The hidden staircase

By Carolyn Keene

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Title: The hidden staircase

Author: Carolyn Keene

Illustrator: Russell H. Tandy

Release date: January 1, 2026 [eBook #77602]

Language: English

Original publication: New York, NY: Grosset & Dunlap, 1930

Credits: Alex White, Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan & the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net. This file was produced from images generously made available by Internet Archive/India.


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIDDEN STAIRCASE ***




                      =NANCY DREW MYSTERY STORIES=

                               THE HIDDEN
                               STAIRCASE

                                   BY
                             CAROLYN KEENE

                            _ILLUSTRATED BY_
                            RUSSELL H. TANDY

                                NEW YORK
                            GROSSET & DUNLAP
                               PUBLISHERS




                          Copyright, 1930, by
                         GROSSET & DUNLAP, INC.




[Illustration: “AND THAT ISN’T THE WORST—LOOK UP THERE!”]




                                CONTENTS


                CHAPTER                              PAGE
                      I A RUDE VISITOR                  1
                     II A WARNING OF TROUBLE            8
                    III INTERESTING INFORMATION        14
                     IV A SECOND CALL                  23
                      V STRANGE HAPPENINGS             31
                     VI THE GHOST CALLS AGAIN          40
                    VII WHAT CAN IT MEAN?              49
                   VIII THE WARNING                    56
                     IX THE ANONYMOUS MESSAGE          63
                      X AN UNFRUITFUL SEARCH           71
                     XI A CRY IN THE NIGHT             80
                    XII THE THEFT                      86
                   XIII ANOTHER SURPRISE               95
                    XIV WHAT HAPPENED TO CARSON DREW  103
                     XV A PRISONER                    111
                    XVI A NEW CLUE                    119
                   XVII UNDER COVER OF DARKNESS       127
                  XVIII INSIDE THE OTHER HOUSE        134
                    XIX A CHANCE DISCOVERY            144
                     XX THE UNDERGROUND PASSAGE       151
                    XXI THE END OF THE PASSAGE        160
                   XXII THE NEXT MOVE                 166
                  XXIII NOTIFYING THE POLICE          178
                   XXIV NANCY LEADS THE WAY           185
                    XXV CAPTURED                      195




                               CHAPTER I
                             A Rude Visitor


“I declare, I don’t know what makes me so nervous this afternoon! I have
the strangest feeling—just as though something were about to happen.”

As Nancy Drew expressed the thought aloud, she tossed aside a book she
had been trying to read and restlessly crossed the living room to glance
out of the window. She was alone in the big house, for her father,
Carson Drew, had been called out of the city on an important law case
and Hannah Gruen, the housekeeper, had taken her day off.

Usually, Nancy enjoyed a book, but on this particular afternoon she had
been unable to interest herself in anything. For no apparent reason she
felt nervous and uneasy.

As she stood at the window, her eyes rested for a moment upon an
old-fashioned mantel clock above the fireplace. The timepiece aroused
pleasant memories, for it had been given to her as a reward for her
service in solving a baffling mystery. Nancy smiled.

“I know what’s the matter with me,” she told herself. “I’m aching for
another adventure. That’s all the good it will do me, too!”

With a sigh of resignation, she again settled herself in a comfortable
chair and took up her book. She had read scarcely a page when her
attention was attracted by the sound of a heavy step on the front
veranda.

The doorbell rang sharply. There was an electric something about the
ring which was arresting, startling. Before Nancy could get up from the
chair, the bell rang a second time.

She dropped her book and hurried to the door. Opening it, she stood face
to face with a man she had never seen before.

He was unusually tall and thin with spindling legs which gave him the
appearance of a towering scarecrow. The illusion was heightened by his
clothing, which was ill-fitting and several seasons out of style. Nancy
could not help but notice several grease spots on his coat. However, it
was not the man’s clothing or miserly appearance which repulsed her, but
rather his unpleasant face. He had sharp, piercing eyes which seemed to
bore into her.

Nancy was permitted but an instant to appraise her visitor, for as she
opened the door he stepped inside without waiting for an invitation.
This rude action somewhat nonplused her, but she was too polite to show
her displeasure.

“I am Nathan Gombet of Cliffwood,” the man told her bluntly. “I want to
see Carson Drew.”

“My father isn’t here now,” Nancy explained quietly.

“Where is he?”

Nancy did not like the brusque way Nathan Gombet had of asking
questions, but she answered him politely.

“Out of town on business.”

“But I must see him.”

“I’m very sorry,” Nancy returned patiently, “but it is impossible. He
won’t be back until late this evening. If you will come back
to-morrow——”

“To-morrow won’t do. I want to see him now,” he demanded.

“Can’t you understand that my father is out of town?” Nancy asked a
trifle tartly, for she was beginning to be irritated. “If you want to
leave a message, I’ll give it to him as soon as he comes in.”

“I don’t want to leave a message. I came after those papers. Did your
father leave them for me?”

“I don’t know what papers you mean.”

“Oh, you don’t, eh? Well, your father knows all right. Just ask him
about Nathan Gombet’s property rights on the river and he’ll tell you
all about the nasty deal he and his friends tried to slip over on me!”

“What are you talking about?” Nancy demanded sharply. “Have you lost
your senses?”

“I’ve just come to ’em, that’s what I’ve done. Maybe you don’t know
about it, but I own some property down along the river. Your father
induced me to sell a piece of it at a ridiculously low figure. The land
is worth several times what he paid me for it. I’m not going to let
anyone put over a raw deal like that. I want the deed back or my price,
and Carson Drew is going to give it to me, too!”

“You don’t know what you are saying,” Nancy said icily. “My father
wouldn’t cheat anyone out of a cent.”

“Oh, no!” Nathan exclaimed sarcastically. “I suppose he’s in business
for his health!”

“He’s not in the business of taking what doesn’t belong to him—that’s
certain!” Nancy retorted hotly. “If you have anything coming to you I’m
sure it will be turned over to you just as soon as my father returns.”

“Just as soon as he returns—that’s good,” Nathan sneered. “Like as not
he’s hiding somewhere in the house this very minute.”

“How dare you insinuate such a thing?” Nancy cried angrily. “I’m alone
in the house.”

The instant she had divulged the information, she could have bitten her
tongue.

“Alone, eh? Well, maybe I was mistaken about your father being here, but
it’s the truth I’ve been telling you about those papers. He cheated me
out of a pile of money.”

“It isn’t the truth, and you know it! I’ve listened to you just as long
as I intend to. You ought to be ashamed to come here and say such
insulting things about my father. Now I wish you’d go!”

“I’ll not stir until I get my papers!”

“I’ve told you I don’t know a thing about your old papers.”

“They’re here some place. I know they’re in the house.”

“Will you kindly leave?”

“Just try to put me out if you think you can!” Nathan Gombet said, with
an unpleasant leer. “You know more about those papers than you let on.”

“You’re crazy!” Nancy snapped. She was so exasperated that she could not
keep her temper in check.

Nathan Gombet’s eyes narrowed to mere slits and a cruel look came over
his face.

“Get those papers for me!” he commanded harshly.

Nancy was aware that her father sometimes kept valuable papers in his
desk, but she had no intention of handing over any of them to this man.
She had never heard her father mention the documents in question, but
she had no doubt that Gombet was trying to get something which did not
belong to him. Although frightened at the man’s strange conduct, she
faced him boldly.

“I’ll not give you anything! Now get out of here!”

“All right, if you’ll not hand over the papers, I’ll just have a look
around for myself.”

A crafty look had come into the man’s eyes. As he spoke, he moved toward
the study which adjoined the living room. From where he had been
standing, Carson Drew’s desk was in plain sight.

“Don’t you dare go in there!” Nancy cried indignantly.

“Oh, so that’s where the papers are? I thought as much!”

A half dozen long strides took Nathan Gombet across the room and into
the study. Reaching the desk he jerked open a drawer and began pawing
through it.

“Stop that!” Angrily, Nancy grasped the man by the coat and pulled him
away from the desk. “You get out of here or I’ll call the police!”

With one vicious jerk, Nathan Gombet freed himself and wheeled upon her.
His face was convulsed with rage and Nancy saw that he was desperate.

Instinctively, she threw up her hands to ward off a blow.




                               CHAPTER II
                          A Warning of Trouble


Nathan Gombet did not strike Nancy Drew, although for an instant it
appeared that he intended to do so. He remained motionless, regarding
her with a hatred he made no effort to conceal. His face was distorted
and he stood in a half-crouched position, like an animal about to pounce
upon its prey.

Nancy knew that she must act quickly, for she saw the man was beside
himself with rage. Unless she handed over the papers he demanded, she
did not doubt but that he would attempt to do her bodily injury. She
must depend upon her own wits to save her, for there was no one within
calling distance. If only she could reach the telephone!

As the thought came to her, her eyes rested for a moment on the
instrument. Nathan Gombet saw the look and understood that she intended
to carry out her threat to telephone the authorities. His lips parted in
an ugly snarl.

“Call the police, will you? Oh, no, my little lady, you won’t do that!”

He made a vicious lunge for her, but she was too quick for him. As he
reached out to grab her, she stepped to one side and, neatly eluding his
clawlike hands, placed the table between them. She caught up the
telephone receiver.

Gombet saw that Nancy Drew was not to be bluffed and instantly a change
came over him. The look of anger on his face changed to one of genuine
fear.

“Don’t telephone,” he begged almost childishly. “I’ll go.”

Nancy hesitated, undecided in her course. She had no wish to start a
scandal in River Heights by calling the attention of the police to the
threats the man had made, for she realized that the resulting publicity
might not do her father any good. Yet she wondered if she could trust
the man to keep his word.

“All right, then, go,” she said curtly, without relinquishing her hold
on the telephone. “I’ll give you twenty seconds to get out of here! If I
see you hanging around the house I’ll call the police!”

Hastily, Nathan Gombet picked up his hat and with a last glance toward
Carson Drew’s desk, turned to leave. Nancy followed him from the study,
watching him closely lest he try to work a trick upon her.

In the doorway, the man paused and looked back.

“I’ll have my rights before I get through,” he muttered. “Your father
ain’t seen the last o’ this, not by a jugful!”

Slamming the door behind him, he tramped across the porch and was gone.
From the living room window Nancy watched him until he disappeared
beyond the corner.

“I almost wish I’d called the police,” she thought. “The idea of saying
the things he did about Dad! He thought he could scare me into giving
him those papers!”

The encounter had disturbed her considerably, for she realized that in
Nathan Gombet her father could have a troublesome enemy. She was
convinced that the man was without scruples. Unquestionably, his
accusations were entirely false, but if he spread his story about River
Heights, undiscerning persons might accept it as fact.

As former district attorney at River Heights, a city in the Middle West,
Carson Drew had built up an enviable reputation for himself, but the
character of his work was such that he had made enemies as well as
staunch friends. Those whom he had antagonized were ever on the lookout
for an opportunity to undermine the reputation he had made for himself.
So far, Carson Drew had more than held his own against unscrupulous
persons, for he was known as a “fighter.”

Nancy was Carson Drew’s only child, but, though she had been indulged,
she had never been spoiled. She was an unusually pretty girl, fair of
skin with friendly blue eyes and golden curly hair. Her friends declared
that she was as clever as she was attractive.

Since the death of her mother a number of years before, Nancy had found
it necessary to be resourceful and efficient. Not only had she assumed
the management of the Drew household, but she took a keen interest in
her father’s law cases, especially those which smacked of mystery. She
had been present at a number of interviews with noted detectives, and
her father declared she had a natural talent for digging into
interesting cases.

Only the summer before, she had taken it upon her own slender shoulders
to solve a mystery which had baffled capable lawyers. When no one could
locate Josiah Crowley’s missing will, Nancy, in an effort to aid Abigail
Rowen and Allie and Grace Horner, had taken over the task herself. Her
thrilling adventures, which included an encounter with robbers, are told
in that first volume of this series, entitled, “The Secret of the Old
Clock.”

Of late, Nancy Drew had longed for another exciting experience which
would give her an opportunity to use her wits, little dreaming of what
was in store for her.

Yet, as she turned slowly away from the window after watching Nathan
Gombet vanish down the street, she had a certain premonition of trouble
ahead.

“If I hadn’t threatened to call the police, that man would have injured
me,” she thought. “I do wish father were here. I want to tell him about
Nathan Gombet and the threat he made. It wouldn’t surprise me if he
should try to make trouble.”

Nancy was indeed disturbed. Never for an instant did she credit any of
the statements the man had made, but from his appearance and actions,
she was inclined to believe that he would stoop to anything in order to
gain his end.

“He has some dishonest scheme up his sleeve,” she assured herself. “Dad
will explain everything when he comes home.”

Try as she would, she could not forget the unpleasant interview. Her
afternoon was completely ruined. In vain she tried to read. After a time
she busied herself with some sewing, but had to rip nearly everything
out.

“It’s no use,” she sighed. “I can’t keep my mind on what I’m doing. I
wish someone would come home. This house is getting on my nerves!”

Glancing at the clock, Nancy saw that it was only four o’clock. Hannah
would not return for at least an hour, and she could not expect her
father until late that evening. Folding up her sewing, she arose and
crossed over to the desk. She regarded it speculatively.

“Gombet said it was a deed he wanted,” she told herself. “If it’s
actually here I think I’d better find it and put it in the safe.”

She seated herself before the desk and, opening a drawer, began to go
over the papers carefully. As she examined the first document she picked
up, there came a sharp ring of the doorbell.

So unexpected was the noise that Nancy started. What could it mean? Had
Nathan Gombet returned to make more trouble?

Quickly thrusting the papers back into the desk, she closed down the top
and locked it.

Then she made her way resolutely to the front door.




                              CHAPTER III
                        Interesting Information


Nancy Drew swung open the heavy oak door, fully expecting to see Nathan
Gombet on the veranda. She had braced herself for another unpleasant
ordeal, but when she saw that her fears were groundless, her face
relaxed into a pleased smile.

“Allie Horner!” she exclaimed enthusiastically. “What a scare you gave
me!”

“Meaning that I look a fright?” Allie bantered.

“Mercy, no! I can’t remember that I ever saw you looking better in your
life.”

The compliment was a sincere one. In the last few months plenty of good
food and freedom from worry had done wonders for Allie. She had grown
becomingly plump and there were roses in her cheeks. Her eyes were
bright and she seemed to have an overabundance of vitality.

Nancy could remember the day when she first met Allie Horner and her
sister, Grace. They lived on a farm along the River Road and at the time
were undernourished and beset with financial worries. Through Nancy’s
efforts, the girls had come into an inheritance, and their troubles had
vanished. They still resided on the River Road, but they had used a
portion of their income to modernize the place, with the result that it
was considered a model farm.

“Do come into the living room, Allie,” Nancy urged cordially. “It’s been
months since I saw you last.”

“Grace and I don’t get to town very often.”

“Too busy, I suppose. But I’m so glad you came to-day. I’ve been
lonesome for someone to talk with.”

“I can’t stay very long, Nancy. I dropped in to give you a little
present.”

“A present?”

“Yes, it’s not much of a gift, I’m afraid,” Allie smiled apologetically
as she thrust two packages into Nancy’s hands. “Just a chicken for your
Sunday dinner and two dozen eggs.”

“Why, that’s a fine gift, Allie! You’re never sure of getting fresh eggs
when you buy them at the grocery store—you have to take the fresh part
on trust. And sometimes your trust is betrayed.”

“I think you’ll find these eggs fresh. I gathered them this morning.”

After thanking Allie for the gift, Nancy carried the chicken and the
eggs to the kitchen and placed them in the electrical refrigerator.
Returning to the living room, she pulled her chair up close to Allie’s,
and the two girls settled themselves for a chat.

“Tell me about everything,” Nancy commanded. “How is your sister?”

“Oh, Grace is fine, and fairly rolling in wealth,” Allie declared
proudly. “She wanted to come with me this afternoon, but she couldn’t
take the time from her work. Dressmaking has picked up tremendously and
she has more orders than she can fill. You should see her new electric
sewing machine.”

“I suppose you’ve made a great many changes since I last visited your
place?”

“Oh, yes. We get a big kick out of landscaping everything. We’ve even
gone in for grand names—we call our place the chicken ranch now. I’ve
had wonderful luck with my Leghorns, and I intend to double my flock
next year.”

As Allie spoke, her eyes came to rest upon the old-fashioned mantel
clock.

“Every time I see that old clock I think of how much you did for all of
us,” she said quietly to Nancy. “I wish you would permit Grace and me to
give you a more suitable reward.”

“But the clock is all I want, really it is,” Nancy protested.

“You’re the strangest girl I ever knew,” Allie sighed. “Oh, well, I know
it won’t do any good to urge you, so I’ll drop the matter. Tell me about
yourself.”

“There’s nothing to tell.”

“Then you’re not involved in any more mysteries?”

“Not so far as I know,” Nancy laughed. Then the smile faded from her
face and she regarded Allie seriously. “Still, an odd thing did happen
this afternoon, just a few minutes before you arrived.”

“Tell me about it.”

“Well, a strange man came to the door and asked to see my father. When I
told him Dad was out of town on important business he didn’t believe me.
He ranted a lot about his ‘property rights on the river,’ whatever that
may mean. He claimed that he had been cheated out of some money. If I
hadn’t threatened to call the police he would have gone through
everything in Dad’s desk.”

“You have no idea who the man was?”

“I never saw him before, but he gave his name as Nathan Gombet.”

“Nathan Gombet?”

“Yes, do you know him?”

“Well, rather! He used to buy eggs and chickens from me until I told him
not to come back any more. He’s a regular miser, if ever there was one.
He has a home over in Cliffwood.”

“I suspected he was a miser from his appearance.”

“You can’t trust him out of your sight. One day after I had sold him
five dozen eggs I turned my back for a minute and he tried to slip an
extra dozen into the crate!”

“He claims my father cheated him out of his property rights.”

Allie laughed shortly.

“Knowing Nathan as I do, I’d be quicker to think he was trying to cheat
your father. What property does he mean?”

“I don’t know anything about it except that it’s along the river.”

“It must be the property that was condemned for the railroad bridge,”
Allie suggested.

“Did the bridge go up on Gombet’s land?”

“As I recall it, he sold a strip of land on either side of the river.
Then after the bridge went up he claimed the railroad had built over its
boundary line.”

“Why didn’t he find that out before the bridge was finished?”

“Oh, no one believes his claim, Nancy. The land was carefully surveyed,
you know. It’s my personal opinion Nathan Gombet isn’t perfectly right
in his mind.”

“You mean he’s——”

“Oh, I wouldn’t go so far as to say he’s crazy, Nancy; but he’s money
mad. It’s an obsession with him that someone is trying to cheat him out
of something. He went nearly daffy when the bridge went up. He even
threatened he’d blow it up if they didn’t pay him his price.”

“He ought to be arrested. It’s dangerous to have him at large.”

“Yes, I think so myself. Of course it’s only a rumor about his threat to
blow up the bridge, but I believe he said it all right.”

“So do I, after the way he acted this afternoon. He’ll bear watching.”

Allie nodded soberly.

“You’re going to tell your father, aren’t you?” Allie queried.

“Oh, yes, just as soon as he gets home.”

The girls talked for some time and then Allie Horner announced that she
must leave.

“I have a notion to ride out into the country with you and hike back,”
Nancy told her. “Father won’t be back for several hours yet and I’m
tired of sitting here in the house with nothing to do.”

“I wish you would come with me,” Allie urged.

“All right. Wait until I get my hiking boots and I’ll do it!”

Nancy left the room and soon returned dressed for hiking. After locking
the doors and windows, she left the house with Allie.

“How do you like our new automobile?” Allie demanded, as she paused in
front of a roadster which was parked at the curbing. “Grace and I bought
it last week.”

“It’s a beauty,” Nancy replied. “You didn’t tell me about that.”

“I intended to, but we got to talking about Nathan Gombet and I forgot.”

The two girls sprang into the roadster and Allie took the wheel. She
drove rather slowly, for as yet she was not perfectly familiar with the
various controls.

When they came to the Muskoka River Nancy thanked Allie for the ride,
and expressed the intention of hiking back.

“If I walk right along, I’ll get home before dark,” she assured Allie,
as she stepped from the roadster.

Nancy Drew watched Allie out of sight, and then struck off at a brisk
pace along the river.

“A walk will do me good,” she told herself. “It may help me get rid of
my nervousness.”

Although the day was warm, there was a cool breeze blowing along the
river, and Nancy found the air invigorating. She swung blithely along,
pausing occasionally to skip a tiny stone out into the water or to watch
a school of minnows in the shallows near shore.

After a time, the path led through thick bushes and tall trees. When she
emerged into the clearing again she saw, less than three hundred yards
ahead of her, a gigantic arc of iron and steel that stretched across the
Muskoka River. It was the first time Nancy had ever seen the new
railroad bridge at close range and she gave a cry of interest.

Hurrying on, she climbed over a fence which marked the boundary of the
railroad right of way and came to the tracks. There she paused and
surveyed the bridge with awe.

“It must have cost a mint of money,” she thought.

As she was considering the remarkable engineering feat which the bridge
represented, a shrill locomotive whistle caused her to wheel about. The
block signal was down and she knew a train was approaching from the
west.

She moved hastily to a safe distance from the tracks. With a fascination
which was tinged with horror, she watched a long, heavy eastbound flyer
as it roared around the bend and like a mighty monster charged down upon
the railroad bridge.

“What if Nathan Gombet dared to carry out his threat?” she asked
herself, with a shudder.

Even after the flyer had clattered safely across the bridge and had
vanished in a cloud of smoke, Nancy could not shake off the uneasy
feeling which had taken possession of her.

Now that she had viewed the bridge, she had a graphic picture in her
mind of the damage Gombet could accomplish if he were so inclined. As
she turned away and walked slowly on toward her home, she lost herself
in sober reflection.

“Nathan Gombet is a dangerous man, that’s certain,” she told herself.
“If only there were some way to put him behind prison bars before he
harms anyone!”




                               CHAPTER IV
                             A Second Call


It was nearly six o’clock when Nancy Drew reached home after her long
tramp. She ate dinner and then waited impatiently for the arrival of her
father on the evening train. At last she heard his step on the veranda
and ran to meet him.

“Well, Nancy, how did you make out while I was gone?” Carson Drew asked,
as he dropped his brief case on the table. “Everything go all right?”

“Oh, Dad, the meanest old man came to see you.”

Quickly, Nancy poured out the story of her encounter with Nathan Gombet.
Her father listened gravely until she had finished.

“So he came here to bother you, did he? I’m sorry you’ve worried so much
about it. Next time don’t let him in.”

“But, Dad, there’s nothing to what he says, is there? You don’t owe him
any money?”

“Not a cent, Nancy.”

“That’s what I thought. But why did he make such a fuss?”

“Because he’s a natural trouble-maker, I guess. You see, some time ago
Gombet’s land was condemned for the railroad right of way. I was on the
land commission and I saw to it that Gombet was well paid. He seemed
satisfied with the deal which was made. But after the bridge went up he
began to pester the commission for more money. Claimed that the bridge
had damaged the rest of his property, and I don’t know what all. I
didn’t pay much attention to his claims because they were ridiculous.
He’s only a sorehead.”

“He’s been making some ugly threats, Dad. It’s said he talks about
blowing up the bridge.”

“A man in his right mind wouldn’t go around telling things like that,”
Mr. Drew said, with a troubled frown. “I think I’d better keep an eye on
him.”

“You’ll be careful, won’t you, Dad?” Nancy pleaded. “I’m sure he means
to do you harm.”

“Yes, I’ll be cautious,” Carson Drew promised smilingly. “But I’m not
afraid of Nathan Gombet. I know how to handle him. What worries me is
the way he came here bothering you. If he should ever try to harm
you——”

“Oh, I’ll probably never see him again,” Nancy said lightly. “At least I
hope I never shall.”

As she spoke, her eyes turned toward the window and what she saw caused
them to dilate in horror.

“Oh,” she gasped. “There was someone at the window just then! I saw the
face distinctly! It was Nathan Gombet!”

