and rushed
across the room. With a muttered
exclamation he grabbed the paper and thrust it into his pocket.
Nancy’s heart was beating madly as she forced
herself to remain outwardly calm. He stood with a cold look on his face, his
eyes fixed on Nancy.
CHAPTER III
Work on a Code
HAD the man heard her rush from the telephone table? Nancy wondered.
Was he suspicious of her actions during his absence? If so, what
reason did he have and what
business deal was he hiding in this dingy excuse for an office? Nancy pretended not to notice
his penetrating, questioning eyes, but she was ill at ease.
The hostile man spoke up. “You girls better
get out of here!” he blurted. “I got
no more time to waste. And don’t bother to come back!”
Nancy and Joanne looked hastily at each other and
moved toward the door. Once outside the building, Nancy breathed a sigh of
relief and turned toward Joanne, who was close to tears.
“Don’t feel bad because you didn’t get
the job,” Nancy said gently as they walked to the car. “You wouldn’t have
wanted it, I’m sure.”
“That
man was detestable!” Joanne shuddered. “I had just given my name and address when he started to shout. You must have heard him.”
Nancy nodded. “I think he had already
found another girl to work for him,” she said. “At least I heard him say
something like that over the phone.”
“I knew I wouldn’t get the job.” Joanne sighed
dejectedly. “He told me I wasn’t the type!”
“I’d count my blessings if I were you,”
said Nancy soberly. “There’s something strange going on in that office and I’d
like to know what it is.”
“Why, what do you mean?” Joanne asked
quizzically.
“Well,” Nancy began carefully, “I’m not sure my suspicions are just, but I have a hunch there’s something
shady about the telephone message
he got when you were in the inner office.” Nancy explained about the
series of numbers on the sheet of paper and how she suspected they might form some sort of code.
“At any rate,” Nancy went on, “we can’t be sure of
anything, so this must remain confidential.”
Joanne nodded and fell silent.
Many thoughts raced through Nancy’s mind as she
remembered the day’s encounters. First there had been the perfume shop and its
mysterious saleswoman, then the curious man on the train who had been attracted
by the strange fragrance. And now, this crude, gruff man in Room 305!
“What
should I do now?” Joanne
asked forlornly. “I can’t go back to Red Gate
Farm and let Gram down. I simply must find
work!”
“Why not come home with me?” Nancy
suggested as they paused beside her car. “I’ll be glad to have you as my guest for the night, and in the morning you’ll feel better and can decide what to
do then.”
Joanne shook her head proudly. “Thank you, but I wouldn’t think
of letting you go to any more trouble. I have a little money. I can find a boardinghouse and I’ll keep on looking for work here.”
Nancy saw that Joanne was disappointed
and discouraged and hated to leave her on her own, but finally conceded. “I
guess you’re right,” she admitted. “But
at least let me help you hunt for a place to stay.”
Joanne accepted the offer gratefully.
Even with the car, it was difficult to locate a pleasant room. Joanne could not
afford a high-priced place, and the cheaper ones were unsatisfactory. Finally, however, they found a suitable
room on a quiet street and Nancy helped Joanne get settled.
“I may be driving over this way tomorrow,” she
said. “If I do, I’ll stop in to see what luck you’ve had.”
“I wish you would,” Joanne invited
shyly. “I’ll need someone to bolster my morale.”
“All right, I will,” Nancy promised.
After a few words of encouragement she said good-by,
then drove slowly toward River Heights, her mind again focused on the various
events of the day.
“I don’t know what will happen to Joanne
if she doesn’t find work,” Nancy told herself. “It would be a shame if her
grandmother loses Red Gate Farm. I wish I could do something, but I don’t know
of any available jobs.”
It was nearly dinnertime when Nancy
reached River Heights. As she passed the Fayne home, she saw George and her
cousin Bess on the front lawn and stopped to tell them about Joanne’s unsuccessful
interview.
“Isn’t that too bad?” Bess murmured in
disappointment. “She seems such a
sweet girl. I’d like to know her
better.”
“I promised I’d drive over to see her tomorrow,”
Nancy told the girls. “Why don’t you come along?”
“Let’s!” George cried enthusiastically.
“I love going places with you. We always seem to find some sort of adventure!”
Nancy’s blue eyes became serious. “I’d say this
has been a pretty full day! I can’t seem to forget that mysterious saleswoman in the Oriental
perfume shop or the
strange man on the train.
I wasn’t going to say anything to you about this, but something odd happened this afternoon
in that office.”
Nancy then related the mysterious actions and
behavior of the man named “Al.”
“You mean you think his telephone
conversation was a little on the shady side?” Bess asked, wide-eyed.
“It seemed that way to me,” Nancy answered. “I
doubt very much that it’s a
manufacturing business and those numbers
I copied from his pad were anything but stock-market quotations!”
“Well, here we go again! Never a dull
moment with Nancy around!” George laughed gaily.
“Don’t
be too impatient, George,” Nancy advised with a grin. “We don’t have proof that any of today’s
incidents is really
cause for suspicion.”
At this moment a foreign-make car went
by. Nancy glanced casually at the driver, then gave a start. He was the man who
had spoken to her on the train!
He slowed down and stared at the three girls and at
the Fayne home. Nancy felt at once that he was memorizing the address. He gave
a self-satisfied smile and drove on. Nancy noted his license number.
“I almost feel as if I’ll hear from him again,” she told herself,
then revealed to the girls, who had not noticed the
car’s driver, that he was the man
who had confronted her on the train.
“He’s still interested in you,” Bess
teased.
But George found nothing to laugh about. “I don’t
like this, Nancy,” she said seriously. “I remember he had a hard, calculating
face.”
Nancy, too, remained serious. A disturbing
thought had suddenly occurred to her.
“Why,” she told herself, “that man must have been
trailing me. But I wonder for what reason?”
She determined, for the moment at least, not to
mention her suspicions aloud and dropped the subject of the mysterious man.
Presently she bade Bess and George good-by, climbed into her convertible, and
drove home.
“I think I’ll ask Dad what he thinks about
that man Al’s mysterious telephone message,” Nancy decided as she hopped from the car.
She had often taken some of her puzzling
problems to her father. He, in turn, frequently discussed his law cases with
his daughter and found Nancy’s suggestions practical.
“You look tired, dear,” Carson Drew observed as she entered the living room and
sank into a comfortable chair. “Have
a big day shopping?”
“I can’t remember when so much ever
happened to me in one day.” Nancy smiled despite her fatigue.
“I suppose I’ll be getting the bills in a few
days,” her father remarked teasingly.
“It wasn’t just the shopping, Dad,”
Nancy returned gravely.
Nancy now plunged into the story of the Oriental
shop and the dropped perfume bottle, of her encounter with the stranger on the
train, and the strange fact of having seen him a short while ago in a
foreign-make car.
“What do you make of it?” she
questioned. Mr. Drew shrugged. “What did he look like?”
“The man seemed very polite, but he had a cruel
look in his eyes.” Nancy gave a brief description of him.
“Hm,” Mr. Drew mused, “I can’t say I
like the sound of this.”
“I wouldn’t wonder about it,” said Nancy, “except that the girl in the shop
seemed so reluctant to sell the perfume.
Why do you suppose she cared whether someone bought it?”
“Maybe she was instructed to save it for
special customers,” Mr. Drew suggested.
“Dad, you may have something there!”
Nancy exclaimed.
She told her father about Joanne Byrd and described
the office which they had visited together. She ended by showing him the figures
which she had copied.
“This was almost all of the message,” she
explained. “I didn’t have time to copy the rest. Can you figure it out?”
Carson Drew studied
the sheet of paper. “I’m not an expert
on codes,” he said
finally, “but I suspect this might
be one, since the man lied in saying these figures are market quotations.”
“Can you decipher it?” Nancy asked
eagerly.
“I wish I could, but it looks
like a complicated one. It would probably
take me days to figure out
what these numbers stand for. Why
don’t you work on it yourself?”
“I don’t know too much about codes,”
Nancy declared, “but perhaps I can learn!”
“I have a book you might use,” her
father offered. “It may not help much, since
every code is different. Still, all codes have some features in common. For instance, in any language
certain words are repeated more frequently than others.
If you can figure out a frequency table, then look for certain numbers to
appear more often than others, you may get
somewhere.”
“I’d like to try,” Nancy said eagerly.
“This will be a good test for your sleuthing mind,”
her father said teasingly. “If you don’t figure out the code, you can always
turn this paper over to an expert.”
“Not until I’ve had a fighting chance at
it myself,” Nancy answered with spirit.
“I’d really like to help you with this mystery,” her father said, “but I’m so tied up
with this Clifton
case I just can’t tackle anything else right now.”
Immediately after dinner Mr. Drew
retired to his second-floor study to work on his law case. Nancy went to her
bedroom to read the book on codes. When she finished, the girl detective took
out the sheet on which she had copied the numbers and studied the figures
intently.
“I’m sure the numbers stand for letters
of the alphabet,” Nancy told herself. “They must have been arranged in some
pattern.”
For over two hours Nancy tried
combination after combination and applied it to the code. Nothing showed up
until she hit upon the plan of four letters of the alphabet in sequence by
number, the next four in reverse. Alternating in this manner and leaving two in
the end bracket, Nancy scrutinized what she had
worked out:
“I’ve hit it!”
she thought excitedly.
CHAPTER IV
A Switch in Jobs
The numbers with the marks above or below them
stymied Nancy completely.
Most of the others fell neatly into place and
spelled:
“Calling meeting,” Nancy repeated. “But where? And
by whom?” She yawned, weary from her long concentration. “My brain’s too fogged
to figure out anything more,” she told herself. “I’ll tackle this another
time.”
The next morning Nancy and her father
enjoyed a leisurely breakfast. He praised her for hitting upon the key to the code but agreed that solving the rest of it would be difficult.
“Keep at it,” he advised, smiling fondly
at his daughter. “By the way, I won’t be home to lunch or dinner
today because of this Clifton case.”
“I thought I’d visit Joanne and try to
cheer her up,” Nancy said. “Do you, by any chance, know anyone who’s looking
for an office girl?” she added.
Mr. Drew shook his head. “No. I’m afraid
I don’t. But if I hear of anything I’ll let you know.”
“I feel that Joanne isn’t the type to be
in the hectic business world,” Nancy remarked. “If it weren’t that she wants to
help her grandmother, I doubt that she’d even try for a city position.”
After Carson Drew had left for his
office, Nancy busied herself around the house, helping Hannah. When the
housework was finally done, Nancy settled herself in an easy chair and delved into the code book once more. But she found no new hints to help break her own
set of numben.
Nancy, Bess, and George had planned to start
for Riverside Heights early in the afternoon, so as soon as the luncheon dishes
had been cleared away, Nancy
was off to pick up the other girls. By
two-thirty they had reached Joanne’s rooming house.
The landlady answered
Nancy’s knock
on the front door and informed her that
Joanne had left two hours before to see about a job. She would be back at three
o’clock. The woman invited the girls in, but the living room looked so dark and dreary that they preferred to wait
outside in the car.
“It’s too bad Joanne has to stay in a dismal place
like that,” Nancy remarked, “especially when she’s accustomed to farm life.”
“I sure hope she finds something,” Bess added.
“Maybe luck will be with her today.”
Within fifteen minutes the girls spotted
Joanne at a distance. She did not notice the car, and unaware that she was
being observed, walked slowly toward the rooming house, her head drooping
dejectedly.
“She didn’t get the job,” George
murmured. “I feel so sorry for her.”
As Joanne approached, Nancy called to her. Joanne
glanced up quickly and mustered a smile.
“No luck today?” Bess questioned.
“None at all,” Joanne answered with a sigh. She
came over to the car and stood leaning against the door. “I tried half a dozen places, but I couldn’t land a thing.
I’ll just have to try again tomorrow.”
In the face of such spirit on Joanne’s
part, the girls could do nothing but encourage her, though secretly they feared
she would have no better luck the next day.
“How about coming for a short ride?”
Nancy invited.
“I’d love it,” Joanne accepted eagerly. “It’s so
hot and stuffy in my room—” She hesitated, then added, “Of course, I guess it
is everywhere these days!”
Nancy took a road that led out of the city and soon
they were driving past cultivated fields of corn and wheat. Gradually, Joanne
became more cheerful.
“It’s so good to be out in the country again!”
she declared, gazing wistfully toward a farmhouse
nestled in the rolling hills.
“That place looks something like Red Gate Farm, only not half so
attractive. I wish you all could visit me there sometime!”
“So do wel”
Nancy said enthusiastically. “Wouldn’t it be wonderful to hike over hills and
breathe in the fresh clean air?”
“I’ve always
wanted to spend a vacation on a farm,” Bess declared longingly. “Just imagine
having cream an inch thick!”
“Just what you
need for reducing!” her cousin teased her.
“You wouldn’t
have to worry about that.” Joanne smiled. “We keep only one cow.”
When
the girls later
left Joanne at the door of her boardinghouse, they had the satisfaction of knowing she was in a more cheerful frame of mind.
“We’ll keep in touch with you, Joanne,”
Nancy promised as they said good- by.
“I have a feeling
we’ll be seeing
a lot more of each other,” Joanne
called after them. “So please
do call me Jo! I’d much prefer it.”
“Jo it is!” they
agreed merrily. “Good-by for now.”
Nancy and her friends had just started back to
River Heights when Nancy checked her gas gauge and decided to stop at a filling
station. The girls were idly watching passers-by when suddenly a
young woman, walking with mincing steps because of her extremely high heels,
attracted Nancy’s attention. Nancy
gasped in recognition.
There was no mistaking the distinctive Oriental
features. The clerk in the perfume shop!
Nancy turned to her companions. “Look at
that girl who just crossed over.
Isn’t she the same one who sold you the perfume, Bess?”
“You mean the one who tried not to sell me the
perfume, don’t you?” Bess joked. “Yes, she’s the same girl!”
Their eyes followed the girl up the street. She had
not glanced toward them, but had passed the filling station and continued on.
“Now, what can she be doing here?” Nancy
wondered. She got out of the car and stood watching the girl, who entered an
office building a short distance farther up the street.
“That’s funny,” Nancy said to her
friends, who were peering from the car windows. “I think that’s the very place
where Jo applied for a position!”
“You don’t suppose that perfume girl has
two jobs, do you?” George
questioned.
“I’d sure like to find out,” the young
detective answered.
Just then the attendant approached. Nancy paid him and stepped
back into the car.
“We must try to follow her,” she declared, starting the motor. They pulled up near the office building into which the
young woman had disappeared.
“You two wait here and keep watch,”
Nancy said. “If I’m not back in a few minutes, you’d better come and see what’s
going on.”
“Aye, aye, sir!” George said mockingly.
“We’re at your service! But be careful!”
Nancy alighted, hurried up the street, and went
into the building. The halls were deserted. Evidently the girl had gone into
one of the offices. But which one? As Nancy stood uncertainly staring up and
down, she spotted a handyman coming down the corridor.
“Did you see a girl come into the building just a moment
ago?” she inquired. “Oriental?” the man demanded,
resting on his broom.
Nancy nodded
eagerly. “Yes, she
looks rather Oriental.” “Oh, you mean Yvonne Wong.”
“Do you know her?” Nancy said, thinking
that with the name Yvonne, the girl
was probably part French.
“No, but I heard that man she works for, with the
loud voice and the swell clothes, call her by that name.”
“She works here?” Nancy inquired in
surprise.
“Guess so. She must be a new girl. Came
here yesterday.”
“I see,” Nancy murmured, thinking Yvonne Wong had
managed a rather sudden change of jobs. “Could you tell me in which office she
works?”
Her questions evidently had begun to annoy the handyman. “In 305. If you’re
so interested,” he said brusquely, “why
don’t you go in and ask her what you want to
know?”
“Thank you,” Nancy responded with a
polite smile, turning away. “I won’t trouble you any further.”
Nancy had taken only a few steps when
she thought of one more question and
came back. “By the way,” she said in a
casual tone, “what sort of office is 305?”
The man regarded her suspiciously. “How should I
know?” he demanded bluntly. “They don’t pay me to go stickin’
my nose in other folks’
business. I got my own work.”
Nancy could see that she was not going
to learn any more from the man, so she left the building and joined Bess and George,
who were waiting
anxiously at the door.
“Well, what did you manage to find out?”
Bess queried, as the three girls walked toward the car.
“Quite a bit,” Nancy answered
meditatively. She was certain that she could not have been mistaken. Yvonne
Wong was the same girl who only yesterday had waited on them in the Oriental
shop. Why had she changed positions?
“Well,” George broke into her thoughts,
“don’t keep us in suspense!”
Nancy answered all their questions as she drove
toward River Heights, explaining that the young woman’s name was Yvonne Wong and that she was a new girl in the
office—the same office Nancy and Joanne had visited.
“But
what about Yvonne’s job at the Oriental perfume shop?” asked George. “I don’t
know,” Nancy admitted, “and the handyman wouldn’t give me any
indication
as to the type of business it was!”
Nancy recalled the strange telephone
call which had been made while she and
Joanne were in the office. She distinctly remembered that some mention had been
made of a girl who had been found for the position, and that the man who called himself
“Al” had said that one “couldn’t be too careful.”
“I wouldn’t be so suspicious about Yvonne,” Nancy added, “except I have a
feeling she didn’t get that job by chance. She must have been chosen because she was especially suited to the
situation—whatever that is.”
“There’s something underhanded about the whole thing, but we haven’t much to go on,” Bess declared.
Nancy agreed. “Some clue may turn up.
Anyway, we have Jo to think about for the time being.”
It was getting
dark as Nancy dropped off Bess and then George
at their homes.
It rained so hard the following day that Nancy
stayed indoors and tried to figure out the remaining symbols of the code. Using
the same alphabetical key, 16 was M, 5 equaled H, 2 could be B, and 18 stood
for R.
“MHBR,” Nancy pondered. “That doesn’t make any
sense. Perhaps those marks over and under the letters are a second code,” she
reasoned. “If only I could decipher them, I might know who’s calling what
meeting, and where.”
The next morning a bright sun shone.
While Nancy was busy with chores around the house, the phone rang and she went
to answer it.
“Hello, Nancy,” said a quiet voice. “This is Jo.
How are you?”
“Oh, Jo, I’m fine,” Nancy replied eagerly. “Did you
find a job?” she asked hopefully.
“Not yet,” Joanne
answered sadly. “But I have some other news.” “I hope it’s good,” Nancy said.
“I just talked with my grandmother on the phone. I
must go home right away. She told me that soon after I left,
a man called and made an offer to buy Red Gate. His price was so low, she didn’t accept. He was very
persistent, though, and gave her five days to think it over.”
“Yes?” Nancy prompted.
