10 Password to Larkspur Lane


CHAPTER VII Unfriendly Keeper



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010 Password to Larkspur Lane

CHAPTER VII
Unfriendly Keeper
“EIFFIE! Are you hurt?” Nancy cried. But
even as she helped the girl to her feet,
Nancy’s anxious glance went to the bird
flying across the yard.
“I’m all right,” Effie said breathlessly. “I’m
sorry I scared him away. Oh, there he is!”
She pointed to the pigeon who had come to
rest on the garage roof. Then, flying slowly
and uncertainly, it flapped about in a circle
and took off toward the front of the house.
Nancy grabbed Effie’s hand. “Come on!”
She pulled Effie toward her car, which was


parked near the front door. “I’ll drive. You
watch for the bird. We must follow it!”
Flustered, Effie climbed in beside Nancy,
taking off her apron and chattering apologies.
“Don’t talk! Just watch,” Nancy said crisply.
31
Effie, clutching her pink bow to keep it in
place, gazed skyward. “There he goes!”
The pigeon was flying low along the street in
front of the house. Nancy started the motor
and began to follow slowly.
“I don’t think this will work,” Effie said,
“because we have to stay on the streets and
the pigeon can fly in any direction.”


“Maybe you’re right,” Nancy said grimly,
“but we’re going to try!”
“He’s turning left,” Effie announced. Quickly
Nancy turned left onto a side street and
followed the bird until it veered again.
“Lucky he’s flying low and slow,” said Effie.
Now and then the bird fluttered to a rest on a
roof or tree branch, but the girls managed to
track it until they had reached open country
beyond the suburbs of River Heights.
“My neck is stiff from watching,” Effie said
with a sigh. “Where’s he going, anyway?”
“Home to its owner,” Nancy replied. “Where
is it now?”


“He went that way,” said Effie, pointing
across a field, “but I can’t see him because of
those trees.”
“Oh, we mustn’t lose it!” Nancy exclaimed.
She stopped the car and scanned the sky.
Effie gulped. “I’m sorry. I can’t see him. Oh, I
could cry!”
“Well, don’t,” Nancy commanded. “That
pigeon is one of my best clues. I must find it!”
Suddenly she spotted the large gray bird
flying out of the dump of trees. “There he
goes!”
Nancy exclaimed.


Luckily the pigeon flew parallel to the road
and Nancy drove along behind it.
“Please watch the bird, Effie,” Nancy
implored as her companion looked away.
“I’m not even blinking both eyes at once,”
Effie assured her. “I blink one eye at a time.”
After a mile, Effie suddenly pointed to a
grove of elms that towered over the flat fields.
“Look! He’s going round and round over
those trees. I think he’s dizzy.”
“No,” Nancy said, and felt a quiver of
excitement. “That’s where it lives. I see
buildings in the grove.” A second later the
pigeon disappeared among the trees.


Nancy halted the car beside a stone wall over
which honeysuckle tumbled. A short distance
ahead was a driveway.
32
“Listen, Effie,” Nancy said firmly, “we are
going in there and you are not to say a word
about our keeping the pigeon or following it
here.”
Effie’s eyes were wide. “Is there a gang of
kidnappers in there?” she asked timidly.
“I don’t know who’s there,” Nancy replied.
“But we must be prepared for anything.”
Then, seeing that Effie was trembling, she
said, “Would you rather wait here?”


“Oh, no! I don’t want to stay alone! But
maybe I—I could hide in the trunk.”
They got out of the car and Effie scrambled
into the luggage compartment. She left the lid
open an inch so there would be fresh air.
Nancy slipped behind the wheel again and
turned off the little-used, sandy road onto a
well-kept gravel driveway. It swept in a great
curve toward a long rambling white house.
Nancy drove nearly a quarter of a mile. Then
the path dipped under the trees, and Nancy
saw that the house was a mansion. Whoever
occupied it must be very wealthy. White
columns supported the overhanging roof of a
porte-cochère.


The young sleuth did not stop there, but
headed toward the outbuildings, to the far
right of it. She pulled up in front of a stable.
Quietly Nancy got out of the car. Her
sweeping glance took in a nearby shed and a
large coop beside it containing a number of
pigeons. On the roof rested the pigeon Nancy
had been following.
The yard was empty. Except for the cooing
and flutterings of the birds, the place was
silent.
Was it deserted? Nancy wondered.
Suddenly she was startled by a noise that
sounded like a pistol shot. She whirled. In the
shadow of the stable doorway stood a dark,
thin-faced man wearing a riding habit. He


carried a long, knotted, leather whip which he
cracked again.
With an unpleasant grin, he said, “Scared
you, didn’t I?”
Keeping her voice cool and even, Nancy
said, “Good morning. Is the owner here?”
“Nope,” he said, studying her carefully.
“What do you want?”
“I’d like to buy some pigeons,” Nancy said.
“They’ll be expensive,” he said. “Ours are
specially trained to fly both day and night.
How many birds you want?”
33


“Two,” Nancy replied. “Do you take care of
these all by yourself?” she asked casually,
hoping to get a lead on how many men
worked at the place.
“Sure,” he said. As he walked toward the
coop, he spotted the pigeon on top of it. “Oh

oh!” he exclaimed softly. “So you finally got
here!” He hurried over and picked up the
pigeon.
The keeper looked it over curiously, then
opened the capsule on the bird’s leg. With
sinking heart, Nancy remembered that the
message was no longer there. She had
intended to replace it before releasing the
pigeon, but the bird’s sudden escape had
made this impossible.