“You must be mistaken,” Carson Drew protested, as he too glanced toward
the window.

“No, I’m sure of it, Dad. There’s someone on the porch now.”

Even at that moment there came a sharp rap on the door.

“Don’t go,” Nancy whispered. “I know it’s Nathan Gombet and I believe he
means to harm you. He may have a gun.”

“I may as well see him now and get it over with, Nancy. I’ll not have
him snooping around here!”

Resolutely, Carson Drew walked to the front door and flung it open. The
light from the living room revealed Nathan Gombet.

“Well?” Carson Drew demanded. “What do you want here?”

“You know what I want.”

“What you want and what you may get are two entirely different matters.
Come in. I have something to say to you.”

Mr. Drew permitted the man to enter, but did not offer him a chair. He
looked Nathan Gombet straight in the face, but the man could not return
the straightforward gaze. Involuntarily, he lowered his eyes.

“Tell me what you mean by coming here and bothering my daughter?” Mr.
Drew asked curtly.

“I came after my just due.”

“Let me tell you something. If you bother Nancy again I’ll turn you over
to the police. Get that straight!”

“I want my rights.”

“Your rights? What do you mean by rights? You’ve had more now than you
deserve.”

“You cheated me! My land was worth several times what I was paid for it.
Either I want the deed back or I want my price.”

“So you were trying to get the deed when you rumaged in my desk this
afternoon?” Mr. Drew demanded severely. “Well, Nathan Gombet, it won’t
do you a particle of good if you do get your hands on it.”

“What do you mean?”

“It has been recorded.”

“Then I want my price.”

“Why, you’re crazy, man,” Carson Drew snapped, with growing impatience;
“the commission gave you your price once, and an exorbitant one it was,
too! If the railroad hadn’t wanted your land you couldn’t have sold it
for a dime.”

“The railroad had to have my land. I could have had anything I wanted to
ask.”

“You’re mistaken, Mr. Gombet. Charging all the traffic will bear doesn’t
go any more. Anyway, the bridge could have gone across the river at a
point south of your land without costing the railroad a cent more money.
You were lucky that they bought your property at any price.”

“The bridge damaged the rest of my land.”

“Damaged it?” Carson Drew smiled. “In what way?”

“Well, ah—” Nathan Gombet began to stammer. Then he thought of
something. “The trains scare my horses.”

“How many horses have you?”

“Why—er—one.”

“Oh! You have one horses?” Mr. Drew smiled broadly and Nancy could not
hold back a giggle.

“Don’t you dare ridicule me!” Gombet snorted.

“I am not ridiculing you, Mr. Gombet. I am merely trying to bring you to
reason. If I recall correctly, your horse is an old nag that couldn’t
even bat an eye at a train. At all events, your fight is with the
railroad and not with me.”

“You drew up the papers.”

“I was merely acting as an agent.”

“I don’t care what you say. I know you and your scheming friends are
trying to swindle me out of my property!”

“I don’t know how you came by such a silly idea. The land commission is
very fair in all their dealings. What you ask is most unreasonable. As
far as I am concerned, the matter is closed!”

“Not much it ain’t! I was swindled out of ten thousand dollars!”

Carson Drew laughed shortly.

“It is useless for us to talk further, I see. I am convinced you are
trying to work a graft, but you’ve come to the wrong place this time!”

“If you don’t give me my money I’ll——”

“None of your threats!” Mr. Drew cut him off sharply. “Now get out of
here!”

“Give me my money.”

“Not a cent.”

“That’s final?”

“Absolutely.”

Nathan Gombet faced Carson Drew with clenched fists and his features
were distorted by rage. Nancy, who stood a short distance away, was
fearful lest he attack her father. But Mr. Drew showed no signs of
flinching, and Gombet was not overburdened with courage. He preferred to
obtain his ends by underhand methods.

He turned abruptly toward the door, but before he reached it he wheeled
upon Carson Drew again. Nancy thought that he looked like a wild animal
making its last stand.

“Take warning, Carson Drew,” he muttered. “If I don’t get my money, I’ll
do something desperate!”

With that he slammed the door and vanished into the night.

“Oh, Dad, what did he mean by that?” Nancy cried, as soon as the door
had closed behind the man. “I’m afraid he’ll do something
terrible—perhaps blow up the railroad bridge.”

“I don’t believe he’d dare attempt that, Nancy. Nathan Gombet isn’t a
very courageous man.”

“Then he’ll try something underhanded. I know he will!”

“You may be right about that, Nancy. He’s obsessed with an idea, and
there’s no talking him out of it.”

“An idea! I’d call it a mania!”

“Perhaps that’s a better word to describe his state of mind.”

“I’m afraid he’ll try to harm you, Dad.”

“I’m not afraid of him, Nancy.”

“I know you’re not, but he’s a tricky sort of enemy to have. Promise me
you’ll be careful, won’t you?”

“I’ll promise, Nancy. Now, don’t worry about it any more. Nothing will
come of the threat, I am sure.”

Mr. Drew picked up the evening paper and began to read as unconcernedly
as though nothing had happened. Nancy found it impossible to follow her
father’s example. She was dreadfully worried, for she was afraid her
father did not consider Nathan Gombet seriously. Oh, how she did hope he
would be cautious!




                               CHAPTER V
                           Strange Happenings


With the passing days, nothing more was heard of Nathan Gombet, and
Nancy Drew began to grow easier in her mind. After all, his threat had
been nothing more than bluff, she assured herself. Probably she would
never see him again.

But as she became less vigilant, she could not know that Nathan Gombet
was plotting revenge. Happy in her false security, Nancy forgot about
the man and turned her thoughts into more pleasant channels.

“I believe I’ll call on Abigail Rowen this afternoon,” she told her
father one day at the luncheon table. “I haven’t seen her for months and
I’m curious to know how she is getting along.”

“You’ll be back before dark?”

“Oh, yes, I’ll be gone only a few hours.”

As soon as luncheon was over, Nancy backed her blue roadster from the
double garage and set off for Abigail Rowen’s cottage, which was several
miles from River Heights.

Approaching the house, she was pleased to observe that there had been
many changes in the last few months. The former description of the
place, “the worst looking house on the road,” no longer applied.

The cottage had received a fresh coat of white paint and the shutters
were a gay green. The old picket fence had been torn entirely away, as
had the old plank walk which led to the house. In its place there was a
new one of concrete. The yard was well kept, and at the rear of the
cottage Nancy saw a man working in a vegetable garden.

“I hope I’ll find Abigail well,” she thought, as she parked her roadster
and walked toward the house.

She rapped firmly upon the door. As she waited for someone to answer the
knock she could not help but recall the first time she had called upon
Abigail Rowen. The old woman had been confined to her bed with injuries
received from a bad fall, and Nancy had found her in a deplorable
condition. There was little food or money with which to buy it, and
Abigail had firmly refused medical attention because she could not pay
for it.

It was through Nancy’s instigation that she had received her inheritance
from the Crowley estate and she had wisely devoted a portion of the
money to medical service.

Nancy’s thoughts were cut short as the door was opened by an old woman
in a black silk dress. It was Abigail Rowen, and she beamed when she saw
her visitor.

“Well, I declare, if it isn’t Nancy Drew!” she exclaimed, with evident
pleasure. “Do come in and sit a spell.”

“How is your hip now?” Nancy inquired solicitously, as she followed Miss
Rowen.

“It ain’t hurt me for going on two months now. I still limp a bit, but
the doctor says I’ll soon get over that.”

“You’re looking much better than when I saw you last.”

“And I’m feeling better too. Things looked mighty black for a while and
I didn’t much care whether I lived or died. I owe everything to you.”

“Oh, not at all,” Nancy said quickly.

As she entered the living room she saw that Abigail had another visitor.

“Rosemary, we were just speaking about Nancy Drew,” Miss Rowen said by
way of introduction. “Well, here she is. One of the finest girls you
ever set eyes on.” The old woman turned to Nancy. “I want you to meet my
friend, Rosemary Turnbull. She came over from Cliffwood to see me
to-day.”

Graciously, Nancy acknowledged the introduction. Rosemary Turnbull was
an elderly maiden lady, tall and a trifle too thin, but not at all
severe-looking in spite of her clothing. She wore an old-fashioned
dress, long and wide of skirt and high in the neck, but she had a kind
face, and Nancy was instantly attracted to her.

“Nancy is just the girl to help you out of your difficulties, Rosemary,”
Abigail said significantly. “She helped me get my inheritance and I know
she’ll help you if you ask her.”

“Certainly, I’ll help anyone I can,” Nancy agreed pleasantly. “What is
it?”

“Well, I hardly know how to tell you,” Rosemary Turnbull began. She
laughed unsteadily. “It seems I’m living in a haunted house.”

“A haunted house?” Nancy cried.

“Well, of course it isn’t really haunted. I don’t believe in ghosts and
things like that.” She lowered her voice. “But the strangest things have
been happening lately.”

“What sort of things?” Nancy asked, with interest.

“Mostly little things. But after a while they get on your nerves. You
see, I live in an old stone house in Cliffwood——”

“Alone?” Nancy interrupted.

“Oh, no. My twin sister Floretta lives with me. Our house, which is
generally known as The Mansion, was built before civil war time, so you
can imagine how old it is.” She laughed nervously. “A wonderful setting
for a ghost story, isn’t it?”

“Go on,” Nancy begged.

“Floretta and I have lived there for thirty years and we’ve never been
disturbed until recently. Just the last few weeks things have happened
which we can’t explain. We hear strange noises at night.”

“In the attic?”

“Not exactly. We hear sounds in all parts of the house.”

“You’re sure it isn’t mice?”

“Oh, mercy, it couldn’t be mice or rats.” Rosemary was horrified at the
thought. “Floretta and I are very particular about anything like that.
There isn’t a mouse in our house.”

“Tell her about the flies,” Abigail prompted.

“Our house is just filled with them now,” Rosemary declared. “And until
lately we never had them at all. I can’t understand it.”

“So far your trouble doesn’t sound very alarming,” and Nancy smiled.
“Probably there is a screen off some place.”

Rosemary shook her head firmly.

“We thought the same, so we made a thorough inspection. And we’re very
particular to keep the doors and windows closed.”

“Tell her about the shadows,” Abigail encouraged.

“We see strange shadows on the walls,” Rosemary went on. A note of fear
had crept into her voice now.

“What sort of shadows?”

“Floretta thought she saw a human shadow one night. She’s beginning to
think the place is haunted. I don’t put any stock in that theory, but
I’ll admit things are beginning to get on my nerves.”

“That would be enough to get on anyone’s nerves.” Nancy was sympathetic.

“And music! One night only last week I distinctly heard someone playing
on a stringed instrument. It was enough to set my teeth on edge.
Floretta says she’ll be a nervous wreck if she stays in the house
another week. She didn’t want me to leave her alone even for a few hours
this afternoon. She wants me to consent to sell the house.”

“And you don’t wish to do that?”

“No. The Mansion has been in the Turnbull family for decades and you
can’t blame me for not wanting to turn it over to a stranger. I don’t
take much stock in ghosts and the like. I can’t believe the house is
haunted.”

“Tell her about the spoon,” Abigail prompted.

“There isn’t anything particular to tell. One morning we found a silver
spoon missing.”

“Are you sure it couldn’t have been misplaced?” Nancy inquired.

“Floretta and I searched everywhere. We didn’t think so much about it
until we missed the pocketbook.”

“You lost a pocketbook, too?”

“Yes. Only yesterday morning we discovered a purse was missing.”

“This begins to look serious. Was there anything of value in it?”

“Nothing except a little money. Eight dollars and fourteen cents, as I
remember.”

“You keep no servants?”

“Floretta and I have done our own work for years. We have a man to take
care of the yard.”

“How long has he been in your employ?”

“Oh, for eight or ten years. He’s perfectly honest. We know he wouldn’t
touch a thing.”

“Have you noticed any prowlers about the house?” Nancy questioned next.

“No, I’ve seen no one except an old organ grinder, and you couldn’t
class him as a prowler.”

“Still, his monkey might have climbed in a window and taken the
articles,” Nancy suggested.

“I only noticed the organ grinder around two days, and it wasn’t on
those days that we missed things. Anyway, all of the windows are
screened.”

“Then that theory won’t work,” Nancy said, with a troubled frown.

“And it doesn’t explain the strange shadows on the walls at night,”
Rosemary added.

“No. I’m afraid we must look for another explanation.”

“I’m more troubled about the shadows than anything else. It’s getting to
a point where I don’t feel safe to sleep in my own bed. I don’t know
where it will all end. Floretta says she won’t stay in the house another
week if things go on as they have been, and I can’t say that I blame
her. If only something could be done before it’s too late!”

“Nancy will help you,” Abigail Rowen declared confidently.

“You will, won’t you?” Rosemary pleaded.

“I don’t know whether I can or not,” Nancy said doubtfully. “I’m
tremendously interested in your story and I’d like to visit The Mansion
some time.”

“Oh, when can you come?” Rosemary asked eagerly. “The sooner the
better.”

Nancy Drew glanced thoughtfully at the watch on her wrist.

“I have my roadster outside. If you wish, I could drive you to your home
now and stop there before returning to River Heights.”

“Oh, if you only will! Floretta will be so grateful! I don’t like to
give up the house, but things are becoming unbearable. I am sure you can
help us.”

“I’ll do my best to solve the mystery,” Nancy smiled as she arose from
her chair. “But I’m not in the least confident. I have a suspicion that
your ghost isn’t going to be very easy to capture.”




                               CHAPTER VI
                         The Ghost Calls Again


Nancy Drew said good-bye to Abigail Rowen and, after promising to call
again soon, left the cottage with Rosemary Turnbull.

“It’s nice of you to offer to take me to The Mansion,” Rosemary
remarked, as she stepped into the blue roadster. “I came by bus you
know, and it’s a slow, tiresome ride that way. Floretta will be
delighted to see me back home earlier than I had planned.”

“Is your sister inclined to be nervous?”

“Oh, yes. The slightest thing sets her off. She wouldn’t stay at The
Mansion alone at night for anything in the world.”

“I don’t wonder she is nervous. So many strange things have happened
there.”

“Floretta is certain The Mansion is haunted. I keep telling myself I
don’t believe in ghosts, and I don’t—but those shadows!” Rosemary
shuddered. “There’s something uncanny about it.”

From the general conversation Nancy Drew had gathered that Rosemary
Turnbull was not the type of woman to be easily frightened. She was
eager to visit the old stone house, for she felt that she had
encountered a genuine mystery.

“Have you told anyone about the strange happenings?” she inquired
presently.

Rosemary shook her head.

“Only the sheriff, and he just sniffed. Seemed to think someone was
playing a joke on us. To-day I told Abigail Rowen, but otherwise I
haven’t mentioned it to a soul. You see, I thought that if we should
want to sell, the rumor that the house was haunted wouldn’t help the
sale.”

“Hardly,” Nancy replied. “But you don’t wish to sell, do you?”

“Only as a last resort.”

Nancy drove rapidly, for the hour was late and she feared that unless
she hurried she would not reach her home before dark. When at last she
did reach Cliffwood it was nearly dusk.

Rosemary directed her to The Mansion, which was located in an isolated
spot on the outskirts of Cliffwood. Through the tall oak and maple trees
which partially hid the house from the road, Nancy Drew caught her first
glimpse of the place. She was a little startled, for with its two large
turrets at the front, the Turnbull residence was not unlike a ruined
castle.

It was a large, massive structure, built of white stone which, with the
passing of the decades, had blackened and crumbled. Undoubtedly, in
years gone by it had deserved the title of “mansion,” but now it could
boast little of its old glory. With the ebb of the Turnbull fortune, the
house had fallen into decay.

As Nancy drove up the winding driveway she could not help but notice the
ghostlike shadows which the trees, swaying in the breeze, cast on the
stone walls. A feeling of uneasiness came over her, a sensation which
she was at a loss to explain.

“There’s something creepy about the place,” she thought. “As Miss
Rosemary said, it’s a perfect habitat for a ghost.”

Nancy was not superstitious and certainly she did not believe in ghosts,
but it seemed to her that the very air about the old place was
oppressive. Perhaps Rosemary Turnbull had experienced the same
sensation, for she turned her eyes toward the second story.

“I don’t see a light in Floretta’s room,” she observed. “I do hope
nothing has happened while I have been away.”

Nancy stopped the roadster in front of the house and Rosemary alighted.

“You’re coming in, aren’t you?” she inquired hopefully.

Nancy hesitated.

“I intended to, but it’s growing so late. I promised father I’d be home
before dark.”

“It’s only a short way to River Heights from here. Floretta will be
disappointed if you don’t come in for a few minutes at least. I want you
to hear her version of the mystery.”

“I am eager to hear it, too,” Nancy declared, switching off the motor.
“All right, I’ll come in even if it is late. Dad will forgive me this
time.”

Rosemary fitted her latchkey into the lock and opened the heavy front
door.

“We’ve thought it best to keep the house locked the last few weeks,” she
explained.

As Nancy Drew stepped inside she noticed that the entire house had the
appearance of having been built in more opulent times than the present.
The rooms were spacious, especially the living room which was furnished
with old-fashioned Colonial furniture. The walls were adorned with
massive, gold-framed portraits, obviously of ancestors of the Turnbull
line.

As Nancy gazed at the pictures she realized that once the Turnbulls had
been the leading family in Cliffwood. They had been a proud family, but
with Rosemary and Floretta the line would die out. Little remained of a
fortune which had once been large. Rosemary and Floretta, while not
poor, had an income only sufficient for their needs. Yet because they
were the last of the Turnbulls, they were welcome in the best of
society.

“My great great grandfather,” Rosemary commented, indicating one of the
pictures which had attracted Nancy’s interest. “He fought in the
Revolution. I am sure if he were living to-day no ghost would dare
invade The Mansion,” and Rosemary smiled slightly.

Nancy did not reply, for at that moment an elderly lady came hurrying
down the stairway to the living room. In appearance she closely
resembled Rosemary, though she lacked her sister’s firm chin. Nancy knew
at once that it was Floretta. She saw, too, that something had disturbed
the woman, for she was so agitated that she failed to note the presence
of a visitor.

“Oh, Rosemary,” she burst out, “why did you leave me here alone? I knew
something terrible would happen!”

“Floretta, you—you haven’t seen anything?” Rosemary demanded shakily.

“It’s my diamond bar pin! It’s gone!”

“Oh, Floretta, are you sure? Perhaps you misplaced it.”

“No, it’s gone. I’ve looked everywhere. Oh, what shall I do? I can’t
bear to lose it!” Floretta turned and saw Nancy for the first time. She
made a valiant attempt to compose herself. “I beg your pardon,” she said
somewhat stiffly.

Rosemary introduced Nancy Drew and explained that the young girl had
offered to help solve the baffling mystery.

“You’ve come just in time,” Floretta declared. “Oh, if only you can tell
me what became of my bar pin! It was an heirloom. We’ve had it in the
family for years.”

“When did you have it last?” Nancy asked quietly.

“Only this afternoon. I was dressing in my room and was just completing
my toilet when I heard the iceman at the back door. I dropped my bar pin
on the dresser and hurried downstairs to let him into the kitchen.”

“Were you gone long?” Nancy interrupted.

“Only a few minutes. Not more than ten at the most. When I came back my
pin was gone!”

“Are you certain it didn’t drop to the floor, or perhaps fall behind the
dresser?”

“Oh, I’ve looked everywhere!” Floretta sank into a chair and buried her
head in her hands. “I’m just sick about it. I wouldn’t have lost it for
anything in the world.”

Rosemary went to her sister and tried to comfort her.

“We’ll find the pin, Floretta. I’m sure it will turn up somewhere.”

She spoke with confidence but nevertheless turned uneasy eyes upon
Nancy.

“Perhaps a bird flew in at an open window and took the pin,” Nancy
suggested.

“Oh, I’m sure that couldn’t have happened,” Floretta insisted. “But if
you’d like to see the room I’ll be glad to show it to you.”

She led the way up the narrow circular stairs and Nancy and Rosemary
followed. Floretta’s room was in the east wing.

“Is this the top floor?” Nancy questioned.

“The attic is above,” Rosemary responded. She attempted to smile.
“There’s no ghost up there, though. I know, because I looked myself.”

Floretta’s room was small. Nancy noticed that it had only one door which
opened into the hall. There were two windows, both screened.

“I left the pin right here,” Floretta said, indicating the dressing
table. “A bird couldn’t have taken it.”

“I see now,” Nancy said quietly.

She crossed the room and examined the screens carefully. Apparently they
had not been touched, for an accumulation of dust was undisturbed.

“I know someone entered my room while I was talking with the iceman,”
Floretta declared firmly. “Oh, I don’t want to stay in this horrible
house another night!”

“It’s apparent no one entered by means of the windows,” Nancy said
quietly. “Tell me, from where you stood in the kitchen could you see the
stairway?”

“Why, I could have if I had looked, I suppose. The kitchen door was
open.”

“You saw no one go up the stairs?”

“Not a soul. But someone might have entered the house when I had my back
turned.”

“Weren’t the doors locked?”

“Yes, I had forgotten that.”

“And if anyone had gone up those stairs wouldn’t you have heard them?”

“I think I would have,” Floretta admitted. “The stairs are old and they
creak.”

“Then how did the thief get in?” Rosemary cried. “Floretta’s bar pin
couldn’t have walked off by itself!”

“I wish I could tell you what became of the pin, but I can’t,” Nancy
said regretfully. “I’m as puzzled as you are.”

As she spoke she turned and for the first time noticed a closet door.
Was it possible that the thief had entered the house early in the day
and had hidden in the closet, biding an opportune time to snatch the
pin?

Floretta divined Nancy’s thought and a look of horror came over her
face.

“Oh, you don’t suppose someone has been spying upon us?” she demanded
fearfully. “I never once thought of that closet! What if there’s someone
in there now?”

Rosemary laughed nervously.

“Don’t be silly, Floretta.”

However, she eyed the closet door with misgiving and made no effort to
investigate.

“Just to make sure there’s no one inside I’ll have a look,” Nancy
remarked.

She crossed the room and paused before the closet door. Hesitating only
an instant, she jerked it open.




                              CHAPTER VII
                           What Can It Mean!


“Empty!” Nancy Drew announced, as she flung open the closet door and
looked carefully inside. “There’s no one here now, at least!”

Floretta, who had been clinging to her sister, relaxed her hold, but
continued to gaze uneasily about the bedroom as though expecting to find
the thief in plain sight.

“I’m afraid it’s a case for the police,” Nancy said thoughtfully.

“Oh, we don’t want to call them,” Rosemary protested quickly. “They will
only laugh.”

“We talked to them once about strange things that have been going on
here, and they weren’t interested. They seemed to think someone was
trying to play a joke on us, and they didn’t even send a man to
investigate,” Floretta added.

“If only you will take the case, Miss Drew,” Rosemary begged, “we’ll be
glad to pay you well for your work.”

“But I’m not a detective,” Nancy protested

“We heard about the clever way you helped the Horner girls and Abigail
Rowen. Surely, you can help us. We need help so desperately.”

“I’ll be glad to do anything I can,” Nancy promised willingly. “But of
course I’ll not take money.”

“But it wouldn’t be fair of us to ask you——”

“I am really tremendously interested in the mystery. I’ll have a lot of
fun trying to solve it. Whether I can do it or not is another matter.
There really are no clues with which to start. If I could spend a night
or so here——”

“You’re more than welcome to come and visit us if you will,” Rosemary
told her.

“But you come at your own risk,” Floretta added.

“I’ll talk with father this evening and ask him if I may come,” Nancy
promised.

“How will you notify us?” Floretta asked. “We have no telephone.”

“Oh, I’ll send a note. I think it wise not to advertise the real purpose
of my visit.”

“A good idea,” Rosemary agreed. “Floretta and I will take care not to
mention it to anyone.”

Nancy glanced at her watch.

“I must dash for home now, or father will be worried to death.”