“Well,” the other girl went on, “in the
meantime, Grandmother decided to try raising money by taking in boarders. She
placed an ad in the paper that same day.”
“Good for her!” Nancy exclaimed. “Has
she had any replies?”
“No,” Joanne said worriedly.
“Even though the ad hasn’t run very long, Gram’s discouraged. I’m afraid she has changed her mind and
intends to take that man’s offer. She said he’s coming to Red Gate tomorrow at five o’clock
and bringing papers for her to sign.”
There was a pause, then Joanne burst
out, “Nancy, I just can’t let Gram go
through with this, and if I’m not there, she’ll
accept the man’s offer. She mustn’t
give up Red Gate Farm yet! That’s why I must get home and persuade
her not to sell.”
“By all means,” Nancy agreed. “I suppose you’ll
take the train to Round Valley in the morning?”
“That’s the horrible part, Nancy,” Joanne said
dejectedly. “I’ll have only enough money for train fare half the way after I
pay my room rent.”
“No need to do that, Jo,” Nancy said
eagerly. “You get your bag packed and be ready to leave at ten o’clock tomorrow
morning!”
CHAPTER V
Money, Money !
As NANCY reflected on her plan, another idea occurred to her. She was sure that Bess and George would love the chance
to spend a vacation on a farm, since they had both mentioned it the other day. Nancy did some mental
arithmetic and came to the
conclusion that three steady boarders who paid their bills regularly might help
to lessen the amount of the mortgage interest payments that threatened Red Gate.
“And also keep Mrs. Byrd from selling the place,”
Nancy thought. “I hope Dad agrees to my making the trip.”
That evening at dinner Mr. Drew said,
“I’ll be out of town for a week or so, Nancy. Do you think you can get some of
your friends to stay with you?”
“I have an even better idea,” Nancy
replied, and smiled.
She outlined her plan to help Joanne Byrd. Her father
consented enthusiastically, proud as always of Nancy’s desire to assist others.
It was not so easy to convince Bess and
George, when Nancy telephoned them. They both wanted to help Joanne and agreed
that a week or two in the country would be very pleasant,
but there were complications. If George went,
it meant she would lose out on a camping trip. Bess had planned to visit an aunt in Chicago, but admitted that the trip
could be postponed.
“There’s one thing about it,” George said
laughingly as she finally agreed to give up the camping trip. “I’ve never been
with you yet that we didn’t run into an adventure or mystery! Maybe a trip to
Red Gate will be exciting.”
Bess and George had no trouble in
getting their parents’ consent. It was decided that Nancy would pick up Joanne
first, then come back for the cousins, since River Heights was on the way to
Round Valley.
Nancy packed her clothes that night
after telephoning the plans to Joanne. As
she was dosing the suitcase, her eyes fell upon the copy of the coded message
which lay on the dressing table.
“I’d better take it along and work on it
whenever I have the chance,” she
decided.
Nancy got up early the next morning and had
breakfast with her father. After exchanging fond good-bys with him and Hannah,
she hurried to her car.
It was close to ten o’clock when Nancy
reached Riverside Heights. She stopped at a downtown service station and had
her convertible filled with gas and checked for oiL Then she drove to Joanne’s
boardinghouse.
Her passenger was waiting. Nancy was
glad to find that Joanne seemed to be in better spirits.
“It’ll be such fun, all of us going
together,” Joanne said, “and I know Gram will be happy to have you stay as long
as you like.”
“Only
on the condition that we are paying
guests,” Nancy insisted. “We’ll see about that later,”
Joanne said, smiling.
They put her suitcase into the trunk of the car and
soon were on their way back to River Heights. Assured by Joanne that they would
be welcome at Red Gate, the cousins brought out their suitcases and put them in
the luggage compartment.
George took Nancy
aside and said excitedly, “A little while ago a man phoned here and asked for Miss Fayne.
When I answered, he said,
‘Listen, miss, tell that
snoopy friend of yours to stop her snooping, or she’ll be sorry!’ Then
he hung up without giving his name.”
Nancy set her jaw, then smiled.
“Whoever he is, he has a guilty
conscience. So my suspicions
were well founded.”
“Who do you think he is?” George asked.
“Either the strange man on the train who followed
me here, or some accomplice of his.”
“I’m glad for your sake we’re going
away, Nancy,” stated George.
“Let’s not say anything about this to Jo,” Nancy
advised, as she and George walked back to the car.
“It’s a perfect day for our trip to the
country,” Joanne said excitedly.
George could see by the expression on Joanne’s face
that a visit to Red Gate Farm with her new friends was far more important to
her than any other plans the girls might have had.
“I agree one hundred per cent!” George
answered happily as she stepped into
the car.
“And I’ll be so glad to get out of this heat,” Bess
chimed in with a sigh. “I spent practically the whole night dreaming about the
cool, refreshing breezes in the country.”
As Nancy steered the convertible in the
direction of Round Valley, she said with an eager smile, “We’re off to rescue
Red Gate Farm!”
Nancy and her friends thoroughly enjoyed
the scenic route to Round Valley. They stopped for a quick lunch and then
continued their drive. The winding roads led through cool groves and skirted
sparkling little lakes. Each hilltop brought a different and beautiful view.
Gradually the worried expression
completely left Joanne’s eyes, and color came into her thin face. She began to
laugh heartily at the antics of Bess and George. As they rode along she told
the girls a great deal about her home.
“You’ll like Red Gate, I’m sure,” she
said enthusiastically. “We haven’t any riding horses, but there will be plenty
of other things to do. We can explore the cave, for one thing.”
“Cave?” Bess questioned with interest. “How
exciting! What kind is it? A home for bears or a pirate’s den?”
Joanne laughed. “There’s
a large cavern located on the farm. No one knows how it came to be there,
but we think it must have been made a long time ago by an underground river.”
“You must have explored it before this!”
Nancy exclaimed.
“Oh, yes, of
course, though I’ll admit I never did very thoroughly, and I haven’t been near
the cave for years. As a child I was always afraid of the place
—it
looked so dark and gloomy. Lately I’ve been too busy working around the farm.”
“We’ll have
to put that at the top of our list!”
George declared. “I love spooky things.”
“Well, I’m not so
sure I do,” Bess admitted.
Nancy laughed.
“We may even find hidden treasure in the walls.”
“I wish you could.”
Joanne sighed. “It certainly would come in handy.”
The hours passed
quickly as the travelers alternately sang and chatted. “Why, it’s almost four
o’clock!” George announced in surprise.
“We’ve made good time,” Nancy remarked.
Bess spoke up plaintively. “I’m half-starved. It’s
been ages since lunch. I could go for a gooey sundae.”
The others laughed, but agreed they were
hungry too.
“Let’s watch for a roadside stand,”
Nancy proposed. “I’ll have to stop soon for
gas, anyway.”
“We’ll come to one soon,” Joanne spoke
up. “We’re in Round Valley now.”
A few minutes later she pointed out a combination
filling station and lunchroom which looked clean and inviting. Nancy turned the
convertible into the driveway and parked out of the way of other drivers
who might want to stop for
gasoline.
The group entered the lunchroom and took
seats at one of the small white tables. They all decided on chocolate nut
sundaes topped with whipped cream.
“Here
goes another pound.”
Bess sighed as she gave her order. “But I’d rather be pleasantly plump than give up sundaes!”
Though there were few customers in the room,
the woman in charge, who also
did the serving, was extremely
slow in filling the orders.
Twice Nancy glanced at her
watch.
“If you’ll excuse me,” she said, “I’ll step outside
and get the gasoline. It will save us a little time in getting started. Don’t
wait for me if our sundaes come.”
She drove the car over to the pump and asked the
attendant to fill the tank. Before he could do so, however, a large,
high-powered sedan pulled up to the other pump, coming to an abrupt stop almost
parallel to Nancy’s car.
“Give me five and make it snappy!” a
voice called out impatiently.
The attendant glanced
inquiringly at Nancy Drew. “Do you mind?” he asked.
“Wait on them first if you like,” she
said graciously.
Nancy observed
the passengers with interest. There were three rather coarse- looking men,
accompanied by a woman.
Nancy could not
see the face of the driver, for it was turned away from her.
But suddenly he
opened the door of his car.
“I’m goin’
inside and get a couple bottles of ginger ale,” she heard him grumble to his
companions.
As he stepped
from the automobile and turned, Nancy saw his face. He was
the mysterious man who had spoken to her
that day on the train!
In view of the telephone call George had received,
Nancy did not wish to be observed. She turned her head quickly, leaned down, and pretended to be studying a road map.
“I hope he doesn’t recognize me!” Nancy thought, “or see my license plate!”
To her relief, the man walked in front of the
convertible without a sideward glance. At that moment the woman alighted and
walked toward the lunchroom, passing close to Nancy’s
car. She was tall and
slender, with blond hair that was almost shoulder length. Nancy’s attention was suddenly arrested when
she detected on the stranger a familiar scent—Blue Jade perfume!
After the driver and the blond woman had entered
the lunchroom, Nancy gazed at the two men who remained in the automobile. They
were the sort Carson Drew would describe as “tough customers.”
The blond woman soon reappeared and got
back into the sedan. Then the
driver
came out carrying the cold drinks. Without looking in Nancy’s direction, he
addressed the attendant harshly.
“Say, ain’t you
finished yet?”
He turned to one
of the men in the car and handed him the bottles of ginger ale.
“Hold these, will
you, Hank? I got to pay this bird!”
Nancy started. “That man in Room 305 called one of
his friends ‘Hank’ over the telephone,” she said to herself. “Could he be this
person?”
Her attention was drawn back to the driver,
who was paying the attendant. He took a thick
roll of bills from his pocket, and with a careless gesture
peeled off a ten-dollar bill.
“Aren’t you afraid to carry such a wad
around, sir?” the attendant questioned,
gazing admiringly at the thick roll.
The driver laughed boisterously. “Plenty more where
this comes from. Eh, Hank?”
“You bet!
My roll makes
his look like a flat tire! Just feast your eyes on this!”
He flashed an even larger roll of bills in the amazed attendant’s face.
The filling-station man shrugged. “I’ll have to go
inside to get, your change.”
The moment he had disappeared, the third man in the
car muttered to his companions, “You fools! Do you want to make him suspicious? Pipe down!” He spoke
in a low tone but the wind carried his voice in Nancy’s
direction.
“Maurice is right,” the driver admitted. “The fellow is only a cornball, but we
can’t be too careful.”
The attendant returned with the change.
The driver pocketed it and drove off without another word. Nancy instinctively
noted the license number of the car. On impulse she went to a phone booth and
dialed her friend Chief McGinnis of the River Heights Police Department.
“I’ll ask him to let me know who owns
both the sedan and the foreign-make car that slowed down at George’s house,” she determined. “Then I’ll
find out about the driver, the woman wearing
the Blue Jade, the men named Maurice
and Hank, and maybe the man in Room 3051”
CHAPTER VI
A Worrisome Journey
“SOME
class, eh?” the attendant remarked
to Nancy as she came back to her car. “Must
be millionaires.”
“Or racketeers,” Nancy thought. As soon
as her gas tank was filled, she paid the bill and hurried back into the lunchroom. The girls already
had been served.
“What took you so long?” Bess asked.
“Another car drove up and I had to wait,” Nancy
answered simply. She sat down, thoughtfully eating her sundae.
“What’s the matter with you?” George de· manded presently. “You’ve hardly said a word since you sat down.”
Nancy looked around and saw that no one was seated
near their table. In whispers she told what had happened.
“Oh, dear,” said Bess, “maybe that man
on the train found out where we’re going and is on his way there too!”
“Don’t
be silly,” George chided
her cousin. “If he’s in some shady deal around
River Heights, he’d be glad to have our young sleuth out of the way.”
Joanne looked a bit worried, but all she said was,
“I think we’d better be on our way. I have to be there before that man comes to
buy the farm. I must talk Gram out of it!”
The girls finished the sundaes and
picked up their checks, but Nancy insisted upon paying.
“I want to break this twenty-dollar bill
Dad gave me,” she said. “I’ve spent most of my smaller bills.”
The waitress changed the bill for her
without comment and the girls left the lunchroom. As they climbed into the car,
Nancy glanced anxiously at the sky. There was a dark overcast in the west.
“It does look like rain over my way,”
Joanne observed. “And we leave the paved road and take a dirt one about five
miles from the farm.”
“I’m afraid it’s going to be a race against time,”
Nancy warned, starting the car. “A bad storm on a dirt road won’t help matters
at all!”
The girls now noticed a change in the country-side.
The hills had become steeper and the valleys deeper. The farms dotting the
landscape were very attractive.
Nancy
made fast time, for she was bent on beating
the storm. The sky became gloomier and overcast. Soon the
first raindrops appeared on the windshield. “We’re
in for a downpour all right!” Nancy declared grimly, as she turned onto the dirt road.
Soon there was thunder and lightning,
and the rain came down in torrents. “Listen to that wind!” Bess exclaimed. “It’s enough to blow us off the road!” The
next minute everyone groaned in dismay, and Nancy braked the car.
Across the road stood a wooden blockade.
On it was a sign:
DETOUR BRIDGE UNDER REPAIR
George read it aloud in disgust. An arrow on the sign indicated a narrow road to
the right. As Nancy made the turn, Joanne gave a sigh.
“Oh, dear,” she said, “this back way
will take us much longer to reach Red Gate.”
The detour led through a woodland of tall trees.
Daylight had been blotted out entirely,
and even with the car’s headlights on full, Nancy could barely see
ahead. Again she was forced to slow down.
Suddenly a jagged streak of lightning
hit a big oak a short distance from the car. It splintered the tree.
“Oh!” screamed Bess. “‘This is
terrible!”
Nancy pretended to be calm, but she really was very
much worried. She decided it would be safer to get away from the dangerous line
of trees, any one of which might crash down on them!
“How long is this stretch
of woods?” she asked Joanne. “Oh, perhaps five hundred feet.”
“We’ll have to chance it.” Nancy drove as quickly
as she dared in the darkness. The girls breathed sighs of relief when open
country was reached.
But Joanne’s fears were not yet over.
“Watch out!” she advised. “There’s a
sharp, treacherous curve very soon, just
before we take the turnoff for the farm.”
By now the brief storm had moved off to a distant
sky and it was easier to see the boundaries of the slippery road.
Nancy rounded a curve, but as the car took the
turn, the wheels
on the right side sank into the thick mud of a ditch, bringing the car to a lurching halt.
The unexpected mishap stunned the girls for a
moment. Finally Bess found her voice. “Now what?”
Nancy endeavored to drive the car out of the ditch,
but it was useless. “Well”—she sighed—“we may as well jump out and examine
the car. Keep your fingers crossed.”
They found the convertible at a lopsided
angle. The right wheels, however, were firmly anchored by the mud. The four
girls attempted to push the car, but without success.
“I’ll look in the trunk,” Nancy said,
“to see if there’s something to help us.”
Nancy found two pieces of heavy burlap. Bess and
George put them in front of the two back wheels for traction. Then they gathered
and broke up some brush to make a mat for each tire.
“I hope this works,” Joanne said, taking
her place to assist in pushing the car. “There
probably won’t be anyone else using this desolate road who could help us.
”I—I’m afraid we won’t reach the farm in time!”
Nancy stepped into the car and started
the motor, easing the gas and slowly rocking the convertible back and forth.
Inch by inch the tires crept forward, finally catching on the burlap and brush
and rolling out of the ditch.
“We’ve done it!” Bess shouted proudly.
“With a little outside
help!” George panted
with a grin. The girls laughed from sheer relief.
They started off again, more slowly than
before. But they had gone only a mile when a new storm seemed to be coming up.
In less than five minutes complete darkness descended again, bringing another
deluge of rain. Deafening
thunderclaps instantly followed vivid forks of
lightning.
Of necessity,
Nancy once more kept the automobile at a snail’s pace. It was impossible
to see more than a few feet ahead. Anxiously Joanne kept glancing
at her watch. “It’s five-fifteen,”
she announced nervously.
Nancy tried to assuage the worried
girl’s fears. “This storm may have delayed
your grandmother’s caller.”
The wind and rain continued unabated. As the
convertible climbed the brow of a hill, there was a brilliant
flash of lightning. George, who was seated in front
with Nancy, screamed, “Don’t hit her!”
Nancy
jammed on the brakes so quickly that the rear of the car skidded
around sideways in the road.
“Who?” she demanded, horrified.
“The woman in the road! Didn’t you see
her? Maybe she’s under the car!”
Heartsick, Nancy jumped out one door, Bess another.
They peered under the car, alongside it, in back of it. They could see no one.
“Are you sure you saw a woman?” Nancy
inquired.
Just then another streak of lightning illuminated
the sky, and Bess called out, “There goes someone running across that field!”
Nancy glanced quickly in that direction
and saw the running figure of a woman. At that same moment the woman looked
back over her shoul der, revealing a thin, haggard face. Nancy judged her to be
in her early fifties.
All four girls stared in mystification.
Nancy and Bess returned to the car and the journey was resumed.
“Why would any sane person be walking in
such a storm?” Bess spoke up finally.
“She’s headed in the direction of the cavern,”
said Joanne, and explained that
they were now nearing the farm. “Maybe she’s
one of those strange people over
there!”
Nancy
and her friends
were immediately curious.
Before they could ask what Joanne meant, the car reached the crest of a steep hill and Joanne cried
out:
“There’s Red Gate Farm!” She pointed to
the valley below them.
The storm had let up and the sun was coming out.
The River Heights girls could clearly see the forty-acre farm, with its groves of pine trees
and a winding river which curled along the valley. Everything looked green and fresh after the heavy rain.
“It’s beautiful!”
exclaimed Bess.
“And cool—and
peaceful,” Joanne added excitedly.
“Don’t count on
much relaxation with Nancy around,” George advised their
new friend. “She’ll find some adventure to occupy every
waking hour!” “Yes,” Bess agreed. “Adventure with mystery added.”
Nancy smiled. She reflected on the two mysteries
she had already encountered; the unsolved case of the Blue Jade perfume and the
strange code.
As the car descended into the valley, the girls
caught a better glimpse of the farm with its huge red barn and various
adjoining sheds and the large, rambling house, partly covered with vines. There
were bright-red geraniums in the window boxes, and a freshly painted picket
fence surrounding the yard.
Nancy stopped the car in front of the big red gate
which opened into the garden. “Oh, I hope it’s not too late!” Joanne cried as
she sprang out to unlatch the gate.
CHAPTER VII
Nature Cult
NANCY drove in to Red Gate Farm and
parked. She consulted her watch and noted with dismay
it was quarter to six. By now the farmhouse
door had opened, and a gray-haired woman in a
crisp gingham dress and white apron came hurrying out to meet them. Her blue
eyes were bright as she welcomed Joanne warmly.
