CHAPTER XX
The SP
NOT daring to look back, Nancy raced for
the shelter of the woods, wondering if she
could make it before being detected.
Suddenly she heard a hoarse shout. “Look,
chief! There goes a girl!”
The young sleuth’s heart sank.
“Catch her!” Thorne yelled.
“No, you fool,” barked Bell. “We haven’t
time! Into the plane, everybody! Go ahead,
Adolf!”
“Wait!” came the tall man’s hard voice. “I
smell gasoline.”
Thorne gave an angry exclamation and Bell
said, “I do, too. Where’s it coming from?”
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“There’s probably a leak in one of the fuel
tanks,” said Luther. Quickly he ducked under
the wing. “One drain valve is open!” he
shouted.
“Open?” thundered Bell. “Who did that?”
At once Thorne climbed into the plane. In a
moment he gave an angry yell. “We have no
fuel!” he cried and jumped out. “The gauges
read empty!”
Miss Tyson raced up to them with three men
and a girl at her heels, followed by the
gatekeeper and his barking dog.
“Everything’s gone wrong!” she exclaimed.
At that moment a plane swooped soundlessly
out of the sky. Before it taxied to a full stop,
several armed State Police officers jumped
out and surrounded the criminals. A powerful
searchlight was turned on the confused gang.
A voice over a loudspeaker ordered, “Stand
where you are! No one move!”
“Ned!” Nancy cried out.
She raced from the woods and reached the
plane as he leaped from it, followed by Dave,
her father, and the pilot.
“Dad!” Nancy exclaimed as Carson Drew
caught her up in his arms.
“Are you hurt?” he asked quickly.
“No, Dad, but I’m so glad to see you! Ned,
you’re just wonderful!”
“Oh, Nancy, you take such chances,” he said.
“But I was sure happy I could come to the
rescue.”
In a moment a second noiseless plane
skimmed down onto the field. Out jumped
Burt, Lieutenant Mulligan, and two members
of his detective squad. They joined the others
in the circle of light, where the officers began
snapping handcuffs on the prisoners.
“Miss Drew,” Lieutenant Mulligan said, “Ned
Nickerson informed me of your plan and I
called the State Police.”
“I’m glad the mystery is solved, Lieutenant,”
said Nancy, then turned to Thorne. “Where
are the old ladies?” she asked anxiously.
The gang members had been staring at Nancy
in disbelief. “You!” Thorne sputtered. “How
did you get out of the cistern?”
“First answer my question,” said Nancy.
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“They’re in the cellar,” Bell replied shortly.
Miss Tyson spoke up. “They are not in the
cellar.” As Bell looked at her, puzzled, she
added,
“I didn’t have time to put them there! As soon
as I saw the air was out of our car tires, I
knew something had gone wrong with the
plans. I wanted to get away—fast!”
“What did you do with Morgan?” Nancy
asked quickly.
“Nothing. He’s still in the car.”
Nancy explained Morgan’s condition to the
police, who promised that the houseman
would be taken to a hospital.
Thorne glared at Nancy. “How did you get
out of the cistern?”
“Climbed out,” Nancy said directly. “I used
the ladder you gave me.”
Miss Tyson gasped. “That’s impossible.”
Briefly, Nancy told how she had escaped and
sent for help.
“‘SP at once,’ ” Ned said with a grin. “Sail-
plane at once!”
“Also, send police,” Nancy added.
“These aren’t gliders?” Tooker asked.
“No,” Ned answered. “They’re motorized
sailplanes. They were perfect for this job
because we flew them here using the motor,
then cut it out and landed soundlessly.”
He grinned at Dave. “All we had to do was
find two sailplanes. We finally rented these
from an airport in the next county. The State
Police provided the pilots.”
“Dad,” said Nancy, “how did you hear about
the plan?”
“Ned briefed me. He called our house on the
chance that I’d returned from Chicago.”
Looking at Adam Thorne, Mr. Drew added,
“I’m proud of my daughter, Thorne. She
planned to take you and your accomplices by
surprise, so you couldn’t harm the old ladies
before you bolted.”
Lieutenant Mulligan cleared his throat. “Miss
Drew, you’re a fine detective.”
Nancy smiled and thanked him.
Adolf Tooker turned to Bell and said angrily,
“This is the girl you said would be no
trouble?”
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“I warned Bell about her,” Thorne spoke up,
“but he wouldn’t listen!”
“It’s not my fault,” said Bell, his voice rising
nervously. “It’s Thorne’s. Ever since he read
about the Comings’ jeweled crystal collection
he wanted to steal it. Then he dragged us into
the scheme and bungled it! My men were
doing all his work!
“Whenever I wanted Tarr and Jackson, they
were trailing Nancy Drew in the sedan or
spying on that Sylvan Lake place. They even
set the dog on her. Twice they snatched
Morgan, and Jackson showed the blue fire
night after night to scare him. It finally
worked. Then suddenly Morgan wouldn’t go
along with us, so we had to teach him a
lesson.
“As for Tarr,” Bell went on bitterly, “he spent
days making the firework wheel and rigging
up an asbestos-lined box for it.”
Tarr gave a sickly grin. “All I had to do was
shut the door of the box and the blue fire was
gone—like magic!”