When the man saw that the capsule was
empty, he bit his lip and frowned. After
putting the pigeon into the coop, he turned
and walked back to Nancy, his eyes
narrowing.
“It’s a lovely house and grounds,” she
remarked innocently. “Who lives here?”
“I’m kind of busy this morning,” he said
curtly. “What kind of birds you want?”
“Any healthy pair will do,” Nancy replied.
While they had been talking, the man’s eyes
had roved over the convertible and now he
gazed at Nancy as if he were trying to make
up his mind about something. Had he
recognized her? Had Adam Thorne warned
his accomplices to be on the lookout for her?


Suddenly the man said, “Okay. I’ll get you a
pair. You pay inside the house.”
“Oh, no,” Nancy thought. “I won’t risk that. I
think I’d better be ready to leave fast!”
As the pigeon keeper walked toward the
coop, Nancy got back into the car and started
the motor. Instantly he turned and hurried
back.
“Hold it!” he said sharply. “I think you’d
better come with me and pick out your own
birds.”
Nancy’s heart began to thump. “No, thank
you,” she said coolly. “You can do it.”
“Get out!” the man snarled and swiftly seized
Nancy’s arm with one hand. He tossed away


the whip and reached into the car to turn off
the motor.
Suddenly a weird sound came from the rear
of the car. Effie! It sounded as if she was
having an attack of hysterical giggles!
Startled, the man let go of Nancy’s arm.
“What’s that?”
Instantly Nancy released the brake and roared
off in reverse. In a shower of gravel she
turned, then sped past the house and down
the driveway. Fearing pursuit, she kept going
for about three miles until she reached the
small settlement of West Gramby. Here the 34
young detective turned into the parking area
of an old-fashioned frame hotel. Quickly she
got out and raised the trunk lid.


“Okay, Effie, you can come out now.”
“Oh, Nancy, I’m sorry if I spoiled
everything,” said the red-faced girl as she
jumped down.
“When I heard that man order you to get out
of the car, boy, was I scared! I wanted to
scream, but all I could do was make a crazy
laugh.”
Nancy smiled. “Never mind. Your giggles
saved the day.”
To calm the excited girl, Nancy suggested that
they have lunch in the hotel coffee shop.
While waiting for their order, Nancy phoned
a neighbor of the Drews and asked her to
give Hannah Gruen some lunch, and tell her


that the girls would be home in an hour. Then
Nancy questioned the hotel manager about
the estate she had seen.
“The owner’s name is Adolf Tooker,” the
man said, “and that’s really all anybody
knows about him. He’s lived there a year or
so, but he keeps to himself.”
“Then he doesn’t bother his neighbors?”
The hotel manager scowled. “His plane does,
though, flying all hours of the day and night.”
“Plane?” Nancy repeated.
“Little tan one, with a flying horse—or
something—on the fuselage.”


So she had been right! The pigeon had been
released from the plane. Nancy was quietly
elated, for she felt sure she had found the
gang’s hideout. But suddenly she
remembered: there were no larkspur! And she
had not seen a gate.
“The kidnappers must have two hideouts,”
Nancy decided. “The pigeons and the plane
are used for messages and transportation
between them.”
When she and Effie reached home, they went
at once to Hannah’s room and told her about
the pigeon incident. “You’re having plenty of
excitement, Nancy.” The housekeeper sighed.
“And here I am cooped up and no use at all!”


Nancy hugged her. “You’ve helped me so
often you deserve a rest! And now I must call
Bess and George.”
When Bess heard about the invitation to the
Comings’, she gave a whoop of delight.
“Guess what?” she said. “I just finished
talking to Dave. He and Burt are going to that
very lake as camp counselors. It happened
suddenly, when three old counselors dropped
out. You’ll probably hear from Ned soon.
And now tell me more about the Comings’
mystery.”
Nancy related it briefly, then phoned George.
“I’ll be ready whenever you say, Nancy.”
35


Just before dinner that evening Nancy made
up a bouquet of flowers from her garden and
took it to the neighbor who had given
Hannah lunch. On the way back, she noticed
a black sedan parked across from the Drew
house. Two men were seated in it with their
hats pulled low. When they noticed her
looking at them, the driver pulled away
quickly.
“I wonder who they are,” she mused.
Nancy unlocked the front door but could not
push it open. She tried harder. It still stuck.
What had happened during her absence?
“Effie!” she called loudly through the crack.


In a few seconds an answer came. “Okay, I’ll
open it.”
There was the sound of something heavy
being dragged over the floor. Effie, pale and
trembling, opened the door. “I put the living-
room couch and a big chair here to keep those
men out,” she explained.
“What men?” Nancy asked.
“The ones in the car across the street. They—
they tried to force their way in here, but I
slammed the door in their faces.”
“Good for you,” said Nancy, both alarmed
and amused. “Who were they?”
“I dunno.”


“Well, they’ve gone, Effie, so don’t worry.”
Nancy herself was greatly concerned and
peered from the window several times. The
black sedan drove past every few minutes. It
was not the one in which Dr. Spire had been
kidnapped. Just before Mr. Drew arrived at
dinnertime, the car parked once more in front
of a house a few doors away. Nancy
mentioned it to her father and asked if the
police should be notified.
“Not yet,” the lawyer said. “That would only
scare them off. I want to find out what they’re
up to.”
“I have an idea,” said Nancy, and told him
what had happened the night before and
during the day. “The keeper passed along the
pigeon story, of course, so they know I’ve


seen one of their hideouts. And they probably
suspect I have the note that was in the
capsule. I think they tried to force their way in
here to intimidate me so that I wouldn’t call
the police—or to take revenge on me if I
had.”
Mr. Drew frowned. “Nancy, you are in great
danger. You must get away—and secretly.”
36
“Shall I go to the Comings’?”
“Good idea.”
“But how can I leave secretly, Dad?”
“I have the solution to that problem,” he
replied. “I’ll give you my surprise present


now.”



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