“My granddaughter told me how kind you all were to her in the city,” she said to Nancy and her friends. “I can’t
thank you enough.”
“Gram!”
Joanne exclaimed. “I can’t stand the suspense.
Did you sell the farm to that man?”
Mrs. Byrd shook her head. “Mercy! I was so excited
at your coming back I forgot to tell you. He phoned a little while ago and said that because of the storm he’d rather come here tomorrow—he could wait one more day.”
Not only Joanne,
but her visitors, heaved sighs of relief. Further
discussion of the subject
was deferred when Mrs. Byrd insisted the girls freshen
up for supper.
They
entered the large,
rambling house, and a little
later everyone sat down in the plainly furnished but comfortable
dining room. Mrs. Byrd appeared very happy as she bustled about, serving the
delicious meal of hot biscuits, sizzling ham, sweet potatoes, and coffee. The
girls had not realized how hungry they were.
“Nothing like driving through a storm to work up an
appetite.” George grinned.
It was not until dessert—freshly baked
lemon meringue pie—that Joanne mentioned again what was uppermost in her mind.
“Gram,” she said gently, “please call up that man and tell him
you don’t want to sell our farm. Please. We’ll find a way to stay here, somehow.
I’m sure there’ll
be answers to your ads for
boarders.”
Nancy quickly spoke up. “Yes, Mrs. Byrd. It
certainly would be a shame to give up Red Gate. And besides, George, Bess, and
I would like to be paying guests for a while—if you’d like us to stay, that
is.”
“Of course I want you all here as long as possible.
But I really can’t accept any money,” Mrs. Byrd protested. “You have been so
wonderful to Jo.”
“If you won’t let us pay our share, we’ll have to
return home tomorrow,” Nancy insisted.
Mrs. Byrd finally relented and declared
with a smile: “I believe I was just waiting
to be dissuaded from taking
that Mr. Kent’s offer.
I’ll call him right now. He
gave me his telephone number.”
The girls followed
her into the kitchen, and sat down while Mrs. Byrd went to
the phone there and put in the call.
“Mr. Kent? I’ve decided not to sell Red
Gate Farm—at any price.... No. I ...
No Absolutely.” The woman winced and held the phone
away from her ear.
Nancy and her friends exchanged glances. The man
was evidently incensed and was speaking so loudly they could hear his voice
easily. Finally Mrs. Byrd put down the receiver.
“Well, I’m glad that man isn’t going to
own Red Gate,” she declared. “He certainly was unpleasant. He even said I might
regret my decision.”
Joanne’s face was radiant and she hugged
her grandmother. “I feel so much better now.” She turned to her new friends.
“Somehow, I know you’re going to bring us luck, Nancy, Bess, and George.”
Suddenly Mrs. Byrd said, “Goodness! I’ve
forgotten to look in our mailbox today.”
“I’ll go.” Joanne hurried outside and was back in a
minute, several envelopes in her hand.
“Graml One of these is from the Round
Valley Gazette. Do you think—?”
Excitedly she handed the mail to her grandmother.
The girls watched eagerly as Mrs. Byrd
tore open a long, bulky envelope and took out a number of enclosed letters. She
looked at them quickly. A smile spread over her face.
“Gram, are they answers to the ad for
board ers?” Joanne asked excitedly.
Mrs. Byrd nodded. “I can hardly believe it! Two
people are arriving the day after tomorrow. First, a Mrs. Salisbury, then a Mr.
Abbott. Several others will come later this month.”
“Wonderful!” Nancy said, and immediately offered
her assistance in getting rooms ready.
“Count Bess and me in too,” said George.
Joanne and her grandmother at first demurred, but were outvoted. “Very well.” Mrs. Byrd smiled. “Tomorrow afternoon will be time enough to
get things ready.”
Later, as the guests bid her good night,
Mrs. Byrd said:
“Jo was right. You three girls have brought us luck. Bless you!”
George and Bess were shown to the room in which
they would sleep. Nancy was to share Joanne’s bedroom.
“Oh,
how sweet it smells in here,” Joanne commented, as Nancy unpacked. “That’s some
of the Oriental perfume which splashed on my clothes in the
train,”
said Nancy. “It certainly is strong and lasting!”
When Nancy awoke the next morning, warm sunlight
was streaming through the windows. Joanne had already gone downstairs. Nancy’s first thought was to phone Police
Chief McGinnis and find out about the owner,
or owners, of the cars driven by the suspicious man. After dressing
hurriedly she went to the first floor and placed the call.
“Good morning, Nancy,” the officer said. “Here’s the information you wanted. Both cars
were rented from drive-yourself agencies by a man named Philip Smith, a native
of Dallas, Texas. They’ve been returned.”
Nancy thanked the chief and hung up.
“That clue wasn’t any help,” she thought. “None of those suspicious men talked
like a Texan. The name Philip Smith was probably phony, and made up on the spur
of the moment. Also, a forged driver’s license might have been used.”
Presently Bess and George came down and the girls
enjoyed a delicious breakfast of pancakes
and sausages. Afterward, Joanne took the girls on a tour of
the farm. She showed them the lovely gardens, a large chicken house, and her
pet goat, Chester.
A turkey took a dislike to Bess and
chased her to the farmhouse porch, much to the amusement of the onlookers!
Joanne came to the rescue and chased the turkey away.
“Our farm isn’t very well stocked,” she
admitted as she led the way to the barn. “We keep only one cow and one work
horse. Poor old Michael should be retired on a pension, but we can’t afford to
lose him yet!”
Joanne cheerfully hailed the hired man.
Reuben Ames was about forty years
old, red-haired, and rather quiet in manner. He acknowledged each introduction
with a mumbled “Pleased to meet you, miss,” and extended a work-worn hand for
each girl to shake. Reuben shifted uncomfortably and then returned to the barn.
“Reuben is as good as gold, even if he
is bashful,” Joanne told the girls. “I don’t know what we’d do without him.”
“We’d better keep an eye on Bess,”
George teased. “She’ll be breaking another heart.”
Bess made a good-natured retort as the girls
started for the orchard. George demonstrated her agility by climbing the
nearest apple tree. Once back at the farmhouse, Nancy asked curiously, “Jo, please tell us more about
the cave that you spoke about yesterday. I’m
bursting to know all about it.”
“Well,
the cave is on a piece of land along the river which Gram rents out.” “Oh, then
I suppose it’ll be impossible for us to visit the cavern,” Nancy
commented.
“I don’t see why we can’t. It’s still our land.”
Joanne frowned. “A queer lot of
people are renting it, though.”
“How do you mean?” Nancy questioned,
recalling Joanne’s remark of the previous day.
“They’re some sort of sect—a nature cult, I think,
and part of a large organization. At least that’s what it said in the letter
Gram received from their leader. Anyway, this group calls itself the Black
Snake Colony.”
“Pleasant name,” Bess observed
cynically.
“I’m not sure what they do,” Joanne admitted.
“We’ve never even spoken to any members. I suppose they believe in living an
outdoor life.”
“You can live that way without joining a
nature cult,” George said dryly. “I suppose they dance when the dew is on the
grass and such nonsense!”
“Believe it or not they do dance!” Joanne laughed.
“But only nights when the moon is out. I’ve seen them from here in the moonlight. It’s an eerie sight. They
wear white robes and flit around waving their arms. They even wear masks!”
“Masks!” Nancy exclaimed. “Why?”
“I can’t imagine.
It all sounds senseless. But the rent money is helpful.”
“Do they live in this cavern?” George asked in amazement.
“No, they live in shacks and tents near the river.
I’ve never really had the nerve to visit the place. Of course if you girls went
along—”
“When
can we go?” Nancy asked excitedly. “I’ll speak to Gram,” Joanne offered.
“It’s odd you’ve never spoken to any of the colony
members,” Nancy remarked thoughtfully. “Who pays the rent?”
“It’s sent by mail. They even leased the
land that way.”
“Didn’t it strike you as a peculiar way
of doing business?” Nancy asked. “Yes,” Joanne
admitted, “but I suppose it’s part of their creed, or whatever you
call it. They probably don’t believe in
mingling with people outside the cult. That’s often the case.”
Directly after lunch the girls helped
the Byrds straighten and clean the rooms
for the expected boarders. They hung curtains, newly made by Mrs. Byrd, and put
fresh flowers in each room.
At the end of the afternoon they were
very pleased with the result.
“All you girls
have worked hard enough,” Mrs. Byrd said.
“You go rest while I fix supper.”
She was insistent, so Joanne led her friends
to the porch. Bess stretched
out in the hammock and picked
up the day’s newspaper. The others chatted. Suddenly Bess gave an exclamation
of surprise.
“Nancy,” she asked tensely, “what was
the name of that girl who sold me the perfume?”
“Wong,” Nancy answered in amazement.
“Yvonne Wong. Why?”
“Because there’s an article in the paper that mentions
her name!” Bess thrust the newspaper into Nancy’s hands, indicating the
paragraph. “Wow! This is something! Read it yourself!”
CHAPTER VIII
Hillside Ghosts
NANCY read aloud:
“‘The Hale Syndicate, which has been engaged in the
illegal importation of Oriental articles, has been dissolved
by court order.”’ Nancy looked up and said, “I
don’t see what that has to do with our perfume friend Yvonne
Wong.”
“A great deal,” Bess declared. “Read on
and you’ll find out!”
“Oh!” Nancy exclaimed a few seconds later. “Yvonne
was employed by the syndicate as a clerk in their shop. She hasn’t been
indicted, because of insufficient evidence, and the top men have skipped!”
Bess nodded, realizing the impact of her
important discovery. “That perfume store we visited must have been owned by the
syndicate!”
“How long ago was the fraud discovered?”
George asked.
“The article doesn’t
say,” Nancy returned. “It has just now been made public.” “It doesn t surprise
me that the Wong girl was mixed up in some underhanded
affair,” George remarked. “I didn’t like her
attitude from the beginning!
“Nor did I,” Bess added. “And I liked her less
after Nancy found out she had received the job Jo wanted.”
“I’m certainly glad I didn’t get that job.” Joanne
smiled. “I’d much rather be here.”
“Do you suppose Yvonne knew the work of
the syndicate was dishonest?” Bess asked with concern.
“I’m sure of it,” George answered flatly. “But it looks as if she and the others slipped out quickly when the federal
authorities became aware of the racket.”
All this time Nancy had been staring into space. It
had occurred to her that Yvonne Wong might still be employed by the
syndicate. Undoubtedly the name and offices had been changed
to throw off the federal
authorities. Was Room 305 now the syndicate’s headquarters?
Nancy immediately thought of the coded message she
had brought with her.
“The
third number in it, 5, was the letter H,” she told herself. Then she reflected on the recent newspaper article
about the syndicate.
“This‘H’ might stand for Hale!” she thought excitedly. “And the line over it might mean that someone
by this name is Important—the ring-leader, perhaps! I must talk to Chief McGinnis again. I may
have stumbled onto a clue to those missing Hale Syndicate men!”
After supper she phoned the chief and pro-pounded her theory. “Well,
Nancy,” he said, “it sounds as
if you might have picked up a clue, sure enough. Send me a copy of that code and I’ll get busy on it.”
After Nancy completed the call, she and
the other girls studied the code once more.
Gazing at the 16 and the 5, Nancy suddenly said,
“M—M—why that could stand for Maurice! Maybe that man’s name is Maurice Hale!”
“Now I’ll sleep better,” Bess sighed.
The girls went to bed happy and excited.
The next day everyone’s attention was focused
on a new boarder.
Shortly after church
services, Mrs. Alice Salisbury and her daughter Nona arrived in an expensive
sedan. Mrs. Salisbury walked with a cane, and complained loudly of her
arthritis as the girls helped her into the house.
Nona waited only long enough to see that
her mother was made comfortable. Then she announced
that she must hurry back to the city nearby, where she lived.
“Mother was born on a farm,” she told Mrs.
Byrd as she stepped into the car, “and she simply pines
for the country. I thought this arrangement might be ideal since she’s never entirely happy with me in the city. I’ll drive down to see her week ends. I do hope she’ll
be happier here at Red Gate Farm.”
Joanne and her friends hoped so too, but
they were not at all certain, for it became increasingly apparent
that Mrs. Salisbury
could not be happy anywhere. She found no fault with the
immaculate farmhouse or the lovely view from her bedroom window, but she constantly complained of her various aches and pains. She talked incessantly about her
many operations. She had a sharp tongue and delighted in using it.
“She wouldn’t be so bad, if only she’d stop talking
operations,” George burst out. “Makes
me feel as though I’m ready for the hospital
myself!”
By the time the girls had adjusted themselves to
Mrs. Salisbury, the second boarder arrived. He was Karl Abbott, a
diamond-in-the-rough type of man. In spite of his sixty-three years, he boasted
that he was as spry as his son Karl Jr.,
who had brought him.
Karl Jr., who worked
in a nearby city, was a personable young man. The girls,
particularly Bess, were sorry he could not remain with his father.
The girls liked Mr. Abbott very much, but they were appalled by his tremendous
appetite. “I wish we could turn him out in the yard to forage for himself,” Joanne
sighed several days later as she peeled
her second heaping
pan of potatoes. “It’s all I can do to keep one helping ahead
of him!”
At first Mr. Abbott
insisted upon remaining in the kitchen,
teasing the girls as
they worked and sampling the food. Then he fell into the habit of sitting on
the front porch with Mrs. Salisbury and chatting with her for hours. Frequently they became involved in violent arguments about trivial matters
just for diversion.
After one of their disagreements Mrs. Salisbury
would maintain a stony silence which was refreshing. But Mr. Abbott would once
again take refuge in the kitchen!
In spite of such slight annoyances, the
days at Red Gate Farm passed very pleasantly. Nancy would go into town on
various errands for the boarders and sometimes Mrs. Byrd.
One day she had just returned to the farm from a shopping trip and on her way to the house stopped at the mailbox.
“There
might be a letter from Dad,” she thought, and drew out a stack
of mail.
She took it all into the house, where Mrs. Byrd
asked Nancy to distribute the letters. As she was sorting them out, she came to
one addressed to the Black Snake Colony.
“Look!” Nancy exclaimed. “This letter
belongs to the nature cult. The mailman must have put it in our box by
mistake.”
“What will you do?” asked Bess
seriously. “Drive over with it?”
“Of course not,” growled Mr. Abbott, who had just
entered the room. “You keep away from those outrageous people. Take it back to
the post office.”
Nancy studied the postmark. It was very blurred.
Could it be Riverside Heights, or was she mistaken? Her curiosity about the
mysterious cult was now even more aroused.
Perhaps she could deliver the letter in person! But she got no
further in her plan, for just then a neighbor
passed on his way to town. Mrs. Byrd
handed him the letter to remail.
Nancy felt disappointed, but was
determined to find out in some way what
was
going on “over the hill.” “If I can only be alone with Bess and George a little
later, maybe we can come up with some plan” she thought.
There had been a
letter from Mr. Drew, informing Nancy that he had returned home. “At least
Dad’s making progress on his case!” she said to herself.
Then
Nancy hurried off to the barn where the “city slickers,” as Reuben called them, were to have a milking lesson.
“It’s no trick
at all!” Bess insisted. “Give me that pail and I’ll show you just how it’s
done.”
Reuben handed over the bucket, and Bess
marched determinedly up to the cow.
“Nice bossy,” she
murmured, giving the animal a timid pat on the neck.
The cow
responded with a suspicious look and flirt of her tail. As Bess set down the
milking stool, the cow kicked it over.
Bess sprang back in alarm. “You can’t
expect me to milk a vicious cow!” she exclaimed.
Joanne and Reuben
exploded with laughter.
“Primrose is an
extremely smart cow,” Reuben drawled. “She won’t stand being milked except from
the side she’s used to!”
Reluctantly Bess picked up the
overturned stool and went around to the left side. The cow leisurely moved
herself sideways.
“I give up! Here,
you try it, George.”
“Oh, no, Bess. I
wouldn’t spoil your fun for anything!”
After a great deal of maneuvering, Bess succeeded
in handling the whole procedure to the satisfaction of Primrose. Nancy came
last, and she, too, was a bit awkward. When Reuben finally
sat down to do the milking, the girls watched him with admiration. “It just takes practice,” he said, smiling.
That
evening Mrs. Salisbury
and Mr. Abbott had their usual disagreement and both
retired early. Mrs. Byrd soon followed,
leaving the girls alone on the porch.
“Do you think there will be any activity
on the hill tonight?” George asked suddenly.
“I’m not sure,”
Joanne answered. “But it’s a
good clear night
and the moon is
full, so the setting is perfect for it.”
“I’m dying to see what those nature
enthusiasts look like,” added Bess. “Just
so they don’t come too close!”
It was a lovely evening and Nancy had been only
half listening to the chatter. She
remained silent and thoughtful. The letter addressed to the Black Snake Colony
was still very much on her mind.
“What’s up, Nancy?” Bess finally asked,
noticing her friend’s silence.
“Three guesses,” Nancy replied with a laugh. “I’m
still curious about that envelope I had in my hands this afternoon. I’m almost
certain that blurred postmark read Riverside Heights.”
“Even if it did,” George remarked, “it
could have been written by almost anyone and simply mailed in Riverside Heights.”
“I suppose you’re
right,” Nancy agreed.
“I guess I’m trying too hard. But let’s walk over toward the hill.”
The four girls started off. They crossed one field
in front of the house and were just climbing a rail fence to the next one when
Nancy cried out:
“Am I seeing things? Look! Over there on
that hill!”
Following her gaze, the girls were astonished to
see shadowy white figures flitting about in the moonlight.
“Ghosts!” Bess exclaimed.
“Ghosts nothing,” George retorted.
“There’s no such animal!”
“Don’t be alarmed,” Joanne said with a smile. “I
imagine the members of the nature cult are having
one of their festive airings
by the light of the moon!”
The girls watched the cult members go
through their mystic rites.
“They’re not doing much of anything,” Nancy
observed, “except flapping around.”
Within ten
minutes the ceremony apparently was concluded. The white figures clustered together for a moment, then moved off across the hillside.
“I
wonder where they’re heading,” Nancy mused. “Back to their tents?” Joanne had been watching
intently. Now she shook her head. “I don’t think so.
I forgot to tell you—the cave has another opening on the slope of the hill, near
the river. The colony members are going in that
direction.”
Immediately Nancy’s
curiosity was aroused. Did this mean the white-robed group intended
to go into the cave itself? If so, why? To continue the ceremony?
“It certainly was a short performance,” Bess
remarked as the mysterious “dancers” vanished from sight. “I wonder if the
ritual has any significance.”
“That’s what I’d like to know,” Nancy said quietly. “And
that’s what we must find out!”
“Not tonight!” Joanne said firmly.