Hastily saying good-bye, she left the house and sprang into her
roadster. In a few minutes she had reached the main road and was driving
swiftly toward River Heights.

“I’ve certainly struck a real mystery,” she mused thoughtfully, as she
drove along the smooth road. “The Mansion is haunted all right, but it’s
haunted by a flesh and blood ghost unless I miss my guess!”

Nancy Drew had no theory which would explain the strange happenings at
The Mansion, but, if her father granted permission, she planned to stay
several days at the house and investigate everything thoroughly. What
the search would reveal she had no idea, but she felt certain she would
unearth valuable clues.

“I’ll go home and try to piece things together,” she told herself.
“That’s what a regular detective would do!”

It was after dark when Nancy finally reached home. She flashed into the
garage with a skill born of long practice, and hurried guiltily toward
the house. As she had expected, her father had reached home ahead of
her.

“Nancy, I’ve been worried about you,” he began.

“Don’t scold,” Nancy begged. “I tried not to break my promise, but I
couldn’t help it this time. Oh, I had the most exciting afternoon!”

“But exciting adventures are hard on poor old Dad,” Mr. Drew chided.
“When you didn’t get back I thought perhaps you had had car trouble on
the road. I was about ready to start after you.”

“I’m terribly sorry. Honestly, I am.”

Nancy looked so genuinely sorry that Carson Drew promptly forgave her.

“Tell me about your adventure,” he suggested.

“Oh, I met two of the dearest ladies. They’re rather eccentric but, oh,
so charming and nice.”

“And you call that an adventure!” and Mr. Drew smiled.

“Of course not. I haven’t reached the adventure part of it yet. These
ladies live in a haunted house. Of course it isn’t really haunted, but
strange things are going on there, and they want me to find out what’s
what.” Breathlessly, Nancy poured out her words.

“Not so fast,” Carson Drew stopped her. “I can’t make head or tail of
what you are saying. You met two ladies who live in a haunted house
which really isn’t haunted. That doesn’t make sense.”

“Oh, you lawyers are so particular about facts,” Nancy sighed.

Beginning at the first of the story, she related everything which had
happened at the Turnbull mansion. Her father listened quietly until she
had finished.

“I’ve heard a great deal about the Turnbull sisters,” he remarked. “They
come from an excellent family. I believe The Mansion has belonged to the
Turnbulls ever since it was built.”

“It would be a tragedy to Miss Rosemary and Miss Floretta if they had to
sell the place now, Dad. I want so badly to help them. They have invited
me to visit them, and I’d like to do it. May I?”

“I don’t know what to say, Nancy. From what you’ve told me I am inclined
to believe there may be danger in visiting that house.”

“I’ll be careful, Dad. It won’t be any worse for me to sleep in that
house than it is for Rosemary and Floretta Turnbull.”

“But you’re my daughter.”

“If you had been assigned to the case you wouldn’t hesitate to stay
there at night, would you?”

“No,” Carson Drew admitted reluctantly, for he saw that Nancy was neatly
cornering him.

“And you’ve often said you wanted me to grow up self-reliant and brave.”

Carson Drew threw up his hands in resignation.

“You win, Nancy. Your eloquence would convince a jury.”

“When may I go?”

“Well, let me see. This is Monday.” Mr. Drew considered the desk
calendar. “I’ll be leaving for Chicago myself Thursday——”

“You’re going to Chicago? I didn’t know that.”

“Yes, on a business trip. The matter just came up this afternoon. I’ll
be gone about a week.” He looked speculatively at Nancy. “Wouldn’t you
like to go along?”

“Oh, of course, but if I do I wouldn’t get to visit the Turnbull
sisters.”

“Are you willing to give up the trip for the chance to ferret out this
mystery?”

“Oh, yes.”

Carson Drew sighed.

“I guess you’re a born detective, Nancy. Well, since your heart is set
on it I’ll give my consent. You may visit the Turnbulls while I am
gone.”

“A whole week?”

“Yes, if you like.”

“Goody! Goody!” Nancy pranced wildly about the room.

Carson Drew laughed.

“I hope you catch the ghost if it will make you happy.” Then the smile
faded from his lips. “You’ll not run into danger?”

“Not if I see it first.”

“Seriously, Nancy, you’ll be careful, won’t you?”

“Of course.”

Carson Drew crossed the room and paused in front of his desk. Unlocking
a drawer he took out a shiny object and handed it to his daughter.

“Your revolver, Dad!”

“Yes, I want you to take it with you.”

“But I sha’n’t need it.”

“I hope not. But it pays to be prepared. I’ll feel better if I know you
have it. The Mansion ghost may turn out to be a livelier one than we
expect.”

Carson Drew spoke half-jestingly, little suspecting that his observation
was a true prophecy.




                              CHAPTER VIII
                              The Warning


The next two days following her visit to Cliffwood, Nancy Drew went
about the house in a preoccupied state. Alternately quiet and talkative,
she was never without an air of suppressed excitement.

In an attempt to strike a plausible explanation for the strange
happenings at The Mansion, she reviewed every detail of the story
related by the Turnbull sisters.

“It’s possible the shadows on the wall at night could have been caused
by the wind blowing the trees,” she told herself. “Still, Rosemary is a
practical woman and I’m sure she wouldn’t be frightened by a thing like
that.”

Before she had visited The Mansion with Rosemary, Nancy had been
inclined to suspect that someone was playing a practical joke on the
Turnbull sisters, but the loss of the diamond bar pin made such a theory
seem unlikely. Without doubt, someone had stolen the pin, but in what
manner, she was unable to guess. Apparently, it had vanished into thin
air.

The longer Nancy reflected on the mystery the more certain she was that
a sinister hand was behind everything. However, she refrained from
disclosing this thought to her father lest he reconsider his promise and
refuse her permission to visit the old house during the week he was to
spend in Chicago.

Carson Drew planned to leave on Thursday. Nancy had written a note to
the Turnbull sisters telling them to expect her on Saturday morning. She
had taken care not to mention the approaching visit to anyone save her
father, and even Hannah Gruen was in ignorance concerning her plans.

On the day set for Mr. Drew’s departure, Nancy helped him pack his bag,
and then shortly before train time took him to the railroad station in
her roadster.

“When shall I expect you home?” Nancy inquired, as they stood on the
platform waiting for the train.

“A week from to-day. If you would like me to, I’ll stop at Cliffwood on
my return trip. Your story has aroused my interest, Nancy. I’m curious
to have a look at that old stone mansion.”

“Oh, I wish you would stop for me,” Nancy declared enthusiastically. She
glanced carefully about to see that no one was within hearing distance.
“If I haven’t solved the mystery by that time you’ll help me, won’t
you?”

“Of course I’ll do anything I can, but from what you’ve told me it
sounds like a tough case. I’m not sure that I’ll be able to solve it
myself. However, if you fail, I’ll try it.”

The conversation was cut short as a shrill whistle announced the
approach of the train.

“I’ll telegraph you the exact hour of my arrival in Cliffwood,” he said
hastily.

“The Turnbulls live some distance from the railroad station, so I’ll
meet you in the car,” Nancy promised.

“And remember—don’t run into danger.”

The heavy passenger train came pounding and clanging into the station,
and Mr. Drew picked up his bag. Kissing Nancy good-bye, he made a dash
for the Pullman cars, which were at the rear of the train, far down the
track.

Nancy waited until the train pulled out and then slowly made her way
back to the automobile. Now that her father had actually departed, she
felt lonesome.

“I may as well stop at Helen Corning’s before I go home,” she decided as
she stepped into the roadster. Helen Corning had been her chum for
years.

Accordingly, she called at the home of her chum and was pleased to find
her there. Helen promptly tempted her into a lively game of tennis, and
before Nancy realized it, the afternoon was nearly gone.

“You must stay for dinner,” Helen urged. “It won’t be any fun eating at
home all alone.”

“But Hannah is expecting me.”

“We can telephone her.”

“Oh, all right,” Nancy gave in.

Not only did she stay for dinner, but she remained during the evening,
for Helen would not permit her to go.

“Remember the fun we had at Moon Lake last summer?” Helen asked her.
“You know, I never did entirely forgive you for cheating me out of a
share in your adventure. Why didn’t you tell me you were going to chase
robbers that day when you left camp?”

“I didn’t know it myself then.”

“Well, if you ever stumble upon another mystery, I want you to take me
in on it!”

Nancy was on the verge of telling Helen about her proposed trip to The
Mansion, but she could not bring herself to the point of revealing the
secret. Helen’s intentions were of the best, but she was a natural born
gossip and Nancy doubted that it would be possible for her to keep the
matter to herself.

“It might do a great deal of harm if it were rumored why I am leaving
town,” she thought. “No, I’ll tell Helen after I return.”

It was late when Nancy reached home and the housekeeper had retired.

“I’m too sleepy to pack my bag to-night,” she decided as she locked the
doors and windows. “I’ll do it the first thing in the morning.”

But in the morning there were other matters which claimed Nancy’s
attention. She had promised the housekeeper a week’s vacation during her
visit in Cliffwood, and before the house could be closed there were many
things to be done. The entire day had slipped away almost before she
realized it.

“Miss Nancy, if you don’t mind, I’ll go to a moving picture show with my
sister,” the housekeeper said to her after the dinner dishes had been
cleared away.

“Why, of course, Hannah,” she agreed generously. “I don’t mind in the
least. I’ll be busy with my packing.”

As soon as Hannah had left the house, Nancy went directly to her room
and began sorting out the dresses that she planned to take with her to
The Mansion. It was ten minutes after eleven when she finished.

“There, I guess that’s all,” she decided. “Oh, no, I’ve forgotten the
revolver Dad gave me. I must take that!”

She hurried downstairs and went directly to the desk where the revolver
had been left. But with her hand on the drawer, Nancy hesitated.

Uneasily, she glanced about the room. For a reason she could not
explain, she felt that someone was watching her.

“I guess my nerves are getting jumpy,” she thought. “I do wish Hannah
would come home.”

Upon impulse, she moved toward the window. As she took a step forward,
she thought she heard a step on the porch. Was it only imagination or
was someone really prowling about the house?

Before she could make a move to investigate, the doorbell rang sharply.

Nancy started.

“It must be Hannah,” she assured herself. “Probably she forgot her key.”

But as she crossed the room she distinctly heard the steps creak under
the weight of some person. Hesitating but an instant, she opened the
door.

There was no one in sight. Wonderingly, Nancy stepped out upon the
veranda and glanced up and down the street.

“That’s strange,” she murmured uncomfortably.

She went to the edge of the porch and peered in the direction of the
hedge. Was it possible someone was hiding in the bushes? A careful
survey disclosed no human form.

As she turned to go inside the house, her eyes fell upon a white
envelope near the door. Curiously, Nancy picked it up and held it to the
light.

“Why, it’s addressed to me!” she gasped in astonishment, as she made out
the bold scrawl.

Hastily entering the house and closing the door behind her, Nancy Drew
ripped open the envelope. As she scanned the note, the color faded from
her face.

“An anonymous message!” she whispered. “Someone has sent me a
threatening letter!”




                               CHAPTER IX
                         The Anonymous Message


Nancy Drew sank down upon the davenport and studied the note which had
just been delivered at her door. The message was brief, but its words
carried an import of veiled violence which mystified and frightened her.
It read:

    “Be warned in time. Keep away from the Turnbull house.”

The threatening communication was unsigned but was written in a bold
scrawl, and, Nancy fancied, was unmistakably the handwriting of a man.

“Who could have sent it?” she asked herself, in amazement. “Why, I’ve
taken special pains not to let anyone know I am going to the Turnbull
house. Even Hannah doesn’t know I am to visit there.”

How could anyone have learned of her plans? Nancy Drew turned this
question over in her mind as she sat propped up with pillows in a corner
of the big davenport, the very picture of a pretty girl in a brown study
over some knotty problem. The more she thought about it, the knottier
her problem became, for she had communicated with Rosemary and Floretta
by writing, and unless her note to them had been intercepted in the
mail, there was no way, to her knowledge, that the information could
have become known to a third person.

“I’m almost tempted to believe in ghosts myself,” she thought. “It’s
positively uncanny!” She reflected a moment and then chuckled: “But,
anyway, I don’t believe the ghost is a very brave one, or he wouldn’t be
afraid to have me on his trail.”

As she considered the possibility of danger connected with her visit to
the old mansion, the smile faded from her face and all facetious
thoughts about ghosts passed from her mind. The note had frightened her,
but it had not deterred her in her purpose to do all within her power to
solve the mystery surrounding The Mansion. Nancy possessed the fighting
instincts of her father, and it would take more than a threat to keep
her away from the Turnbull house. She was convinced that underhand work
was going on at The Mansion and she was determined to expose it if it
were possible to do so.

“I think Dad was wise to suggest that I take his revolver,” she told
herself. “And I’ll take plenty of ammunition, too! Enough to annihilate
an army! Though, truth to tell, I don’t know whether I could hit the
broad side of a barn or not.”

Getting up from the davenport, Nancy crossed over to the desk, and with
a glance at the window shades to see that they were down, removed the
revolver from the drawer. Taking it upstairs, she placed it carefully in
her traveling bag. As she started back down the stairs, she heard a
light step on the porch.

She paused and listened.

“I wonder if I’m to get another note?” flashed through her mind.

Before she could move forward, the door opened and Hannah Gruen came in.

“Oh, it’s you,” Nancy murmured in relief.

“Why, yes. Who did you think it was?”

“Well, I didn’t know,” and Nancy smiled. “I wouldn’t have been much
surprised if a ghost had walked in.”

“A ghost?” Hannah asked in alarm. “What do you mean?”

“Oh, nothing,” Nancy assured her hastily. “I was only joking.”

Before the housekeeper could question her further, the girl said good
night and retreated to her bedroom.

“I’ll not let that anonymous note disturb my sleep,” she told herself
resolutely, as she tumbled into bed, “and to-morrow I’ll start for The
Mansion just as I planned.”

After she had finished her breakfast the next morning, Nancy Drew took
leave of the housekeeper, and, closing up the house, started off for
Cliffwood in her roadster.

There was not a sign of life about the old stone house as she drove up,
and she began to wonder if anything had happened to Rosemary and
Floretta since her last visit.

However, before she could lift the knocker on the front door, Rosemary
greeted her.

“I saw you coming up the drive. Oh, you don’t know how glad we are that
you have come!” she declared cordially. “You see, we were afraid you
might change your mind. We couldn’t have blamed you if you had.”

“I hope nothing has happened since I was here the other day,” Nancy said
quickly.

“Oh, it’s been almost unbearable. We had made up our minds to leave the
place if you didn’t come to-day.”

Rosemary’s face was strained, and Nancy thought she looked as though she
had not slept for several nights. The ordeal of remaining in the house
was gradually wearing her down.

“Last night we heard music again,” she said, in a very low tone.

“What sort of music?”

“It seemed to come from a stringed instrument. It might have been a
guitar.”

“From what part of the house?”

“That was the strange part of it. The sound wasn’t localized. It seemed
to move from one part of the house to another.”

“Did you hear the music distinctly?”

“No; the sound was muffled, as though it were a long way off. Oh, it was
almost ghostly!” Rosemary shuddered and turned appealing eyes upon
Nancy. “Tell me, do you believe in the supernatural?”

“I am almost certain your house is not haunted,” Nancy returned firmly,
for she saw that Rosemary’s iron nerve was beginning to go back on her.
“How long did the music last?”

“About half an hour, I should judge.”

“Did Miss Floretta hear it, too?”

“Oh, yes. She’s positively ill this morning. She didn’t get out of bed.
We’ll go to her room now if you like.”

“Perhaps it would be better not to disturb her.”

“Oh, she wanted to see you just as soon as you arrived.”

Rosemary led the way through the long, dark corridor and to the
stairway.

“I’ll show you to your room first and then you can talk with Floretta,”
she told Nancy when they reached the upper hall.

Rosemary opened a door and permitted Nancy to enter ahead of her. The
bedroom was a large, comfortable one with an old-fashioned canopy bed
and heavy mahogany furniture.

“I have assigned you the room right next my own,” Rosemary explained.
“If anything should happen during the night you could rap on the wall or
cry out and I would hear you.”

Nancy nodded soberly.

“And the key is in the door,” Rosemary continued. “Floretta and I always
lock our doors.”

“I will lock mine too,” Nancy promised.

“Are you certain you want to go through with it?” Rosemary questioned
anxiously. “If anything should happen to you I’d never forgive myself.”

“I don’t believe anything serious will happen.”

“I wish I could feel as confident,” Rosemary sighed. “Shall we go to
Floretta now?”

“Yes, I am ready. I will unpack my bag later.”

Nancy followed Rosemary down the hall and they entered the bedroom in
the east wing.

“Welcome to the haunted house,” Floretta murmured as a greeting to the
girl. She was propped up in bed with cushions and her face was white and
haggard. A tray on a table near the bed had been left practically
untouched.

“Floretta, you didn’t eat your breakfast,” Rosemary chided gently.

“Oh, I couldn’t, Rosemary. I’m so upset. I can’t stay in this horrible
place much longer.”

“Miss Drew is here to help us,” Rosemary responded quietly.

“But can she? I’m beginning to doubt that anyone can help us!”

“Nonsense! You mustn’t let your nerves get the best of you!”

“I think I can help you.” Nancy smiled reassuringly. “At least I will do
my best. I intend to go all over the house and see if I can locate
secret panels or trapdoors.”

“I don’t believe it will do any good,” Floretta declared
pessimistically. “I never heard of anything like that in the house.”

“I may as well have a look, anyway,” Nancy said easily. She remembered
something which she intended to ask the Turnbull sisters. “Tell me, did
you mention to anyone that I was coming here for a visit?”

“No,” Rosemary answered promptly. “We took care not to mention it to a
soul.”

“Of course we talked about your note when it came,” Floretta added. “But
we didn’t let out a hint of its contents to anyone. Why do you ask?”

Nancy hesitated, then deciding that it could do no particular harm to
tell the Turnbull sisters of the note she had received, she related what
had happened the previous night.

“Someone warned you not to come here?” Floretta gasped. “Why, how could
the news have gotten out?”

“I wish I knew,” Nancy admitted. “It would seem as though the walls have
ears!” She lowered her voice. “Even now, someone may be listening to
every word we say!”




                               CHAPTER X
                          An Unfruitful Search


Nancy Drew’s presence in The Mansion had a wholesome effect upon the
Turnbull sisters, for soon after her arrival they became more cheerful.
Floretta announced that she felt a great deal better and insisted upon
getting up and dressing. To the surprise of her sister she appeared most
cheerful when she came downstairs for luncheon.

“Tell me, does this house have any particular history?” Nancy
questioned, as the three sat at the table.

“Oh, yes, indeed,” Rosemary responded proudly. “It was built in the
early days when stone houses were out of the ordinary. Of course The
Mansion has been remodeled many times, but the original walls still
stand. The property has never passed from the Turnbull family.”

“To your knowledge there are no secret panels or trapdoors in the
house?”

“I know of none. However, Floretta and I never were interested in such
things until recently, and I’ll admit we haven’t gone over the house
carefully. It’s possible something like that was built-in when the house
was remodeled in Civil War times. As a protective measure, you know.”

“Then, if you have no objection, I believe I’ll have a look around and
see if I can locate anything unusual.”

“Certainly,” Rosemary assured her. “You’re free to do anything you like,
and we’ll help you all we can. Where will you start?”

“I may as well begin in the attic and work down.”

“If you go up there you’ll need candles. It’s very dark. You see, we’ve
never had the house wired for electricity.”

Rosemary hurried to the kitchen, and returned in a few minutes with half
a dozen large tallow candles. Before concentrating her attention upon
the attic, Nancy made a preliminary survey of the entire mansion.

The house consisted of fifteen large rooms. On the first floor, in
addition to the kitchen, butler’s pantry, and dining room, there was a
drawing room, a library, a sun parlor and a reception hall. Directly
beneath the first floor was the basement, which had been broken up into
storerooms.

The second floor was devoted to bedchambers. Rosemary explained that one
wing of the house had been shut off for years, and this portion of the
house at once aroused Nancy’s interest. However, a casual survey of the
rooms reveal nothing which would indicate that anyone had visited them
in the last six years. A thick accumulation of dust was undisturbed.

“We’ll try the attic first,” Nancy decided. “Later, I’ll go over these
other rooms more carefully.”

[Illustration: Single file, Nancy and the two ladies trudged up the
narrow stairs leading to the attic.]

Single file, Nancy and the two ladies trudged up the narrow stairs
leading to the attic. As Nancy opened a door at the head of the stairs,
a gust of wind struck her candle and extinguished the flame. Quickly
lighting it, she stepped into the attic.

She glanced about curiously, flashing the light into every nook and
corner. The attic appeared little different from others Nancy had
visited. It was filled with pieces of discarded furniture. A tall
highboy stood in one corner, a broken rocking chair in another, and
boxes were piled everywhere.

Systematically, Nancy poked into the boxes and went over the walls inch
by inch. The latter had a hollow sound, but she was unable to find a
spring which would open a panel. If the walls guarded a secret, they
guarded it well.

“I guess there’s nothing here,” Nancy admitted after she had spent
nearly an hour in the attic.

She was reluctant to leave, for although she had unearthed nothing, she
could not help but feel that she had overlooked something of vital
importance.

“I was afraid you wouldn’t find anything,” Rosemary commented, as she
turned toward the stairs. “Now where?”

“Shall we try the basement?”

The three made their way cautiously down the stairs to the first floor
and from there to the kitchen. As they descended into the dark cellar,
an unpleasant musty odor assailed their nostrils.

A few minutes search convinced Nancy that the basement was not worth
bothering about. The floors and walls had been covered with cement and
offered no possibility of a trapdoor. However, before returning to the
first floor, she looked carefully about in the storerooms to make
certain that no one was hiding there.

“Well, our search wasn’t very well rewarded,” Nancy admitted, after the
three had returned to the kitchen. “But I’m not ready to give up yet. I
intend to have another look to-morrow.”

The investigation of the attic and the basement had taken the better
part of the afternoon, and already shadows were beginning to lurk in the
nooks and crannies. With the approach of night the house seemed to take
on a more formidable atmosphere.

Dinner at The Mansion was rather a strained, formal affair. Rosemary and
Nancy made an attempt to keep up a conversation, but without much
success. There was a tenseness in the air which everyone felt.

After dinner the three adjourned to the drawing room. Rosemary sat down
at the piano and tried to play, but Nancy noticed that her hands
trembled. After a time, she gave it up.

Floretta was even less composed than her sister. She sat rigidly on the
sofa, with hands tightly clasped. Involuntarily, her eyes roved about
the room as though she were looking for someone.

“What an odd piece of furniture,” Nancy commented in an attempt to start
a conversation.

“Which piece do you mean?” Rosemary questioned.

“The sofa. I never saw one like it.”

“I don’t wonder. It’s built in.”

“Built in? How odd. I’ve seen built-in bookcases and window seats, but I
never heard of a built-in sofa.”

“It was our great grandfather’s idea,” Floretta explained. “I never
could see any sense in it myself. I’d much rather have a sofa that could
be moved about.”

At nine o’clock, Nancy announced that she would retire, and in obvious
relief Floretta and Rosemary arose to follow her example.

“Don’t forget to lock your door,” Rosemary warned her guest, as she said
good night at the head of the stairs. “And if anything should
happen—scream. We’ll hear you.”

As soon as she was alone in her bedchamber, Nancy Drew locked the door.
Then she made a hasty examination of the closet. There was nothing
inside. She looked under the bed.

“There’s nothing like caution,” she assured herself. “I don’t believe a
ghost will get in here very easily, but just the same I’ll be prepared.”

Unlocking her traveling bag she removed the revolver her father had
given her and a flashlight she had thoughtfully included as part of her
emergency equipment. Carefully loading the revolver, she placed it under
her pillow.

“There!” she exclaimed, with satisfaction. “Any ghost that comes
prowling about is apt to meet with a warm reception!”

