Read The Hidden Staircase Online

Authors: Carolyn Keene

Tags: #Women Detectives, #Detective and Mystery Stories, #Mansions, #Mystery & Detective, #Juvenile Fiction, #Adventure and Adventurers, #Braille Books, #Mysteries & Detective Stories, #Fiction, #Adventures and Adventurers, #Mystery Fiction, #Women Sleuths, #Children's Stories, #Drew; Nancy (Fictitous Character), #Haunted Houses, #Drew; Nancy (Fictitious Character), #Mystery Stories, #General, #Nancy Drew, #Mystery and Detective Stories

The Hidden Staircase (9 page)

Nancy’s plan was followed to the letter. Just as the grandfather clock in the hall was striking midnight, Nancy arrived in the kitchen and sat down to await developments. Helen was posted in a living-room chair near the hall doorway. Moonlight streamed into both rooms but the girls had taken seats in the shadows.
Helen was mentally rehearsing the further instructions which Nancy had written to her during the afternoon. The young sleuth had suggested that if Helen should see anyone, she was to run to the front door, open it, and yell “Police!” At the same time she was to try to watch where the intruder disappeared.
The minutes ticked by. There was not a sound in the house. Then suddenly Nancy heard the front door open with a bang and Helen’s voice yell loudly and clearly:
“Police! Help! Police!”
CHAPTER XI
An Elusive Ghost
BY THE time Nancy reached the front hall, Tom Patrick, the police guard, had rushed into the house. “Here I am!” he called. “What’s the matter?”
Helen led the way into the living room, and switched on the chandelier light.
“That sofa next to the fireplace!” she said in a trembling voice. “It moved! I saw it move!”
“You mean somebody moved it?” the detective asked.
“I—I don’t know,” Helen replied. “I couldn’t see anybody.”
Nancy walked over to the old-fashioned sofa, set in the niche alongside the fireplace. Certainly the piece was in place now. If the ghost had moved it, he had returned the sofa to its original position.
“Let’s pull it out and see what we can find,” Nancy suggested.
She tugged at one end, while the guard pulled the other. It occurred to Nancy that a person who moved it alone would have to be very strong.
“Do you think your ghost came up through a trap door or something?” the detective asked.
Neither of the girls replied. They had previously searched the area, and even now as they looked over every inch of the floor and the three walls surrounding the high sides of the couch, they could detect nothing that looked like an opening.
By this time Helen looked sheepish. “I—I guess I was wrong,” she said finally. Turning to the police guard, she said, “I’m sorry to have taken you away from your work.”
“Don’t feel too badly about it. But I’d better get back to my guard duty,” the man said, and left the house.
“Oh, Nancy!” Helen cried out. “I’m so sorry!”
She was about to say more but Nancy put a finger to her lips. They could use the same strategy for trapping the thief at another time. In case the thief might be listening, Nancy did not want to give away their secret.
Nancy felt that after all the uproar the ghost would not appear again that night. She motioned to Helen that they would go quietly upstairs and get some sleep. Hugging the walls of the stairway once more, they ascended noiselessly, tiptoed to their room, and got into bed.
“I’m certainly glad I didn’t wake up Miss Flora and Aunt Rosemary,” said Helen sleepily as she whispered good night.
Though Nancy had been sure the ghost would not enter the mansion again that night, she discovered in the morning that she had been mistaken. More food had been stolen sometime between midnight and eight o’clock when she and Helen started breakfast. Had the ghost taken it for personal use or only to worry the occupants of Twin Elms?
“I missed my chance this time,” Nancy murmured to her friend. “After this, I’d better not trust what that ghost’s next move may be!”
At nine o’clock Hannah Gruen telephoned the house. Nancy happened to answer the ring and after the usual greetings was amazed to hear Hannah say, “I’d like to speak to your father.”
“Why, Dad isn’t here!” Nancy told her. “Don’t you remember—the telegram said he wasn’t coming?”
“He’s not there!” Hannah exclaimed. “Oh, this is bad, Nancy—very bad.”
“What do you mean, Hannah?” Nancy asked fearfully.
The housekeeper explained that soon after receiving the telegram on Tuesday evening, Mr. Drew himself had phoned. “He wanted to know if you were still in Cliffwood, Nancy. When I told him yes, he said he would stop off there on his way home Wednesday.”
Nancy was frightened, but she asked steadily, “Hannah, did you happen to mention the telegram to him?”
