CHAPTER XIV
The Matching Necklace
As NANCY’S eyes fluttered open, she saw
Bess’s anxious face bending over her.
“Oh, thank goodness!” Bess exclaimed.
“She’s coming to.”
George and Mrs. Corning stood at the other
side of the bed. “You’re in your room, dear,”
said Mrs. Corning. “How do you feel?”
Nancy sat up, frowning. “My head aches, but
otherwise I’m all right. What happened?”
“The boys found you on the driveway,” said
George. “The gang got away.” She explained
that the boys had seen three men scuffling
and finally one had been carried off through
the woods. By the time the boys had rescued
Nancy, their search for the others was
hopeless.
“They took Morgan, then?” Nancy asked. “I
was afraid of that.” She told how she had
been pulled away from the houseman.
“Lucky the thug didn’t know it was you,”
said George, “or you’d have been kidnapped,
too.”
“The boys are waiting in the kitchen,” Bess
put in. “I’ll go down and tell them you’re
awake.”
“Let’s all go,” said Nancy. “I think I could do
with a glass of milk and some crackers, if you
don’t mind, Mrs. Corning.”
The woman’s face broke into a smile and she
said, “That’s the best news I’ve heard yet.
Now I know you’re feeling better.”
As Bess and George served cake and glasses
of milk, Nancy and the boys exchanged
stories.
Dave raised his glass of milk. “Here’s to
General Drew!”
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The others echoed the toast enthusiastically. “I
guess I wasn’t such a good general tonight,”
said Nancy. “I certainly lost the battle.”
“The campaign’s not over,” Burt told her
cheerfully.
Ned smiled and patted Nancy’s shoulder.
“Better luck tomorrow.”
Mrs. Coming cleared her throat. “Nancy dear,
I’m afraid we had better—”
“Oh please, Mrs. Corning! I know what
you’re going to say—that I’d better give up
the case.
But please give me another day to find out
exactly what’s going on at Larkspur Lane.”
Ned and the others backed up Nancy’s plea.
Mrs. Corning hesitated. “Well, all right, but
we can’t wait longer than tomorrow night.”
“I’ll do my best to solve the mystery by then,”
Nancy said quietly. To herself she added,
“And no mistakes, Nancy Drew!”
Next morning the girls again started out early.
As before, Nancy hid in the back of the car
and George drove. The sky was overcast, but
Nancy’s spirits were light. Some miles from
the lake she took the wheel, her eyes shining
with excitement.
“I don’t see how you can be so cheerful,”
Bess grumbled. “You were knocked out last
night and now you’re going into more
danger.”
Nancy smiled. “I never felt better.”
Familiar with the way now, she was able to
make good time to the spot where the sign
“L. S.
LANE” marked the battle line.
“We’re in enemy territory now,” she
remarked. “From now on, caution must be
our password.”
Nancy drove past the half-concealed
driveway and into the woods, where she
parked the car behind a tangle of creeper and
bittersweet.
“No one will notice it here,” Nancy said.
“Now let’s strike through the woods ahead
and see how close we can come to the house
without using the road.”
Cautiously the girls worked their way around
bramble and bush until the roof of the
gatehouse came into view. They crept closer
and looks of dismay came over their faces.
Tilted back in a chair against the gatepost was
a man whom Nancy assumed was the
gatekeeper. At his feet lay a brindled Great
Dane, his tongue lolling and his eyes alert.
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Nancy gasped. “That’s the beast that tackled
me at the flower show!” she whispered.
“Let’s hope he doesn’t scent us.”
George said, “There’s certainly no chance of
getting in here. Let’s go on!”
Nancy led the way to the right, still well
within the trees, always keeping the tall fence
with its border of larkspur in view. After
trudging through the woods for a quarter of a
mile the girls found that the fence turned to
the left. It continued in a straight line up the
shallow slope along the flower-lined
enclosure.
“Ugh, it’s rough traveling,” Bess shuddered.
“I’m afraid of snakes.”
“Want to wait here?” George asked.
“I certainly do not,” Bess retorted. “I’d be
scared to death by myself.”
Smothering her fears, Bess followed Nancy
and George through the tangled undergrowth.
At one point they came to a place where a
clump of trees partially concealed the house.
Nancy called a halt for rest and consultation.
She and George sat down.
“This wouldn’t be a good spot to climb the
fence,” George observed, leaning back on her
elbows. “You’d rip your skirt on that barbed
wire.”
Nancy looked at her in surprise. “You’d do
more than that! Don’t you see?” she asked,
pointing to the top of the enclosure.
“I see a fence and two strands of barbed wire
stretched along the top,” George replied.
“Notice how the wire is fastened to the
supporting posts.”
“It’s attached to little porcelain knobs. What
does that have to do with it?”