With that, she sprang into bed. She did not intend to fall asleep at
once, but before she knew it, she had dozed off. When she awoke the sun
was streaming in the bedroom window.

With a start, Nancy Drew opened her eyes and glanced about the room. So
far as she could tell everything was exactly as she had left it.
Hurriedly dressing, she went downstairs. Rosemary and Floretta were
there ahead of her, and breakfast was nearly ready.

“Did you sleep well?” Rosemary asked her.

“Like a log.”

“I scarcely shut my eyes all night.”

“But surely nothing happened to alarm you?” she asked.

“No, I didn’t hear a sound.”

After breakfast Nancy once more began the task of investigating the
walls of the various rooms in the hope of discovering a sliding panel.
She spent the morning going over the downstairs rooms. She tapped the
walls with a small hammer and even looked behind the heavy pictures.

“I’m certain there must be a secret opening in this house somewhere,”
she told herself. “But it doesn’t look as though I am going to find it
very easily.”

In the afternoon she devoted her attention to the bedrooms, but without
success. That night she again slept with the revolver under her pillow.

The next day was a repetition of the one that had gone before. Nancy
began to wonder if there really was a mystery connected with the old
house.

“Can it be that Rosemary and Floretta only imagine strange things that
have been happening?” she asked herself.

That night when she retired, she was half inclined not to place the
revolver under her pillow as usual, for it seemed a rather unnecessary
precaution. Upon second thought, however, she decided it would be wise
not to take a chance.

After climbing into bed and blowing out the light, she did not fall
asleep at once. The window curtains were up, permitting the moonlight to
stream in, and for some time Nancy watched the shadows of the trees
dance on the white walls of the room.

“I wonder if those shadows were the ones Rosemary and Floretta saw?” she
thought.

After about half an hour she dozed off, but she did not sleep soundly.
She awoke in the middle of the night and found that she could not go
back to slumber.

“What is the matter with me?” she asked herself. “I feel just as if
something were about to happen!”

The house was as quiet as a tomb. Yet there was something about the
silence which was ominous.

“This will never do,” Nancy chided herself severely, as she felt a cold
chill creeping over her.

Resolutely, she closed her eyes, but sleep would not come. She tried the
time-worn device of counting the sheep, but in vain. It was as though a
faculty over which she had no control had elected to maintain a vigil.
Restlessly, Nancy Drew tossed about.

Then, just as she was sinking into a light sleep, she was aroused
rudely. What was it that had awakened her? She sat up in bed and tried
to pierce the darkness.

Then she heard a noise which seemed to come from the floor below. There
was a dull thud and then a blood-curdling yell! After that—silence.




                               CHAPTER XI
                           A Cry in the Night


When the loud, piercing cry echoed through the old stone house, Nancy
Drew instinctively clutched the bedclothing about her neck as though by
so doing she could protect herself from an unseen danger. An instant she
waited, but the cry was not repeated. There was not a sound to be heard
anywhere in the house.

Then, with determination, Nancy sprang from the bed and slipped quickly
into her dressing gown and put on her bedroom slippers. Reaching under
her pillow, she was relieved to find the revolver and flashlight where
she had left them.

The stars were no longer shining and the room was so dark that she could
not see a foot ahead of her. Switching on the flashlight, she made her
way to the door and gave it a pull. It did not open.

“Am I locked in?” Nancy thought in horror.

In her haste and excitement, she had forgotten that she had fastened the
door herself. As she remembered, she turned the key in the lock and
jerked open the door.

Stepping out into the corridor, she flashed her light about in all
directions. There was no one in sight.

Then the door at the end of the hall opened and Floretta half-stumbled,
half-fell into the corridor. As she saw the flashlight, she let out a
low cry of fright.

“Be quiet!” Nancy warned.

“Oh, I thought it was the ghost!” Floretta chattered. “Did you hear that
terrible scream?”

“Yes, I heard it. Where is Miss Rosemary? See if she is all right.”

“Oh, if Rosemary has been murdered——”

She broke off as Rosemary came out of her room. She, too, was badly
frightened, but she was able to maintain a certain amount of composure.
The two sisters huddled together near Nancy. Although nearly thirty
years older than the girl, they seemed to look to her for protection.

“The cry came from the floor below, or at least that’s the way it
sounded to me,” Nancy whispered. “We must go down there and find out
what has happened.”

“Go down there?” Floretta wailed. “Never!”

“Sh!” Nancy warned. “Not so loud. We don’t know what danger we are
facing.”

“We’ll be murdered if we go down there,” Floretta maintained in a
slightly lower tone.

“I have a revolver.”

“I can’t go.”

“Then you stay here,” Rosemary said brusquely, to hide the tremble in
her own voice. “If you’re going downstairs, I’ll go with you, Nancy.”

“And leave me here all alone?” Floretta asked desperately.

“Then come along,” Rosemary told her curtly.

Flashlight in hand, Nancy Drew had already started to move toward the
steps. Rosemary followed, and Floretta, not to be left alone, brought up
the rear.

On the stairway, the three huddled together while Nancy flashed her
light about the hall below them. Everything was in perfect order and
there was no sign of an intruder.

“It was a ghost! I know it was!” Floretta whispered.

“Be quiet!” Rosemary warned.

Nancy led the way on down the circular stairs. At every step the old
boards creaked alarmingly underfoot.

“We’re certainly heralding our approach all right,” Nancy thought
grimly. “I hope someone doesn’t take a shot at us!”

This fear she did not communicate to the Turnbull sisters, for she knew
that it would take but little to throw them into a frenzy of fright.

Reaching the drawing room, she fumbled about and finally located an oil
lamp which she lighted. A survey of the room revealed nothing amiss.
Everything seemed in its place, and the trio moved on toward the sun
parlor.

“The silver!” Floretta exclaimed suddenly. “Do you suppose it is
missing?”

The same thought had just occurred to Nancy, and, turning quickly, she
hurried toward the dining room. Floretta and Rosemary followed at a more
cautious pace.

The buffet where the silver was kept was locked. Rosemary removed the
key from a near-by vase and, fitting it into the lock, opened the door.

“Nothing is missing,” she declared, after she had finished counting the
silver.

“I don’t believe the cry came from this room, anyway,” Nancy said
thoughtfully. “It seemed to me that it was directly under my bedroom.”

“Then the cry must have come from the library,” Rosemary announced.

“I thought it seemed to come from that direction, too,” Floretta
murmured. “It was the most blood-curdling yell I ever heard. Like
someone in distress.”

“Shall we search the library?” Nancy interrupted.

“Lead the way,” Rosemary told her grimly.

With revolver held ready for instant use, Nancy Drew started in the
direction of the library. The Turnbull sisters, who still huddled
together, kept close behind her. Scarcely had they taken a dozen steps
when Floretta paused and looked anxiously back over her shoulder.

“What was that?” she whispered fearfully.

“What?” Nancy asked impatiently, turning around. “I didn’t hear
anything.”

“I thought I heard footsteps behind me,” Floretta murmured nervously.

“You must have been mistaken,” Rosemary said firmly. “I heard nothing.”

Nancy was certain that Floretta’s nerves were getting the best of her,
but nevertheless, to make sure that they were not being followed, she
paused and strained her ears to catch a sound. She could hear nothing.

“You must have been mistaken,” she said quietly, again moving on.

In the face of danger, Nancy Drew was cool and collected, but even for
her it was a nerve-wracking experience to move through the dimly lighted
old mansion, uncertain as to what lay just ahead. At any moment they
might be walking into a trap.

She opened the library door cautiously, half-expecting something to
spring out and pounce upon her. As she flashed her light about the room
she was relieved to see that everything was in order. But was it?

Her eye rested upon a ladder-back chair which had been pushed up against
the bookcase. Surely, Rosemary and Floretta would not have left it that
way, for they were both excellent housekeepers and meticulous about
details.

Rosemary’s eyes had fallen upon the same chair.

“Someone has been in here!” she exclaimed.

Her eyes slowly traveled upward to the top of the bookcase. She gave a
little scream.

“My silver urn! It’s gone! Someone has stolen my urn!”




                              CHAPTER XII
                               The Theft


“The silver urn is gone!” Rosemary repeated, as though unable to believe
her eyes. “Someone has taken it! And it can never be replaced.”

“It was a family heirloom,” Floretta added morosely. “We’ve had it ever
since grandmother died. It was handed down from one generation to
another.”

“It was valuable, too,” Rosemary went on. “It was solid silver. We had
been offered five hundred dollars for it by a jeweler, but of course we
refused the offer. Oh, I can’t bear to lose it!” She sank into a chair
and looked as though she were about to cry.

“Perhaps we’ll find it somewhere,” Nancy offered hopefully. “Are you
certain it was left in the library?”

“Oh, yes, it was on the top of the bookcase. We’ve kept it there for
years.”

“First a spoon, then a pocketbook, next my pin, and now the urn,”
Floretta reviewed pessimistically. “It’s too much. I know there’s a
ghost in this house.”

“A ghost wouldn’t have needed a chair to reach the top of the bookcase,”
Nancy commented dryly.

“That’s so,” Rosemary agreed. “The chair is pushed up against the
bookcase! But how did the thief get into the house?”

“If we knew the answer to that question, I think the mystery would be
solved,” Nancy returned. “Were the doors all locked last night before
you went to bed?”

“Oh, yes, I was very careful.”

“And the windows?”

“All bolted.”

“I can’t understand it,” Nancy murmured, perplexed.

She examined the room as carefully as she could in the dim light but was
unable to find any additional traces of the midnight prowler.

“The thief seems to have vanished into thin air,” she said at last. “I
don’t believe there is any use to search to-night. We may as well go
back to bed.”

“I couldn’t sleep a wink,” Floretta interposed. “I am going to sit up
the rest of the night.”

“So am I,” Rosemary added.

“Then we may as well bring our blankets down here,” Nancy declared. “I
don’t think the thief will return to-night, but at least we can be
prepared.”

Accordingly, the three settled themselves in comfortable chairs, and
spent the remainder of the night snugly wrapped in warm blankets. Nancy
and Rosemary occasionally dozed off into a light slumber, but Floretta
was too nervous to permit herself to go to sleep. Although the light was
burning, her eyes continually roved about the room, fearfully searching
the darker corners.

At the first indication of dawn, Rosemary, with Nancy assisting her,
prepared breakfast. Hot coffee went a long way toward reviving the
spirits of the trio. And with the rising of the sun, the old house
seemed less oppressive and fearful.

As soon as breakfast was over, Nancy set herself to the task of going
over the library minutely. She examined the walls inch by inch, but
found no indication of a secret panel. With Rosemary’s help, she even
moved the heavy bookcase, but there was nothing behind it. The furniture
occupied but little of her time, for with the exception of a built-in
sofa similar to the one in the drawing room, it was all very ordinary
and offered no possibility of a hiding place. Nancy did examine the
bookcase and the chairs for fingerprints, but her search was not
rewarded. There was not a single clue which pointed to the identity of
the thief.

Nor was the missing urn found anywhere in the place. All day Nancy
searched, but in vain. She was bitterly disappointed, for she had hoped
to be able to help Rosemary and Floretta. The ordeal of the night had
frightened them a great deal, and they began to talk seriously of
leaving the house at the end of the week.

“It will be better to close it up than to endure another week like the
past one,” Rosemary admitted. “I don’t like to be driven away, but I see
no other way.”

Nancy said nothing, but mentally resolved that she would never leave The
Mansion until she had solved the mystery. When her father arrived on his
way home from Chicago, she would tell him everything and turn the case
over to him.

The next two days and nights were uneventful, greatly to the surprise of
everyone. Rosemary and Floretta began to show the effects of the strain
under which they labored.

“I declare, I’d almost as soon something would happen as to keep
thinking it’s going to every minute,” Rosemary sighed.

With the passing of the days, Nancy Drew became quiet and thoughtful.
She had a new worry which she did not communicate to the Turnbull
sisters.

When her father had left for Chicago he had promised that he would
return within a week and that he would send her a telegram stating the
exact hour he expected to arrive in Cliffwood. For several days Nancy
had been anxiously looking for the message, but it had not arrived. Why
had her father failed to keep his promise?

“It’s possible Dad didn’t get his business accomplished as quickly as he
expected,” she assured herself. “I’ll probably get the telegram
to-morrow.”

But the expected message did not arrive on the following day, and now
Nancy began to worry in earnest. Surely, her father would have wired her
if he had been delayed, she told herself. What could have happened?

“Perhaps he decided not to stop at Cliffwood, and went on to River
Heights,” she reasoned.

Glancing at the calendar she saw that it was a full week since her
father had left home. By this time she had expected to return to River
Heights herself, and she had asked Hannah to open the house before her
arrival.

“If only there were a telephone here,” she fretted. “I could call home
and find out if Dad is there yet.”

The more she thought of it, the more anxious she became, and at last, to
relieve her mind, she decided to drive to Cliffwood and make the
telephone call. This intention she communicated to Rosemary and
Floretta.

“You’ll not be gone long, will you?” Rosemary questioned anxiously.
“We’ve decided not to stay in this house another night alone. When you
leave, we’re going too.”

“I’ll be back in a few minutes,” Nancy promised. “I only want to make a
telephone call.”

“I’m sorry we haven’t one here,” Rosemary apologized. “It’s so much
bother to go into Cliffwood.”

“I really don’t mind at all. I’ll enjoy the ride.”

As Nancy left The Mansion behind, she breathed more freely. There was
something about the place that was oppressive. She drove rapidly and
soon reached the main part of Cliffwood. Entering a corner drug store,
she telephoned to her own home. After a short wait, Hannah Gruen
answered.

“Is my father home yet?” Nancy asked, after a few preliminary remarks.

“No, I haven’t heard from him since he left,” came the response.

Nancy hung up the receiver and leaned against the side of the telephone
booth. What could it mean? Why had her father failed to notify anyone of
his change of plans? It was not at all like him.

“I have a notion to telegraph to Chicago and find out if he has left
there,” she thought. “I believe I have the address of the firm he went
to see.”

Opening her purse, she fished about and after pulling out several wrong
cards, found the one for which she was searching.

“Now to find a telegraph office,” she decided, as she left the drug
store.

She found one only a few doors away, and, having entered, wrote out a
brief message and handed it to the clerk at the desk.

“When the answer comes have it sent to the Turnbull Mansion,” she told
the man.

After paying the charges, she left the office and slowly made her way
back to the roadster.

“Now, back to the haunted house,” she told herself grimly. “I’m
beginning to feel that I’ll never solve the mystery by myself. I’ll be
glad when Dad gets here so he can help me.”

As she approached The Mansion, Nancy’s attention was attracted to
another stone house only a short distance away. In general appearance it
bore a striking resemblance to The Mansion.

“I wonder who lives there?” she thought. “I must inquire when I get back
to The Mansion.”

However, for the time being, Nancy was too troubled about her father to
devote much thought to the mystery of the old house, and before she
reached The Mansion she had forgotten the question she had intended to
ask.

The evenings at The Mansion were all alike. Dinner was served at seven
o’clock in the big, gloomy dining room, and after that the three
adjourned to the drawing room. There was no radio and no evening paper.
With the deepening of the shadows, the conversation became stilted and
difficult. By nine o’clock everyone was glad of the opportunity to
retire.

All afternoon Nancy had waited hopefully for an answer to her telegram,
but it had not arrived. She would have made another trip to the
telegraph office in the evening, but she knew that Rosemary and Floretta
would be afraid to stay in the house alone.

At nine o’clock Nancy went to her room, but she did not fall asleep for
hours.

“I have the strangest feeling,” she thought. “It’s just as though
something had happened to Dad. Of course it’s silly of me!”

But try as she would, she could not free herself of the conviction, and
when she arose in the morning it was still with her. She ate very little
for breakfast, but her lack of appetite passed unnoticed by the Turnbull
sisters. As she was about to leave the table, there came a ring of the
front doorbell.

Rosemary and Floretta exchanged frightened glances.

“Who—who can it be, do you suppose?” Floretta stammered.

“I’ll go,” Nancy said quickly. “I think it must be for me.”

She left the dining room and hastened to open the front door. As she had
expected, it was a uniformed messenger boy.

“Telegram for Nancy Drew,” he said curtly.

“I am Miss Drew.”

“Then sign here.”

Nancy complied with the request and eagerly accepted the yellow
envelope. As she tore open the flap and scanned the message a frightened
look came over her face. The telegram had been sent by the law firm in
Chicago and confirmed her worst fears.

The message read:

    “Carson Drew left here two days ago.”




                              CHAPTER XIII
                            Another Surprise


For a full minute Nancy Drew stood staring blankly at the telegram in
her hand. She read it a second time, although she knew every word by
memory.

Worry assailed her anew. If her father had left Chicago two days before,
as the telegram indicated, he would have reached Cliffwood before this
even if he had come on the slowest train. Surely, something must have
happened to him en route. What had delayed him?

After a moment’s reflection, Nancy entered the house, intending to tell
the Turnbull sisters about the telegram and ask their advice. She was
destined never to carry the thought into action, for as she closed the
door behind her she heard a wild shriek from above. It seemed to come
from Floretta’s room.

Fearing the worst, Nancy sprang toward the stairs and took them two at a
time. Rosemary came running from the kitchen.

Reaching Floretta’s room, Nancy thrust open the door.

“What is it?” she cried.

Floretta stood in the center of the room, wringing her hands in anguish.

“My dresses have been stolen!”

“Your dresses?” Nancy echoed.

“Yes, while we were at breakfast. Someone entered my room and took three
of my best black silk dresses. And that isn’t the worst. Look up there!”

Wonderingly, Nancy turned her eyes toward a picture which hung over the
bed. What she saw caused her to gasp in astonishment.

On the frame perched two live canary birds!

“Oh!” Rosemary screamed. She had entered the room behind Nancy and her
eyes had fallen upon the picture frame.

“It’s wizardry!” Floretta moaned.

Cautiously, Nancy moved toward the picture.

“Don’t touch those birds,” Rosemary advised.

“Why, they’re only tame little canaries,” Nancy said, gently removing
one from the frame. “See!”

“Don’t bring that bird near me!” Floretta cried. “It’s an evil omen.”

“I never heard of a canary being called an omen of bad luck,” Nancy
returned, studying the bird curiously. “A canary is a rather happy
little bird. This one is, anyway.”

“Get them out of the house,” Floretta pleaded.

Obligingly, Nancy opened the window and set the two canaries free.

“How did they ever get in here, anyway?” Rosemary demanded. “We never
had a bird in our lives.”

Nancy was dumbfounded. Never had she heard of a more puzzling mystery.
Had the canaries been left in the room by the same person who had stolen
Floretta’s dresses? Unquestionably, the birds could not have flown in a
window, for they were kept carefully screened.

So many strange things had occurred in the house. Unexplainable music
and shadows, and the sound of footsteps in the night. Then a spoon had
disappeared, next a pocketbook, a diamond pin, an urn, and now
Floretta’s silk dresses.

Nancy lost no time in examining the closet and the walls of the room,
but she could find no clue which suggested in what manner an entrance
had been effected. Apparently, the windows had not been opened.

Nancy felt almost humiliated. She had promised to help Floretta and
Rosemary, and so far she had not even gained a clue! Many things had
happened under her very nose, and yet she had been unable to put her
hands on the thief. There must be an explanation for everything if only
she could think of it!

As she stood absorbed in her own unpleasant thoughts, a sudden idea came
to her.

“Do you know of anyone who wants to force you out of this house?” she
demanded.

Rosemary shook her head.

“Why, no. Why should anyone want to do that?”

“Is there anyone who wants to buy the house?”

“We’ve had several offers from real estate men. There’s some talk that
the city wants this house for a historical museum.”

“And the real estate men are trying to get it cheap in the hope of
selling to the city and making a neat profit for themselves,” Nancy
summarized shrewdly.

“That’s about it.”

“You don’t intend to sell?”

“We didn’t—until lately. At least not unless we could get our price for
it. Now, we’d be lucky to sell it for anything, I guess. No one wants a
haunted house.”

Nancy was eager to learn more, for now she felt that she had stumbled
upon her first clue. She was convinced that someone was trying to force
the Misses Turnbull from their home and, by frightening them, induce
them to sell The Mansion at a low figure.

“Who has tried to purchase the place?” she asked quickly.

“Well, there’s John O’Conley,” Floretta told her.

“What sort of man is he?”

“Oh, I’m sure he is honest. We’ve known him all our lives.”

“And there was H. D. Fellows, another real estate agent,” Rosemary added
thoughtfully. “He made us a very straightforward offer, but he wasn’t
willing to meet our price. However, he was very nice about it when we
told him we wouldn’t sell.”

“Were there any others?”

“Oh, Nathan Gombet! But we didn’t consider his offer seriously,”
Rosemary continued.

Nancy pricked up her ears at the information. Here was genuine news!

“Nathan Gombet!” she exclaimed. “What sort of an offer did he make you?”

“Oh, Gombet isn’t honest,” Floretta broke in feelingly. “We won’t have
anything to do with him any more. You see, he claimed we gave him an
option to buy our house for six thousand dollars.”

“Six thousand! Why, that’s ridiculous. Surely, you didn’t give such an
option?”

“Mercy, no! But Gombet claims we did.”

“The house is worth at least twenty thousand,” Rosemary declared. “And
if the city should decide to use it for a historical museum, we ought to
get even more than that for it.”

“I should think so,” Nancy agreed. “Gombet was trying to cheat you.”

“We never gave him any sort of option,” Floretta insisted. “We wouldn’t
do business with him at any price, because we couldn’t trust him. He
would cheat us out of our eye teeth!”

“How long ago did all this happen?”

“Oh, it must have been nearly a year ago,” Rosemary said, trying to
recall. “It was last spring.”

“The matter went to court?”

“No. Nathan Gombet threatened to make trouble and he said he would sue
us, but nothing ever came of it.”

“We had forgotten all about him until you brought up the subject,”
Floretta added.

“Then, have you heard nothing more from him since?”

“He threatened us once,” Rosemary told Nancy. “Said he would make us
sorry we hadn’t sold at his price. But nothing ever came of the threat.”

“How long ago was that?”

“Two or three months ago, I should judge.”

Nancy Drew nodded thoughtfully and relapsed into deep meditation. She
was now convinced that Nathan Gombet had some connection with the
mysterious things which had been going on in the old house. Perhaps he
was trying to frighten Rosemary and Floretta so that they would be glad
to sell at his price.

“Gombet hasn’t approached you with a new offer recently, has he?” she
asked.

Floretta shook her head.

“We haven’t seem him for some time, and we don’t want to either.”

“You don’t think Gombet has had anything to do with what has happened
lately, do you?” Rosemary questioned the girl.

“Of course I don’t know, but I’m beginning to suspect there may be a
connection,” Nancy returned. “At least, I intend to investigate that
line and see what it leads to.”

“To be sure, there’s nothing in Nathan Gombet’s character that would
prevent his using any underhand method to induce us to sell him this
house,” said Rosemary musingly. “Still, I don’t see what opportunity
he’s had to do what’s been done here. He hasn’t been near us for some
time, you know, Nancy.”

“That’s true,” replied the girl. “But someone must have made the
opportunity. Mr. Gombet has the motive and is so lacking in any sense of
honor that would keep him from injuring you in this way, that I believe
he furnishes the best lead to follow.”

With that she left the bedroom and went to her own room farther down the
hall. But as she sat by the window trying to think her way through the
jumble of information she had gleaned, she found it difficult to keep
her mind on the mystery.

After a time she took the crumpled telegram she had received earlier
that morning from her pocket and studied it again. How could she
interest herself in a mystery when her father was missing? What had
happened to him? Oh, if only she could answer that question!




                              CHAPTER XIV
                      What Happened to Carson Drew


After taking leave of his daughter at the River Heights railroad
station, Carson Drew boarded the Chicago train. Upon arriving in the
city he lost no time in dispatching the business which had brought him
to the great city on the lake. He had expected to remain in Chicago a
full week, but so successful were his negotiations that his business was
completed a day earlier than he had anticipated.

“I may as well send Nancy a telegram and return a day earlier,” Mr. Drew
decided.