“No, I didn’t,” the housekeeper replied. “I didn’t think it was necessary.”
“Hannah darling,” said Nancy, almost on the verge of tears, “I’m afraid that telegram was a hoax!”
“A hoax!” Mrs. Gruen cried out.
“Yes. Dad’s enemies sent it to keep me from meeting him!”
“Oh, Nancy,” Hannah wailed, “you don’t suppose those enemies that Mr. Gomber warned you about have waylaid your father and are keeping him prisoner?”
“I’m afraid so,” said Nancy. Her knees began to quake and she sank into the chair alongside the telephone table.
“What’ll we do?” Hannah asked. “Do you want me to notify the police?”
“Not yet. Let me do a little checking first.”
“All right, Nancy. But let me know what happens.”
“I will.”
Nancy put the phone down, then looked at the various telephone directories which lay on the table. Finding one which contained River Heights numbers, she looked for the number of the telegraph office and put in a call. She asked the clerk who answered to verify that there had been a telegram from Mr. Drew on Tuesday.
After a few minutes wait, the reply came. “We have no record of such a telegram.”
Nancy thanked the clerk and hung up. By this time her hands were shaking with fright. What had happened to her father?
Getting control of herself, Nancy telephoned in turn to the airport, the railroad station, and the bus lines which served Cliffwood. She inquired about any accidents which might have occurred on trips from Chicago the previous day or on Tuesday night. In each case she was told there had been none.
“Oh, what shall I do?” Nancy thought in dismay.
Immediately an idea came to her and she put in a call to the Chicago hotel where her father had registered. Although she thought it unlikely, it was just possible that he had changed his mind again and was still there. But a conversation with the desk clerk dashed this hope.
“No, Mr. Drew is not here. He checked out Tuesday evening. I don’t know his plans, but I’ll connect you with the head porter. He may be able to help you.”
In a few seconds Nancy was asking the porter what he could tell her to help clear up the mystery of her father’s disappearance. “All I know, miss, is that your father told me he was taking a sleeper train and getting off somewhere Wednesday morning to meet his daughter.”
“Thank you. Oh, thank you very much,” said Nancy. “You’ve helped me a great deal.”
So her father had taken the train home and probably had reached the Cliffwood station! Next she must find out what had happened to him after that!
Nancy told Aunt Rosemary and Helen what she had learned, then got in her convertible and drove directly to the Cliffwood station. There she spoke to the ticket agent. Unfortunately, he could not identify Mr. Drew from Nancy’s description as having been among the passengers who got off either of the two trains arriving from Chicago on Wednesday.
Nancy went to speak to the taximen. Judging by the line of cabs, she decided that all the drivers who served the station were on hand at the moment. There had been no outgoing trains for nearly an hour and an incoming express was due in about fifteen minutes.
“I’m in luck,” the young detective told herself. “Surely one of these men must have driven Dad.”
She went from one to another, but each of them denied having carried a passenger of Mr. Drew’s description the day before.
By this time Nancy was in a panic. She hurried inside the station to a telephone booth and called the local police station. Nancy asked to speak to the captain and in a moment he came on the line.
“Captain Rossland speaking,” he said crisply.
Nancy poured out her story. She told of the warning her father had received in River Heights and her fear that some enemy of his was now detaining the lawyer against his will.
“This is very serious, Miss Drew,” Captain Rossland stated. “I will put men on the case at once,” he said.
As Nancy left the phone booth, a large, gray-haired woman walked up to her. “Pardon me, miss, but I couldn’t help overhearing what you said. I believe maybe I can help you.”
Nancy was surprised and slightly suspicious. Maybe this woman was connected with the abductors and planned to make Nancy a prisoner too by promising to take her to her father!
“Don’t look so frightened,” the woman said, smiling. “All I wanted to tell you is that I’m down here at the station every day to take a train to the next town. I’m a nurse and I’m on a case over there right now.”
“I see,” Nancy said.
“Well, yesterday I was here when the Chicago train came in. I noticed a tall, handsome man—such as you describe your father to be—step off the train. He got into the taxi driven by a man named Harry. I have a feeling that for some reason the cabbie isn’t telling the truth. Let’s talk to him.”