“Grandmother will be very upset if we don’t come right back.”
Reluctantly Nancy gave up the idea. The girls
started for the farmhouse, but Nancy kept looking back over her shoulder,
determined not to miss anything. However, the hillside remained uninhabited and
still.
As the girls drew near the road, the motor of a car
broke the silence and headlights appeared. The automobile slowed down in front
of the farmhouse as if about to stop. Then suddenly the car went on. Why? Nancy wondered.
Had the driver seen the girls
and changed his mind?
CHAPTER IX
Black Snake Colony Member
NANCY was too far away from the car to
see its driver or license plate. Thoughtfully she went to bed, but lay awake
for some time, feeling completely baffled over the many mysterious happenings.
By morning she felt eager for action.
Ever since her arrival at Red Gate Farm,
Nancy had wanted to visit the cavern on the hillside. The strange moonlight
ceremony and the unidentified car which had hesitated in front of the house only
intensified her interest in the place.
She broached the subject of a visit there to Mrs.
Byrd, but Joanne’s grandmother
frowned on the idea. “I’ll worry if you go,” she said. “Those folks are
probably harmless, but we don’t know much about them. I wish now I had never
rented the land. The neighbors are saying I was foolish to do it in the first place.”
“And so you were!” Mrs. Salisbury, who had overheard the conversation, chimed in. “You’ll ruin the value of your farm. Why, people around are saying dreadful things
about the members
of that cult. Even Reuben
is afraid to go near the
place!”
“I’m not,” Nancy announced. “I think it
would be fun to investigate.”
Mrs. Salisbury snorted.
“Fun! Girls these days have strange ideas
of fun! First thing you know, Mrs. Byrd, she’ll
be wanting to join the colony!”
“Nonsense.” Mrs. Byrd smiled.
In order to avoid further dissension, Nancy dropped
the subject of the cave. But that afternoon she set out alone on a hike. Making
her way to the woods which skirted the river, Nancy struck a well-worn path and
decided to continue along it.
She had walked only a short way when the
sound of a faint cry came to her.
Nancy halted in the path and listened intently. The cry was not repeated. “Maybe I imagined it,” she said
to herself.
Nevertheless,
Nancy quickened her pace, looking about her as she walked. As
she rounded a bend a few minutes
later, she was startled
to see a woman hunched over on the ground, writhing in pain.
“What’s the matter?” Nancy cried out, hurrying
over to her. Then the girl’s eyes widened. This was the woman she had seen running
across a field the night of the storm.
“I tripped on a root in the path,” the woman murmured,
rocking back and forth
in pain. “My ankle—it’s broken.”
Nancy dropped to one knee and quickly
examined the injured ankle. It was swelling rapidly, but all the bones seemed
to be in place.
“See if you can stand,” she advised.
With Nancy’s help the woman managed to get to her
feet, but winced as she tried to take her first step.
“It isn’t broken,”
Nancy said gently, “but you have a bad sprain.”
“Oh, what’ll I do now?” the woman moaned.
“Do
you live far from here?” Nancy asked.
The stranger
looked at her rather queerly and did not answer at once. Nancy thought she had
not understood, so repeated the question.
“About a quarter
of a mile up the river,” was the mumbled response. “I’ll get there all right.”
“You’re scarcely able to walk a step,”
Nancy said with a troubled frown. “Please let me run back to the farm and bring
help.”
“No, no,” the woman protested, clutching
Nancy fearfully by the arm. “I don’t want to be a bother to anyone!”
“Nonsense! You shouldn’t be walking at
all. It won’t take me a minute to get someone to help you.”
The woman shook
her head stubbornly. “My foot feels better now. I can walk by myself.”
She started
off, but nearly
collapsed by the time she had taken three steps. “If you won’t let me go for help, then at least let me take you home.”
Again the woman protested, but Nancy took hold of
her arm and placed it over her own shoulder.
With Nancy’s support,
the woman made slow and painful
progress up the path.
“This is killing you,” Nancy said, dismayed that
the woman was so foolishly stubborn. “I can get our hired man to carry you—”
“No!” the woman objected vehemently.
Her unwillingness to accept help puzzled Nancy. As
they made their way slowly along, she became aware that her companion’s
distress was not entirely due to pain, but partially to Nancy’s own presence.
This mystified Nancy, but she could not turn back as long as she knew the woman
really needed her.
“I don’t remember
seeing any houses along the river,”
Nancy said after a time. “You’re
not a member of the nature cult, are
you?”
A half-cynical expression crossed the
woman’s face, then one of sadness. “Yes,” she returned quietly, “I’m one of the
members.”
Nancy
took time to scrutinize her companion more carefully than before. She wore a blue gingham dress which was
plain and durable, and certainly did not appear to be a costume. The woman did
not speak or act as Nancy imagined a member
of the cult would. She seemed like any other person.
“It must be healthful to live an outdoor
life,” Nancy remarked, feeling that some comment was necessary. “I’ve often looked over at your tents and thought I should like to visit the colony
some time.”
The woman stopped
abruptly in the path and faced Nancy, an odd look on her face.
“You must
never come near!” “Why not?”
“It wouldn’t be safe!”
“Not safe!” Nancy
echoed in astonishment. “I don’t understand.”
“I—I mean the
members of the cult don’t want folks prying around,” the woman said hastily.
“I see. The rites
are secret?”
“That’s it,” the
woman said in obvious relief.
“But why
couldn’t I visit the colony sometime when ceremonies aren’t being held?” Nancy
persisted.
“You mustn’t come
near the hillside—ever!” the stranger warned.
The two
continued up the path. To Nancy it
was apparent that her questions had disturbed the woman, for several times
she caught her looking distressed and
worried.
As they approached the hillside colony, and before
they were within sight of the tents, the woman stopped short.
“Thank you for your help,” she said
quietly. “I can make it alone from here.”
Nancy hesitated. The woman’s firm tone told her it
would do no good to protest. She was not going to let Nancy come any nearer the
camp!
“At least let me find something that you
can use as a cane,” Nancy said.
She searched along the path and found a branch that
was strong enough. The woman accepted it gratefully. Her face softened and she
stood for an instant, looking intently at Nancy.
“You’re a good girl to help a stranger like me.
I wish—” The woman turned away abruptly. “Remember,”
she advised sternly over her shoulder, “don’t ever come near the camp!”
Still perplexed, Nancy watched the woman
hobble away. It took her a long time to reach the top of the hill, but at last
she disappeared from sight.
“I can’t understand why the poor thing acted the
way she did,” Nancy said to herself as she sat down on a log to think. “What
harm could it have done if I’d gone with her to the colony? The cult must have
some very important secrets!”
The more Nancy considered the matter,
the more baffled she became.
“You must never come near the hillside!”
the stranger warned
“The woman didn’t look as though being a member of
the Black Snake Colony made her very happy,” Nancy thought. “If they’re so afraid that someone
will discover their secrets, they must be doing more than just flitting at
night in white robes! Maybe that’s only
to keep people from guessing what really goes on there!”
As Nancy reached
this startling conclusion, she jumped up and walked briskly
toward Red Gate Farm.
“There’s one thing certain,” she said to
herself with a chuckle. “Now that the woman has forbidden me to go near the
camp, I can’t resist finding out what’s happening there!”
Nancy
was just approaching the farmhouse when she heard the phone ringing.
She hurried inside and answered it.
“Yes, this is Nancy
Drew,” she replied to a strange
man’s question. “One moment.”
While Nancy waited, she wondered who the caller
might be. Was someone going to threaten her to desist in her detective work?
“Oh!” she said as the next speaker announced
himself as Chief McGinnis. A sense of relief came over the girl.
“I have some news, Nancy,” the officer
said. “It’s discouraging. Nothing on the code or the missing men.” Then he
chuckled. “We need another clue from you.”
Nancy realized her old friend was
teasing. “Glad to help,” she said gaily. “What’s the assignment?”
“To find out where the Hale Syndicate moved to after it left Room 305.” “Then that was their headquarters!”
Nancy cried excitedly. “Temporarily. But they left no forwarding address,” the police
chief said.
“If we could decipher the rest of the code we might
be able to trace them,” Nancy said. “Anyhow, I’ll be on the lookout for any
clues. At least it shouldn’t be too hard to find Yvonne Wong.”
Chief McGinnis agreed and assured Nancy he would
let her know if there were any new developments. Then he asked, “And what are
you doing? Any mysteries up your way?”
“There might be.” She told him the
little she had been able to glean about the
mysterious nature cult. She described the unusual moonlight ceremony the girls had witnessed and the appearance
of the unidentified car.
The police chief whistled in amazement.
“Sounds as though you do have another mystery up your sleeve! Have you come
across any possible clues to what the cult is worshiping, Nancy?”
The girl detective
hesitated a moment
before telling Chief McGinnis about her
curious conversation with the woman she had assisted in the woods.
She decided to mention it,
and added that although the woman had readily admitted to being a member of the
cult, she had given Nancy no reason for her firm warning to stay away from the
meeting place.
“Black
Snake Colony, eh?” the police chief
said reflectively. “Yes,” Nancy
replied. “Have you ever heard of it?”
“No, but let me
look in a report we have here on all cults. I’ll call you right back.”
Nancy waited
eagerly for the phone to ring. When it did she snatched up the receiver. “The
Black Snake Colony is not listed,” Chief McGinnis told her.
“You mean it’s a
phony?” Nancy asked excitedly.
CHAPTER X
Plan of Attack
CHIEF McGINNIS refused to comment on the
possibility that the Black Snake Colony might be a phony group.
“They may not have been in existence
long enough to be known,” he replied. “But you might try to find out what you
can and let me know.”
“I’ll do that,” the young detective agreed.
After Nancy had put down the phone, she reflected
for a long minute on the new twist to the hillside
mystery, then walked out to the front porch, where Mrs. Salisbury,
Mr. Abbott, and the three
girls were seated.
Nancy had not planned to tell them of
her experience, but her face was so animated
it revealed her thoughts. They besieged her with questions until finally she revealed
her meeting with the woman member of the strange
nature cult.
“Told you not to come near, did she?”
Mrs. Salisbury cackled. “Well, I hope you intend to follow her advice.”
Nancy laughed and shook her head. “I’m
more interested than ever in what’s going on up there on the hillside. I’m
ready for a little adventure right about now!”
“So am I,” George chimed in.
Joanne nodded vigorously, while Bess, always more
cautious, agreed rather halfheartedly.
“Better stay away,” Mr. Abbott advised,
for once not contradicting Mrs.
Salisbury. “You can’t tell what may be going on
there.”
Nancy was tempted to comment, but instead she
forced a smile and said, “It seems to me that this matter may be of deep concern
to Jo and her grandmother, if not to me.”
Mrs. Byrd had stepped to the porch door in time to
get the gist of the conversation, and at once spoke up.
“I think Nancy is right,” she declared
thoughtfully. “Of course, I don’t want
the girls to go looking for trouble, but
I’m beginning to think someone ought to investigate those mysterious people.
If anything questionable is going on, I want to know about it. I’ll ask the Black
Snake Colony to move out, even if I do lose the rent. Why, I might get into trouble myself if they stay.”
Mr. Abbott and Mrs. Salisbury fell into an
injured silence. Nancy gave her friends a sly wink, and in a few minutes they
all quietly withdrew to the springhouse to discuss
their plans. Here, she told the girls about her conversation
with Chief McGinnis.
“Something peculiar is going on at those cult meetings, I’m sure,” Nancy went
on, “and I must find out about them if I can. Do you all want to join me in the
investigation?”
“Of
course,” Joanne and George said. “Do you think it’ll be safe?” Bess asked.
“I’m
not making any rash promises.” Nancy laughed. Bess gave a little shiver.
“I don’t like it, but count me in.”
“How can we visit the colony without
being caught?” George asked.
“That’s the problem,” Nancy replied. “We must make our plans carefully. Before we do anything, I suggest we find out about the robes
the cult members wear. We may need to wear similar ones to help us
in our investigation.”
“There’s only one way to find that out,” Joanne
said. “Some night when they’re having a ceremonial meeting,
we can sneak through the woods and try to get a closer look at what’s going on.”
Nancy nodded excitedly. “The double entrance to the cave will be perfect!”
she said. “If we can’t
sneak into the meetings any other way, we
can get into the cave at the
end they don’t use.”
“Sounds terribly risky to me!” Bess
commented.
“Oh, for Pete’s sake,” George said scornfully.
“Don’t be such a wet blanket, Bess!”
Her cousin opened her mouth to retort,
but Nancy interposed quickly to forestall any further argument.
“We’d better not tell our plan to anyone
except your grandmother, Jo,” she advised. “Otherwise, Mrs. Salisbury and Mr.
Abbott will try to talk her out of letting us investigate.”
After a light supper and some rather
forced conversation on trivial matters,
the girls retired. They had tried to keep silent about the activities of
the nature cult, but their secretive manner did not escape the notice of Mrs.
Salisbury and Mr. Abbott.
“You’re up to something,” Mrs. Salisbury remarked
the next morning.
“And if I were Mrs. Byrd, I’d
put a stop to it at once!”
Mrs. Byrd, however, went on serenely
with her work, being careful not to interfere
with the girls’
plans. They maintained a close watch of the hillside, but for two days seldom saw anyone in the vicinity.
“I think they’ve holed in for the rest
of the summer,” George declared impatiently at breakfast. “Either that, or
they’ve moved out.”
“The cult’s still there,” Joanne reassured her.
“The rent check arrived in the morning mail.”
“By the way, where do these nature
people get their food?” Nancy queried. “They can’t live on blue sky and
inspiration.”
“I think friends must bring food to them
in automobiles,” Joanne answered. “Several times I’ve seen swanky cars drive up
and park near the hillside.”
“The cult members must be fairly well off, then,”
Nancy said thoughtfully. “I’m getting tired of marking time. I wish something
would happen soon. If it doesn’t, I think I’ll investigate that cave, anywayl”
That night the girls were late in finishing the dishes. By the time they had put
everything away it was quite dark. When they went out to the porch, they were
relieved to find that the boarders had gone to their rooms.
The girls sat talking quietly for some
time. The moon was high, and Nancy, from force of habit, glanced eagerly toward
the distant hill.
“Look, girls!” she exclaimed. “They’re
at it again!”
The four girls could see white objects moving to
and fro, apparently going through a weird ritual. Nancy sprang to her feet.
“We’ll have to hurry if we want to see
anything,” she said. “Come on! We’ll take the short cut!”
They dashed across the lawn, flung open the gate, and ran through the woods.
Nancy led the way up the river path, then to the sparsely wooded hillside. Not
until they were dose to the camp did she stop.
“We’ll have to be very careful,” she
warned in a whisper. “Scatter and hide
behind trees. And don’t make a sound.”
The girls obeyed, Bess staying as close to George
as possible. Nancy found a huge oak
tree well up the hill, and hid behind it. From this vantage point she could see
fairly welL
Nancy had been there for less than five
minutes when she heard the sound of several cars approaching. They came up the
woods road and stopped at the foot of the hill, not far from the nature camp.
Several
men stepped from the cars. Nancy was too far away to see their
faces, but she did observe that they quickly
donned long white robes with head masks, and joined the other costumed figures
who were on the brow of the hill.
For nearly ten minutes the members of
the cult flitted back and forth, waving their arms and making weird noises.
Then they moved single file toward the cavern and vanished.
Suddenly Nancy felt herself
grasped by an arm. She wheeled sharply
and then laughed softly.
“George! For goodness sake, don’t ever do that again! You scared me silly!” “What do you make of it, Nancy?”
“It’s the strangest
thing I’ve ever seen. I haven’t been able to figure it out.”
“What should we do next?”
asked Bess, who had joined
them.
“Let’s follow them into the cave!”
George proposed rashly.
“And be caught?”
Nancy returned. “No, this is serious business. I think it’s time to go home and
plan our own costumes.”
“I wonder why so many people came here in automobiles?” Joanne
mused, as the girls walked off slowly.
“That’s what
I’ve been wondering,” Nancy replied soberly, “but I think I might know.”
“Why?” her
friends demanded.
“It looks to me as if only a few persons are actually living
in the Black Snake Colony. Apparently they want to give the
impression that the organization is a large one, so they have these other
people come the night set for the ceremonials.”
“There were certainly a lot of men in
those cars,” added Bess. “Why should they go to all that trouble?” Joanne
asked doubtfully.
“I don’t know,” Nancy
admitted, “unless it’s because
they’re trying to hide something they’re doing here.” She changed the subject. “I think we’ll be able to
make costumes like theirs if you’ll give us some old pillowcases and sheets,
Jo. When we visit the cave, we must disguise ourselves to make our scheme work!”
CHAPTER XI
A Midnight Message
“WHEN shall we visit the cave?” George asked.
“As soon as we can,” Nancy answered. “Of course we
must help Jo and her grandmother with the work.”
Since there was no further evidence of activity on
the hillside, the girls went to bed.
The next morning George remarked, as she
helped Nancy make her bed, “What do you suppose those
men do between ceremonials? It certainly is strange
how much time they spend in that cave!”
“What puzzles me is those automobiles
that were on the hillside,” Bess said. “Why did they come? Surely those men
were here for something besides ballet dancing. What’s your guess, Nancy?”
“I’m afraid I haven’t any answer. But I
mean to find one for Mrs. Byrd’s and Jo’s sakes.”
The three girls learned that Reuben was
due to be absent most of the day and offered
to do his chores. During the morning
they picked cherries
and took them to town to sell at a local market.
When they returned, a small, strange car was standing in the driveway. Loud voices were coming from the living
room.
“I don’t have to sell and I won’t sell!”
Mrs. Byrd said with finality
in her tone.
“That’s what you think,” a man said sneeringly.
“You’re going to lose this farm and I can buy it cheaper from the bank. Why
don’t you sell it to me and make a little profit? Then you can go to the city
and take life easy.”
“We don’t want to go to the city,”
Joanne spoke up. “We’re getting along all right here. More boarders are coming
soon and we are paying off our back mortgage interest. So we don’t have to
sell.”
Outside, Nancy, Bess, and George looked at one another. The insistent buyer again! Fervently they hoped that Mrs. Byrd would not weaken
in her decision. A moment
later they felt relieved.
“I will say good afternoon, Mr. Kent,”
Mrs. Byrd said. “Thank you for your
offer, but I cannot accept it.”
“You’ll be sorry! You’ll regret this!” the caller
stormed. He came out the screen door, slamming it viciously behind him.
Nancy
stared in surprise.
Mr. Kent certainly was one of the most ill-mannered
men she had ever seen! And also, she thought wryly,
one of the most tenacious!
Why was he so determined to buy the Byrd home?
Mr. Kent, his face red with anger, stepped into his car and sped off,
but not before he gave Nancy and her friends
a baleful look.