Accordingly, he sent his daughter a message to the effect that he would
arrive at the Cliffwood station the following morning. He then boarded
the night flyer. He did not dream that the telegram would never reach
Nancy. It was destined to fall into the hands of an enemy.

Oblivious of impending danger, Mr. Drew settled himself comfortably in
the Pullman and took up a newspaper. The train had been moving perhaps
an hour when the conductor came through and paused at his seat.

“Carson Drew?” he inquired.

“That’s my name.”

“Then here’s a telegram for you. We picked it up at the last station.”

Wonderingly, Mr. Drew accepted the envelope and quickly ripped it open.
He smiled with pleasure as he read the message:

    “Will meet you at the Cliffwood station.

                                                           “Nancy.”

“Well, I’m glad to know she received my message,” he thought, “though I
didn’t expect her to answer the telegram. I’m greatly relieved that
nothing happened to her while I was in Chicago. Somehow, I didn’t like
the idea of letting her go off to that old stone house by herself.
Anything might have happened.”

Relieved that all was well with his daughter, Carson Drew settled
himself to enjoy the evening paper. After reading it for perhaps an
hour, he tossed it aside and went out to the observation car to give the
porter an opportunity to make up his berth. After smoking a cigar he
returned and before he retired left an order for the porter to call him
in the morning.

In spite of the sway and rumble of the train, he slept soundly and did
not open his eyes until the porter called him.

“Twenty minutes out of Cliffwood, suh.”

Mr. Drew dressed himself hastily and prepared to get off at the station.
He was eager to see Nancy again, for it seemed a month since he had been
at home. It was nice of her to offer to meet him at such an early hour,
he told himself. It was not yet seven o’clock.

The train came to a stop, and he swung from the step to the platform.
Where was Nancy? Carson Drew glanced about in all directions, but his
daughter was not in sight. Perhaps she had been delayed, he thought. Oh,
well, no matter. He would wait a few minutes, and then if she failed to
come along, he could call a taxi.

He picked up his bag and started toward the waiting room, but he had
taken less than a dozen steps when he saw a man hurrying toward him.
Carson Drew frowned as he saw who it was. He had no desire to meet
Nathan Gombet. Undoubtedly, the man would try to argue with him again
about his so-called property rights on the river.

“That fellow is a pest,” Mr. Drew told himself. “Just my luck to run
into him.”

But as Nathan Gombet approached, he could not help but see that the man
was laboring under great excitement.

“Wonder what’s the matter with him now?” he asked himself curiously.

Nathan Gombet came straight toward him.

“Oh, Mr. Drew,” he cried as he came up, “I have terrible news! Your
daughter has been injured! You must come quickly!”

“Nancy is hurt?” Mr. Drew grasped him roughly by the arm. “It can’t be!”

“She’s badly injured. But the doctors think she has a chance to pull
through.”

“How horrible!” Carson Drew groaned.

“She’s calling for you. You must come quickly!”

“Take me to her!”

In his anxiety to reach the daughter he loved so dearly, Carson Drew
became almost frantic.

“Here, jump in!” Gombet ordered.

He opened the front door of a battered auto which stood near the
platform. Mr. Drew, bewildered and shocked from the crushing news,
obeyed without question.

Gombet scrambled in after him. He took the wheel and with one quick
glance about started off down the street.

The station on this side was practically deserted and no one saw the car
depart.

“Where is Nancy?” Mr. Drew demanded.

“At my house.”

“At your house?” Mr. Drew asked, in surprise. “Didn’t they take her to a
hospital?”

“She was too badly injured to be moved,” Nathan explained glibly.

“Oh, my poor little girl,” Carson Drew murmured brokenly. A moment later
he said, “You didn’t tell me how she was hurt.”

“In an automobile accident. Her roadster ran off into a ditch.”

“And she was taken to your place?”

Mr. Drew did not like the look on Nathan Gombet’s face. Was the man
deceiving him? No, it was more likely he was trying to keep Nancy’s true
condition from him. Perhaps she had been so seriously injured that she
was practically at the point of death. The thought nearly drove him
wild.

“The accident occurred in front of my house,” Gombet continued, trying
to make his explanation appear plausible. “The doctor brought her
inside.”

“Oh, and Nancy was always such a safe driver, too.”

“I didn’t see the accident myself, but they say the steering gear
broke.”

“Tell me, will she live?”

“I can’t tell you that.”

The drive, though not a long one, seemed endless to Carson Drew. Nancy!
His daughter! His little girl! The widowed father and the motherless
girl were very close to each other. In what condition would he find her
when he reached the end of this soul-trying drive? Was she conscious?
Was she alive? He turned impatiently to Nathan Gombet.

“Hurry!” Mr. Drew urged. “I can’t get there quickly enough!”

“The car won’t go any faster,” Gombet grunted.

And indeed it would not. Gombet was already driving as fast as he dared.
Carson Drew was so worried that he asked no more questions but kept his
eyes glued upon the road.

Gombet drove furiously and they soon reached the outskirts of Cliffwood.
Presently they came within sight of two large stone houses, and Nathan
Gombet turned in at one of them.

“I live here,” he explained.

Carson Drew did not so much as give the house a casual glance. The
instant the car stopped he sprang to the ground and started for the
door. Quick as he was, Nathan Gombet was ahead of him. He opened the
door for the lawyer and led the way through the kitchen where a fat,
slovenly looking colored woman was working over the stove.

Had Mr. Drew not been intent upon reaching the bedside of his daughter,
he would have observed that the colored woman received a significant nod
from Nathan Gombet as he passed near her.

The moment the two men had passed into the next room, she walked over
and quietly locked the outside door.

“This way,” Nathan directed.

He opened a door and indicated a long, dark stairway. Without
hesitation, Carson Drew followed him. He went up a flight of circular
stairs and at last came to a landing.

Nathan paused and indicated a door to the left.

“Your daughter is in there,” he said.

There was an eager, cruel gleam in his eyes, but Carson Drew did not
notice.

“It won’t frighten her for me to go right in?” the lawyer asked
anxiously.

“No, it won’t frighten her.”

Hesitating no longer, Carson Drew opened the door and stepped inside. To
his surprise the room was dark. The curtains were pulled down over the
windows and at first he could see nothing. Then, as his eyes became
accustomed to the darkness, he saw that he was not in a bedroom. The
place had every appearance of a prison.

Carson Drew realized that he had walked into a trap.

He wheeled about and faced Nathan Gombet who stood in the doorway, eying
him, gloating upon him.

“What does this mean?” he demanded sharply. “Where is Nancy?”

“It means that you are my prisoner,” Gombet retorted, with an evil leer.
“Before I get through with you I guess you’ll come to terms about that
property!”

With that he slammed the door shut and before Carson Drew could make a
move turned the key in the lock. As the old miser trudged down the
corridor, his hollow laughter echoed through the house.




                               CHAPTER XV
                               A Prisoner


As he heard the key turn in the lock, Carson Drew stood for a moment as
though paralyzed.

Things had happened so rapidly since he had left the train at the
Cliffwood station that he could scarcely think logically. The fear that
Nancy had been injured had driven everything else from his mind. Now he
realized that all unwittingly he had walked into a trap.

Angrily, he jerked at the door, but it would not give. He kicked at it
savagely, but after a few minutes was convinced that it could not be
broken down even with a ram, for it was made of extra heavy wood. He did
not cry out for help, for he realized that there was no one near who
could aid him.

At last he sank down into a chair. What a fool he had been not to
suspect a plot! It was all clear to him now. Undoubtedly, Gombet had
intercepted the telegram which he had sent to Nancy, or in some way had
learned of the lawyer’s intended visit to Cliffwood. He had lied about
Nancy in order to induce him to come to this house.

“I don’t care what Nathan does to me, if only Nancy is safe,” Carson
Drew thought.

What had become of her? He did not believe she had been hurt as Nathan
had stated, but it was possible that the miser had taken her prisoner
also.

Nervously, Carson Drew paced the floor. The room was dark, but as his
eyes became accustomed to it, he noticed a small window far above. The
window was heavily barred.

“Evidently this room was fitted up for a prison,” he told himself
grimly. “I imagine Nathan Gombet has been biding his time to get me
here.”

There was little furniture in the room—nothing but a cot, a table, and
a chair. Mr. Drew pulled the table across the room and by standing on it
was able to look out of the window.

The courtyard was far below, and one glance disclosed the fact that even
if it were possible to break the bars, he could not hope to escape. It
would be suicide to drop to the ground, and there was no tree or
building near by.

“Nathan thought of everything,” Carson Drew observed dryly. “He has me
completely at his mercy.”

Just what Gombet would do with him, Mr. Drew did not know, but he
suspected the miser would go to any length to gain his end.

“I’ll never give in to him!” he resolved firmly.

Presently, glancing out of the window again, he noticed a stone house
some distance away which appeared not unlike the one in which he was
imprisoned.

“Can that be the Turnbull house?” he questioned himself.

He tried to recall the description Nancy had given him, and every detail
tallied. He was convinced that the stone house was indeed The Mansion.

“I wonder if Nancy is still there?” flashed through his mind. “Oh, if
only she returns to River Heights before that fiend gets his hands on
her!” It was characteristic of Carson Drew to think of his daughter’s
safety before his own. She was always first.

As the hours dragged slowly on, he kept a close watch of the neighboring
house, hoping to catch a glimpse of Nancy or someone to whom he could
signal. At noon the colored woman appeared with his luncheon, which
consisted of bread and water, shoved through a small hole at the bottom
of the door. Mr. Drew drank the water but did not touch the bread.

All afternoon he maintained his watch at the tiny window. The Turnbull
home appeared deserted. What had become of Nancy? Had she already
departed, or was she, too, held a prisoner at the hands of Gombet?

Toward evening, Carson Drew was startled to hear heavy footsteps in the
corridor. He scrambled down from the window, but there was not enough
time to move the table back into place.

Nathan Gombet stepped into the room. Carefully locking the door, he
placed an oil lamp on the table and gave Carson Drew a gloating grin.

“How do you like it here by this time?” he asked with elaborate
politeness.

“Oh, it’s very pleasant,” Mr. Drew returned sarcastically. “You may as
well put your cards on the table, Nathan Gombet. What do you want of
me?”

Nathan became intently eager.

“You know what I want,” he muttered. “You must pay me for my land and
sign a paper that you will not prosecute. If you will do that, I’ll let
you go free.”

“Indeed?”

“Yes,” Nathan smiled gleefully. “I want a check for twenty thousand
dollars. And if you know what’s wise, you’ll hand it over without
batting an eyelash.”

Carson Drew smiled grimly.

“You old reprobate! You’ll never get a cent!”

While he had been talking, Mr. Drew had done fast thinking. Now, he made
a sudden spring toward Nathan Gombet, intending to overpower him. Quick
as the action was, the old miser was prepared. Taking a step backwards,
he deliberately pulled a gun upon the lawyer.

“Oh, no, you don’t,” he snarled. “And just for that trick I’m going to
tie you up!”

Still covering Mr. Drew with the revolver and never taking his eyes from
the lawyer’s face, Gombet cautiously backed up to the door and unlocked
it. The heavy-set colored woman whom Mr. Drew had seen in the kitchen
came into the room so quickly that it was obvious she had been standing
just outside the door ready to aid the miser when summoned.

“Tie him up!” Nathan ordered harshly.

“Yes, suh.”

The colored woman disappeared, to return in a few minutes with heavy
ropes. As she waddled across the floor she clumsily brushed against
Nathan and entangled one of his feet in the rope.

“Take care what you’re doing,” the miser reprimanded her sharply.

He gave the rope a savage kick, and then emitted a howl of pain.

“Tarnation, but that leg does hurt,” he muttered. “Fell on a broken
stair step and just about killed myself. Leg’s pained me ever since!” He
wheeled upon the colored woman as though she were responsible for his
misfortune, but without ceasing to cover Carson Drew with the revolver.
“Get a move on there! Tie that man up and be quick about it!”

“Yes, suh.”

Sullenly, the colored woman set herself to the task. With the pistol
staring him in the face, the lawyer dared not resist. He was pushed
roughly into a chair and securely bound to it with the heavy ropes.

“Now how do you like it?” Nathan Gombet demanded, with satisfaction,
when the task had been completed.

Carson Drew did not give him the pleasure of an answer.

“Now, will you come to my terms?”

“I will not!”

Nathan stared at the lawyer in disbelief. He had not believed that Mr.
Drew would dare defy him.

“That’s your final decision?”

“It is.”

“You’ll be glad enough to come to my terms when I get through with you,
Carson Drew!”

“Do your worst.” Carson Drew smiled provokingly. Then his eyes narrowed.
“But remember this. You’ll be brought to justice in the end, and when
you are, the law won’t be lenient with you!”

“The law!” Gombet laughed scornfully. “A lot of good it will ever do
you! You’ll never see your daughter or your friends again unless you
give me the money. Will you sign the papers?”

“I’ve given you your answer. Can’t you understand plain English?”

“All right, I’ve given you your last chance!” Nathan’s face became
convulsed with rage. “In a day or so you’ll be glad enough to do as I
ask. I’ll starve you to it!”

Carson Drew shrugged his shoulders indifferently. Nathan Gombet saw that
his threat had made little impression upon the lawyer.

“And if that ain’t enough to bring you to time,” he added with a wicked
laugh. “I’ll get your daughter here, too!”

A look of horror came into Mr. Drew’s eyes.

“You couldn’t do that! Why, you don’t even know where she is!”

“Oh, don’t I? She’s right at the Turnbulls’ house. I can get her here
easily any night. Just have to dope her a bit, that’s all.”

“You fiend!” Carson Drew struggled at his bonds, but he was helpless.

Nathan Gombet laughed again, and turned toward the door.

“No more food or water for you,” he called back, as he turned to leave.

Carson Drew heard the key turn in the lock, and then he was left to
sober reflection. He did not doubt that Nathan Gombet would attempt to
carry out his ugly threat. That night he might enter The Mansion and
abduct Nancy. The thought made him ill.

“What can I do?” he asked himself miserably. “Perhaps, after all, I had
better do as Nathan asks.”




                              CHAPTER XVI
                               A New Clue


For two days after the arrival of the telegram from Chicago which stated
that Carson Drew had left for home, Nancy waited hopefully. But as the
time passed and no word was received from her father, her anxiety
intensified. All sorts of unpleasant thoughts began to trouble her.

Had her father met with an accident? Perhaps, in crossing the street, he
had been struck by an automobile. Oh, if only he would come or send word
of his whereabouts! The suspense was almost unendurable.

At the repeated urging of Rosemary and Floretta, she consented to remain
at The Mansion until she received news from her father. But the strain
of waiting was beginning to tell heavily upon her. Since Carson Drew had
left River Heights, she had not even received a letter from him.

Nancy’s interest in the mystery of the old stone house gradually
lessened. She was still determined to solve the enigma, but the fear
that something had happened to her father overshadowed all else.

Since the theft of the silk dresses from Floretta’s room, nothing had
happened to disturb the tranquility of the Turnbull household, although
an atmosphere of suspense seemed to hover over the entire house.
Sometimes Nancy thought that the very silence of the place would drive
her into hysterics. She longed to depart, but for the sake of Floretta
and Rosemary she remained.

Several times she had searched the house in the hope of finding secret
openings in the walls, but although when she rapped them a few had a
hollow sound, she was never able to find any hidden door. It was
discouraging.

Since Nancy had learned that Nathan Gombet was endeavoring to purchase
the Turnbull mansion at a ridiculously low price, she felt that she had
struck a valuable clue. In her own mind she was firmly convinced that
the miser had some connection with the strange things which had been
going on in the old house. She had no way of establishing the identity
of the thief, but she was certain that it was either Gombet or someone
employed by him.

“He intends to scare Rosemary and Floretta into selling at any price,”
Nancy thought. “It’s up to me to quench his little game!”

She was at a loss to know what course to follow. If only her father were
there to give her advice!

“As a last resort I’ll go to Gombet and have a talk with him,” she
decided. “By skillful questioning I may be able to learn something which
will incriminate him.”

Nancy was well aware that Nathan Gombet was clever as well as scheming.
It would be difficult to convict him of entering The Mansion, that she
knew. She could not cause him to be arrested upon suspicion.

“I must find a way to prove that he is the guilty one,” she thought. “If
I delay too long, something terrible may happen here. That miser is a
desperate man when crossed.”

Convinced that it was unwise to postpone her visit to the home of the
miser, she determined to visit him that very day, although she dreaded
the ordeal.

“Can you tell me where Nathan Gombet lives?” she asked Rosemary at the
luncheon table.

“Why, don’t you know?” Rosemary asked. “He lives in the old stone house
directly back of us.”

Nancy gave an exclamation of surprise.

“I wish I had known that before.”

“We would have mentioned it, but we thought you knew.”

“You think Gombet has something to do with the mystery?” Floretta
questioned curiously.

“I’m almost certain of it. But to prove my theory will not be easy.
Nathan is as clever as he is scheming. Tell me, how long has he lived in
the stone house?”

“Oh, for years. And a mighty unpleasant neighbor he is, too.”

“I can imagine,” and Nancy smiled grimly.

“You see, there’s quite a story connected with Nathan’s ownership of the
house,” Floretta began. “Would you care to hear it?”

“Indeed, I would.”

“The house was originally built by a Turnbull. That explains why it so
closely resembles our own.”

“Both homes were built by the same man?” Nancy asked.

“No; by two brothers.” It was Rosemary who answered. “They were devoted
to each other, and for that reason they built their houses close
together, although, as you can see, they are on different roads.”

“When the Civil War broke out, the brothers had their first
disagreement,” Floretta continued the story. “William, the brother who
owned this house, was a staunch supporter of the Union, but the other
brother joined the Confederate forces.”

“He gave his life as well as his fortune to the cause,” Rosemary broke
in.

“He was killed in action,” Floretta finished. “After his death it was
learned that he had heavily mortgaged his home. Everything went to pay
the debts. The house passed from one person to another until finally it
fell into the hands of Nathan Gombet.”

“But why does he want to buy your home?” Nancy demanded, with a puzzled
frown. “If he hopes to sell to the city, why doesn’t he give up his own
house.”

“The city doesn’t want it,” Rosemary explained. “He did try to sell. His
house doesn’t have as interesting a history as ours does, and he has
permitted it to run down. It’s in a terrible condition now. I shouldn’t
be surprised any day to see it tumble from its foundation.”

“Nathan has always been queer,” Floretta remarked. “As long as we can
remember he has lived alone.”

“Not exactly alone,” Rosemary broke in. “He keeps a servant. A colored
woman who looks as though she were an ogre.”

“And birds,” Floretta added. “His house fairly swarms with them. When
they die, he stuffs them! Ug!” She shuddered. “You couldn’t hire me to
go near his place.”

“You say he keeps birds?” Nancy inquired, with quickening interest.
“What kind?”

“Oh, most every kind, I guess,” Rosemary answered. “Parrots. You can
hear them screeching clear over here sometimes.”

“Does he keep canaries?” Nancy questioned eagerly.

“Oh, yes,” Rosemary agreed.

The significance of the question did not dawn upon Rosemary and
Floretta, and Nancy did not tell them what was in her mind. At once she
had thought of the two canaries which had found their way into The
Mansion so mysteriously. Was it not likely that Nathan Gombet had
brought the birds from his own home? But how had he succeeded in
entering the mansion without being discovered? That question remained
unanswered.

“I must visit the other house without delay,” she told herself. “But how
can I manage it? If I openly call upon Mr. Gombet he’s certain to
suspect my purpose and perhaps hold me a prisoner.”

If only she could find a way to enter the house without Nathan’s
knowledge!

“I’ll keep a close watch on the house, and I may see him leave,” she
decided. “If I do—that will be my chance.”

Nancy was excited at the information which she had secured, and was
eager for action. She felt that the solution to the mystery was almost
within her grasp.

She laid her plans carefully. She refrained from telling Rosemary and
Floretta of her intention to visit Gombet’s house, for she knew they
would be afraid to permit her to attempt the dangerous mission.

“If conditions are right, I’ll slip away this very night,” she resolved.

All that afternoon she moved restlessly about the house, making frequent
trips to the window to glance searchingly toward the old stone dwelling
which was half-hidden by tall trees.

“Time never dragged more slowly,” Nancy complained. “I wish night would
come.”

She ate little dinner, for as the hour approached, she realized more
keenly than before that she was about to undertake a dangerous
adventure. Clouds had been forming in the sky all afternoon, and by the
time the shadows began to gather a drizzly rain had set in. Nothing
could have pleased her more.

“What a horrible night,” Floretta remarked nervously as she glanced at
the rain-splashed windows. “I hope we don’t have another visit from our
ghost. It’s just the sort of night for something to happen.”

Rosemary looked displeased at this audible expression of her sister’s
nervousness.

Nancy smiled reassuringly.

“I have a feeling that this is going to be an unlucky night for our
ghost,” she said evenly. “And now, if you will excuse me, I believe I’ll
retire early.”

After saying good night to Rosemary and Floretta, Nancy Drew went
directly to her room. But she did not prepare for bed. On this night she
had an important mission ahead of her.




                              CHAPTER XVII
                        Under Cover of Darkness


Nancy Drew dressed herself in garments that would resist the rain, and
then removed her flashlight and pistol from their hiding places. The
latter she examined carefully to make certain it was loaded and ready
for instant use.

“I may need it to-night,” she assured herself grimly. “No telling what
I’ll get into.”

Nancy was in a hurry to get away, and it seemed that the Turnbull
sisters were never going to bed. Presently, she heard them moving about
downstairs and knew they were locking up for the night. After an
interminable wait, they came upstairs and went into their respective
rooms. A half hour more, and the house was quiet.

“Now is my chance,” Nancy thought. “If only I can get out of here
without being heard.”

Hastily slipping into her slicker and pulling a tight-fitting turban
over her curly, bobbed hair, she picked up her flashlight and revolver.
She opened the bedroom door and listened. All was quiet.

“I feel like a ghost myself,” Nancy chuckled, as she tiptoed past
Rosemary’s room.

The floor creaked alarmingly, and she paused, fearful lest she had
awakened the Turnbull sisters. She did not wish to frighten them and
neither did she wish to explain why she was prowling about at such a
late hour.

Apparently the noise had not been heard, for no sound issued from either
bedroom. Rosemary and Floretta were both sleeping soundly. After
hesitating a moment, Nancy cautiously crept on down the stairway.

She groped her way down the steps and upon reaching the drawing room,
turned on the flashlight. Quietly, she made her way to the front door.
As she had expected, it was locked.

She felt for the key, but did not find it. Surprised, she flashed her
light full upon the lock. The key was not there.

“Just my luck,” she murmured. “Rosemary and Floretta must have hidden it
somewhere.”

Softly, she moved through the house to the kitchen and tried the back
door. It also was locked and the key likewise was missing.

“Now I am in a nice mess,” Nancy told herself in disgust. “There’s no
hope of ever finding the key. I’ll have to go through a window.”

Rosemary and Floretta had not forgotten to lock the windows, but they
had been barred from the inside, and the one in the kitchen offered
little resistance when Nancy tried it. Quietly raising it, she crawled
through and pushed it down when she had reached the ground.

The rain was falling steadily, and a sudden gust of wind blew a wet
spray into her face. She did not mind. The blacker and stormier the
night, the more effectively it would serve her purpose.

She did not light her flashlight for fear of attracting attention to her
movements. Splashing through the mud and water, she tried to pierce the
darkness. She could see only a short way ahead, but she knew the exact
location of the other house, and headed for it. Her heart began to beat
faster as she contemplated the adventure before her. If all went as she
planned, she hoped to solve the mystery of the Turnbull mansion before
she returned.

As the outlines of the other stone house gradually emerged from the
murkiness of the drizzly night, she experienced a sensation of dread.
The night’s work was not going to be pleasant, of that she was sure.

There was something about the house which seemed sinister. Through the
mistlike rain, the rays of a light in one of the lower rooms shone forth
as if in a half-futile attempt to pierce the gloom, while the rest of
the house stood dark and somber.

