The searchers turned and fled 2 глава




“So he’s the tall-story boy,” George remarked.

Bess said, “Perhaps they’re not tall stories. Maybe they’re true. I don’t think Karen was making up what she told us.” Bess gave a great sigh and said in a dramatic voice, “That old mountain is spooky!”

The others laughed, then discussed who would take the sailboat up to Mirror Bay Bide-A-Wee. It was finally decided that Nancy and George would. Bess and Aunt Eloise would return by car.

As the two girls set off, Nancy kept thinking about the funny smile on Yo’s face. Did the lake and the bay have tricky winds? Would she and George be likely to run into some kind of trouble? Or did Yo know something more about the mountain he was not telling?

CHAPTER IV

The Green Apparition

 

As the sailboat moved up the lake, Nancy relaxed. It was a beautiful day and the water was calm. There was just enough breeze to carry the craft along at moderate speed. The girls had a close look at Kingfisher Tower and Council Rock, famous in the Indian history of Otsego.

“At the head of this nine-mile-long lake,” said Nancy, pointing ahead, “is Mount Wellington but it’s never called that. Instead, the mountain is known as Sleeping Lion because of its shape.”

“And it certainly looks like one,” George observed.

Nancy explained, “I’ve been reading up on the history of this place. Did you know that the village was founded by William Cooper, father of James Fenimore Cooper? He later became a judge. There’s an amusing story told in connection with his wife. He loved the wilderness and when a young man he decided to move his family from Burlington, New Jersey, up to Cooperstown.

“She refused and would not budge from her favorite chair. Not to be outwitted, Cooper had his wife and the chair lifted bodily into a covered wagon and brought to her new home.”

George laughed heartily. “I’ll bet she loved that! If my husband ever dared do that to me, I wouldn’t speak to him for a month!”

“I’ll remind your friend Burt,” Nancy teased.

George grimaced, then said, “Here’s a local story I heard. There was a man named Prevost who lived along the east shore of this lake. He wrote to a friend, saying all his children had ‘hooping cough’ at once. Ordinarily this might not seem like anything unusual, but as it happened, Mr. Prevost had twenty-one children!”

It was Nancy’s turn to laugh. By this time the girls were nearing the bay. Suddenly both of them noticed two boys in a canoe.

They were clawing furiously at the water to reach the paddles which evidently had been swept from their craft. Their efforts seemed futile, so Nancy suggested to George that they help the little fellows.

“I’ll come about,” she said, “and slacken the sheet rope.”

George worked the tiller. By expert tacking, the girls came alongside the drifting paddles and scooped them up. The boys were waiting with outstretched hands.

“That’s great!” one of the little fellows exclaimed. “Gee, thanks a lot.”

George grinned. “You boys are really good at dogpaddling,” she remarked.

“Yeah, but pretty soon your arms ache,” the other boy said.

Nancy asked them if they ever went up into the woods on the mountain.

“Sure,” said one lad, who told them his name was Chuck.

“Have you ever seen a strange man up there?” Nancy queried.

“No,” Chuck answered, “but we’ve heard funny sounds.”

Nancy asked what they were like.

“Something like the whirring of machinery—you know, soft buzzing.”

“You have no idea what it was from?”

The boys looked at each other. “Maybe we shouldn’t tell you, but we got scared and ran away,” Chuck confessed.

Nancy smiled, saying she did not blame them. Then she asked, “Have you ever seen a woman gliding across the water near here?”

Both boys giggled and Chuck said, “You must be kidding!”

The children thanked the girls again for retrieving the paddles and started off. Nancy and George pulled into the dock of Mirror Bay Bide-A-Wee a few minutes later. Aunt Eloise and Bess were waiting for them.

“The Crestwood is great!” Nancy told her aunt. “What a wonderful surprise for us!” Then she spoke of Yo’s strange smile and tried to guess why.

Aunt Eloise said that Yo seemed a little hard to figure out. “If you’d given him the chance, he might have told you some tall story about the Crestwood.”

Bess announced that she was hot from her trip to the village and wanted to go for a swim. “How about the rest of you?” she asked.