“Those knobs are insulators, which means the
wire is charged with electricity. If you touch
it, you will probably set off an alarm and get a
bad shock besides. You could be killed.”
George gave a low whistle.
“It’s a regular fort,” said Bess. “Yet how
peaceful it all looks!”
Through the wire fence the girls could see
other flower gardens, occasional clumps of
trees, and a view of the rear of the gatehouse.
It was truly a lovely spot, except for the
sinister strands of charged wire.
“Rested?” Nancy asked. “Let’s go!”
Since they were now approaching the house,
the girls moved even more warily. Bess
stepped gingerly, afraid of putting her foot
down on a snake.
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“It would be just like those people to let a
couple of thousand rattlesnakes and
copperheads loose around here,” Bess
muttered. “Ugh,” the worried girl cried
suddenly, and jumped sideways, clutching at
her cousin. Caught off balance, George
stumbled and fell, giving a muffled yelp.
“What happened?” Nancy whispered
excitedly, turning back to them.
“I stepped into a hole, and I—I think my
ankle is sprained,” George said, her face
white.
Nancy’s heart sank. If any of them should
become helplessly injured, detection would
certainly follow.
“Oh, it’s all my fault,” whispered Bess. “I’m
sorry, George. I thought I stepped on
something alive.” Her eyes filled with tears.
George managed a grin. “Take it easy. I’m not
dying.”
Nancy knelt beside George, and with deft
fingers felt the injured ankle, wishing that Dr.
Spire were with them now!
“I’m sure it’s not broken,” she said softly.
George rubbed her ankle gingerly. “Go on,
you two. I’ll wait for you here.”
“You sure you’re all right?” Nancy asked.
“Yes. Go on, please.”
Nancy and Bess resumed their cautious
advance to the top of the rise. There they had
a full view of all the grounds.
Surrounding the house was a wide lawn with
gravel walks and flower beds. In the rear was
a huge meadow which Nancy surmised was
used as a landing field for the airplane. The
craft was not in sight.
Just below the brow of the hill, and connected
with the house by a long arbor, was a group
of outbuildings—a carriage house evidently
converted into a garage, a good-sized barn,
and a chicken yard.
“Listen,” Nancy said, raising a finger. “I
heard cooing.”
“Pigeons!” Bess exclaimed.
The girls moved ahead until they were behind
the carriage house, where they saw a small
wooden building which had no window on
their side. Here they rested in the shade until
aroused by soft cooing and the sound of a
man’s voice.
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“You’re getting better!” the listeners heard
through the wooden walls. “I guess you’ll be
able to work again if we keep you warm with
this electric light. That’ll cure you!”
There was more cooing. Then the unseen
man said, “You ought to be ashamed taking a
couple of days getting to the boss’s place and
arriving there lame at that! And why did you
go to Drews’, you half-witted barnyard
goose?” A door closed and all was silent.
“Did you hear what that man said?” Bess
asked with a catch in her voice. “He
mentioned your name!”
“Yes. That was the man I met at Tooker’s
estate. I recognized his voice,” Nancy said as
she walked ahead.
Once past the outbuildings, the girls saw a
lichen-covered sundial surrounded by a
grassy court. In it stood a number of
wheelchairs, each occupied by an old lady.
A large woman in a nurse’s uniform had her
back to the girls. She seemed to be
administering to one of the elderly women.
“It looks like a real nursing home,” Bess
whispered. “Perhaps our suspicions are all
wrong.”
Nancy put a finger to her lips. The nurse
turned and walked toward the fence.
“That’s the woman who stole my handbag!”
Nancy exclaimed softly.
“The one who took the bracelet?”
“Yes. She’s in league with Thorne and
Tooker, I feel sure.”
“One of those old ladies may be Mrs.
Eldridge,” Bess said, “but how can we find
out?”
“I don’t know yet, but I’ll think of
something,” Nancy replied. “Meanwhile,
we’d better go back and help George to the
car. If she were discovered, she’d have no
way to escape.”
The girls hurried back to their companion and
the three made their way down the hill.
George limped along as quickly as she could,
but progress was slow. When they had nearly
reached the gatehouse, the girls paused and
George sat down on a stump to rest.
Suddenly Nancy seized Bess’s arm and
pointed among the trees. On the other side of
the wire barrier was an old woman, dozing in
a wheelchair.
“Stay here,” Nancy whispered. “I’m going
closer.”
Bess clung to her friend’s arm. “No! Suppose
they catch you!”
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“I must talk to that old lady,” said Nancy.
“She may be able to help us.”
Nancy crept cautiously toward the fence.
When she was a few feet away, still screened
by bushes, she stifled a gasp. The elderly lady
wore a necklace which looked like the gold
bracelet Dr. Spire had given Nancy as a clue.
“The missing Mrs. Eldridge!” Nancy
murmured excitedly.
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