So this was the home of Nathan Gombet, Nancy ruminated. She could not
help but feel that the dark, uninviting aspect of the structure provided
an abode singularly in keeping with the sinister character of its
master.

As she stood in the shadow of the tall maples which surrounded the
house, she was uncertain what course it would be wisest to follow. She
did not wish to blunder into danger and she especially dreaded an
encounter with Nathan Gombet. Yet, if she accomplished anything, she
must enter the house, and it must be done this night.

She squared her shoulders and stepped forward. At that very moment the
front door of the dwelling opened. Startled, Nancy retreated behind a
tree.

[Illustration: A man came out of the house.]

A man came out of the house. Unmindful of the rain, he stood for several
minutes with his face turned in the direction of the Turnbull mansion.

It was Nathan Gombet.

Nancy recognized him as the light from the window shone full upon his
face and clearly defined his features. The stoop of his shoulders was
unmistakable.

She crouched behind a tree and waited. What did the miser intend to do?
Perhaps he was contemplating another visit to the Turnbull mansion!
Otherwise, why would he stand there and stare in that direction?

Nancy could not know that Nathan was deliberately planning a scheme
which boded ill for her. The old miser had just ended a stormy interview
with Carson Drew who was held prisoner in the tower room of the house,
and he had made up his mind to bring the lawyer to time by kidnapping
his daughter. Just how he would get his hands on Nancy he did not know,
but as he abruptly started off down the path, he was turning over a
number of plans in his head.

“The time will soon be ripe,” he chuckled evilly.

Unaware that Nathan had been thinking of her and likewise without a
suspicion that she stood within a stone’s throw of the room where her
father was imprisoned, Nancy Drew considered what she had best do.

“There’s not much use to trail Nathan,” she decided. “After all, he may
not visit the Turnbull house, and this will be my only opportunity to
visit his house. It was pure luck he left just when he did.”

Hesitating no longer, she moved on through the rain. Once she glanced
back over her shoulder, but Nathan Gombet had been swallowed up in the
darkness.

Cautiously, Nancy approached the old stone house from the rear. The
light was still shining from a window, and she saw now that it came from
the kitchen. The shades were up, and as she drew closer she was able to
peer in.

A fat colored woman was washing dishes at the sink, her back to the
window.

“She must be the servant Rosemary and Floretta were telling me about,”
Nancy guessed. “I never saw a more surly-looking creature. She looks
positively vicious!”

Nancy Drew was disappointed, for with Nathan Gombet gone she had hoped
to find the house deserted. The presence of the colored woman made her
mission a very dangerous one.

“It’s now or never,” she thought nervously. “I must hurry or Nathan
Gombet may return.”

Cautiously, she moved forward and surveyed the house at close range.
With the exception of the kitchen, the shades were pulled down over all
of the windows.

“I may be able to get in a cellar window,” Nancy reasoned.

With one eye on the kitchen door, she began an investigation. After
trying several windows, she found one which had not been locked.

“Luck is with me,” she breathed. “Now, if I can get into the house
without being detected!”

The window was a small one and swung back on a hinge. It made a loud
grating sound as it opened, and Nancy felt certain the colored woman
must have heard the noise. Frantically, she scrambled through the small
opening and dropped to the cellar floor. Before she could prevent it,
the window banged shut behind her.

“Now I have done it!” she thought, in a panic.

Her fears were confirmed. The kitchen door opened and there was a heavy
tread on the back porch. The colored woman had heard the noise and was
coming to find what had caused it.




                             CHAPTER XVIII
                         Inside the Other House


Nancy Drew crouched in the dark cellar of the old stone house, scarcely
daring to breathe lest her presence be discovered. She could hear the
old colored servant coming down the path which led directly to the
window through which she had just scrambled.

“She heard the noise all right, and she’s coming to investigate,” Nancy
thought fearfully.

She dared not turn on her flashlight to search for a hiding place and
she dared not remain where she was. If the colored woman looked in at
the window, as she was almost certain to do, her presence would be
detected.

Feeling her way in the dark, Nancy moved cautiously forward. She could
not see a foot ahead of her, and the cellar was unpleasantly musty and
damp.

Her hand touched something cold and slimy. She recoiled as though she
had touched a snake, although in reality it was only an old piece of
rubber hose.

She could hear the colored woman coming nearer and nearer. Unless she
found a hiding place quickly, she would be caught.

Then her hand touched a doorknob. She turned it eagerly. The door opened
readily, and Nancy found herself in a small storeroom.

There was no time to search for a better place, so she quickly drew the
door to after her. Leaving a tiny crack through which she could peep,
she waited anxiously.

Almost immediately, she heard a noise at the cellar window, and a light
was flashed about. It rested for a moment upon the door of the storeroom
and then moved to another corner.

“I suah thought I heard somethin’!” Nancy heard the old negress mutter.
“An’ it was right down in this heah basement, too!”

She continued to flash the long beam of her flashlight here and there
about the cellar, and though Nancy could see nothing at the window
because of the glare, she imagined that back of the lens she saw two
penetrating black eyes peering directly into her retreat.

“If she sees me!” Nancy thought, and the prospect of being captured like
a thief in the house of Nathan Gombet caused her to crouch closely to
the wall, praying that the colored woman would not discover her. “If she
decides to come down into the cellar, I’m lost,” she told herself.

Apparently, the colored woman was satisfied that there was nothing wrong
in the basement, for after peering in at the window, she moved away,
muttering to herself.

“I done reckons my old ears is playin’ me false,” she mumbled. “I hears
noises dat sounds like dey was in de basement and dey was only in my
haid.”

A moment later Nancy heard the kitchen door slam shut. After waiting
several minutes longer to make certain that the old colored woman had no
intention of returning, she switched on her flashlight and curiously
surveyed her surroundings.

The storeroom in which she found herself was like any other room of its
kind, though it showed neglect. The place was filthy with dirt, and in
one corner some half-rotten potatoes sent up an odor which was anything
but pleasant.

After assuring herself that there was nothing of interest in the room,
Nancy opened the door and quietly stepped out into the main part of the
basement. It was a relief to get a whiff of comparatively fresh air.

Her purpose in entering the cellar was to discover whether or not there
was a secret tunnel connecting the Turnbull mansion with Nathan Gombet’s
house. Since she had learned that both residences had been built at
approximately the same time, she had suspected that such a passageway
might be in existence. She had been unable to find an entrance in the
cellar of the Turnbull mansion, but she hoped to have better luck in the
basement of Gombet’s house.

Flashing her light over the walls, she searched diligently for a secret
opening or a trapdoor. Obviously, there was no tunnel which opened out
of the basement. The walls appeared to be constructed of solid stone.

However, as she moved her light about, she saw a flight of stairs which
led to the first floor of the house.

Nancy Drew had no intention of leaving the place until she had made a
thorough investigation of the floors above, but the stairway she had
located led directly into the kitchen. So long as the colored woman was
working there, she would be held a prisoner in the cellar.

“I may have to wait here until she goes to bed,” she thought dismally.

A girl less patient would have given up the search, but Nancy was
determined to see the affair through to the end. Unless she here and now
unearthed an important clue which would definitely connect Nathan Gombet
with the strange happenings and numerous thefts at the Turnbull mansion,
she feared that the mystery would forever remain unsolved.

She had visited the home of Gombet as a last resort. She was firm in her
intention not to return without the evidence which must be obtained
before the old miser could be convicted.

The cellar was damp and Nancy’s slicker was but slight protection
against the chill night air. Presently, she was shivering with cold.

“This will never do,” she chattered. “I can’t stay here all night.”

Discomfort made her bold. Impulsively, she crept up the stairway. A door
blocked the entrance to the kitchen. Crouching down, she peered through
the keyhole. The colored woman was still there. She stood with her back
to the basement door, ironing.

It was slightly warmer on the landing and Nancy remained there, hoping
that some errand would take the woman from the room. After what seemed
an interminable wait, the negress put her ironing board away and,
picking up the basket of clothes, went out of the kitchen.

Throwing caution to the winds, Nancy gently tried the door. It was not
locked. Without making a sound, she opened it and stepped out into the
light.

Now that she was actually in the kitchen she did not know which way to
turn. As she hesitated, she heard the colored woman returning.

Frantically, Nancy glanced this way and that. There was not sufficient
time to retreat to the cellar. The woman had nearly reached the kitchen.

“I’m trapped,” the girl thought desperately.

Then her eyes rested upon a closet door to her left, and with scarcely
an instant’s consideration, she hastily sought the refuge it afforded.

Scarcely had she stepped into the closet and closed the door when the
colored woman came back into the kitchen. Without so much as a glance in
the direction of the closet, she picked up a pile of ironed linen and
again left the room. Nancy could hear her moving about in another part
of the house.

“Now is my chance!” she advised herself. “If I stay here I’ll be sure to
be caught.”

Quickly, she stepped out of the closet. She listened for a second to
make certain the woman was not returning, and then, without making a
sound, darted into the next room.

There was no time to look about, for at any moment the colored woman
might come back and find her there. She must reach the second floor.
Where was the stairway?

Softly, she tiptoed across the floor and opened a door. Fortune favored
her, for it was the right one. A narrow, winding stairway, not unlike
the one in the Turnbull house, led to the landing above.

With her pistol ready for instant use, Nancy Drew crept noiselessly up
the stairs. The boards creaked slightly but she did not pause until she
had reached the landing. It was pitch dark and she dared not use her
flashlight.

She heard a noise, and started.

“That sounded like someone coughing, but I guess it couldn’t have been,”
she decided. “My nerves are all on edge to-night.”

Had she only known it, she stood within twenty feet of the room where
her father was held a prisoner!

Nancy paused and listened, but the sound was not repeated.

She then crept silently along the corridor, unwittingly passing the
prison chamber in the dark.

The floor boards creaked alarmingly, and at each step she feared someone
would spring out and attempt to overpower her. She felt as though unseen
eyes were watching her every movement.

“I must control my nerves,” she told herself firmly.

By a supreme effort of will she gained control over herself and moved
forward again. Her hand struck a door knob. Cautiously, she opened the
door, wondering what would be revealed. In the inky blackness she could
see nothing, and with sudden daring, switched on her flashlight.

As a penetrating beam fell upon an object directly in front of her, she
started back in sheer horror.

A big owl, with spread wings and wicked glassy eyes, was less than three
feet from her!

Only by rigid mental discipline did Nancy suppress a cry of fright.
Then, as she continued to stare at the huge bird, she relaxed slightly.

The owl was stuffed! For a moment she had forgotten that Rosemary and
Floretta had told her that Nathan Gombet was something of a taxidermist.

With misgiving, she flashed her light about. What she saw did not tend
to lessen her terror. She stood in a room of birds!

“What a strange hobby,” Nancy shuddered.

Never had she seen such a collection. The room was crowded with
pedestals upon which sat stuffed birds. From one corner, an eagle looked
down upon her, and from another, an ugly vulture. There were several
crows and odd specimens Nancy did not recognize.

It was a gruesome sight. She stared at the figures in fascination and
horror, for in the semi-darkness a score of glassy eyes seemed focused
upon her.

Nancy’s first impulse was to back hastily from the room, but almost
immediately she gained control of herself. She would not leave until she
had discovered every secret of the old house!

As she moved her light about, she saw that there were live birds in the
room also. Golden canaries in gilded cages! They seemed strangely out of
keeping with the ugly stuffed specimens about the walls and upon the
pedestals. There were dozens of the little yellow birds, and as a beam
from the flashlight struck the cages, they aroused sleepily on their
perches and began to chirp and twitter.

“Canaries!” Nancy whispered, impressed at the sight. “Now I am sure it
was Nathan Gombet who entered the Turnbull mansion. The two canaries
which we found in Floretta’s room must have come from here! But how did
they get there? That is what I must find out before I leave here
to-night!”

She turned toward the door and as she moved forward a ray from the
flashlight fell upon a large cage which had escaped her notice. Now for
the first time she saw a brilliantly colored parrot.

The bird began to stir restlessly. Sensing that she was about to bring
disaster upon herself, Nancy switched the light to another portion of
the room. Too late! The parrot let out a loud squawk.

“Go ’way!” it screamed. “Go ’way! Polly wants a cracker!”

Thoroughly alarmed, Nancy darted toward the door. As she opened the
door, she heard a heavy step on the stairs. The colored woman was coming
to find out what the matter was! Escape was cut off.

“I could choke that parrot!” Nancy told herself almost fiercely. “Now I
am in a mess!”




                              CHAPTER XIX
                           A Chance Discovery


Softly, Nancy Drew closed the door. One quick glance toward the stairway
had convinced her that she could not hope to escape into the corridor.
Already the old colored woman, oil lamp in hand, had nearly reached the
landing. Fortunately, she was fat and awkward and could not move
swiftly. Nancy was thankful for that.

The ill-tempered parrot which had been the cause of all the trouble, was
now fully awakened. It began to flutter about angrily in its cage and to
squawk louder than before.

“Go ’way! Go ’way!” it screeched shrilly, cocking its head and eying her
slyly.

“Oh, hush up, you horrid bird!” Nancy murmured in an undertone, as she
scowled at the bird. “You’ve caused enough trouble as it is!”

She flashed her light about the room in a desperate attempt to find a
hiding place. The room was bare of furniture.

She rushed to the window and glanced hopefully out. There was no ledge,
and the drop to the ground would be suicide.

Nancy realized that she had never been in a more dangerous situation.
She did not doubt that the old colored woman was as unscrupulous as her
master, and what she would do if she found a stranger prowling in the
house, Nancy dreaded to consider. At least she would turn her over to
Nathan Gombet when he returned, and Nancy could think of no worse fate.

Nervously, she gripped her revolver. If the necessity arose, could she
defend herself? She had never shot a firearm in her life at anything but
a target, and she knew that she could never bring herself to the point
of injuring a human being deliberately, even to save herself from
capture. Yet, the revolver would serve as a bluff, and perhaps as an
effective one.

“I can’t afford to be caught here,” she thought. “Even if I managed to
escape it would put an end to my investigation, and I haven’t learned
half enough yet!”

In her prior survey of the bird room, Nancy had failed to notice a
closet door directly behind the parrot’s cage. Now, as her eyes turned
again in that direction, she saw it for the first time.

With a low exclamation of pleasure and belief she glided toward it.
Opening the door, she stepped inside and closed it after her.

She was not an instant too soon, for scarcely had she entered the dark
recess when she heard the room door open. The colored woman came
waddling into the room. She flashed her light into the corners of the
room and looked about in a puzzled manner as though unable to understand
what had caused the commotion of the birds.

“Go ’way! Go ’way!” the parrot cackled, harping on its eternal theme.
“Polly wants a cracker.”

“How comes you so excited to-night, talk-bird?” the woman demanded
crossly. “You carries on like a fool with all yo’ squawkin’ and
speechifyin’!”

“Go ’way! Go ’way!” the parrot repeated mechanically, fluttering its
wings and swinging saucily on its cage trapeze.

“Oh, nev’ mind, nev’ mind!” the negress grunted. “I’ll go ’way all
right, but befo’ I goes I’s gwine cut off yo’ conversation!”

Provoked that the bird had caused her to make a special trip upstairs,
she picked up a piece of heavy canvas from the floor and flung it over
the parrot’s cage.

“I reckon dat’ll hold you fo’ a spell!” she muttered.

The parrot gave a last dismal squawk and then became quiet.

The woman stood beside the bird cage regarding it with satisfaction. She
was not more than a yard or two from the closet door and if she had
reached out her hand could have touched the handle.

Fearful lest she be discovered, Nancy pressed herself against the wall
of the closet and remained motionless. She felt a tiny little knob
pressing uncomfortably into the hollow of her back, but without a light
she could not see what it was. Later, if she escaped detection, she
intended to investigate.

Now, she knew that the slightest noise would bring the enemy down upon
her in an instant. For some reason, the colored woman showed an
inclination to remain even after she had covered the bird cage. Perhaps
she sensed a foreign presence in the room. At all events she stood near
the closet, listening.

The room was silent save for the twittering of the canaries. Nancy held
her breath in suspense. Would she be discovered? It was a nerve-wracking
moment.

Again the woman flashed her light about the room, but she did not turn
toward the closet. After a last careful look around, she moved heavily
toward the door. There she paused and appeared to reflect.

“Cain’t make out what upset that there bird all of a sudden,” she said
to herself. “Reckons I ain’t gwine take no chances.”

With that, she went out and closed the door behind her. Nancy heard a
peculiar grating sound, but was at a loss to explain it.

The colored woman shuffled down the corridor and as she descended the
stairs to the lower floor, her footsteps gradually died away. After
waiting several minutes, Nancy emerged from her hiding place. The air
had become unpleasantly stuffy within the closet, and she was glad to
get out.

Avoiding the parrot cage, she crept noiselessly to the door. She grasped
the knob and pulled, but to her astonishment the door did not open.
Again she tried, but without success.

The door was locked!

Now Nancy comprehended the significance of the peculiar grating noise
she had heard directly after the negress had left the room. It was the
sound of a key turning in the lock. She, Nancy Drew, was a prisoner in
the bird room—the “chamber of horrors.”

“Now what shall I do?” Nancy questioned herself miserably. “Oh, why did
I ever come to this horrible place, anyway?”

She sank down on the floor and tried to think of a way out of the
predicament, but could not. Her zest for adventure had been her undoing.

“If I ever get out of here alive I’ll think twice before I go blundering
into anything like this again,” she promised herself.

Presently, she walked over to the window and glanced toward the Turnbull
mansion. If only she could wish herself safely back into her own room!

“And the worst part of it is that I haven’t discovered what I came to
find out,” she mourned. “I’m sure there is a secret panel in this house,
but now I’ll never find it. I’m certain it wouldn’t be in this room.”

Because there was nothing else to do, she began a half-hearted
examination of the walls. As she had expected, she found nothing of
interest. She was about to give up in disgust when a sudden thought came
to her.

She recalled the knob she had felt within the closet. Probably it was
nothing, but at least it would do no harm to have a look at it.

Flashing her light into the closet, she focused it upon the knob in
question. It was a tiny thing and appeared to have no special purpose.
Certainly it was not the right size to serve as an object upon which to
hang clothing.

“I wonder what it is for?” the girl asked herself.

Curiously, Nancy stepped inside the closet and twisted the knob. She
thought she heard a clicking noise. Was it only imagination?

Eagerly, she examined the back wall of the closet and her interest
quickened. In the dim light she could make out a long crack. She tapped
the wall with her knuckles, and it had a hollow sound.

“I believe I’ve stumbled upon something important,” Nancy thought
excitedly.

With all her might she pushed upon the knob. Unexpectedly, a spring
clicked and the entire side of the closet wall dropped down!

[Illustration: She toppled forward and fell headlong down a steep
flight of stone steps.]

Nancy struggled to maintain her balance, but could not. She toppled
forward and fell headlong down a steep flight of stone steps.

A low cry of pain escaped her, and then she lay still.




                               CHAPTER XX
                        The Underground Passage


After Nancy Drew had plunged through the opening into the dark abyss,
the closet wall clapped back into place. She did not hear the spring
click, for before she reached the bottom of a long flight of stone
stairs her head struck a hard object and she lost consciousness.

For several minutes she remained in a limp little heap at the bottom of
the stairs. When at last she opened her eyes, she gave a little moan of
pain, and tried to recollect what had happened.

She could see nothing, for she was enveloped in darkness. Gradually, she
began to recall the events leading up to the sudden fall through the
opening in the wall. She could remember pressing the tiny knob in the
closet, but there her memory failed her. Evidently, she had found the
secret panel and was now in an underground chamber.

As yet, Nancy was too badly shaken to realize the full importance of the
discovery. She sat up and gingerly felt of her head. There was a big
bump over her left eye.

“Lucky I wasn’t killed,” she murmured.

She scrambled slowly to her feet and moved first one limb and then
another. She had been sorely bruised and scratched in the fall, but so
far as she could tell no bones were broken.

In the descent she had lost both her revolver and flashlight, and she
began to grope around in the dark, hoping to find them.

She found the revolver almost at her feet, but it required a diligent
search before her hand struck the flashlight. It had lodged in a corner
near the last step.

“I hope it isn’t broken,” she thought anxiously, as she picked it up.

To her relief, the flashlight had not been damaged. When she turned it
on it worked perfectly, but its feeble light illuminated only a small
portion of the surroundings.

Nancy saw that she had fallen to the very bottom of a long stone
stairway. In vain she looked for the opening through which she had
plunged. It had vanished as though by magic.

“That’s strange,” she murmured, bewildered. “I know I fell down those
steps.”

Limping painfully up the stairs, she stared in astonishment at the solid
wall at the top. She ran her hands up and down but could not find the
hidden spring.

“Oh, well, I could probably find it if I hunted long enough,” she told
herself. “But I’m only wasting valuable time. I’ve found the secret
passage at last, and, the Fates being willing, I intend to find out
where it leads. I can investigate this panel later when I have more
time.”

Nancy cautiously descended into the tunnel. The steps were of crudely
cut stone and led almost straight down into an inky, uncertain
blackness. Beyond, stretched a passageway.

When she reached the bottom of the steps, she paused, undecided what to
do. She did not know where the passage might lead; she might be walking
into danger.

“I’ll chance it,” she decided. “I wouldn’t turn back for anything in the
world now.”

The passageway which stretched uninvitingly before her was very narrow
and only high enough for her to walk without bending over. The sides
were built of brick and stone, but the material had begun to crumble and
Nancy feared that at any moment a portion of the walls or ceiling might
come tumbling down upon her.

“Well, here’s for it,” she decided resolutely.

She moved slowly forward, flashing her light ahead of her. The passage
was unpleasantly damp and had an earthy smell. Moisture clung to the
walls, and there was a cold breeze circulating.

“I must be underground,” she thought.

An awful silence reigned in the subterranean passage. The quiet was
oppressive. With an anxious glance over her shoulder, Nancy went on.

Once she thought she heard a sigh from someone in distress.
Involuntarily, she stopped to listen.

“I guess it was only the wind,” she told herself uncertainly.

On she went deeper into the labyrinth of darkness, feeling her way
cautiously. The tiny light from her flashlight but dimly illuminated the
passage, and she stumbled and groped her way along timidly. When she
accidentally brushed against the stone walls or put out a hand to save
herself from falling, the structure felt clammy and repulsive to the
touch.

“Silly!” she chided herself sternly.

But in spite of her determination, she could not free her mind from
unpleasant supposition. The gruesome sights she had seen in the bird
room had made an unpleasant impression upon her. What if the colored
woman had heard her fall down the stairs and knew the secret of the
hidden panel in the closet? At this very moment she might be following.

Nancy shivered. In the subterranean passage, cries for help would never
be heard. She would be entirely at the mercy of anyone who found her
trespassing.

Her own footsteps seemed strangely loud and echoed in her ears. Oh, if
only she would come to the end of the passage! Surely, it could not run
on forever.

The air was cold and damp, and in a number of places water dripped from
the ceiling. Nancy believed that it was rain dripping through the cracks
in the cement. In that case she could not be far underground.

Where did the tunnel lead? Perhaps it came out in someone’s garden or a
wood.

“And maybe to a graveyard.” Nancy shivered. “I’ve heard of such things.
Anyway, I hope not. I’ve gone through enough for one night!”

Her head ached from the injury she had received, and she was tired from
nervous strain. She was impatient to reach the end of the passage.

What would she find there? She could only hope that the exit would not
be barred. If such were the case, she would be a prisoner in the
underground vault. Of course she could always return to the entrance,
but whether or not she could find the hidden spring which controlled the
sliding panel was another matter.

After a time she stopped a moment to rest. As she paused she heard a
sound directly behind her. Wheeling, she suppressed a cry of terror.

A big rat scurried by, almost at her feet.

“Ug!” Nancy shuddered. “I don’t like this place.”

Still, she would not turn back. After resting a few minutes she again
proceeded.