Everyone was willing and within minutes they were ready. Nancy proposed that they do a little diving to see if they could find out what the woman gliding on the water might have been looking for.

“I’m sure she was searching for something because she kept her head down and turned it from side to side.”

The girls separated and went underwater time after time. The bay was so clear they could see as deep as the sun filtered. They tried scratching the silt and loose shale, but found nothing of interest.

In a little while, however, George came to the surface. “I’ve discovered something!” she exclaimed, and led the way down to a sunken rowboat.

It took the combined efforts of them all during the short periods when they could hold their breath to turn the rowboat over and finally bring it to the surface.

“It still floats!” George remarked. “Do you suppose this is what the woman was looking for?”

Nancy shrugged as they beached the rowboat. “In any case, let’s examine it.”

Both lockers were opened but contained only an assortment of old rags. Nothing was wedged under the slatted floorboards.

“If there was ever anything hidden in this old wreck,” said George, “it has long since floated away or been taken.”

Nancy agreed. “Let’s leave it on the shore so the woman can have a chance to look at it.”

Bess spoke up. “You keep referring to that mysterious figure as if she were a real person. I think it’s just some funny way the mist rolls in here that makes it look like a woman.”

Nancy said nothing but she was convinced a live person was involved.

The group was very hungry and all helped prepare the evening meal. An hour later they began to eat.

“This baked chicken is scrumptious,” George complimented Nancy. “You’re some cook.”

“But it won’t match Bess’s dessert!” she replied, winking at her friend.

Broad smiles crossed their faces when Bess later came from the kitchen and set down the delectable dish. Atop the thickly frosted chocolate roll were huge walnuts. The first slice was passed to Aunt Eloise.

After tasting it, she announced with a smile, “It’s good, but I prefer my walnuts dipped in chocolate rather than pickled.”

“Pickled walnuts?” Bess asked incredulously.

Miss Drew nodded. “You got these from a jar I bought in the village. The pickling is based on a colonial recipe. Back in those days preserves and pickles were often made from such foods as green walnuts, barberries, parsley, even nasturtium buds.”

After the first bite the diners got used to the unusual taste. As Bess was directing her attention to a second slice of cake, George cast an annoyed glance at her cousin.

“Pretty soon you’ll look like a sweet roll!” the slim girl quipped.

“That’s not fair, George Fayne,” her cousin returned.

Aunt Eloise and Nancy glanced at each other and decided it was time to change the subject.

As the girls finished tidying the kitchen, Nancy said, “Who’s game to hike up the mountain and try to prove or disprove the stories of the green sorcerer?”

George was eager to go, but Bess was not keen about it.

“How about you, Aunt Eloise?” Nancy asked.

Miss Drew smiled. “I wouldn’t think of letting you go alone, and besides I’m interested in seeing what’s up there. Let’s all make the climb.”

Each carried a flashlight but did not use it at once since it was not yet dusk. The foursome had been climbing for about ten minutes when they heard footsteps. Presently a man came toward them. He was dressed in woodsman’s clothes and carried a small bag like those used for tools.

“Good evening,” he said pleasantly. Then he added, “Isn’t it kind of late for you ladies to be climbing the mountain? There are many holes along this so-called trail. You’re lucky you didn’t turn an ankle on your way up.”

Aunt Eloise said, “I’m sure we’ll be perfectly all right. We’ll be careful.”

The man frowned. He was rather short but had an athletic build and looked very strong. “I beg you not to go any farther in the dark. It’s too dangerous. I’ll be glad to help you down the mountain.”

Nancy thanked him for his solicitousness but said they would like to go a little farther. She was tempted to ask him if he had ever seen the green man, yet instinct told her not to.

Without another word the man went on down the mountain trail. Aunt Eloise and the girls climbed upward. Suddenly the woods began to sparkle with infinitesimal lights.

“Fireflies!” Nancy exclaimed. “When we get back, let’s gather some in a jar and watch the little insects turn their lights off and on.”

The trekkers had gone only a short distance when suddenly they heard a shrill whistle like those used by the police.

“What’s that for?” George asked.

“Perhaps it was some kind of a signal,” Nancy replied. “The sound seemed to come from below, so maybe the man who passed us blew it to warn some friends who are up here.”