Jackson’s face was pale. “We only did what
Thorne ordered.”
“Be quiet, all of you!” barked Thorne. “Don’t
you know there are police listening?”
“It doesn’t matter,” Adolf Tooker said
wearily. “They’ll find all the evidence they
need here.”
“Is this your whole gang?” Mulligan asked
sharply.
Tooker looked around the group which
included the gateman with the dog, the
pigeon keeper, and the nurse’s aide whom
Nancy had startled in the hall.
“Yes.”
Miss Tyson’s assistant was shaking with
fright. “I was only doing what Dr. Bell
ordered. He told me the patients were too
nervous to have visitors.”
“He’s no doctor,” Nancy told her. “And I
find it hard to believe Miss Tyson is a real
nurse.”
The hard-faced woman shot her a venomous
look.
“The police will find out about them all,”
Lieutenant Mulligan said grimly.
At that moment two helicopters appeared,
lights flashing. They landed on the field and
the rotors were silenced.
“Last stage of Nancy’s plan,” Ned said.
“Reinforcements!”
“Okay,” called a State Police officer to the
arriving troopers. “Load this gang in the
copters and take ’em away!”
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An hour later Nancy had the biggest thrill of
the evening. As she walked into the
Comings’
living room with her father and the boys, she
saw Mrs. Eldridge seated in a big chair with
little Marie asleep on her lap. At one side
stood the child’s mother, on the other a tall
stranger.
“Nancy,” the old woman said happily, “this is
my nephew John. Nancy Drew is the girl
who—
” Tears filled her eyes and she could not go
on.
“Yes,” he said, “Nancy Drew has done a
wonderful job. Thank you, Nancy.”
“The hospital called,” said Mrs. Corning.
“Morgan will be all right! We’re so grateful to
you for clearing up the mystery about him.”
“Will you take him back?” Bess asked.
“Of course. He is honest and faithful. We
know his true story. There can’t be any more
trouble.”
Nancy thanked her friends for helping her.
She gave Bess and George each a squeeze
and quickly excused herself to change her
clothes. When she came downstairs, Mrs.
Corning had a tray of tempting food waiting.
“Oh good!” said Nancy. “Supper was a long
time ago. I’m famished!”
While everyone ate, Mrs. Eldridge told what
she had learned while a prisoner at Larkspur
Lane. Tooker, whose real name was Van
Hofwitz, was an international confidence
man.
“The sanatorium was his idea,” she said. “He
made Bell a partner and he was to pass as a
doctor. Thorne had put money into the
venture while in prison. As soon as he
escaped, he joined the others.”
Mrs. Eldridge went on to say that Von
Hofwitz ingratiated himself into various social
circles.
He would introduce the fake doctor to
wealthy ladies who complained of old age.
“I see now how silly I was,” Mrs. Eldridge
said. “I was taken in by their suave manners
and my own vanity.”
She revealed that the unscrupulous pair
would persuade the women to go secretly to
the sanatorium. There, using drugs and
threats, Bell prevailed upon the patients to
sign away large parts of their wealth to him.
Mr. Drew spoke up. “Thorne is a very sharp
lawyer and no doubt the contracts he drew for
you women to sign seemed harmless enough
but could not be changed, even if your
relatives tried to break them.”
96
“But your courage, Mrs. Eldridge,” said
Nancy, “helped to put an end to the whole
scheme.
There are two questions I hope you can
answer,” she added. “Why did the gang use
blue bells in the code?”
“Because Bell was so conceited he wanted
his own name in it. Blue, of course, was the
color of the flowers growing so profusely
around the estate.”
“And why was the pigeon released from the
plane?”
“Tooker was flying from the mansion to an
appointment with an old woman in
Pennsylvania that day. He let the bird go on
the way so that it would reach his estate more
quickly.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Eldridge, for the answers
to my questions,” Nancy said. “And now I’ll
go upstairs and get your bracelet for you.”
“No, dear,” said the old lady. “I want you to
keep it as a memento.”
“How wonderful!” Nancy hugged her.
Mr. Corning spoke up. “And I am going to
order French crystal earrings in the form of
tiny larkspurs for you and the other girls.”
“Oh, how exciting!” Bess exclaimed. “Thank
you very much.”
George grinned and added her thanks.
Nancy protested that she wanted no reward.
“I’m just happy everything turned out right.”
Ned grinned. “If I were to give Nancy the
reward she’d like best, I’d hand her another
mystery to solve.”
But it was not Ned who would bring The
Clue of the Broken Locket to Nancy, though
he was to play a part in the strange case.
“I’ll find you a mystery by tomorrow
morning,” he promised jokingly.
“And I’ll be ready for it,” Nancy said with a
twinkle in her eyes. “But make it very, very
complicated and original.”
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Document Outline - CHAPTER I
- CHAPTER II
- CHAPTER III
- CHAPTER IV
- CHAPTER V
- CHAPTER VI
- CHAPTER VII
- CHAPTER VIII
- CHAPTER IX
- CHAPTER X
- CHAPTER XI
- CHAPTER XII
- CHAPTER XIII
- CHAPTER XIV
- CHAPTER XV
- CHAPTER XVI
- CHAPTER XVII
- CHAPTER XVIII
- CHAPTER XIX
- CHAPTER XX
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