The passage was no longer straight, but twisted and turned in a puzzling
fashion. At one place she came to a point where two tunnels branched
off. She hesitated, uncertain, which one to take.

After a short mental debate she selected the right hand one, but as she
went on, could not help but feel she had chosen the wrong one. Perhaps
she was returning to Gombet’s house, doubling back on her trail.

Anxiously, Nancy, glanced at her flashlight. She had forgotten to bring
an extra battery and she did not know how long the present one would
last. The bright light somewhat reassured her, but nevertheless she
quickened her pace. She could think of nothing more horrifying than to
be left without a light in such a gruesome place.

She tried to take note of the various turns in the tunnel but presently
gave it up as a hopeless task. If she were forced to return, she must
depend upon instinct to guide her.

“I hope I don’t get lost,” she worried. “That would be the crowning
misfortune.”

At last her foot struck a hard object, and Nancy quickly turned her
flashlight upon it. She had reached another stone step. Perhaps she was
approaching the exit to the passageway.

The thought gave her new courage. As she peered ahead she saw a long
flight of stone steps leading upward. Eagerly, she groped her way up
them.

It seemed to her that the air became gradually warmer and less damp.

“I’m coming out of the tunnel at last,” she reasoned joyfully. “I wonder
where I am?”

At last the stone steps came to an end, but to her chagrin, Nancy faced
a solid wall.

“There must be a secret spring, if only I can find it,” she thought
desperately.

Anxiously, she flashed her light over the wall. Near the top step she
saw a tiny knob not unlike the one she had discovered in the closet of
Nathan Grombet’s house. With a cry of satisfaction, she pushed upon it.

Slowly, the wall swung back, and in amazement Nancy passed through the
opening. The panel grated shut behind her.

“This is positively spooky,” she laughed uncertainly. “Who ever dreamed
there was a place like this anywhere near Cliffwood? It reminds me of
the feudal castles. The man who built it certainly had funny ideas.”

If Nancy had expected to find herself at the mouth of the passage she
was mistaken. Ahead of her was a steep flight of wooden stairs.

The steps were very old and offered treacherous footing, and the space
between the walls was so narrow that it was with difficulty that she
proceeded. She moved forward cautiously feeling each step.

She had climbed but a short distance when she stepped forward with her
right foot and instead of striking a solid base, found nothing beneath.
Only by grasping the step above did she save herself from a fall.

Quickly focusing the light down upon the step, she was able to see that
the bottom of it was missing. The flooring had rotted entirely away.

“That was a lucky escape,” she said inwardly. “I might have broken my
leg there.”

Carefully avoiding the hole, she moved on. A dozen more steps and she
reached a landing. Here several narrow flights of stairs branched off.
What could it mean? Where was she?

Nancy felt reasonably certain that that she was inside a house, but
whether she had returned to Gombet’s dwelling, she had no way of
telling.

After a slight hesitation she selected one of the flights and continued
to climb. The steps were in terrible condition and at any moment she
expected to crash through the half-decayed wood.

Far above, she thought she could see a dim light filtering through a
crack, and she hurried eagerly on. She was so anxious to reach the top
of the stairs that she failed to notice that her flashlight was growing
dimmer and dimmer.

Just as she came to the end of the steps, the light blinked. Then for
the first time Nancy glanced down and saw that the bulb was dim. The
battery was nearly exhausted. A few moments more, and she would be
plunged in darkness.

Ahead she caught a glimpse of a huge metal ring on the wall. What it was
she had no idea, but it offered her her only hope of escape from the
staircase.

Just as her hand reached out and grasped it, the flashlight flickered
again. Then it went entirely out.

Nancy Drew was left in darkness.




                              CHAPTER XXI
                         The End of the Passage


Panic momentarily took possession of Nancy Drew as her light flickered
out. She was a prisoner within the secret staircase. Without a light
there was little hope that she could find the exit.

After her first fright had passed, she began to think more logically.
Through a crack in the wall, a dim light filtered. Unquestionably, she
had reached the end of the passage, and if only she could find the
secret, the wall would open.

“Perhaps the metal ring will open the panel,” she thought hopefully.

Grasping it firmly with both hands, she pulled with all her strength. A
trapdoor fell back so unexpectedly that Nancy nearly lost her balance
and tumbled down the stairs. Only by maintaining her hold on the ring
did she save herself.

Beyond the opening she could see a room. Where was she? Had she doubled
back and thus returned to Nathan Gombet’s dwelling?

Scarcely daring to breath lest her presence be discovered, she crawled
through the opening and hastily scrambled to her feet.

The room was dimly lighted by one window, and as she glanced toward it,
Nancy was surprised to see the moonbeams shining upon the casement.
Evidently, she had been within the passage for some time, as it had
stopped raining.

In the dim light she could not make out her surroundings. She moved
forward with the utmost caution. As she groped her way, she reached out
with her hand and touched something. It was a piece of furniture.
Eagerly, she felt of it, and then smiled broadly.

She knew that old highboy. She remembered seeing it the day she had
searched the Turnbull attic!

Nancy’s anxiety fell from her like a cloak. She leaned against the
highboy and chuckled softly. Now she knew where she was!

She had traveled from Gombet’s house underground to the Turnbull
mansion. The stairs she had ascended had led up the side of the house to
the attic. Undoubtedly, the other flights she had passed led to other
portions of the old house.

But why had she failed to discover the trapdoor when she had first
examined the attic, she asked herself. Certainly, she had made a
thorough search.

“I can’t see a thing without a light,” she grumbled mentally. “I suppose
I’ll have to wait until morning before I can investigate this attic
again.”

Nancy did not close the trapdoor, for she was afraid that if she did she
might never again find the spring which opened it. In the morning she
would visit the attic and again enter the hidden staircase.

“Now I’ll go to my room and try to sleep,” she decided. “It’s long past
midnight and I’m dead tired.”

Softly, she crept forward, feeling her way out of the attic. She found
the stairs which led to the floor below, and quietly descended them.

“I hope Floretta and Rosemary don’t hear me,” she chuckled. “If they do
they’ll think the ghost is abroad again.”

She slipped past Rosemary’s bedroom and reached her own in safety.

“What an adventure!” she sighed happily, as she closed the bedroom door
behind her and lighted a candle. “What a night! I hope I’ll never go
through another as harrowing. Still, I wouldn’t have missed it for
worlds!”

Hastily, she undressed and crawled into bed, but she did not fall to
sleep at once. Instead she lay awake staring up at the ceiling.

As she pieced together the information she had secured from every
source, she comprehended the value of her night’s work. She understood
it all now. Nathan Gombet was the guilty party. It was he who had
visited the Turnbull mansion at frequent intervals, frightening the old
ladies and stealing their valuables.

Since Nancy had learned that he wished to buy the Turnbull property at a
ridiculously low figure, she had been convinced that it was Nathan who
made nightly visits to the mansion, but without definite proof of her
theory she could not lay her case before the authorities. Now she had
the necessary proof!

Probably the secret tunnel which connected Gombet’s house with the
Turnbull residence had been built before Civil War days, and had been
planned as a protection against possible marauders. At that time the
Turnbull brothers had been friendly and Nancy imagined that they used
the passage frequently as a means of going from one house to the other.
But with the Civil War, the brothers had become enemies, and the
passageway had been closed up. With the passing of the years it had been
forgotten, until now the descendants could recall nothing about it.

In some way, undoubtedly by accident, Nathan Gombet had stumbled upon
the entrance. He had determined to use the knowledge to further his own
ugly schemes.

“Probably there are openings on each floor,” Nancy thought. “It would be
easy for Nathan to go from one room to another without being discovered,
it would be just like him to hide and listen to any conversation he
could!”

She recalled the strange threatening note she had received which had
warned her not to meddle with the affairs of the Turnbulls. She was
convinced that Gombet had sent the message. He had heard Floretta and
Rosemary discussing the letter, and in that way had learned that she was
expected to arrive.

The loss of the pocketbook, the silver spoon, the urn, the pin, and
Floretta’s dresses could be easily explained. Nathan had entered the
house by the secret staircase and had taken the things.

“There must be an opening into the library,” Nancy told herself. “I
intend to find it to-morrow if I have to chop down the wall!”

It was no longer a mystery how the canaries had reached Floretta’s room.
Probably Nathan had accidentally left the entrance to the tunnel open on
one of his visits to the mansion, and the birds had flown through the
opening and had found their way to the house, or possibly the miser had
brought them with him.

The loud cry which had been heard in the night was easily explained.
Nathan Gombet had fallen over the broken step on the stairway and had
hurt himself.

“Served him right, too,” Nancy thought, with some pleasure.

Satisfied that she had solved the mystery, she turned over in bed and
tried to go to sleep. But she could not. Worries began to beset her.

Until Nathan Gombet was brought to justice her work was not
accomplished. It would not be easy to capture him, she knew, for the
miser was a desperate man when crossed. If only her father were at home
to give her advice!

“What can have become of him?” she fretted, as she tossed restlessly in
bed. “I’m so worried. If I don’t hear from him to-morrow I must report
him missing to the police!”

Not until it was nearly dawn did she fall into a troubled sleep.




                              CHAPTER XXII
                             The Next Move


When Nancy Drew opened her eyes the following morning, the sun was
streaming in at her bedroom window. A quick glance at the clock on her
dresser disclosed that it was fifteen minutes past nine.

“Horrors!” she cried, springing from the bed. “Why didn’t Floretta or
Rosemary awaken me?”

She was provoked with herself that she had overslept on a morning when
she had so much to do. Although she had gone through a trying ordeal the
night before, she was none the worse for the experience, and arose
feeling refreshed and eager for what the day might bring forth.

Hastily dressing, she hurried downstairs to find that breakfast was
waiting.

“You have no idea how sorry I am,” she apologized contritely. “You
shouldn’t have waited for me.”

“It doesn’t matter in the least,” Rosemary told her quietly, as the
three sat down to the breakfast table. “This may be the last breakfast
we’ll ever eat here.”

“Why, what do you mean?” Nancy glanced up quickly and noticed the sad
expression on the faces of the Turnbull sisters.

“Nathan Gombet was here this morning,” Rosemary explained.

Nancy’s spoon clattered from her hand.

“He was here this morning?” she asked in astonishment.

“Yes, he came to repeat the offer he made us some time ago for the
house.”

“That wasn’t an offer—it was a steal!”

“But in the light of what has happened here, we can’t expect to get much
for the house.”

“You didn’t sell?” Nancy questioned anxiously.

“We have made up our minds to give up the house. Yes, we accepted his
offer and told him that if he came back this afternoon we would sign the
papers.”

“Then you haven’t signed anything yet?”

“Not yet,” Rosemary responded listlessly.

“Oh, I’m so glad!” Nancy cried impulsively. “If you had it would have
spoiled everything. There is no need for you ever to leave your home,”
she added impressively. “You see, I’ve solved the mystery at last.”

“You’ve solved the mystery?” Floretta demanded eagerly. “You know what
became of our silver urn? Oh, it’s too good to be true!”

“I can’t lay hands on your urn this minute,” Nancy told her. “But I
think I can get it within twenty-four hours.”

“Don’t keep us in suspense,” Rosemary begged. “Tell us everything. Is
there really a ghost in our house?”

Nancy laughed.

“Nathan Gombet is the ghost—just as I suspected.”

“Are you certain?” Rosemary asked a trifle doubtfully. “He has been our
neighbor for years and he offered to buy our house.”

“That’s just why he has been trying to frighten you. Because he wanted
to force you to sell at his price.”

“I always thought Nathan was mean, but I had no idea he would do a thing
like that,” Floretta said. “Have you really the proof that he is the
guilty party? Unless you have, we wouldn’t dare accuse him.”

“I’ll show you my proof,” Nancy declared. “Come with me and I think
you’ll be convinced.”

Hurrying to the kitchen, she secured a supply of candles, and then led
the way to the attic. Wonderingly, Rosemary and Floretta followed.

Nancy flung open the door and permitted the Turnbull sisters to enter
first.

“I have discovered a hidden stairway,” she informed them, as she flashed
her candle in the direction of the old highboy.

Rosemary and Floretta took one look and gasped in astonishment. The
secret stairway was plainly revealed for the trapdoor was open just as
Nancy had left it the night before.

“Who ever dreamed of a hidden staircase in our house?” Floretta demanded
in excitement.

“There were rumors to that effect,” Rosemary admitted. “But I never
believed them. Just think how many times we’ve been in this attic and
never discovered the trapdoor!”

“It was very cleverly hidden,” Nancy told them. “I searched and couldn’t
find it myself from the outside.”

“Where does the stairway lead?” Floretta asked, peering into the dark
recess.

“It leads to a tunnel which connects The Mansion with Nathan Gombet’s
house.”

“And he’s been entering our house nightly by means of this staircase?”
Floretta questioned.

“I’m convinced of it.”

“But how did you ever make the discovery?” Rosemary broke in admiringly.

Nancy then told the details of her harrowing experience in the Gombet
residence. She ended by showing them the bump on her head which had been
caused by falling down the stone steps.

“You might have been killed,” Floretta shuddered. “And imagine going
through that passage all alone in the dead of night! It must have been
terrible! I never could have done it.”

“I’ll admit I didn’t enjoy the experience,” Nancy replied. “But it was
the only way to solve the mystery.”

Rosemary, who had been studying the entrance to the staircase
meditatively, now turned to Nancy with a puzzled frown.

“There’s one thing that isn’t clear to me. I don’t see how Nathan took
our silver urn from the library and managed to escape without being
caught. In order to reach this staircase it would be necessary for him
to pass our bedrooms. Surely, we would have heard him.”

“That puzzles me too,” Nancy admitted. “But I have a theory which I
intend to investigate this morning. I believe there must be another
opening to this staircase on the floor below.”

“Perhaps there’s one in every room,” Floretta speculated.

“It wouldn’t surprise me to find one on every floor,” Nancy stated.

“But we searched thoroughly,” Rosemary protested. “We went over every
inch of the walls.”

“That’s true. But I believe it will be easier to find the openings from
the inside. I intend to enter the staircase again and try to find them.
Last night I remember that several flight of stairs branched off from
one landing. I want to find out where they lead. Do you want to go with
me?”

“Certainly,” Rosemary declared promptly. “I have a great curiosity to
see what the stairway is like.”

“It’s so old we must be careful not to fall,” Nancy warned her. “One of
the steps has rotted away entirely.”

As she spoke, she stepped through the opening into the passageway.
Rosemary boldly followed, but Floretta hesitated uncertainly.

“What if the trapdoor should fall shut?” she questioned anxiously.

“I’m sure it won’t,” Nancy reassured her. “But even if it does, I can
open it again. See, here is the hidden spring.”

She held her candle so that the beam illuminated the metal ring which
controlled the door. Still, Floretta hesitated.

“Do hurry,” Rosemary commanded impatiently. “There’s no danger.”

Floretta folded her skirts tightly about her to prevent them from
brushing against the dusty walls, and then timidly descended the first
step.

“I don’t like it,” she choked. “The dust is terrific and the
cobwebs—ug!” Nevertheless, she did not turn back.

Cautiously, Nancy Drew led the way down the wooden stairs, taking care
to avoid the broken step. At the landing she selected one of the
passages which led in another direction, and descended the stairs until
she came to another landing.

As she flashed her light about, her keen eyes caught the gleam of a
metal ring. She seized upon it eagerly.

“This must open a panel,” she cried, in excitement.

As she pulled upon the ring, the wall fell away, and to her amazement
she stepped into a closet which was filled with garments.

“Where are we?” she demanded.

“Why, we must be in my room!” Floretta gasped. “Now I understand what
became of my silk dresses and the diamond pin!”

“It’s clear Nathan must have entered the room by means of the secret
panel in the closet,” Rosemary observed.

“But how did the canaries get in?” Floretta demanded.

“They might have flown through the passage and entered the room when the
panel was open,” Nancy suggested.

“That’s very likely,” Rosemary agreed. “It’s no wonder we thought the
walls had ears. It’s my opinion Nathan has been hiding in the staircase
listening to everything we say. It frightens me to think of it!”

“I feel confident it was Nathan Gombet who sent me the threatening
letter advising me not to come to this house,” Nancy declared. “Can you
remember whether or not you read my letter aloud after it arrived?”

“Yes, we did,” Floretta responded quickly. “And we were in this very
bedroom too! Nathan must have been listening and heard every word!”

“It’s clear enough now,” Rosemary said caustically. “That man thought he
could frighten us from our home. To think we nearly sold The Mansion to
him!”

“Shall we investigate the other passages?” Nancy questioned. “Our time
is getting short and I’m eager to find out where they lead.”

“By all means,” Rosemary agreed.

Without taking time to close the panel after them, the three descended
the hidden stairway to the landing below and there selected another
flight of wooden stairs.

“We must be going down to the first floor now,” Floretta observed, as
they cautiously descended.

“Watch out for the step,” Nancy, who was ahead, called out in warning.
“There’s another broken one just ahead.”

The three avoided the hole in the flooring and continued down the
staircase. At last, Nancy came to the end of the passage, but to her
surprise could find no hidden panel. In vain she flashed her candle
about over the walls and Floretta and Rosemary aided in the search.

“That’s funny,” Nancy murmured in perplexity. “I’m sure there must be an
opening here somewhere.”

She glanced anxiously at her candle. It would not last many more
minutes, and unless she wished to be plunged into darkness, she must
return to the kitchen for another supply. Floretta and Rosemary had used
the last of their stock.

The passage at this particular place was very narrow and so low that a
person could not stand upright without striking the top wall.

Tiring of the stooped position which she had been forced to endure for
several minutes, Nancy straightened. Her head struck the top of the
passageway.

“Ouch!” she exclaimed.

To her astonishment, she heard a strange clicking noise.

“I believe I’ve discovered the panel,” she cried eagerly.

While Rosemary held the candle, she examined ceiling overhead and pushed
upon it with all her strength. To her surprise, the wall gave way easily
and lifted up.

Nancy pushed the obstruction out of the way and thrust her head and
shoulders through the opening. Curiously, she gazed about. She had come
up through the sofa seat in the library!

“My word!” she exclaimed. “No wonder I never found the secret panel in
this room. Who would have thought of looking in the sofa!”

She pulled herself up through the opening and then assisted Floretta and
Rosemary, who were less athletic.

“Mercy! What next?” Floretta gasped as she sank down into a chair and
tried to regain her breath.

“Imagine living in this house all these years and never discovering
anything wrong with that sofa!” Rosemary commented.

“I see everything now,” Nancy said slowly. “That broken step just before
we came to the opening. Nathan must have fallen and cried out in alarm.
And I feel certain there must be another opening in the sofa in the
drawing room. I’m going to find out!”

Darting into the next room, she jerked the cushions from the sofa and
lifted the base boards. As she had suspected, there was an opening
similar to the one in the library, which was just large enough for a
person to squeeze through.

“That’s how Nathan stole the silver urn,” Floretta observed. “He came up
through the sofa seat in the library!”

“How stupid of me not to think of looking there before,” Nancy said.

“Stupid? I think you’ve done extremely clever detective work, as it is.
Why, we’ve lived here for years and never dreamed of a hidden staircase.
How shall we ever repay you for all you have done?”

“Oh, let’s not think about that now,” Nancy said hastily, glancing at
her watch. “There’s so much yet to be done. We must bring Nathan Gombet
to justice if we can!”

“I agree with you there,” Floretta cried feelingly. “Go and call the
police! We want him locked up!”

Nancy started toward the door.

“If he has an inkling of what we have discovered, he’ll try to escape,”
she threw back over her shoulder.

She hurried to the garage at the rear of the house and quickly backed
her roadster out upon the drive. Rosemary and Floretta, not to be left
behind, crowded in beside her.

“Oh, do you think the police will be able to capture him?” Floretta
asked tremulously. “I’ll never feel safe again until I know he’s behind
prison bars.”

“I’m afraid we shouldn’t have taken the time we did to investigate those
passages,” Nancy returned quietly. “But I wanted to be absolutely
certain that Nathan Gombet was guilty before I turned him over to the
authorities.”

With that she shifted gears, and the car roared down the Cliffwood road
to disappear in a cloud of dust.




                             CHAPTER XXIII
                          Notifying the Police


“Oh, if only we had installed a telephone at the mansion,” Rosemary
fretted, as Nancy Drew’s roadster sped along over the smooth road toward
Cliffwood.

“Isn’t there any house along the road where we can stop to call the
police?” Nancy questioned. “It would save us considerable time.”

Rosemary shook her head.

“There aren’t any houses until we get almost into Cliffwood.”

“Then we may as well drive straight to the sheriff’s office,” Nancy
decided. “It’s only a short distance, anyway. A few minutes delay ought
not to make such a big difference.”

“But it may,” Floretta declared uneasily. “I believe Nathan is beginning
to be suspicious. Otherwise, he wouldn’t have come to us this morning
with the offer to buy the house.”

Nancy did not respond, but concentrated her attention upon the road
before her. In exactly twelve minutes flat she brought the automobile to
a quivering halt in front of the sheriff’s office.

Switching off the engine, she sprang from the car, and, with the
Turnbull sisters close behind her, ran into the building. The sheriff,
the picture of repose, with his feet comfortably placed on the top of a
roll-top desk, was laughing and talking with several men who were seated
about the room. As Nancy Drew and the two women came in, he swung his
feet to the floor and eyed them with respectful attention.

“Anything I can do for you?” he inquired.

Without mincing words, Nancy quickly told of the strange things that had
happened at the Turnbull house and of the discoveries she had made. At
various points, Rosemary and Floretta corroborated her story.

“I want you to arrest Nathan Gombet,” Nancy ended. “He is the guilty
man.”

The sheriff scratched his head in perplexity.

“Well, I don’t know what to say. Nathan Gombet is no friend of mine and
folks say he’s a little queer, but I never heard of his doing any harm.”

“There’s always a first time,” Rosemary snapped.

“He’s just a clever crook—that’s all,” Nancy declared impatiently.
“Don’t you believe our story? We can show you the staircase.”

“Yes, I believe your story, all right,” the sheriff said hastily. “But I
dasn’t proceed without evidence. You can’t arrest a man unless you’ve
some proof he’s guilty.”

“What more proof do you want?” Rosemary interposed tartly.

“Well, if you’d found the silver urn in his house, or something like
that——”

“If my father were here, he’d convince you all right,” Nancy said, with
rising temper.

“Your father?”

“Yes, Carson Drew.”

“You don’t mean Carson Drew, the lawyer from River Heights? You’re his
daughter?”

“I am.”

“Well, that’s different. Why didn’t you say so at first?”

“What has that to do with the case?”

“Well, I reckon a daughter of Carson Drew knows what she’s about. If you
say Nathan Gombet is a crook, I’ll take your word for it.”

“Well, it seems to me you’ve taken plenty of time to make up your mind,”
Nancy said sarcastically.

The sheriff, thus goaded to action, turned to the other men in the room.
His indolent manner fell from him.

“Come on, boys!” he shouted.

Turning to Nancy he ordered:

“You lead the way and we’ll follow.”

Nancy nodded, and with Floretta and Rosemary hurried outside to the
waiting roadster.

“I never could stand that sheriff,” Rosemary commented. “You can see now
why we didn’t like to put the matter in his hands before. He would have
made a mess of it.”

“I can see all right,” Nancy admitted dryly.

She sprang into the car and the Turnbull sisters climbed in beside her.
She started the motor and waited impatiently for the sheriff and his
deputies. The moment the police car was ready to leave, she shifted
gears and was off.

As the two cars raced down the side streets of Cliffwood, many passersby
turned to stare curiously after them. Nancy did not notice, for she was
intent only upon one thing, and that was to reach the old stone house
before Nathan Gombet had an opportunity to escape or to hide the booty
he had stolen from the Turnbull mansion.

“The sheriff may be stupid enough to refuse to arrest him unless he
finds _evidence_ on the place,” she thought, in disgust.

She drove swiftly and soon came within sight of the gloomy old stone
house owned by the miser. Believing that it would be wisest to approach
cautiously and not give an alarm, she slowed down. To her chagrin the
police car raced ahead and roared down the driveway. It came to a sudden
halt in front of the house.