Bess looked very unhappy. “I’m sure we’re heading for trouble,” she insisted. “Please, let’s go back to the cabin!”

But she was the only one who wanted to stop the hunt. Contrary to what the man had said, Aunt Eloise and the girls had found no holes. With the glow from their flashlights and the many fireflies, they were able to detect rough spots.

Bess became more and more nervous. “I just know there’s danger ahead. Maybe it’s only intuition, but I think we should give up!”

Nancy had another idea. “If there are people on the mountain carrying on some illegal operation,” she said, “they’ve certainly been forewarned of the approach of strangers.” She suggested that they turn off their flashlights and stop talking. “Let’s hide behind trees.”

Five minutes later the strange apparition of the green man appeared a little distance ahead. He was swathed in a weird flickering light, and his face had an eerie greenish hue.

“Oh!” Bess cried out involuntarily.

At that moment a deep sonorous voice began to speak. Was it coming from the green man or from someone else nearby?

“I am the sorcerer,” the voice said. “Return to your cabin at once! Trouble there!”

CHAPTER V

A Rescue

 

Ess was already running pell-mell down the hill, her flashlight pointing the way. “Come on! Hurry!” she cried out.

The other girls seemed mesmerized by the strange figure. Miss Drew insisted that they leave and finally they followed her. Nancy was last in line. She turned to look back.

The green apparition was gone!

Nancy was puzzled. “How had the man accomplished such an instantaneous exit?” she asked herself. “Of course he could have turned out the light surrounding him, but what about his clothing which definitely had glowed with a green hue even in the dark?

“I’m coming up here again in the daylight to find out what’s going on,” she determined.

When the group reached Mirror Bay Bide-A-Wee they were relieved to find the cabin untouched. To be sure there was nothing explosive or otherwise dangerous, they searched every inch of the place, inside and out. They did not come upon anything harmful.

“That sorcerer just wanted to get rid of us,” George said in disgust.

“One thing is sure,” Nancy remarked. “Yo, Karen, and all of us have seen the green man, so we know he does exist.”

Bess spoke up. “I wish he’d go out of existence and the sooner the better!”

The climb up the mountainside and the quick descent had given everyone an appetite. They enjoyed a late evening snack of cheese and fruit, then went to bed.

Nancy was first to awaken the next morning. It was still early but instantly she thought of the figure that might be gliding across the water.

“Maybe I could see her more clearly this time,” she thought and hurried out to the porch.

The mist was not so heavy as the previous day and she could plainly see a woman with graying hair and wearing white slacks and sweater moving across the water.

When Nancy looked more intently, it occurred to her that the figure was not gliding but walking. The stranger kept going out deeper and deeper until the water reached her knees.

“How far is she going?” Nancy wondered.

As the young detective continued to gaze, the woman suddenly lost her balance. She went down under the water. Nancy waited for her to reappear, but there was no sign of her.

“Something has happened!” Nancy decided.

She raced from the porch across the strip of beach and through the shallow water. Still the woman had not reappeared.

“The impact must have knocked her,” – Nancy thought worriedly.

In a frantic lunge she shallow-dived at where the woman had gone down. She could see her thrashing with her arms but unable to rise. Nancy rushed toward her and now realized that the woman was wearing knee stilts. One of them had caught between two rocks.

Nancy rushed toward the drowning woman

 

Nancy yanked at the stilt and pulled it loose. To her horror the woman had stopped struggling. She was drowning!

“I must do something quick!” Nancy thought, realizing that soon she would have to go to the surface for air herself.

Nancy attempted to guide the victim to the surface but the load seemed too great. She knew she could not hold out much longer.

At that moment George appeared. She had come to the porch just in time to see Nancy go underwater but fail to reappear quickly. Together the two girls brought the woman to the surface. They towed her to the beach, and Nancy began giving her mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.

By this time Bess and Aunt Eloise had come outside and hurried to them. There were anxious moments as the girls took turns giving the victim artificial respiration.

Aunt Eloise had gone for a blanket to cover her. The stilts were unbuckled from just below the woman’s knees.