“Nice disposition,” George commented sarcastically.
“I hope he never shows up again,” Bess
said firmly.
The girls found Mrs. Byrd and Joanne quite shaken.
“I can’t understand that man’s persistence,” the woman said.
Nancy was sure the matter was tied in with the cult on the hillside but did not mention this theory. She merely said, “Try not
to worry about Mr. Kent. I doubt that
he’ll return.”
Soon the incident was forgotten as
preparations for supper were started and the farm animals were fed. George
elected to take care of gathering eggs from the henhouse. Bess gave the horse
hay and water.
“I’ll get the cow,” Nancy offered, and
went off toward the pasture to drive Primrose in.
But the cow was not there. Nancy walked
around the fence surrounding the field to see if there was any opening through
which the animal might have wandered. Finally she found one, and saw hoofprints
leading toward a patch of woods.
Nancy dashed off among the trees. She had never
been that way before, but there was only one path to follow. Several
times she paused
to listen and thought
she heard the faint tinkling
of a cowbell somewhere ahead of her.
It was rapidly growing dusky in the
woods and Nancy hurried on. Again she stopped to listen. She could hear the
cowbell distinctly now.
“Primrose can’t be far ahead,”
she thought in relief, and went in that direction. Nancy finally caught sight of
the Jersey contentedly munching grass on the hillside beyond.
Nancy stopped short and gave a gasp of
astonishment—the sound of the cowbell had brought her to the mouth of the cave!
“I can hardly believe it!” she almost exclaimed
aloud. This must be the other opening near the nature camp Jo told me about!”
Eagerly Nancy rushed
toward the cave.
But no sooner had she peered into the
dark entrance than she was startled by the crackling
of a twig behind her. Nancy wheeled to find a man standing
not three feet away from her!
He seemed to have risen from the bushes
which half hid the opening of the cave. Instantly it flashed through Nancy’s mind that he had been stationed
there to see that intruders did not enter.
“What’re you doing here?” he asked, his
voice as cold as steel.
Nancy recoiled. The man stood in the shadows of the
shrubbery so that she could not see his face distinctly. But at the sound of his voice she knew instantly
she was in danger.
“I must persuade him I wasn’t spying,”
she thought desperately. “Better speak
up!” the man snarled. “What’re
you doin’ here,
girlie?”
“I was hunting
for that cow,” Nancy replied as casually as possible. She pointed to the
Jersey, which was grazing a short distance away.
She held her
ground defiantly. There was a moment’s silence. Nancy could feel that the man was staring
at her, as if undecided whether
or not to believe her.
“So you were after the cow?” the lookout growled.
“Then why are you by this
cave?”
“Why, I was just
wondering what was inside,” Nancy said innocently.
“Surely there’s no harm in
looking.”
“You’ve no
business around here!” the man snapped. “This property belongs to the members
of the Black Snake Colony.”
“Oh!” Nancy exclaimed in pretended awe.
“Then you must belong to the colony. How very interesting!”
The man made no
response to Nancy’s remark. Instead, he muttered:
“Round up that old cow of yours and get out of
here! And don’t come trespassing again!”
Nancy
knew she would gain nothing
by arguing. Obediently she overtook the cow and headed her back toward Red
Gate. The man watched until Nancy disappeared into the woods.
As soon as she had started the cow down
the path, however, Nancy quietly
retraced her steps. She reached the edge
of the woods just in time to catch a glimpse of the man entering the cave.
“That proves he’s one of the Black Snake group,”
she told herself. “He was acting as a guard for them.”
For an instant
Nancy was tempted
to follow, but common
sense told her not to press
her luck. The lookout seemed
determined enough to make trouble
for her if she took the chance. Reluctantly, the young sleuth turned back toward the farm.
It was clear to Nancy that the entire
business of the Black Snake group was anything
but open and aboveboard! Obviously they were afraid
that some of the
countryfolk would attempt to investigate.
When Nancy finally
reached the barn and Joanne
began to milk Primrose, the other girls plied their friend with questions.
“We were
beginning to worry,” Joanne
said in relief. “I wouldn’t
have let you go
alone if I’d known this cow of ours would stray so far.”
“I’m glad I went,” Nancy said quickly.
She then told the others what had taken
place near the mouth of the cave.
They gasped in astonishment upon hearing of her
encounter with the lookout.
“Weren’t you frightened when he sprang up out of
nowhere?” Bess asked, giving Nancy an admiring glance. “I’d have fainted on the
spot!”
“That’s an easy way out if I ever heard one!” Nancy commented with a laugh. “Girls don’t faint
these
days,”
George
scoffed.
“Probably
you’d
have
screamed
and brought all the members down on you. They’d have dragged you
off and put an end to you!”
“Thanks, George,” Bess muttered. “You
say the nicest things!”
“Well, girls, talk all you like,” Nancy added, “but
don’t lose your nerve altogether. I still want to get a closer look at that
cave!”
“Not tonight!” Bess said firmly.
Nancy smiled. “I hope there won’t be a ritual on
the hillside tonight. We’ve been too busy to get our costumes ready.”
The girls watched but the distant
landscape remained dark. Finally they went to bed. Not long afterward, Nancy
was roused from a fitful slumber by the stopping of a car not far from her window. She hopped from bed and went to
peer out. A tall, slender
woman who wore her hair piled high was walking
to the
front door.
Nancy leaned out the window and called, “What is it you wish?” “Nancy Drew. Is she here?”
“Yes, I’m Nancy.”
“I have a letter
for you.” Nancy did not recognize the woman’s
voice. But she might be disguising it.
“From
whom?” “Your father.”
“Why are you bringing it now?”
“It’s an urgent message,” the strange woman said. “I’ll
leave it on the doorstep.”
She dropped the letter,
hurried into the car, and the man at the wheel drove off. Heart pounding, Nancy put on her
robe and slippers and hurried down to the front door.
CHAPTER XII
Secret Service Agents
THE stopping of the car at the house had
awakened Mrs. Byrd who slept on the
first floor. She met Nancy in the hall and asked what was happening.
Quickly Nancy told her, then opened the
door. On the porch lay a plain envelope with Nancy’s name typed on it.
“This seems like a peculiar
way for your father to get in touch with you,” Mrs.
Byrd remarked. “Why didn’t he phone if it’s
urgent?”
“I don’t understand it myself,” Nancy answered, as
she tore open the letter.
The message was typewritten and was succinct. Nancy
was to return home at once. Her father needed her. She was not to try to
communicate with him. He could not explain why. It was signed “Dad.”
Nancy
read the letter
to Mrs. Byrd. “Oh, I couldn’t let you start out at this time of
night alone,” the woman said at once.
“You must wait until morning.”
“This whole thing doesn’t seem like
Dad,” Nancy reflected. “He wouldn’t send a terse note like this even if he were in some kind of trouble.”
Mrs. Byrd was very much concerned. “It
seems to me he would have called you on the phone in an emergency,” she offered thoughtfully.
“Yes,” Nancy agreed, “that’s why this puzzles me
so. But don’t you worry about it, Mrs. Byrd. This is something I’ll have to try
to figure out myself.”
“But, my dear,” Mrs. Byrd repeated,
“it’s impossible for you to do anything about it at this hour.”
Nancy carefully studied the note again.
Suddenly she became aware of a familiar scent of perfume. The young detective held the envelope
to her nostrils. It had been handled by someone who used the distinctive Blue Jade scent which
Bess had purchased!
Instantly Nancy was alerted.
“It wouldn’t surprise
me, Mrs. Byrd, if this letter
is a phony! I’m going to call Dad, even though it’s an unearthly hour to waken him.”
She picked up the receiver
in the hall. No sound reached her ears. “I’m afraid
the line is dead,” she told Mrs. Byrd. “Does this happen often?”
“It has never happened before,” Mrs. Byrd said. “I
made a call after supper and everything was all right then.”
Nancy stood in perplexed silence. Had
her father tried to get her, found
the line out of order, then given
the note to the couple? The woman might have carried the letter in a handbag
which contained a purse-size bottle
of the Oriental perfume.
“In that case I ought to start for River
Heights,” Nancy thought. But a feeling
of suspicion about the whole thing overpowered her. It might be a trap. The telephone line could have been cut. One or more persons
might try to capture her on the road.
“But why?” Nancy asked herself repeatedly. She came
to the conclusion that the Hale Syndicate was back of the incident. They must
have found out she had reported her suspicions to the police and somehow had
learned where she was staying.
She turned to Mrs. Byrd and said, “I’ll
wait until seven o’clock, then try the phone again. If it still isn’t working,
I’ll go to town and call Dad.”
“Thank you, dear.” Mrs. Byrd patted
Nancy on the shoulder. “But don’t go anywhere alone. Take Bess and George with
you.”
“I will.”
Promptly at seven o’clock Nancy tried to get in
touch with her father but the phone still was not working.
Joanne was already
up, but Nancy roused Bess and
George. The three girls were astounded to learn about
the note.
“We’ll get breakfast in town,” Nancy told Mrs.
Byrd as she prepared to drive off with her friends. “And if I don’t have to go
to River Heights, I can do your shopping, too. Suppose you give me the list.”
Halfway to town, George said suddenly, “Nancy,
isn’t your gasoline tank nearly empty?”
Nancy nodded. “I’m glad you reminded me. Watch for
a station and we’ll stop.”
Presently Bess sighted one on the main
road. “It’s the same place we stopped
to eat on our way to the farm,” she said.
“So it is,” George remarked.
“I can phone from
here,” Nancy decided.
She turned in at
the gravel driveway, but as two other cars were ahead of her, she drew up some
distance from the pump.
“How about
getting breakfast here after you phone?” Bess suggested.
The girls
agreed. Bess and George entered the lunchroom while Nancy went to an outdoor
phone booth. She had her father on the wire in a few moments.
“Dad, did you send me a note last night?”
“Why, no.”
Quickly his daughter explained her question. The
lawyer said grimly, “It’s plain to see someone wants to harm you in one way or
another. Please be very careful.”
Nancy promised and said, “Anyway, I’m glad you’re all right.”
After Nancy hung up, she dialed the phone company
to report that the Byrd line was out of order.
A few minutes later she joined Bess and George at a table and whispered
the result of her conversation with Mr. Drew.
“Oh, Nancy, this means you’re
in danger!” Bess said worriedly.
“I thought at least I’d be safe at Red Gate Farm,” Nancy said. “I
wonder,” George muttered.
The girls were the only customers in the
restaurant. No one came to wait on them. From an inner room, evidently used as
an office, they could hear excited voices.
“Something’s wrong,” Nancy said to her
companions.
Just then two men came out of the office
in company with the gasoline-station attendant and the woman
who served as waitress of the restaurant. The woman was talking excitedly.
“We found the twenty-dollar bill in the
cash register at the end of the day. It looked like any other money, and we
didn’t suspect anything was wrong until John took the day’s receipts to the
bank. And of all things they said the bill was counterfeit and they’d have to
turn it over to the Secret Service!”
“Yes,” one of the agents spoke up, “we’ve just come
from the bank and it’s a counterfeit all right. There’s been a lot of this bad
money passed lately. The forgery is very clever.”
“What am I going to do?” the woman
cried. “We were cheated out of twenty
dollars! It isn’t fair to hard-working
people like John and me. Aren’t you Secret
Service agents going to do something about it?”
“We’re doing
all we can,” one of the men replied. “We don’t have much to go
on.”
“It was a girl who gave me the bill,”
the woman explained. “There were several of them in the party. I’d recognize—Oh!” she shrieked. “There’s the very
girl!” She pointed an accusing finger at Nancy
Drew.
Nancy and her friends stared in
astonishment. They could not believe what they had just heard.
“Arrest that girl!” the woman screamed.
“Don’t let any of them get away— they’re all in on it together!”
“Just a minute,” one of the agents said. “Suppose
you explain,” he suggested to Nancy.
The excited woman, however, was not to
be calmed. She rushed toward Nancy and shook her fist at the girl. “Don’t deny
you gave me that phony bill!” she almost screamed.
“I neither deny nor affirm
it,” Nancy said, turning to the agents.
“I did give the woman a twenty-dollar bill, but how do you know it was the counterfeit?”
“It was the only twenty we took in that day,” the waitress retorted. Nancy’s
thoughts raced. “I’ll
take your word for it,” she said quietly.
Opening her purse she took out another twenty-dollar
bill. The woman snatched the money and handed it to one of the Secret Service
men. “Is this good?” she asked crisply.
The agent examined the bill. Then he looked at
Nancy. “Where did you get this?”
“From my father. He gave me both bills,
as a matter of fact. One was for car emergencies.”
Instead of giving
the bill to the woman,
the man put it into his pocket.
“This is serious business,
young lady. The bill you just gave me is also counterfeit!”
Nancy
was thunderstruck. Bess and George
gasped. Before any of them could
speak, the lunchroom woman cried
out, “She’s one of the gang! Arrest her!”
For the first time the station attendant
spoke up. “Take it easy, Liz. These
girls don’t exactly look like counterfeiters.”
Liz sniffed.
“People don’t usually go around paying for sundaes with twenty- dollar bills!”
she said tartly.
“My father
gave me the money because
I was going on a vacation.”
“A likely story!” the woman sneered.
“It’s the truth!”
George spoke up indignantly. “The idea of accusing my friend
of passing bad money on purpose! It’s ridiculous!”
“Ridiculous, is
it?” the woman retorted angrily. “You’ll sing a different tune when you’re in
jail!”
“You can’t have Nancy
arrested. She didn’t
realize it was counterfeit money!” Bess protested. “George and I
have some cash. We’ll pay you twenty
good dollars to make up for the bad one.”
As the cousins pooled their funds and handed over
the money, the woman quieted down.
“Maybe I was a little hasty,” she
admitted. But she was not entirely cowed. “How about your father?” she asked Nancy. “How come he had counterfeit bills?”
Nancy said she
did not know, but certainly he had not acquired them dishonestly.
One of the Secret Service men said, “Suppose
you tell us who you are, and—” “I’ll tell you who she is!” came an authoritative voice from the doorway.
CHAPTER XIII
A Hesitant Hitchhiker
UNOBSERVED by the girls, an automobile
had driven up and parked near the filling station. A tall young man had
alighted and started for the lunchroom. Upon hearing the amazing conversation
inside, he had halted. Then, realizing Nancy was in need of help, he had
stepped inside.
“Karl!” Nancy cried out. She had never before
been so glad to see anyone!
“It looks as if I just got here in the nick of time.” Karl Abbott Jr. smiled. “They’re trying to arrest us!”
Bess exclaimed.
“You’re kidding!” Karl cried in astonishment.
“It’s no joke,” Nancy returned earnestly, then told him of her
predicament. “Look here,” Karl said bluntly, turning to the two Secret Service
agents, “you
can’t hold these
girls.”
“Who are you?” one of the agents demanded.
“My name is Karl Abbott, and these girls are
friends of mine. As it happens, my father is living at Red Gate Farm in Round Valley, where they also are staying. I was on my way there when I thought
I’d stop for a bite to eat. Lucky I did,
too!”
“These
girls may be friends of yours,” the unpleasant woman spoke up shrilly, “but this girl had better explain
why she gave me counterfeit money!”
“If
you’re accusing these
girls of deliberately trying to pass counterfeit money,
you’re crazy!” Karl Abbott cried out.
“You’re willing to vouch for the honesty of this
young lady’s father as well?” the agent asked.
“Most definitely. This is Nancy Drew. No doubt
you’ve heard of her father, the famous lawyer. If you haven’t, you soon will!”
“Not
Carson Drew of River Heights?” “Yes,” Karl replied.
“Why didn’t you tell us who you were?”
the restaurant owner asked.
“You didn’t give me a chance
to tell you anything!” Nancy
retorted. “And you didn’t seem ready to believe what I
did have to say.”
The two agents looked at each other. One asked to see Nancy’s driver’s license, then with a
smile he said, “Too bad you have such
a loss because of the counterfeit money. The
outfit which is distributing the twenty-dollar bills is a clever one.
“The
money is turning
up in many places. I’ll get in touch with your father to
find out where he was given the bills. Incidentally,
we understand a few women are mixed up in the racket. That’s why we detained you.”
“Let’s get out of here!” George urged.
The girls hurriedly left the lunchroom with Karl.
The government agents leisurely followed them outside.
As Nancy was about to step into her car, she thought of something. It occurred
to her that by some remote chance the investigators might be interested in the
phony message which she had brought with her.
“This may or may not have anything to do
with the case,” she told them, handing over the scented note. “But the
signature is a forgery, and the perfume has some mystery to it.”
She gave a brief account
of her own involvement with the mystery, beginning with her encounter on the train
with the man who had mentioned “the Chief,” and ending with the code.
“If the rest of the code can be deciphered,” Nancy concluded, “that
might give us the answer to everything, including
the Hale Syndicate’s whereabouts.”
“So you’re the young detective Chief
McGinnis mentioned in his reports to us,” one of the agents said admiringly.
“What you’ve done so far is really astounding. Chief McGinnis didn’t mention
you by name. He probably figured you would prefer him not to.
“Your deductions seem very sound, Miss Drew, and I’d advise you to be careful. That Hale gang may think you know too much already.
I’ll take this note
and pass it along to a handwriting expert. Perhaps Yvonne Wong was the person
who delivered it.”
Nancy shook her head. “From what I could see of the
woman, I know she wasn’t Yvonne.”
After the agent had wished
Nancy luck on the solution
of the mystery, she said
good-by to the men, and, with the others, went back to her car.
Although Karl Abbott was eager to continue on to
Red Gate Farm to see his father, he expressed concern
about the three
girls and their upsetting experience. He asked for a detailed
account of the events which had led to Nancy’s
predicament. He was most interested and sympathetic when the girls told
him the whole story.
“Well,” he said admiringly, “I guess I won’t worry too much about you girls.
You certainly aren’t easily daunted by
emergencies.”
After Karl Jr. and the trio had exchanged good-bys, the young man got into his car and drove on to the farm.
Bess turned to her companions. “Where
to? I’m more starved than ever.”
“It’s only a short way to town from here,” Nancy
replied. “We can get breakfast there and then do our shopping.”
Soon the girls reached Round Valley. When they
finished eating, Nancy looked at Mrs. Byrd’s list.
“There’s really not much on it,” she
commented. “Two of us could do the shopping. Suppose you girls take over and
I’ll go buy the material for our costumes.”
“Material?” Bess queried.
Nancy laughed. “If we’re going to join the Black
Snake group in one of their rites, we’ll need ghost costumes, and I’ve decided
it wouldn’t be fair to Mrs. Byrd to ruin four of her sheets and pillowcases.”
Suddenly George said, “What are we going
to use for money?”