The sheriff sprang from the automobile and turned to his men.

“Surround the house!” he ordered crisply. “We won’t take any chance on
letting that old boy get away!”

“Oh, why does that sheriff have to be so dramatic?” Nancy murmured, in
alarm. “After all this noise, it will be a wonder if Nathan Gombet
doesn’t slip through the secret tunnel and escape. That will ruin
everything!”

Impatiently, she opened the door of the roadster and started to get out,
but Floretta held her back.

“Don’t go,” she begged. “There may be shooting!”

Nancy permitted herself to be pulled back into the safety of the
automobile. From there, the three watched the sheriff with misgiving.
They saw him walk up to the back door and knock. When there was no
response, he knocked again. He tried the door, but it was locked. Then
he peeped in at the kitchen window.

“No one at home,” he muttered in disgust, turning away.

Nancy could stand it no longer. Springing from the roadster, she ran
toward the sheriff.

“You can’t expect Nathan Gombet to welcome you with open arms after all
the noise you made coming up the drive,” she cried. “He’d be more apt to
welcome you with buckshot! He’s probably watching now from an upstairs
window. We’d all make good targets!”

The sheriff glanced anxiously upward and stepped closer to the house.

“It’s pretty serious business to go breaking into a man’s house,” he
said, somewhat crestfallen, “unless you’re mighty sure you’ve got the
right man.”

“Nathan Gombet is the right man!”

“Well, maybe he is, I don’t know.” The sheriff’s old doubt was returning
to assail him anew. “I suppose I could ram the door, but I don’t like to
do it.”

“I’ll assume the responsibility,” Nancy said shortly.

“All right, we’ll do it.”

“There’s an easier way.”

“How do you mean?”

“Climb through the cellar window and get in that way. There’s a stairway
from the cellar leading to the kitchen.”

“That’s an idea.”

The sheriff motioned to his deputies, and Nancy led the way to the
cellar window. One by one the men crawled in. Nancy hesitated an
instant, and then she followed.

Silently, she indicated the stairs leading to the kitchen. The sheriff
and his deputies crept quietly up to the landing, and there they paused
and listened. The house was as silent as a tomb.

Then unmistakably, there was a slight shuffling sound which seemed to
come from the kitchen. The sheriff turned to a deputy near him and
whispered into his ear:

“Did you hear that?”

“Yes, chief,” the deputy whispered in reply. “There’s someone hiding in
that kitchen!”

“Get set, boys, we’ll see who it is!”

The sheriff placed his hand on the door knob and gave it a quick turn.
The latch clicked. As the sheriff thrust open the door, he started back
involuntarily, for he stood looking straight into the muzzle of a sawed
off shotgun, held in the hands of Gombet’s colored servant!




                              CHAPTER XXIV
                          Nancy Leads the Way


The old colored woman advanced threateningly, her face convulsed with
rage.

“You git, white man!” she ordered, “or I’ll fill yo’ system full of
lead.”

Somewhat sheepishly, the sheriff retreated. He dared not reach for his
own revolver which hung in its holster, lest the colored woman carry out
her threat. As he backed away, the negress slammed the door and locked
it.

“I reckon we’ll have to take the place by storm,” the sheriff muttered
to his companions. “She’s locked the door. We’ll have to ram it.”

“And while we’re doing it, she’ll pepper us with shot,” one of the
deputies observed.

“I reckon you’re right, at that,” the sheriff said slowly. “I guess we’d
better fire a volley through the door.”

“We haven’t any call to kill the woman,” a deputy argued. “And a stray
shot might hit her. We don’t want to do that.”

“That’s so. Anyone have an idea how we can get into the house?”

“I have,” Nancy Drew announced quickly. “I know of a secret passage
which leads from the Turnbull mansion to an upstairs room of this house.
Give me two men, and the rest stay here to keep watch. We’ll get into
the house through the passage and take her by surprise.”

“That’s an idea,” the sheriff murmured. “I’ll go with you myself.” He
indicated one of the deputies. “You come along too. The rest of you boys
stay here.”

“And make a little racket every so often to hold the attention of the
old colored woman,” Nancy suggested.

“When we get into the kitchen I’ll blow my police whistle,” the sheriff
added. “When you hear it, rush up from below.”

The sheriff and the deputy assigned to the venture, followed Nancy Drew
from the cellar. They crept past the kitchen window and hurried toward
the police car. There was no time for Nancy to stop to explain matters
to Rosemary and Floretta. They sat huddled in the roadster where she had
left them a few minutes before.

“They’ll be safe enough so long as they stay in the car,” the sheriff
said, as the three ran across the courtyard and sprang into the police
car. “That colored woman isn’t likely to make trouble unless she’s
bothered.”

The sheriff took the wheel.

“Drive to the Turnbull mansion,” Nancy directed.

The police car sped rapidly down the road and up another and came to an
abrupt halt in front of The Mansion. Nancy tried the front door. To her
relief, she found it unlocked. In their haste to reach the sheriff’s
office, the Turnbull sisters had neglected to fasten the doors and
windows.

Nancy opened the door and led the way to the library. Quickly lifting
the cover of the sofa, she disclosed the hidden opening. Deftly, she
lowered herself into it. The sheriff and deputy stared after her in
astonishment.

“Well, what do you know about that!” the sheriff exclaimed.

“We’re going through a secret passage,” Nancy explained hastily.
“Hurry!” she called impatiently. “There’s no time to lose!”

Hesitating only a moment longer, the sheriff and the deputy likewise
lowered themselves through the opening into the hidden staircase.

“You know where you’re going?” the sheriff questioned doubtfully.

“Yes,” Nancy returned. “Watch these stairs, or you may take a tumble.”

As her eyes became more accustomed to the darkness, she moved rapidly
down the staircase, warning the two behind her of treacherous steps.

At last she reached the lower level and paused before what appeared to
be a solid wall.

“Now what?” the sheriff demanded.

Nancy did not respond, but ran her hand over the wall in search of the
tiny knob which would open the panel. She found it, and as she pushed
firmly upon it, a portion of the wall swung back.

“Come on,” she urged, stepping through the opening.

The sheriff and his deputy followed. They turned and looked back
uneasily as the panel grated shut behind them.

“What if we are locked in here?” the sheriff questioned.

“We shan’t be,” Nancy told him quietly. “I know the secret.”

The three rapidly descended the flight of stone steps and entered the
tunnel which led directly to the bird room of Nathan Gombet’s house.

Reaching the stone steps at the end of the passage, she paused only long
enough to warn the two officers that they were now within the house and
must remain silent. Quickly ascending the stone steps, she groped about
the walls, searching for the hidden spring which would open the panel.

“Look for a brass ring or a tiny knob,” she directed the two men.

Even as she whispered the instruction, her hand struck a solid object on
the wall. Eagerly, she felt of it and discovered it was a small metal
ring.

“I’ve found it!” she whispered in delight.

She gave the ring a hard pull, and, to the amazement of the sheriff and
his deputy, the secret panel opened.

Nancy stepped out into the light and motioned for the two men to follow.
She now stood in the closet of the bird room. Cautiously opening the
closet door, she peered out.

“The coast is clear,” she informed her companions quietly. “Follow me.”

Softly, she tiptoed across the room and tried the door leading into the
corridor. It was unlocked. Treading quietly down the hall, she led the
way to the stairs.

Reaching the lower floor, Nancy Drew and the officers crept toward the
kitchen where the belligerent old colored servant had taken up her post.

The sheriff listened for a moment at the inner door of the kitchen and
peered through the keyhole. The old woman had not relinquished the gun,
but stood before the basement door making vehement threats.

“I’s waitin’ fo’ you,” she muttered. “You just make one pass t’rough dat
doah and I’s gwine lose control o’ mah trigger finger. I’ll fill you so
full o’ buckshot dat you’ll look like a sieve, and I don’t mean
possibly.”

Satisfied that the old negress was occupied at the basement door, the
sheriff quickly stepped into the room and covered her with his pistol.

“You’re under arrest!” he said sharply.

The colored woman turned suddenly and gazed into the muzzle of the
sheriff’s gun. She hesitated an instant as if debating whether it would
be wise to attempt resistance, then threw up her hands in surrender. The
shotgun clattered to the floor.

Nancy Drew, who by this time had rushed into the room, ran to the
basement door and unlocked it. As the sheriff gave one short blast on
his police whistle, the deputies who had been left stationed below burst
into the kitchen. One of them caught up the shotgun from the floor and
placed it out of reach. Another quickly slipped handcuffs on the woman’s
wrists.

“Now that we have her, what are we going to do with her?” the sheriff
asked bluntly.

Nancy turned toward him.

“Sheriff, may I question the prisoner?”

“Go ahead; but I’m afraid you’ll not get much out of her.”

“I’ll try, anyway,” Nancy said, smiling. She faced the negress and
demanded:

“Where is Nathan Gombet?”

“How come you asks me? I ain’t keepin’ track o’ dat man just ’cause I
works heah.”

“You’re not fooling anyone,” Nancy replied sharply. “I know that you are
not only Nathan Gombet’s servant but his partner in crime as well.”

The woman assumed an innocent expression.

“How you talk! Crime? What you mean crime? I’s just an old culled woman
who makes her victuals workin’! You can’t bluff me with yo’ scary talk.”

“I’m not bluffing. It will be the best for you to tell us where he is.
If you don’t, you’ll be behind bars within an hour.”

“Fo’ doin’ what?”

“For resisting an officer. Isn’t that true, sheriff?”

“Yes, I reckon it is,” the sheriff returned. “The woman has laid herself
open to imprisonment by trying to thwart justice.”

“Now will you tell?” Nancy looked straight into the old negress’ eyes as
she asked the question.

For a moment the woman met her gaze defiantly and then a frightened look
came over her face and she began to whine.

“I’ll tell! I’ll tell! Don’t send me to no jail!” she implored. “Please,
Mr. Sheriff!”

“Then, if you don’t want to go to jail, tell us where Nathan Gombet is
hiding.”

The colored woman eyed the girl sullenly for an instant, and then
pointed to the floor above.

“Up dar!” she mumbled. “He’s up dar with de prisoner.”

“Prisoner!” Nancy exclaimed, giving the sheriff a quick glance. “What
prisoner?”

The colored woman stubbornly shook her head.

“We’ll find out who you mean,” Nancy declared. She turned to the sheriff
with decision. “We must capture Nathan Gombet before he escapes. If he’s
upstairs he may have heard us and try to get away through the secret
passage!”

“He’ll not get away,” the sheriff assured her grimly.

Delegating one man to remain below to guard the colored woman, he
ordered the other deputies to follow him. Nancy, who could not bear to
remain behind, crept up the stairs after them.

At the top landing the party paused, undecided which way to go. As they
hesitated, the sound of a harsh, rasping voice reached their ears.

“Listen!” Nancy commanded in a tense whisper.

Instantly, she recognized the voice. It belonged to Nathan Gombet!

As she listened intently, the man began to speak again and she caught
the words distinctly.

“I give you just one minute, Carson Drew! If you don’t sign that paper
before then I’ll——”

Nancy did not hear the rest of the threat, for Nathan’s voice had
dropped to a lower pitch. What could it mean? Had Nathan held her father
a prisoner in the house? She turned frightened eyes toward the sheriff.

“They’re in that room,” she whispered, pointing to the chamber in which
her father was imprisoned.

The sheriff nodded, and with his pistol held ready for instant use,
moved softly toward the room. Quick as he was, Nancy was ahead of him.

Without a thought for her own safety, now that she knew her father was
in danger, she flung open the door.

At a glance she took in the situation. Her father, haggard and pale with
suffering, was bound to a chair and Nathan Gombet, a taunting grin on
his evil face, was bending over him.

“If you don’t sign this paper, you’ll never get out of here!” he
snarled.

At the sound of the opening door, the miser wheeled about and saw Nancy
Drew. As he instinctively retreated, she advanced.

“The police will have something to say to you!” she said tensely.

As Nancy Drew spoke, the sheriff and his men closed in around Nathan
Gombet.

“Your game’s up,” the sheriff announced covering the miser with his
pistol.




                              CHAPTER XXV
                                Captured


Nathan Gombet’s shifty eyes roved to the door, and, suddenly, he made a
spring for it. One of the deputies caught him roughly by the arm and
dragged him back.

“Oh, no, you don’t!”

“Handcuff him,” the sheriff ordered.

The miser saw that escape was cut off entirely. As the realization came
over him, he wilted and offered little resistance when the handcuffs
were snapped upon his wrists.

Nancy immediately lost interest in the miser and ran to her father.
Frantically she began to work at the ropes which bound him to the chair.

“Oh, Dad!” she murmured brokenly, “are you hurt?”

“I’ll be all right,” Carson Drew forced a wan smile. “Couldn’t have
stood it much longer, though. If you hadn’t come just when you did——”

With the aid of one of the deputies who had a knife, Nancy quickly cut
the ropes and set her father free. In relief he stretched his cramped
limbs.

Slowly getting upon his feet, he took a step forward and would have
collapsed had Nancy not helped him. Wearily, he sank down upon the chair
again.

“Legs feel paralyzed,” he complained.

“Don’t you want me to call a doctor?” Nancy asked, as she began to rub
the cramped muscles.

Carson Drew shook his head.

“No, I’ll be all right after a while. I’m just weak. If only I could
have a glass of water! That fiend hasn’t given me anything to eat or
drink for more than twenty-four hours. My throat is parched.”

“I’ll get you a drink!” Nancy cried.

She darted from the room and hurried downstairs to the kitchen. Pumping
a cold drink of water at the sink, she paused only long enough to step
to the outside door and call Rosemary and Floretta Turnbull, who were
still waiting anxiously in the roadster. They came in response to her
summons, and followed her upstairs.

“Tell us everything, Dad,” Nancy begged, as she gave her father the
glass of water.

Carson Drew set down the tumbler which he had emptied at one draught and
fastened his eyes upon Nathan Gombet.

“That man induced me to come here by trickery,” he explained, a hard
glint coming into his eyes. “He has tortured me here for several days
trying to force me to sign over money to him.”

“Well, he won’t try any more of his tricks,” the sheriff broke in.
“We’ll have him behind prison bars inside of twenty minutes.” He turned
to the prisoner. “What have you to say for yourself?”

“Nothing,” Gombet muttered sullenly.

“Do you admit that you were trying to get money which did not belong to
you?” Carson Drew questioned sharply.

Nathan Gombet did not reply.

“You’ll talk all right when we get you to the station,” the sheriff told
him harshly. “It’s no use to deny your guilt. You were caught in the
act.” He picked up a piece of paper from the table and glanced at it.
“Is this the agreement he was trying to force you to sign, Mr. Drew?”

The lawyer nodded.

“Yes, he wanted me to turn over a large sum of money and then promise
not to prosecute.”

The sheriff folded the paper and put it in his pocket.

“I’ll just keep this for evidence.”

“And don’t forget, he tried to force us from our home,” Rosemary
Turnbull broke in. “We intend to file a charge against him.”

“I didn’t mean no harm,” Gombet grunted.

“Oh, no,” Rosemary retorted sarcastically. “I suppose those nightly
visits of yours were merely friendly calls.”

“I thought I saw an easy way to make a little money. I offered to buy
your house.”

“Yes—at your price,” Floretta sniffed.

“It was a cowardly trick—to try to cheat two women,” Carson Drew
observed.

“He nearly succeeded, too,” Rosemary declared feelingly. “If it hadn’t
been for Nancy Drew, we would have been forced to give up our home. We
couldn’t have stood it there another day.”

For some time Nancy had remained silent, but now she turned to the old
miser.

“When did you first discover the hidden staircase?” she questioned
curiously.

Nathan hesitated as though debating whether or not to tell.

“You’d better make a clean breast of everything. It will go easier with
you if you do,” the sheriff warned him.

“It was two months ago,” Nathan muttered. “Found the hidden spring by
accident.”

“You explored the staircase and discovered that it led to the Turnbull
mansion?”

Gombet nodded.

“How many openings are there into this house?”

“Only the one in the room where I keep my birds.”

“There’s one more thing I want to know,” Nancy continued. “It was you
who sent me the threatening note, warning me not to come to the Turnbull
mansion, wasn’t it?”

“Yes, I sent it,” the man grunted.

“How did you learn that I was going there?”

“Hid in the staircase and heard the old ladies talking about the letter
you’d sent.”

“Just as I suspected. And now where are the things you took from their
house?”

“What things?”

“Oh, you needn’t pretend,” Floretta broke in, enraged. “You took our
silver urn and a diamond pin.”

“And a pocketbook and a silver spoon, to say nothing of Floretta’s silk
dresses,” Rosemary added severely.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Oh, yes you do,” Nancy told him quietly. “It won’t do you any good to
deny it, for we intend to search the house from cellar to garret. You
may as well tell us what you have done with the things.”

Nathan Gombet debated the question silently and then muttered
reluctantly:

“You’ll find ’em in my room.”

“Which room is that?”

“Straight across the hall.”

Nancy hurried from the room without waiting for more. Rosemary and
Floretta followed her eagerly. As they flung open the door of the
bedroom they gave a little cry of pleasure, for on the dresser stood the
silver urn.

“What a relief!” Rosemary cried, rushing forward and snatching it up.
“It’s a wonder he didn’t try to dispose of it.”

Floretta, who had been investigating the closet, triumphantly brought
out an armload of dresses.

“But where is the diamond pin?” Rosemary demanded. “That is the most
valuable of all.”

“Is this it?” Nancy, who had opened a bureau drawer, held up a tiny
object.

Eagerly, Floretta reached for it.

“That’s it. Oh, I’m so glad.”

“And here is the spoon,” Nancy continued, removing it from the drawer.
“And the pocketbook. The money is gone though.”

“Oh, we don’t care about that,” Rosemary said quickly. “There wasn’t
much in the pocketbook, anyway.”

“Then everything is here,” Nancy declared.

Armed with the booty, the three returned to the chamber across the hall
and disclosed their findings.

“It’s a clear case of theft, all right,” the sheriff said, as he
examined the articles. “We’ll take this fellow to jail and lock him up.
He’s a dangerous character and ought not to be at large.”

“How about the negress?” Nancy questioned.

“She is an accomplice,” Mr. Drew put in. “Take her along.”

The sheriff grasped Nathan Gombet roughly by the arm and shoved him
toward the door. Two of the deputies helped Carson Drew downstairs.

The old miser and the negress were put into the police car, and the
sheriff and his men drove away, leaving Nancy and her father to say
good-bye to the Turnbull sisters.

“We’ll see to it that the various openings into the staircase are
boarded up,” Rosemary told the lawyer. “With Nathan in jail, we probably
will never be bothered again.” She regarded Carson Drew anxiously. “You
don’t look a bit well. You’re in no condition to return to River Heights
to-night.”

“I think I can make it,” Carson Drew replied.

“Nonsense. You must spend the night at The Mansion. Floretta and I will
be delighted to have you. A good rest will do wonders for you. You need
a good meal, too.”

“To tell the truth, I don’t feel very strong,” the lawyer admitted. “Are
you certain it won’t inconvenience you if I stay?”

“Of course not. What a thing to ask, after all your daughter has done
for us! No, it’s all settled. You must stay at The Mansion until you
have recovered your strength.”

“And we’ll promise you there will be no ghosts to trouble you,” Floretta
added, with a laugh.

So it was decided. Nancy helped her father into the roadster and drove
him to The Mansion. As soon as she saw that he was comfortably settled
on the sofa, she returned for the Turnbull sisters.

Although Carson Drew had suffered a great deal at the hands of Nathan
Gombet, he had received no permanent injury. His strength gradually
returned and he began to walk with less difficulty. Food and rest
accomplished wonders. After a good night’s rest he appeared at the
breakfast table and announced that he felt able to travel.

“Oh, we were hoping you would stay another day,” Floretta said
regretfully, after the lawyer had announced his decision to return to
River Heights that morning.

“I’m afraid I must go,” the lawyer returned. “My business has been
neglected the past week, you know. By the way, have you heard anything
more about Nathan Gombet?”

“The entire story is in the morning papers,” Rosemary turned to Nancy
with a warm smile. “Haven’t you seen them?”

“Not yet,” Nancy admitted.

“You’re certainly in the limelight,” Floretta told her. “Evidently the
reporters learned everything from the sheriff.”

Nancy caught up one of the papers, and as her eye scanned the story on
the front page a deep flush crept into her cheeks.

“Mercy! I don’t deserve all the credit!” she protested modestly.

“Indeed, you do,” Rosemary told her firmly. She glanced significantly at
Floretta, who nodded firmly. “I hardly know how to begin,” she went on,
addressing Nancy with some hesitation. “But I want you to know how much
Floretta and I appreciate what you have done for us.”

“I was glad to do what little I could,” Nancy declared graciously. “It
was really fun for me. I thoroughly enjoy a mystery—though for a time I
thought this one would prove my undoing.”

“We want to reward you for what you did,” Rosemary went on earnestly.

“Oh, I don’t want any reward!” Nancy exclaimed. “You know, we discussed
that before.”

“We were afraid you wouldn’t take money,” Floretta sighed.

“So we’ve decided to give you a little gift as a remembrance,” Rosemary
continued. “We want you to accept our silver urn.”

“Your urn!” Nancy gasped. “Oh, I couldn’t do that! Why, it’s a valuable
heirloom and you prize it highly!”

“We want you to have it,” Floretta insisted stubbornly. “We’ll feel hurt
if you don’t take it.”

“It will serve as a reminder of your adventure in The Mansion,” Rosemary
coaxed. “Please take it.”

As she spoke she picked up a wrapped package from a table and handed it
to Nancy.

“If you insist, I’m afraid I can’t refuse,” Nancy said, as she accepted
the urn. “There’s nothing in the world I’d rather have! This will make
my second trophy! I’ll keep it on the mantel with the clock!”

After thanking the Turnbull sisters for the gift and for their generous
hospitality, Nancy and her father departed. Floretta and Rosemary
watched them until they had disappeared down the road.

For a time Nancy and her father rode in silence, and then Carson Drew
turned to his daughter with a look of deep admiration in his eyes.

“That was a neat piece of detective work you did,” he said.

“Everything turned out all right,” Nancy admitted. “But when I was going
through that dark tunnel the night I discovered it, I told myself I’d
never dabble in another mystery as long as I lived if I ever got out of
there alive!”

“Do you intend to live up to that?”

“Not if I can help it! Now that you are safe and the mystery is solved,
I’m aching for another one. I suppose that’s all the good it will do be,
though!”

“Oh, I don’t know,” Mr. Drew smiled. “This affair has won you quite a
reputation.”

Indeed, Nancy Drew’s days of adventure were by no means over. Before
many months had elapsed she was destined to be involved in another
mystery case, equally as baffling as the one she had just solved.
Readers who wish to follow her strange adventures may do so in the next
volume of this series, entitled “The Bungalow Mystery.”

But as Nancy Drew drove along the smooth road she had no idea of what
was in store for her, and so it was that a semi-melancholy expression
settled over her face. Carson Drew, who noticed the look, laughed aloud.

“You’re a true daughter of your old dad all right, Nancy! Pining for
another mystery before you’re well out of this one!”

“Oh, I wasn’t pining exactly,” Nancy declared gayly, resolutely shaking
off the mood of despondency which had claimed her for the moment. “I
just couldn’t help thinking that perhaps this would be my last chance to
solve a mystery. And I do enjoy detective work!”

“Don’t worry; opportunity will come knocking at your door sooner than
you expect,” her father told her lightly. “A good detective is always in
demand.”

“Meaning that I am that?” Nancy demanded, a happy light in her eyes.

Carson Drew nodded and gazed tenderly upon his daughter.

“Meaning that I am mighty proud of you, Nancy. From this day on I intend
to turn over my mystery cases to you.” His eyes twinkled mischievously.
“As a detective, you have me backed completely off the map!”

                                The End




                           TRANSCRIBER NOTES


Mis-spelled words and printer errors have been fixed.



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