No one had spoken. But when the stranger suddenly took a deep natural breath they all sighed in relief.

“Thank goodness!” said Bess.

The first-aid treatment was continued until the victim was breathing normally again. Her eyelids fluttered open but instantly closed.

Aunt Eloise said, “Let’s carry her up to the cot on the porch.”

This was done very gently and carefully. They watched the woman intently to see if she would show any signs of going into shock. She did not seem to; instead, she fell into a deep exhausted sleep.

“We can take turns watching her,” Nancy said. “In the meantime, let’s get dressed and have breakfast.”

The woman slept peacefully and Miss Drew thought it was not necessary to call a doctor. Breakfast over, the girls did the necessary housework while Aunt Eloise sat on the porch with the patient.

In the meantime, they had examined the aluminum stilts. They could be adjusted to a six-foot length and had large square ends covered with rubber.

“I guess,” said George, “that on land one could walk indefinitely on these. But in the water where there are uneven surfaces, it must be dangerous.”

“As the woman found out,” Bess remarked. “I take it she doesn’t know how to swim and dive, or she wouldn’t have needed these. What do you suppose she was hunting for? Surely not that rowboat.”

“I hope we can find out when she wakes up,” Nancy replied.

They went out to the porch and were just in time to see the near-drowning victim open her eyes and keep them open. She looked from one face to another in bewilderment.

Everyone smiled at her and Aunt Eloise said, “You’re all right now. You had a nice long nap.”

The stranger sat up and it was evident she had regained her strength. She smiled at last and asked, “You rescued me?”

They nodded and introduced themselves.

“Thank you. Thank you very much. That was a dreadful experience. I shall never go near the water again.”

Miss Drew asked, “Would you like some toast and tea?”

“I’m sure that would taste very good. I do feel kind of weak.”

While Bess went to prepare the food, their guest told them she was Miss Anne Armitage, a retired schoolteacher.

“I’m staying in a little cottage on the west side of the lake. My reason for being here is to find something in this bay.”

Miss Armitage did not explain further. Instead, she told the group that as a child she had loved to walk on stilts and became a real expert at it. She had continued to practice.

“Since I can’t swim,” she said, “I thought I’d use a stilt-method for going into deeper and deeper water. I suppose I was foolish not to use a life preserver.”

“I’m afraid you were,” Aunt Eloise remarked.

By this time Bess had the toast and tea ready and brought it out to the porch on a tray.

Miss Armitage seemed to enjoy them. As she finished a second cupful, color came back into her face.

“You are wonderful people,” she said. “And very brave too. There is no way I could ever repay your kindness.”

“Do you feel like talking and telling us any more about what you’re doing?” Aunt Eloise asked.

Miss Armitage smiled. “I suppose it’s the least I can do for people who saved my life.”

She paused and looked off over the water. Then, as if making up her mind to something, she said, “If all of you will promise to keep a great secret, I will tell you what I’m trying to do. It’s a fabulous story.”

Each of her listeners agreed to keep the matter confidential and leaned forward expectantly as she began.

CHAPTER VI

The Cardiff Giant

 

“ONE of my ancestors,” Miss Armitage began, “was an aristocrat in old Czarist Russia. She was very wealthy and owned beautiful things. Much to her family’s dismay, she fell in love with an American and came to this country to marry him. They settled in Cooperstown in a large house with attractive grounds. Later the place burned down.”

“What a shame!” Bess put in.

“Yes, it was,” Miss Armitage agreed. “But long before the fire, the woman had one child—a beautiful little girl. She brought her daughter up as if she were a princess and even imported a child’s royal coach from Russia. Her own little pony pulled it.”

As Miss Armitage paused, Nancy smiled. “This sounds like some of the fairy tales I used to read.”

The visitor nodded. “Indeed it does, and the whole tale fascinates me.”

“What’s the rest of the story?” George asked. “You haven’t told us yet about the bay. Where does that come in?”

Miss Armitage’s eyes twinkled. “I’ll get to that. In fact, I dislike telling the next part of the story because it is sad. The lovely little girl died very suddenly.