Nancy had only two dollars. Bess and
George between them counted six. “That will pay for the meat and groceries,”
Bess said. “I guess our costume
material and the other errands will have to wait.”
The food shopping was soon finished
and the girls
returned to Red Gate Farm.
Joanne met them
at the kitchen door. “Guess what?”
she burst out. “The telephone repairman was here. He said our line had been cut!”
Nancy nodded.
“By those people
who were here last night.”
“I suppose
so. Oh, Nancy, I’m so worried
for you. And Karl Jr. tells us you’ve had another adventure this morning.
He said you’d explain.”
Nancy, with lively interruptions from Bess and
George, related the girls’ recent experience.
“I gave those Secret Service men the note and told
them the Hale Syndicate might be mixed up in some way with the counterfeiters.
The syndicate may be the distributors of the phony bills.”
“Well, do let the authorities take care of it,” Joanne urged. “I want you girls to have a good time while you’re here.”
“Oh, I’m having a wonderful time,” Nancy
assured her. “By the way, I think we should work on our costumes
for the hillside ceremony. Could you
repay us the money we spent today so I can buy more material?
We decided it isn’t fair to use your grandmother’s good linens.”
“Oh, yes, right away. I’ll get it from Gram. And I think there are a few more
groceries she needs.”
Joanne returned in a few minutes and
handed over the money to which she added enough for the marketing. Nancy headed
for town. She had gone about a mile when she sighted a woman hurrying
along the side of the country road.
She was limping slightly.
“I’ll
offer her a ride,” Nancy
decided. “She seems to be in a great hurry.”
She halted the car and called, “May I give you a lift to town?”
The woman glanced up, startled. Nancy was surprised
to see that she was the woman from the Black Snake Colony whom she had helped several
days before on the river trail!
What she was doing so far from her camp Nancy did not know, but she was determined to make the most of the opportunity at hand.
“Please get in,” Nancy urged, as the woman
hesitated. “I’m sure your foot must be paining you. I notice that you are still
limping.”
“Thanks,” the woman returned
gratefully, hobbling
over to the car door which
Nancy held open for her. “I am in a hurry to get to town.”
Before
stepping inside she looked quickly
over her shoulder
as though fearing that someone might observe her actions.
She sighed in relief and settled back,
looking very pale and exhausted.
“You weren’t intending to walk all the way to
town?” Nancy asked in a friendly, conversational tone.
The woman nodded. “I had to get there
somehow.”
“But aren’t the members of your colony permitted to
use any of the cars I’ve seen around the camp?” Nancy questioned, watching
her companion closely
and hoping that she might tactfully glean some information.
“We aren’t allowed much freedom,” the
woman answered.
“You shouldn’t be walking on that foot yet,” Nancy
protested. “You’re apt to injure your
ankle permanently.”
“It’s nearly well now,” the woman told
her, avoiding Nancy’s eyes. “They didn’t know at the camp that I was going to
town. I—I left in a hurry.”
Again the stranger cast an anxious
glance over her shoulder. “She obviously thinks she’s being followed,” Nancy
thought to herself. “Perhaps she’s even running away!”
Nancy wanted to ask her companion a
number of questions but the woman’s aloofness discouraged her. Deciding on an
entirely different course, the young sleuth pretended not to pay particular
attention to the woman. For some time they drove along in silence. Nancy could
see that her passenger was gradually relaxing and losing her fear.
“Am I going
too fast for you?” Nancy
inquired, thinking the time was right to launch the conversation.
“Oh, no,” the woman returned quickly. “You can’t go
too fast for me.” She hesitated, and then added, “I have an important letter to
mail.”
“Why don’t you drop it in one of the
roadside mailboxes?” Nancy suggested casually. “The rural carrier will pick it
up and save you a long trip.”
“I want to get it off this morning if I
possibly can.”
“I’ll be glad to gro to the post office and mail it
for you,” Nancy said, purposely drawing the woman out.
“Thank you, but no,” the woman mumbled.
“I—I’d feel better if I did it myself.” As Nancy did not reply, she said, “I don’t mean to be
ungrateful for all you’ve done—really I don’t. It’s only that I mustn’t get you into trouble.”
“How
could I get into trouble by helping you?” Nancy asked with a smile. “You don’t understand,” her companion replied
nervously. “There
are things I
can’t explain.
The leaders of the colony
will be very angry with me if they find I
have left even for a few hours, and
especially that I’ve mailed this letter to my sister. The cult forbids
communication with the outside world.”
“I can’t understand why you tolerate
such rigid supervision,” Nancy said
impatiently. “Why, the leader of the cult must treat you as prisoners!”
“You’re not far from wrong,” the
woman confessed.
“Then why don’t you run away?”
The question
startled the woman. She glanced sharply at Nancy, then as quickly looked away.
“I would if I
dared,” she said finally.
“Why don’t you
dare?” Nancy challenged. “I’ll help you.”
“No, you mustn’t
get mixed up in this. Perhaps later I can get away.”
“I don’t see
what anyone can do to you if you decide to leave the colony,” Nancy went
on. “Surely you’re a free person.”
“Not any more,” her companion returned
sadly. “I’m in it too deep now. I’ll have to go on until Fate helps me.”
“I wouldn’t
wait,” Nancy advised bluntly. “Let me help you—right now!”
CHAPTER XIV
Disturbing Gossip
THE strange woman in Nancy’s car seemed to waver for a moment,
as if about to accept the girl’s offer
of help. Then she shook her head.
“No, I won’t drag you into it!” she said
with finality. “You don’t know what you’d be getting into if you helped me. Why, if they even learn
that you’ve aided me in mailing this letter—”
Nancy
saw the woman
shudder. For one fleeting
instant she, too, felt afraid— afraid of something she could not define.
The young sleuth realized that the woman was trying
to warn her of danger. Nancy knew the wise thing to do was forget all about the
nature cult and the strange things which apparently went on in the hillside
cave. Yet, she felt that she was on the verge of discovering an important
secret.
Nancy’s companion was obviously relieved when
the car rounded a bend and brought
them within sight of town. “If you’ll just drop me off at the post office, I’ll
be most grateful,” the woman said.
“May I take you back with me?” Nancy
asked. “I’ll be returning in less than an hour.”
“No, I’ll walk back.”
Nancy saw that it was useless to protest and let
the matter rest. She made no comment.
After
leaving her passenger
in front of the post office, Nancy continued down the main street to the supermarket. Later, while she waited in the check-out
line to pay for her groceries, two women took their places behind her. They were talking earnestly together,
and did not pay any attention to Nancy. She,
in turn, did not notice them until one of the shoppers began to speak on a
startling subject.
“It beats me the way those people carry on,” she
heard one of them say. “You’d think Mrs. Byrd would turn them out!”
Instantly Nancy became alert.
“I suppose she needs the money,” the other woman responded, “but someone should speak to
her about it. The idea of those folks capering around in bedclothes! They must
be crazy!”
“That’s just what I think!” the first woman remarked. “If I lived near that farm
I wouldn’t feel safe! And I don’t think it’s
decent for a law-abiding community like
ours to have folks like that around.
I’m going to get a big group together and call on Mrs. Byrd to tell her what we
think of her!”
“I’ll certainly join you,” the woman
said.
Nancy felt the situation was becoming serious;
that the criticism
of Mrs. Byrd would grow even sharper.
If the two women carried out their threat, the consequences might be
very unpleasant. Prospective Red Gate boarders might change their minds! The
colony might take reprisals!
“One thing is certain,” Nancy decided.
“Our costumes must be ready by tonight in case the colony members have a meeting.”
She paid for the groceries and went
directly to the material shop, where she bought several yards of white muslin,
then started for home.
Driving back to Red Gate Farm, Nancy
kept a sharp lookout for the woman from the Black Snake Colony, but she was
nowhere along the road. “I wish I could have talked to her more. It might have
helped in my plan to attend the ceremony.”
Joanne, Bess, and George were just
returning from the woods with pails brimming over with luscious-looking berries
when Nancy drove into the barnyard. As they started to help her carry in the
packages, Karl Abbott Jr. rushed gallantly from the house to assist. He glanced
curiously at the soft, fat one which Nancy kept tucked under her arm, but she
did not give any explanation of its contents. Besides, the elder Mr. Abbott and
Mrs. Salisbury were within hearing distance.
Immediately after a late lunch
and some pleasant
conversation with the guests,
Nancy excused herself and summoned the other girls to her room. There she
unwrapped the material and brought
out scissors, needles,
and thread.
“We must work like mad,” she said, “in
case there’s a meeting tonight.”
With great excitement and anticipation she cut out the first
costume which was to serve as an entering wedge to the
nature-cult ceremonial. As Nancy worked, she
told the story of her adventure with her passenger
and the conversation of the women in the market.
Joanne was alarmed. “Oh, Gram must never hear of
this!” she exclaimed. “She’d be heart-broken!”
The others agreed. “We won’t tell Mrs. Byrd any
more than we have to,” George said. “I do hope we can solve the mystery before
something ugly happens!”
For the next few hours their needles
flew furiously. At last the costumes
were finished. The four friends could not control
their laughter as they tried them on.
“You certainly look as if you’re ready
for Halloween!” George
told Nancy. “Do you think I’ll pass?”
“In the moonlight they won’t be able to tell you
from a full-fledged member of the cult,” Bess declared. “Let’s see you go
through the mystic rites.”
To the delight of her chums,
Nancy danced around
the room, waving
her arms wildly and making
weird moans.
“Jo!” a voice called. “Dinner’s ready!”
Startled, the girls scrambled out of the white robes and hastily
hid them. They tried to compose their faces as they hurried
downstairs, but merely
succeeded in looking guilty.
“Seems to me you girls spent a long time
locked up in your rooms.” Mrs.
Salisbury sniffed suspiciously.
“Planning some kind of mischief, no doubt.” Mr.
Abbott wagged his finger playfully at the four girls.
George had a hard time keeping a straight face, and hastily
took a sip of milk. Bess could not restrain a giggle,
whereupon Mrs. Salisbury gave her a sharp look.
“Humph!” she exclaimed. “I must say I’ll
have to agree with Mr. Abbott this time. I’m sure you four are up to some prank.”
Even Nancy and Joanne had to smother
tell-tale grins. They only smiled pleasantly, but offered no explanation.
Actually, the girls were so excited
over their prospective adventure they could scarcely do justice to the excellent
meal Mrs. Byrd had prepared. Karl Jr., as
usual, was a charming companion.
He had many amusing anecdotes to tell, and Nancy was happy to observe that Joanne seemed to be enjoying it all immensely.
Indeed, by the time dessert was finished, Nancy and
her chums realized that they had temporarily forgotten counterfeiters,
syndicates, and even the nature cult on the hill.
Everyone was sorry, a little later, when the young man announced that he must leave.
“I wish I could stay,”
he said regretfully, letting
his eyes rest especially long on Nancy, “but I must get back to the city tonight. I’ll try to run down again in a
few days to see Father. Take care of yourselves,” he added to the girls.
After Karl Jr. had gone, and the girls were washing the dishes, George said teasingly, “You can’t tell me ‘Father’ is the only attraction at Red Gate Farm! He has his eye on Nancy!”
“Silly!” Nancy laughed.
“He scarcely took his eyes off you all evening,”
George insisted. “You made quite a hit this morning with that rescued-heroine
bit.”
“Oh, honestly, George!” Nancy blushed.
“You never give up, do you?”
“Karl Jr. wouldn’t be so bad,”
Bess added, “but imagine having
Mr. Abbott for a father-in-law!”
“You do the imagining,” Nancy said
lightly. “I’m going outside and look at the hillside.”.
All the girls watched until late in the
evening, but the mysterious place remained dark and deserted. Disappointed, the
girls went to bed.
They awakened early the next morning, for they had
gradually become accustomed to farm hours. When they learned from Mrs. Byrd
that Reuben was not feeling well, the girls eagerly helped
with the various
outdoor chores. It was
noontime before they realized how much time had passed.
“You girls should have some relaxation this afternoon,” Mrs. Byrd said. “How
about a swim down in the brook?
There’s a spot that used to be known
as the old swimming hole. It’s fairly deep.”
“That sounds wonderful,” Bess declared.
Jo declined, but at two o’clock Nancy, Bess, and George set off in bathing
suits. For two hours they swam, floated, and sun-bathed on the shore. Every
once in a while Nancy or George
would mention some angle of the colony, Hale Syndicate, or counterfeiting mysteries.
But immediately Bess would say, “Shush! We’re relaxing. We may
have a big
night tonight.”
Finally the girls started for the farmhouse. To reach it they had to cross a field
in the corner of which lay a heap of large stones, apparently raked there when
the acreage was cultivated.
George, grinning, climbed across the
stones, saying, “This life is making me rugged. I—Oh, ouch!” she cried loudly,
then added, “A snakel It bit me!”
CHAPTER XV
Masqueraders
NANCY and George turned just in time to
see a brownish snake slither off in a wiggling motion and disappear among the
stones.
“Oh, George!” Bess cried. “Was it a
poisonous one?”
“I’m not sure,” she answered, “I—I hope it wasn’t a
copperhead.”
“We’d better not take any chances,” Nancy declared, whipping
a handkerchief from her beach
robe. “Let’s put on tourniquets, Bess.”
Like lightning the two girls tied their
handkerchiefs tightly above and below the puncture marks made in George’s calf by the snake’s fangs.
Then Nancy took a tiny pair of scissors from her bag. “I wish I had something
to sterilize these with,” she said.
“Will perfume
do?” Bess asked,
and took from her bag the tiny bottle of Blue
Jade.
The liquid was poured onto the scissors,
then Nancy deftly made a crosscut incision near the punctures. Blood spurted out, and with it, she hoped, any serum
the snake might have injected.
George stoically had not made a sound,
but finally she said, “Thanks, girls. Your quick first aid probably made it
possible for me to go to the ceremonies tonight—if they have them.”
“I think you’d better not step on your
foot, or stimulate circulation,” Nancy advised. “Suppose Bess and I carry you.”
George started to protest but finally consented.
Seated on a “chair” made by the intertwined hands of Nancy and Bess, George was
carried toward the farmhouse.
The trip, though
awkward and slow, went at a steady pace. George maintained her Spartan attitude. She not only refused to complain but teasingly asked Bess,
“Aren’t you glad I don’t eat as much as you
do?”
“I don’t know what you mean,” Bess replied,
puzzled.
“Well, if I loved desserts as you do,” George
teased, “I wouldn’t be such a featherweight to carry!”
Bess
gave her cousin an indignant glance. “How do you like that for gratitude!
Next time I lug you all the way home—!”
Nancy interrupted with a grin, “I guess
we all do our share of eating dessert.
Anyhow, we’ve made it, girls. Red Gate Farm is
just ahead!”
As they came up to the house, Mrs. Salisbury, who
was in the garden, exclaimed, “Oh, gracious! What happened?” Mr. Abbott and
Mrs. Byrd hurried from the house.
“Just a precautionary measure,” Nancy
explained, and told of the snake incident.
George
was carried indoors
and laid on a couch.
Mrs. Byrd quickly
called the family physician. He arrived shortly, and examined George’s wound.
The doctor nodded
approvingly as he bathed it with an antiseptic and removed
the tourniquets.
“Excellent first-aid treatment,” he announced. “You’ll be fine, young lady. I’d
advise you to rest for several hours.”
“Thank
you. That’s good news.”
George gave a relieved grin.
For the remainder of the afternoon she was made to
lie inactive. When dinnertime came, George
got up, declaring, “I never
felt better!”
“But take it easy in case we go out
tonight,” Nancy pleaded with her.
To allay suspicion on the part of the other boarders,
Bess and Joanne were posted as guards across the road. If they saw the
beginning of rites on the hill, the girls were to give birdcalls. In the
meantime, Nancy and George waited in George’s room, the costumes ready to be
picked up at a moment’s notice.
Suddenly Nancy leaped from her chair and flew into
her own bedroom. “What’s eating you?” George called.
“Oh, why didn’t I think of it before?
How stupid of me!” Nancy said, returning with a piece of paper in her hand.
“What are you talking about?” George demanded.
“That snake today.
The way he wriggled. It looked just like the mark over the
numeral 2 in the coded
message!” Nancy cried
excitedly. “The 2 we think means B!”
George sat up. “You mean the B with the wavy line
over it might signify the Black Snake Colony?”
“Yes. Oh, George, this connects the Hale
Syndicate with the nature cult here. Now the message
reads: ”Maurice Hale
calling Black Snake
Colony meeting—”
“And the 18. How about that?”
George asked.
“Not too hard to guess,
George. The 18 is the letter R, and could
stand for Red Gate
Farm.”
“Nancy, you’re a whiz, as I’ve often
told you,” her friend declared.
The young sleuth
smiled, then said wistfully, “If I could only have had another second to copy the next few numbers, I might have known the exact time.”
“What happens now? Will you notify the
police?”
At that instant Nancy and George heard soft
birdcalls. “No time to phone now,” Nancy said.
She grabbed two of the costumes and dashed from the room. George followed with the others. As prearranged,
the girls left by the kitchen door to avoid the boarders. Mrs. Byrd had been told that the girls might go up the hillside
to watch if the nature cult
put on a performance.
Nancy and George joined the other girls
and they all scurried toward the woods. It was very dark beneath the dense
canopy of trees, and Bess gripped Nancy’s arm. Joanne was familiar with every
path and led the way toward the hillside.
A weird cry broke the stillness. Involuntarily the girls halted
and moved closer together.
“What—was—that?” Bess chattered.
“Only some wild animal,” Nancy reassured her. “Come
on!” she urged. “We must hurry or we’ll miss the ritual!”
The girls went through the dark forest as fast as
they could. The moon was rising, and ghostly rays of light filtered through
gaps in the foliage overhead. A faint breeze stirred the leaves into what
seemed like menacing whispers. The girls finally reached the river trail and
followed it.
“We must be careful now,” Nancy warned in a low
voice. “We’re drawing near the colony. The cult may have a lookout stationed
during the night ceremonies.”
“I hadn’t thought of that,” Joanne
murmured.
“I almost wish I hadn’t come,” Bess whispered
nervously. “I had no idea it would be this dark.”
“What
were you expecting at nine-thirty at night?” George
chided in as low a tone as
possible.
“It will be lighter when the moon rises higher,”
Joanne told her. “Still—if
you want to turn back—”
“No, I’m going through with this
masquerade if the rest of you are!” Bess retorted stalwartly.
Nancy hoped fervently it would remain a
masquerade. She was firmly convinced now that the Black Snake group were
unscrupulous people working with, or at least friendly with Maurice Hale. Nancy
now felt convinced that the mystic rites were nothing but a sham.