Nancy followed the woman, her heart beating furiously. She was ready to grab at any straw to get a clue to her father’s whereabouts!
“Hello, Miss Skade,” the taximan said. “How are you today?”
“Oh, I’m all right,” the nurse responded. “Listen, Harry. You told this young lady that you didn’t carry any passenger yesterday that looked like her father. Now I saw one get into your cab. What about it?”
Harry hung his head. “Listen, miss,” he said to Nancy, “I got three kids and I don’t want nothin’ to happen to ’em. See?”
“What do you mean?” Nancy asked, puzzled.
When the man did not reply, Miss Skade said, “Now look, Harry. This girl’s afraid that her father has been kidnaped. It’s up to you to tell her all you know.”
“Kidnaped!” the taximan shouted. “Oh, good-night! Now I don’t know what to do.”
Nancy had a sudden thought. “Has somebody been threatening you, Harry?” she asked.
The cab driver’s eyes nearly popped from his head. “Well,” he said, “since you’ve guessed it, I’d better tell you everything I know.”
He went on to say that he had taken a passenger who fitted Mr. Drew’s description toward Twin Elms where he had said he wanted to go. “Just as we were leaving the station, two other men came up and jumped into my cab. They said they were going a little farther than that and would I take them? Well, about halfway to Twin Elms, one of those men ordered me to pull up to the side of the road and stop. He told me the stranger had blacked out. He and his buddy jumped out of the car and laid the man on the grass.”
“How ill was he?” Nancy asked.
“I don’t know. He was unconscious. Just then another car came along behind us and stopped. The driver got out and offered to take your father to a hospital. The two men said okay.”
Nancy took heart. Maybe her father was in a hospital and had not been abducted at all! But a moment later her hopes were again dashed when Harry said:
“I told those guys I’d be glad to drive the sick man to a hospital, but one of them turned on me, shook his fist, and yelled, ‘You just forget everything that’s happened or it’ll be too bad for you and your kids!’ ”
“Oh!” Nancy cried out, and for a second everything seemed to swim before her eyes. She clutched the door handle of the taxi for support.
There was no question now but that her father had been drugged, then kidnaped!
CHAPTER XII
The Newspaper Clue
MISS SKADE grabbed Nancy. “Do you feel ill?” the nurse asked quickly.
“Oh, I’ll be all right,” Nancy replied. “This news has been a great shock to me.”
“Is there any way I can help you?” the woman questioned. “I’d be very happy to.”
“Thank you, but I guess not,” the young sleuth said. Smiling ruefully, she added, “But I must get busy and do something about this.”
The nurse suggested that perhaps Mr. Drew was in one of the local hospitals. She gave Nancy the names of the three in town.
“I’ll get in touch with them at once,” the young detective said. “You’ve been most kind. And here comes your train, Miss Skade. Good-by and again thanks a million for your help!”
Harry climbed out of his taxi and went to stand at the platform to signal passengers for his cab. Nancy hurried after him, and before the train came in, asked if he would please give her a description of the two men who had been with her father.
“Well, both of them were dark and kind of athletic-looking. Not what I’d call handsome. One of ’em had an upper tooth missing. And the other fellow—his left ear was kind of crinkled, if you know what I mean.”
“I understand,” said Nancy. “I’ll give a description of the two men to the police.”
She went back to the telephone booth and called each of the three hospitals, asking if anyone by the name of Carson Drew had been admitted or possibly a patient who was not conscious and had no identification. Only Mercy Hospital had a patient who had been unconscious since the day before. He definitely was not Mr. Drew—he was Chinese!
Sure now that her father was being held in some secret hiding place, Nancy went at once to police headquarters and related the taximan’s story.
Captain Rossland looked extremely concerned. “This is alarming, Miss Drew,” he said, “but I feel sure we can trace that fellow with the crinkly ear and we’ll make him tell us where your father is! I doubt, though, that there is anything you can do. You’d better leave it to the police.”
Nancy said nothing. She was reluctant to give up even trying to do something, but she acqui esced.
“In the meantime,” said the officer, “I’d advise you to remain at Twin Elms and concentrate on solving the mystery there. From what you tell me about your father, I’m sure he’ll be able to get out of the difficulty himself, even before the police find him.”

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