“Her mother was heartbroken and almost went out of her mind. Madame insisted that she and her husband move and that every object which brought back memories of the child were to be sold or given away.

“The particular object which reminded the mother of her beloved daughter was the royal coach. It was painted in gold and white and had birds and flowers carved on it. Madame felt that no one else should use it, yet she didn’t want it to be destroyed. Finally she requested that it be put into a waterproof box and lowered into the bay. The whole thing was to be kept very quiet.”

Everyone agreed it was a sad story indeed.

Then George said, “Evidently somebody didn’t keep the secret. How did you learn about it?”

Miss Armitage said that when the child’s nurse, Maud Jayson, became an old lady with a failing memory, she had told the tale but no one believed it.

“That is, no one but myself. I came across pieces of a faded torn letter in an old book which I received when the books of the little girl’s mother were passed to members of the family. I happened to inherit this one.”

“Did you by any chance lose one of the pieces?” Nancy asked her.

“Yes I did,” Miss Armitage replied. “And it was an important part of the message. I think I lost it on the water yesterday morning. Foolishly I was carrying the letter in a small pocket.”

Nancy stood up and excused herself for a minute. She went to get the paper she had found and showed it to Miss Armitage.

The woman was amazed. “This is what I lost! Where did you find it?”

Nancy told her, then said, “Miss Armitage, I’ve puzzled over the meaning of it. Your story is fascinating and explains the mystery.”

The woman said that her reason for wanting to retrieve the child’s beautiful royal coach was to present it to the Fenimore Museum.

“If the water did not get to it and the coach is intact, I think it would be a lovely addition to the historical exhibits. Thousands of people could enjoy it.”

“And it would be a rare piece,” Aunt Eloise added. “I doubt that there are very many like it in the world.”

George asked Miss Armitage how she hoped to locate the box containing the child’s coach.

“Either by feeling around with my stilts or by a long pole which I sometimes use. I thought if I located the box and could prove that the story is true, then I could hire some divers to bring it up.”

Miss Armitage looked searchingly from one face to another. Finally she said, “If this mystery intrigues you, Nancy, how about solving it for me? Since you rescued me, you girls must be wonderful swimmers. You should be able to locate the coach.”

Nancy accepted the challenge with alacrity, and Bess and George said they wanted to help in the search too.

“But you must promise to keep it a secret,” Miss Armitage insisted.

“We promise,” said the girls in unison and smilingly gave a mock salute.

The woman stood up. She wished the girls luck, then asked if one of them would drive her car home. “I still feel a little shaky,” she said.

“I will,” said Nancy. “Let’s all go to town,” she suggested. “We’ll need scuba diving equipment for our search, and I can’t wait to start.”

Aunt Eloise begged off, saying she had letters to write.

George drove Miss Armitage’s car, which the woman had parked on the road not far from Mirror Bay Bide-A-Wee. Since her home was on the opposite side of the lake, the two cars were driven through Cooperstown, then out Route 80, which ran along the water.

When they reached the attractive rented cottage, Bess carried the stilts inside. For the first time Miss Armitage laughed aloud.

“How foolish I’ve been! I think I ought to give away those stilts. To think of all the trouble I put you girls to and wasn’t accomplishing a thing myself!”

“Don’t worry about that,” Nancy said quickly. “And please keep the stilts. Sometime when you’re feeling strong, I want you to give us a demonstration.”

“I will if you’ll all try them,” Miss Armitage said. After a brief pause, she added, “By the way, you aren’t far from the Farmers’ Museum. That’s a great place to visit. You know who’s there? The Cardiff Giant.”

“Who’s he?” George asked.

The retired schoolteacher would not reveal any more. “You’re so close now, why don’t you find out for yourselves?”

“Maybe we will,” Nancy replied. “But first we want to shop for scuba equipment.”

The girls returned to the center of Cooperstown in Nancy’s car and parked near a restaurant. Yo was just coming out of it.

He seemed very glad to see them. Grinning, he asked, “Have you met the green man yet?”

To his surprise their answer was yes. “Really? Tell me about it,” he said.

The girls related their experience and told about the man saying there was trouble at Bide-A-Wee cabin.