Fortunately, for Nancy’s
purpose, the hillside
was covered with large rocks
as well as dense shrubs which
would provide temporary hiding places. As the girls stole cautiously up the steep path,
they could see cult members still congregating.
“We’re in plenty of time,” she thought.
The girls separated, George and Bess crouching
behind a huge rock. Joanne and Nancy took cover behind a heavy growth of shrubs
and tall grass.
For nearly ten minutes the girls watched
as figures milled about the hillside.
Then they heard the sound of cars approaching.
“They must be coming up through the pasture again,”
Joanne said, listening intently.
An
instant later she and Nancy saw the headlights of three automobiles. “Look!”
Joanne tugged at Nancy’s sleeve.
“More members are coming out of
their
tents!”
The two girls watched the white-robed figures
walking slowly toward the brow of the hill, where the three automobiles had
parked.
“I wonder if one of the newcomers is
Maurice Hale,” Nancy thought.
She and Joanne were too far away to hear what was being said, but they could
see distinctly. They watched as a
group of men and women, twelve in number, stepped from the cars.
Nancy could not distinguish any of their faces.
The new arrivals quickly donned white garments and
headgear similar to the outfits Nancy and her friends had made, then joined the
other members of the cult.
The ghostly figures soon began dancing
about in the moonlight, and Nancy felt that the time was right for her daring
attempt to join the group. Before she could tell Joanne, there was a slight
stir in the bushes directly behind her.
Involuntarily Nancy jumped, fully
expecting to come face to face with one of the cult members. Instead, Bess and
George emerged.
“Isn’t it about time for us to do something?” they
asked, almost simultaneously.
“Yes,” Nancy agreed, “we’d better get
into our robes as quickly as we can.”
The girls were well hidden by the rocks and bushes.
They donned their costumes and pulled the headgear over their faces. For the
first time, Nancy noticed the scent of Blue Jade on Bess. “I wonder if that was
wise,” Nancy thought. “If it attracts attention to Bess it might increase her
danger, but it’s too late now to do anything about it.”
As George, overeager, started off, Nancy caught her friend’s
arm. “Wait!” she warned. “We must slip quietly into the circle one
at a time.”
“My knees are shaking now,” Bess admitted. “I don’t know how I’ll be able to
dance.”
“Stay here if you like,” Nancy told her.
“I think we should leave someone to keep guard, anyway.”
“I’ll stay,” Joanne offered. “I know the
way back through the woods better than you girls do.”
“Come
on!” George pleaded.
“If we don’t hurry we’ll be too late!”
“Good luck!” Joanne whispered as the girls crept away.
Inch by inch, the three girls made their way up the hill. They crouched behind a clump of bushes a stone’s throw from where the cult members
were dancing. Nancy indicated that she would make the first move. Bess and George nodded.
“The slightest mistake will mean detection!” Nancy
thought, her heart pounding.
Waiting for the right moment, she suddenly slipped
out among the white- robed figures and instantly began waving her arms and
making grotesque motions.
CHAPTER XVI
Startling Commands
RELIEVED that her entry into the group
had not been noticed, Nancy marched along with the other ghostly
figures. If only George and Bess were as successful!
Nancy watched her disguised companions
and saw that the girls would have no trouble in following the motions, since
each person was apparently making them up on the spur of the moment.
“So far, so good,” Nancy told herself.
Satisfied now that her own position was temporarily
secure, she tried to help her friends. Deliberately moving toward the shrubs
behind which George and Bess were hiding, she shielded them from the view of
the cult members, all the time continuing her grotesque motions.
George realized what the young sleuth was trying to do and made the most of the opportunity. Choosing her time, she
slipped out and joined the group on the hillside.
Bess was more timid. Several times at
the critical moment she lost her nerve, but she finally managed to summon
enough courage and made the plunge.
“Keep
close together,” Nancy warned in an undertone. “If we lose each other,
it may be disastrous.”
By this time the girls
had made up their minds
that there was nothing the least
bit mystic about the queer rites of the Black
Snake Colony. Disguised persons
on all sides of them were making crude remarks which assured the girls that the cult members did not take the ceremony seriously.
“This ought to give the country yokels an eye-full”
Nancy heard one man mutter.
“How much longer do we have to do this?”
another grumbled. “I’m getting sick of flapping my arms around like a
windmill!”
“This cult idea was all foolishness, anyway!” still
another said.
“Foolishness, is it?” someone caught him up. Nancy
thought she recognized the voice but was not certain. “Let me tell you a girl
was prowling around here
only a few days ago! I guess the Chief
knew his business when he thought up this crazy cult idea.”
“Well, enough
of this!” a loud voice
announced. Nancy decided
the man must be one of the leaders. “We may as well go into the cave and get
down to business!”
George was just wondering what the girls
had better do when Bess clutched Nancy’s hand and whispered nervously:
“Do we dare enter?”
“We must,” Nancy returned quietly.
The girls stood motionless, watching
the white-robed figures
march single file toward the entrance to the cave.
Finally Nancy signaled, and the three friends followed the group, even though
it occurred to them that they might be walking
into a trap.
“Keep close behind me,” Nancy warned her
companions in a whisper.
As they approached the mouth of the opening, Nancy
saw a tall figure, robed in white, standing guard. Her heart nearly stopped as
she realized that each person was uttering some password.
“We’re finished now,” she thought.
It was too late to turn back. The three girls could
do nothing but hope that in some way they might get past the stalwart guard.
Nancy kept close to the person just
ahead of her, and as he muttered the password, she managed to hear it.
“Kamar!”
When Nancy’s
turn came to pass the guard, she spoke the word clearly. As she
had hoped, George and Bess heard, and taking their cue from her, repeated the password. The sentry did
not give them a second glance, yet the girls breathed easier when they were safely
through the entrance.
The marchers descended into a cold, damp
tunnel. Someone was carrying a torch at the head of the procession, but Nancy and her friends,
who were near the
end of the line, were in semidarkness.
“What do you suppose we’re getting
into?” George muttered.
Nancy did not reply,
but gave her friend a sharp nudge as a warning not to speak. A moment later Bess tripped
over some object
in the path and would
have
fallen
if Nancy had not caught
her by the arm. They walked farther
underground, and then, unexpectedly, stepped into a dimly lighted chamber.
The members of the cult seated themselves on the floor, and the girls
followed their example. Presently they became aware of the strong scent
of Blue Jade perfume. Bess was not the only one wearing it tonight!
“So there is a definite connection
between this distinctive perfume and the Black Snake Colony!” Nancy thought.
“No wonder that man on the train was startled. Perhaps the women use it, and he
couldn’t identify me but took it for granted I was one of the group. If so,
it’s just as well Bess has some on.”
Nancy suddenly recalled the forged note bearing the
Blue Jade scent. “The woman who delivered it to me must be a member of the
cult!” she thought excitedly.
After everyone had entered the room, the
man who had given the sharp order outside the cave spoke again. He threw off
his headgear and glanced over the group appraisingly. Nancy was stunned.
Maurice!
The man she had seen the first time she had stopped at the filling
station! “Is he Maurice Hale?” she asked herself excitedly.
“Everyone here?” he demanded gruffly.
He counted the group, and again Nancy and her
friends held their breaths. Apparently some of the members of the colony were
missing, for the leader did not notice that three new recruits had been added
to his organization.
“We may as well get down to work,”
the leader announced. “Snead, have you anything to report?”
At the question
one of the disguised persons
stood up and threw off his mask. Again Nancy was startled. He was
none other than the man she had seen in Room
305!
“Here’s the good money,” he said,
handing over an envelope. “Perfect score this time for our main distribution
department.”
“Very fine. Then nothing’s gone wrong at
your new office?”
“Not yet, Chief,” was the muttered reply, “but
yesterday I saw a bird hangin’ around the building—looked like a plain-clothes
cop to me. I don’t want you to think I’m backing out, but if you ask me, I’d
say it’s about time to blow. This game can’t last forever, you know.”
“I’ll do the thinking for this outfit!”
the leader scathingly retorted. “We’ll stay
here another week and then pick a new spot. What makes you think the cops are
wise?”
“Well,
they may have got wise to the fact that we’re using Yvonne again—” “That’s
right!” a shrill, angry female voice interrupted. “Blame me! Every
time
somebody gets nervous, you bring me into it!”
Nancy could scarcely restrain herself. She had been
right about Yvonne! The girl was mixed up in the Hale Syndicate racket!
“You deserve blame,” A1 Snead retorted irritably. “First, you didn’t have any more sense than to sell a bottle of that perfume
to a perfect stranger—”
“I told you, that girl insisted upon
buying it, and I was afraid if I flatly refused, she and her friends would get suspicious. Besides, I don’t see what harm
it did to sell the perfume to a teenager!”
“No,” Snead retorted sarcastically, “you’re so simple-minded
you wouldn’t see it might land us in jail! When Pete was on the train going to River Heights
he noticed the scent and thought that the girl was one of the Chief’s
agents! Lucky for all of us, he saw his mistake before he spilled
anything!”
Yvonne sputtered back in defense. “Well, at least I
phoned Al at his office right away so he could warn the agents about the stray
bottle of Blue Jade. It’s not my fault Pete happened to be on the same train as
those girls.”
The leader suddenly
became impatient. “Enough
of this!” he shouted. “It’s not getting us anywhere! Snead,
I placed Yvonne in your office
and she’ll stay there
as long as I say. I’m
satisfied with the rest of her work.
Get me?”
Snead nodded sullenly.
Nancy had been studying the leader intently and by
this time was convinced that he was far more clever and intelligent than his subordinates. She figured that Al
Snead was right-hand man to the Chief, but resented his superior’s favoritism toward Yvonne Wong. The organization was a large one, evidently
changing its scene and type of operation from time to time. If only she could
slip away and get help from the authorities!
“Another thing,” Al Snead continued, addressing
Maurice Hale, “we’d better make up a new code. Those girls that have been gettin’
too close to our operation just might notify the cops.”
“All right,” the Chief responded. “I’ll
work one out in a day or two.”
He called on another member of the organization for
a report. “Two hundred packages passed, sir.”
“Good!” the leader exclaimed, rubbing his thin
hands. “Now, if you’ll follow me to
the workroom, I’ll give you each your cut, and dole out the stuff for next
week.”
Nancy
and her friends
could not have retreated had they wished,
and certainly did not want to leave when they seemed
so near the truth!
But the situation in which they found
themselves was a foreboding one and the very atmosphere of the room was tense
and frightening. Boldly they followed the others
into an adjoining chamber which was brilliantly lighted
with torches.
Though
prepared for the unexpected, the girls were taken completely aback at the sight
which greeted their eyes!
CHAPTER XVII
Tense Moments
NANCY’S first impression on entering was
that the chamber appeared to be a cross between a printing shop and a United
States mint.
“Counterfeiters!” she thought excitedly.
Hand presses stood about and several engraved
plates had been left on a table. Various
chemicals and inks were in evidence. Neat stacks of paper money lined
one wall and other bills were scattered carelessly on the floor. Never in all her life had Nancy seen
so much money!
The room was cluttered with it. Twenty-dollar bills
appeared to be everywhere. Money, still damp, was drying on tables. Nancy
observed that all the bills seemed to be of the twenty-dollar denomination.
At last she had the answer to the many
questions which had been troubling her! This was the secret
of the cave! The latest
racket of the Hale Syndicate! The nature cult was a hoax, its so-called mysterious rites used
only as a screen to hide the work of a clever band of counterfeiters! The Black
Snake Colony seemed to her to be a perfect
name.
Nancy realized that if she did not try to get away and bring help now, she and
her friends would fail. There was nothing
they could do by themselves.
Nancy
turned to relay
her intentions to Bess and George. A slight tug on their robes was all that was needed to
make them understand, but to put the plan into operation was another matter.
The girls attempted to edge toward the
chamber entrance by degrees, but Al Snead stood barring
the door. For the time being escape was out of the question. They must bide their time.
As long as some members of the
organization remained masked, the girls knew
they would be comparatively safe. But already
several people had stripped
off their robes and headpieces. Every minute that the girls’ escape was delayed
increased the danger of detection.
Since
it was impossible to sneak
away, Nancy made careful
note of her
surroundings and tried to identify the faces on her mind. Except for Yvonne,
the leader Maurice Hale, Al Snead, and the man she had seen on the
train, all were strangers. Six people
besides Bess, George,
and herself remained
masked.
As Nancy surveyed the elaborate
equipment in the workroom, she realized that
this was an unusually large gang of counterfeiters. The engraved plate which
had been copied from an actual United
States Government twenty-dollar bill was a work of
art. Probably the leader of the gang had at one time been noted as a skilled engraver
and had decided
to use his talents to unlawful advantage.
Nancy carefully glanced about the room. Maurice
Hale was looking over some stacks of counterfeit money while several members of
the gang talked quietly. Bess and George automatically followed Nancy’s gaze
but stood perfectly still next to her near the table.
Nancy, under ordinary circumstances, could not
have told the counterfeit money from the real thing-with the picture of Jackson on the face, and the White
House on the back. But now that she had been alerted to examine the bills carefully, she noted that the color
and texture of the paper
appeared to be at fault.
When Nancy felt sure that she was not being
observed, she stealthily picked up one of the bills and tucked it inside her
robe as evidence.
“We made a pretty
fair week’s profit,” Maurice
Hale said gruffly
as he stacked the bills into several large piles. You distributors and passers keep up like this for another month and I’d say we’ll all
be on Easy Street.”
“The racket won’t last another month,”
Al Snead growled. “I tell you, the federal agents are getting wise that the phony stuff’s
being passed around
here.”
“Bah!”
Hale replied contemptuously. “Let them be suspicious! They wouldn’t
think of this out-of-the-way place as our headquarters in a thousand
years!”
Nancy could not help but smile at his
words. “That’s what he thinks!”
The next voice that spoke startled Nancy. She
recognized it instantly as belonging to Mr. Kent —the would-be buyer of Red
Gate Farm!
“Yeah, maybe not,” he was saying.
“Still, it’s too bad the old lady wouldn’t sell her place. Then we’d really
have a setup!”
It flashed through
Nancy’s mind that her hunch had been right about Mr. Kent being involved with the hillside cult.
No wonder they wanted to obtain Red Gate
Farm; it would have been a better headquarters for the gang than the cave.
The girl detective strained her ears as
the conversation continued. A woman
next to Kent said scornfully, “I only
hope your bright idea about that fake letter we took to the Drew girl, and
cutting the farm telephone wires, doesn’t backfire.”
So, Nancy told herself, it was Kent,
and the woman
who had just spoken, who were the ones responsible for that
part of the mystery. Mr. Kent also was undoubtedly the driver of
the car which had slowed down one evening near the farmhouse.
Meanwhile, the leader went on deftly
stacking the money. Nancy and her
friends watched him with increasing uneasiness. When the various members of the
organization were called upon to accept their share of the counterfeit bills,
they would doubtless remove their masks. How would the girls escape
detection then?
Nancy realized the situation was becoming more
serious. She and her friends must escape before
the actual distribution of the money began. If only Al Snead
would move away from the door!
One thought comforted
Nancy. Joanne was on guard outside
the cave. If worst
came to worst and escape was cut off, Joanne undoubtedly would become alarmed
and hurry back to the farmhouse for help.
“We may have to make a dash for it!” Nancy
warned George in a whisper. “If that man moves away from the door, be
ready!”
Al Snead did not move, however, and it
seemed to the girls that he was watching them. They wondered if their
whispering had made him suspicious.
Bess trembled slightly, and moved nearer
Nancy. Maurice Hale had finished counting the money, and, glancing over the
assembly, announced in a commanding voice:
“Well, those of you who haven’t removed
your masks had better do it one by one. I want to be sure no one is here who
shouldn’t be!” He pointed to Bess. “You first!”
Nancy
and her friends
felt themselves go cold. They were trapped!
There was nothing they could do now but make a wild dash for safety.
“Ready!” Nancy muttered under her
breath.
Before the girls could put their ideas into action,
they were startled by a loud commotion in the tunnel. An instant later the
guard, who had been stationed at the entrance of the cave, burst into the
chamber. He was half dragging a young girl who fought violently to free
herself.
The victim was
Joanne!
CHAPTER XVIII
Prisoners
NANCY’S first impulse was to dash
forward and try to help Joanne. But instantly she realized the foolishness of
such an act. George half started toward Joanne, but Nancy restrained her.
“Wait!” she whispered tensely.
If the situation had been grave before, it was even
more serious now. With Joanne captured there was no one to go for help! The girls must depend
entirely on themselves to escape from the cave. No one at the farmhouse
knew that they were doing anything
more than watching the Black Snake Colony from a safe distance.
“Let me go!” Joanne cried, struggling to free
herself.
“Where did she come from?” Maurice Hale demanded
unpleasantly.
“I saw her hiding among the bushes,” the guard
informed him. “She was spying! But she got just a little too curious!”
“Spying, eh?” A harsh expression crossed the
leader’s face. “Well, we know what to do with snoopers!”
“It’s all a mistake,” Joanne murmured,
on the verge of tears. “I didn’t mean any harm. I’m Mrs. Byrd’s granddaughter
and I was merely curious to know more about the cult.”
Even as Joanne spoke, her eyes traveled
about the room, noting the stacks of money and the queer printing
presses. She tried not to show that she understood their significance, but it was too late. The leader had seen her startled expression.
“So?” he drawled smartly. “This time
your curiosity has been the means of getting you into serious trouble. You’ll
learn, by the time we get through with you, not to meddle in affairs that don’t
concern you!” He turned quickly to Snead. “Al, see that no one leaves this
room!”
“Yes, Chief,” the guard answered.
Nancy wondered what he had in mind. Just then
Maurice Hale continued in a cold,
harsh voice:
“Just to make sure that other spies haven’t been
pulling a fast one on us, I’ll have everyone remove his mask at once. Be mighty
quick about it too!”
“No!” Bess whimpered
aloud. Then, realizing
what she had done, she covered
her mouth and sank back against the wall.
All heads turned in her direction. Nancy
and her friends had deliberately delayed in removing their masks, but now Nancy
knew their effort to gain time was doomed.
With Al Snead still blocking the door, things looked
black. Most of the others already had stripped off their headgear.
In addition to Maurice Hale and Al
Snead, Nancy immediately recognized Yvonne Wong and Pete, the man who had
spoken to her on the train. Next she spotted Mr. Kent, and finally, the woman
with the upswept hairdo who had brought her the faked letter.
“That woman’s
the same one I saw at the service station with the three men,” Nancy
thought. “If she hadn’t changed her hair style, I might have recognized her the
night she delivered the note.”
The other unmasked members were
strangers to Nancy. Tensely now she watched as the leader stood before Bess.
“Nothing to be afraid of, dear,” he said, and gently lifted off the
ghostly head covering. The next instant Maurice Hale practically shrieked, “A
spy!”
His face contorted with rage, Maurice
snatched the white cloth headpieces from George’s
face, then Nancy’s. Their scheme was exposed to all the members
of the counterfeit gang!
For an instant
there was stunned
silence, then angry cries arose from the Black
Snake Colony members.
“They’re the ones who bought the Blue Jade perfume
from me!” Yvonne Wong shrieked.
Al Snead glared at Nancy. “Yeah. I knew
something was wrong when you came into the office wearin’ the Blue Jade. I
smelled it, but didn’t let on.”
He then pointed accusingly toward
Joanne. “That girl is the one who applied at our city office for a job! When
she told me who she was and where she was from I knew she was the last person
in the world we’d want to hire!”
“That crazy idea of yours about someone
with farm experience,” the leader cried. “We didn’t need anybody to talk to our
agents about cows and chickens
—”
“But this place is
in the country,” Al Snead defended himself. “And in our codes we use a lot
of that kind of lingo.”
“Silence!” Maurice yelled, and turned to Joanne. “So you thought
you’d get a job at our office and spy on us! And
your meddling friend Nancy Drew was in cahoots with you.”
“No,
oh no!” Joanne cried out. “It was only by accident. I wanted to find a job
and help my grandmother. Nancy
was just trying
to help me locate the office—”
“Don’t expect us to believe a trumped-up
story like that,” the leader said harshly. “We know all about why you two have been snooping
around ever since Al had Pete trail you from
Riverside Heights. What’s more, we
know how to deal with such people!”
Hale turned menacingly to Nancy. “You’ll
wish you’d taken Pete’s advice when he called your pal”—he indicated
George—“and warned her that you’d better mind your own business.”
“Oh,
Maurice, please don’t
be too harsh with the girls,” a timid voice
pleaded. “They didn’t mean any harm.”
As she finished, the speaker
removed her mask.
Nancy
turned quickly to see the woman she had helped in the woods and later
had taken to town.
“So she’s a counterfeiter!” Nancy told herself
incredulously. “I can’t believe it!”
“Didn’t mean any harm?” Maurice drawled
sarcastically. “Oh, no, of course not. They only wanted to land the whole Hale
Syndicate in jail! Not that you would care! If I had known what a whiner you
are, I’d never have married you! Mind your own business and let me take care of
this!”
In spite of the seriousness of her own situation, Nancy felt pity for the woman.
Undoubtedly as the wife of such a tyrant as Maurice Hale she had stayed with
him against her will. She had hated the life that he had forced her to lead, but evi
dently she had been powerless to escape from
it.
“No wonder the poor woman took a chance
and slipped away from time to time,” Nancy thought.
Frightened by the harsh words of her
husband, Mrs. Hale moved back into a far corner of the room. Nancy wished she
could help her in some way, but realized that the woman dared not say more.
“What’ll we do with these girls?” the
leader demanded. “We can’t let’em go.
They know too much!”
On all sides angry mutterings arose. Yvonne Wong
heartlessly proposed that the girls be tied up and left prisoners in the cave.
But Maurice Hale ruled down that suggestion.
“We’ll have to get ‘em out of here,” he
said. “They’ll be missed and a searching party might visit this joint. How
about the shack at the river? It’s in such a desolate spot no one would think
of looking there until after—”
He did not finish the sentence, but from
the sinister expression on his face, Nancy and her friends guessed his meaning.
He intended to lock them up in the cabin and leave them without food!
A cry of anguish came from the leader’s
wife. Rushing forward, she clutched
her husband frantically by the arm.
“Oh, Mauricel You couldn’t be that
cruell”
Mr. Hale flung her away from him with a force that
sent the woman reeling against the wall. She uttered a little moan of pain and
sank to the floor.
“Oh!” Bess screamed.
Even
the cult members
were startled. “Be quiet!”
ordered their chief.
The cruel action aroused Nancy. For an instant all eyes were centered on the woman, and Nancy thought
she saw her opportunity. Quick as a flash she made a rush
for the exit. Bess and George, equally
alert, darted after her.
Al Snead, who stood in the opening, was taken
completely by surprise. He tried to hold his ground but the girls were too
strong for him. He managed to detain Bess and George, but Nancy wriggled
from his grasp.
She hesitated when she saw her friends had failed.
“Go on, Nancy!” Bess shrieked. “You must
escape!”
Nancy darted into the next room, while George and
Bess struggled with their captor, trying to block the door and give their
friend more time.
“Stop that girl!” Maurice Hale shouted
angrily. “If you let her get away, I’ll
—”
Nancy plunged
into the tunnel
and was swallowed up by darkness. She ran for her
life and for the lives of her friends, realizing this probably was her only
chance.
The long white robe hindered
her, but there was no time to tear it off. She held it high above her knees. Once she
stumbled, but caught herself, and rushed on frantically.
“Go on, Nancy!” Bess shrieked, “You must escape!”
The tunnel seemed to have no end. Behind her, Nancy
could hear pounding footsteps and angry shouts. She thought the men must be
gaining. If only she could reach the mouth of the cavel
The tunnel wound in and out and several times Nancy
brushed against the rough stone wall. The route was so circuitous that she
began to think she had taken a wrong turn.
Then,
just as she was giving
up hope, Nancy spotted a dim light
far ahead and knew she must be nearing the mouth of
the cave. No one appeared to be left guarding the entrance. Her only chance! In
a moment more she had reached the open air.
“Saved!” Nancy breathed.
At that instant a dark figure loomed up from the
grass. Nancy felt a heavy hand on her shoulder!
CHAPTER XIX
Destroyed Evidence
“NOT so FAST there!” The man leered as he clutched Nancy firmly by the
arm and whirled her around. “What’s the
big rush, anyway?”
Nancy, staring into his hard face, saw
that he was the man who had been addressed as “Hank,” one of the three men she
had seen at the filling station. Frantically she struggled to free herself.
“So—”
he muttered in satisfaction, “the pretty blond spy the boys were telling
me about. I thought you were warned
by the guard to keep away from here! This time, I take it, you’re lookin’
for something besides
a stray cow!”
“Yes, and I’m going to find it!” Nancy
said bravely.
“Oh, yeah? You’re going to find what? The police?”
Hank looked at her costume. “You’re a spy. But your little game is up.”
Nancy’s pulse was racing. How could she
get away? She could hear running footsteps coming through the tunnel, and knew
her chance of escape would be over in another instant. In desperation she tried
to jerk herself free from Hank. But her captor gripped her more securely and
laughed as she cried out in pain.
“Let me go!”
Nancy twisted and squirmed, but her efforts
only made Hank tighten his grip.
By the time the others reached her, she
had given up the struggle and stood quietly waiting for the worst to come.
“Good thing you got her, Hank,” Maurice Hale called. “The
little wildcat! We’ll give her a double
dose for this smart trick!
No girl’s going to put anything over on me!”
At the entrance of the cave it was
nearly as bright as day, for the moon was high. Maurice Hale glanced nervously
about, as though fearing observation by unseen eyes.
“Get back inside!” he sharply ordered his
followers. “It’s a clear night and some wise bird might see us without our
costumes and wonder what’s up. We must destroy the evidence as quickly as we
can and clear out of this place!”
Even as the leader spoke, Nancy thought she heard a
rustling in the nearby bushes. She told herself that it probably was only the
wind stirring the leaves. Rescue was out of the question, for no one knew that
she and her friends had planned such a dangerous mission. How foolish of them
not to have revealed their full plans to someone!
Nancy made no protest as she was dragged
back into the cavern. Bravely she tried to meet the eyes of her friends, for
she saw that they were even more discouraged than she. Poor Bess was trembling
with fright.
“Th-the perfume did it!” she wailed. “I knew this
masquerade was far too dangerous for us to try!”
“Cheer up,” Nancy
whispered encouragingly. “We’ll find some way to get out
of here!”
Bess only shook her head. She was not to
be deceived.
“And to think I
was the one who couldn’t wait for a spooky adventure on the hillside,”
George moaned regretfully. “I really ought to have my head examined!”
The members of the syndicate were furious. There
would be no second opportunity for these intruders to break away. At an order from the leader, Al Snead found several pieces of
rope and bound Nancy and her friends hand and foot. He seemed to take particular delight in making
Nancy’s bonds cruelly tight.
“I guess that’ll hold you for a while.”
He grinned, gloating over the girls’ predicament.
“Get to work!”
the leader commanded his men impatiently. “Do you think we
have the rest of the night? If we don’t hurry up and get out of here, the cops
are apt to be down on us! Don’t know what this
girl’s done.”
All colony members, except Mrs. Hale,
went to work with a will; the fear of the law obviously had affected them. With
a sinking heart, Nancy realized the men planned to destroy all the evidence of
their counterfeiting operations.
“The
machines that we can’t take with us well wreck,”
Maurice Hale ordered. “If we save the plates we can start up again
in a new place. Get a move on!”
He stood over the men, driving them furiously. His wife had slumped down in
a chair and had buried her face in her hands. She appeared crushed. Only once
did she summon her energy to speak.
“Maurice,” she murmured brokenly, “why won’t you give up this
dreadful life
—always
running from the police? We were happy before
you got mixed up with such bad company.”
Her husband cut her short with a sarcastic remark.
She did not try to speak again, but sat hunched over, looking sorrowfully at
the girls. Nancy knew that she wanted to help them, but did not have the
courage for further defiance.
The work of destroying the
counterfeiting machinery went on, but several times Maurice Hale glanced
impatiently at his watch.
“No use waiting
until we’re through
here,” he observed
after a time. “Let’s get
the prisoners out of here pronto. The sooner we’re rid of them, the safer I’ll feel.
Al, you start on ahead with one of the automobiles. You know the way to the shack, don’t you?”
“Sure,” Al Snead agreed promptly.
“Then take Hank along to keep guard and
get going!”
Nancy and her chums were jerked to their feet. The
cords around their ankles were
removed to permit them to walk, but their arms were kept tied securely behind them.
“Move along!” Al Snead ordered Nancy, giving
her a hard shove forward.
The girls stumbled
along through the dark passageway from the inner room to the mouth of the cave. Men and women
followed them with angry, menacing
threats.
Al and Hank pushed the girls to make
them hurry. Nancy and her friends exchanged hopeless glances from time to time.
George held her head up contemptuously, but Joanne was white as a sheet and
Bess was on the verge of tears.
“Guess this’ll teach you girls to mix with the Black Snake Colony!” a raucous
voice said as the group made its way toward the exit.
Nancy held back a retort, but her icy
look told the man she did not appreciate
the remark. Their walk seemed interminable. Finally, however,
moonlight could be seen. In a moment they were approaching the mouth of the cave.
Nancy took a few halting steps and then
paused as if she had turned to stone. Her eyes were riveted upon the entrance.
There stood Mr. Abbott’s son, Karl jr.!
“Oh, Karl!” Nancy cried out. “These men are
counterfeiters! Don’t let them capture you tool Run!”
CHAPTER XX
A Final Hunch
KARL ABBOTT did not run. Instead, he
signaled with his hand. At once seven
armed men sprang from the darkness of nearby
bushes.
“Secret Service agents,” Karl explained
quickly to the girls.
“Stand where you are! Don’t anyone move!” ordered
one of the federal men.
So unexpected was their arrival that the
counterfeiters were stunned. For an instant no one moved. Then, with a cry of
rage, Maurice Hale darted into the cavern. He had taken only a few steps when one of the other agents grabbed
him, firmly by one arm.
“None of that! We have you right this
time, Hale. You won’t try any funny stuff with Uncle Sam again!”
Some of the counterfeiters who had not
yet come from the cavern had turned back,
172 THE SECRET OF RED GATE FARM
“They’ll get away through
the other exit!”
Nancy cried out. Karl smiled. “We have that covered too.”
He now introduced the four girls to Secret Service
Agent Horton who was in charge of the group. The federal man gave Nancy Drew a
quick word of praise for revealing the headquarters of the counterfeiting ring.
“Outwitted—by that snooping kid!” Maurice Hale
screamed.
The thought seemed to unnerve the man completely. He did not protest when
handcuffs were put on his wrists. Other members of the syndicate submitted to
the agents without resistance, although Yvonne
Wong vehemently protested her
innocence.
“I didn’t know what it was all about until
tonight,” she cried angrily. “It isn’t fair to arrest me! I’ve worked for Mr.
Snead only a few days—”
“You’ll have to think up a better story than
that!” she was told bluntly. “Your name has been mixed up in underhanded
deals before, but this is the first time
we’ve been able to get any evidence
against you.”
While the prisoners were being rounded up, Karl
Abbott rushed over to the girls and quickly freed their hands.
“Are you all right?” he asked anxiously.
“Yes,” Nancy told him, “but if you hadn’t
arrived just when you did, it might have been a different story!”
She was on the verge of asking what had
brought him to the cave at the psychological moment when she saw that two
federal agents were placing handcuffs on the wrists of Maurice Hale’s wife. Breaking away from her friends,
Nancy darted to the other side of the room.
“Oh, don’t arrest
Mrs. Hale,” she pleaded. “She isn’t like the rest. She tried to
save us, but they wouldn’t listen to her.”
“Sorry,” Horton returned, “but we’ll have to take
her along. If you want to intercede for her later, we may be able to have her
sentence lightened.”
After the prisoners had been herded out
of the cave to waiting government automobiles and the printing plates used in
the making of the counterfeit bills had been collected, Nancy felt explanations
were in order from Karl.
“How did you know we had come here?”
Nancy asked him.
“From Mrs. Byrd. She was greatly worried.
When I came to see Father tonight she told me that after you’d gone
she found evidence of your costume making. She
confided in me you might have done just what you did. She asked me to try
and stop you.”
“Yes. Go on,” Nancy urged.
“Well, I’ve been suspicious of this hillside
ceremony stuff, and after talking further with Mrs. Byrd, I decided to get in touch with the Secret
Service men she said
you had told her about.
They couldn’t come, but the chief agent in this area
sent some of his other men.”
“How
marvelous of you to have put two and two together!” Bess exclaimed. “By the time we all got here,” Karl went on, “no one was around. I sneaked
inside
just as all of you were coming out. Mr. Horton thought you girls would
not be harmed if you walked outside
before the gang was captured.” “Thanks for that,” said
George. “I’ve had enough!”
Just then Secret
Service Agent Horton
came over to Nancy’s
group and
extended his hand to her. “Miss Drew,” he said earnestly, “I
want to thank you for your work which has resulted in the solution
of one of the most baffling cases of counterfeiting the United States
Government has ever had. How did you do it?”
Nancy blushed at the praise. “It was
sort of a chain reaction, I guess,” the young sleuth replied, and told of the
various circumstances that had led to tonight’s adventure.
When she finished, the agent shook his
head in amazement. “You cracked a code this gang had thought was unbreakable.
My congratulations.”
It was late when the four girls,
escorted by Karl Abbott, left the cave. As they neared the farmhouse, Joanne observed
that the lights were on. “I hope Gram hasn’t been too worried.”
Before the girls reached the porch, Mrs.
Byrd came hurrying toward them.
She clung tightly to Joanne for an instant.
“I’m so glad you’re back,” she murmured in relief.
“And you girls are all right. I was terribly afraid those members of the Black
Snake Colony—”
She was interrupted by Mrs. Salisbury’s voice from the dark porch. “You had us so worried we couldn’t go to
bed. The idea of girls running around the country at this hour! That nature
cult is all foolishness, anyway!”
“Absolutely!” Mr. Abbott
agreed. “The less you meddle
with their affairs,
the wiser you’ll be!”
“You’re wrong this time, Father,” Karl
Jr. announced. “If the girls hadn’t meddled, those counterfeiters would have
operated indefinitely.”
“Counterfeiters!” the two boarders and
Mrs. Byrd exclaimed together.
They were tense as Karl Jr. related everything that
had happened. In fact, it was not until the next day that Mrs. Salisbury
recovered from the shock sufficiently to boast:
“Well, I always said those girls were up
and coming!”
Mr. Abbott was very proud of the part his son had played in the case, and said
so several times.
Mrs. Byrd had nothing except praise for Nancy and
her friends. “And who would think,” she said incredulously, “that Bess’s
innocent purchase of a bottle of perfume would lead you girls to a mystery
right here at Red Gate Farm!”
However, the removal of the Black Snake
Colony from her property left her a
serious financial problem. “I’m glad
they’re gone,” she said, “but I’ll miss the money. I can’t hope to rent the land again. It isn’t fertile
enough for farming.
All this talk about counterfeiters is apt to give Red Gate a bad name,
too. I’ll probably lose those other boarders who were coming!”
“Publicity is a queer thing,” Nancy said
thoughtfully. “Sometimes one can work it to one’s
advantage. That’s what we’ll
do now.”
“How?” Joanne asked.
“We’ll advertise that counterfeiters’ cavern to
sightseers and make enough money to lift a dozen mortgages!”
The others were enthusiastic. During the
next week the girls, with Karl Jr.’s assistance, placed in the cave for public
display an imitation setup of the counterfeiting operation. There were several
old printing presses, and some dummy figures arranged before them as if “at
work.” Scattered about the cave floor were stacks of homemade “money”—to
represent counterfeit bills.
The following week Mr. Drew came to Red Gate Farm. A few miles away he halted his automobile at the side of the road, and with an amused smile studied a large billboard which read:
Follow the arrow to Red Gate Farm! See the mysterious
cavern used by counterfeiters! Admission fifty cents.
As Carson Drew continued slowly in his
car, he presently came to another sign, bolder than the first:
Regain health at Red Gate Farm.
Boarders by Day or Week.
The traffic was unusually heavy, and the lawyer
soon realized that all of the cars were headed for the farm. The place was
crowded. He parked as near the house as he could and walked up the path. The
grounds were well kept and equipped with swings and huge umbrellas. A number of
persons, evidently boarders, were enjoying the garden.
Before Carson Drew had reached
the front door, it was flung
open, and Nancy rushed to meet him. “Dad!” she cried joyfully. “Isn’t
this wonderful?”
“You’ve done a magnificent job, Nancy.”
After a hearty dinner Nancy and her friends took Mr. Drew to the hillside cave. Reuben
Ames, looking most unlike himself
in a new suit which was a trifle
too tight, was in his glory as he conducted groups of visitors
through the cavern.
“I’ve collected thirty dollars already today,” he hailed Nancy as she came up
with her friends.
“This beats plowin’ corn.”
Bess grinned.
“Didn’t I always say that adventure follows Nancy Drew around?”
And Bess was right, for another exciting
adventure awaited her courageous friend, who very soon was to become involved
in The Clue in the Diary.
Mr. Drew
laughed. “Nancy,” he said, “as I think of your adventure at Red Gate Farm I
can’t decide whether you’re better as a detective or as a promoter!”
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