“It wasn’t true. It was only an excuse to get us away,” George said angrily. “Yo, have you any idea at all what’s going on up in those woods?”

“No,” the young man replied. “But I’d like to find out. To tell the truth, though, I don’t think that green guy is fooling around. He wouldn’t hesitate to harm any of us.”

“Then,” said Bess, “I for one will stay out of his reach!”

Nancy changed the subject and asked Yo where they could buy scuba equipment. He told them, then George inquired if he knew about the Cardiff Giant at the Farmers’ Museum.

“Oh yes,” Yo replied. “Wait until you see that moth-eaten old Indian.”

“Tell us about him,” Bess urged.

Yo grinned but refused. Finally the girls left him. Nancy said that before going to the sports shop, she would like to stop at the post office up the street.

“I want to see if there are any letters for us sent to General Delivery.”

Several were handed over to her. The one Nancy tore open first was from Ned Nickerson, her favorite date.

As soon as she finished reading it, Nancy exclaimed, “Girls! Listen to this!”

She read part of the letter aloud. It said, “Now I can tell you a surprise which your Aunt Eloise and I have arranged. She invited Burt, Dave, and me to come up to your cabin. We’ll be there this weekend!”

“How super!” Bess cried out. “Best news I’ve heard in ages.”

“Great!” George commented with a grin.

Burt Eddleton was a special friend of hers, and Dave Evans dated Bess.

Nancy went on, “Ned also says, ‘Be sure to have a mystery waiting for us.’ ”

The three girls giggled. “Mystery!” Bess exclaimed. “We’re full of them!”

Nancy remarked that she would give up her room, and bunk with her aunt so the three boys could use hers. “It’s lucky there are three beds in it.”

The girls went back to the street and walked to the shop where scuba diving equipment could be purchased. After choosing some they went to the car and set off for the Farmers’ Museum on the west side of the lake.

The exhibits were housed in a huge barn and several smaller buildings. The adjoining grounds were laid out as a reproduction of a colonial village with separate offices for a lawyer, a doctor, and a printer. There also were a pharmacist’s shop with old-fashioned candies, a blacksmith’s, a pioneer homestead, a schoolhouse, and a church.

In the huge barn the girls were intrigued by demonstrations of broom-making, spinning, and weaving. They walked all the way through the building. In a nearby shed stood a large unusual-looking vehicle.

“What’s that?” Bess asked, perplexed.

When the girls drew closer, they could read a sign saying that the vehicle was a snow roller. It was horse-drawn and pulled what looked like a tremendous barrel nearly the width of an old-time country road.

George remarked, “Clearing away snow in olden days must’ve really been a task. Think of how easy it is today with motorized equipment.”

“Now let’s go see the Cardiff Giant,” Nancy suggested.

Bess pleaded, “But first I want to buy some of that old-fashioned candy.”

Before Nancy and George could decide which to do, a cry rang out loud and clear in the big barn.

“Stop thief!”

CHAPTER VII

Scuba Search

 

As the cry of “Stop thief!” was repeated, Nancy, Bess and George raced into the great barn.

At the same moment they saw the girl who resembled Nancy. She was darting in and out among the sightseers, but Nancy caught sight of her dropping a purse into a shopping bag she carried. The girl’s own bag hung over her arm.

“She’s the one!” George exclaimed to the people around her, and put on a burst of speed to catch the thief.

As Nancy started to follow, she was jolted to a full stop by two hands that grabbed her shoulders from behind. She turned to face her accoster, a red-faced, angry woman.

Seizing one of Nancy’s wrists in a crushing grip, she shrieked, “Here she is! She’s the one! She stole my purse!”

Bess, just behind Nancy, yanked the woman’s hands away.

“What do you think you’re doing?” she asked, her eyes flashing. “My friend Nancy Drew is not a thief!”

By this time a crowd had gathered around the group. A guard pushed his way through to confront them.

“What’s going on here?” he demanded.

“This girl stole my purse!” the woman cried out. “Arrest her! Make her give me back my money!”

“Where is the bag?” the guard asked Nancy sternly.

“I don’t have it,” she replied. “Evidently the thief resembles me very strongly. She got away. But a friend of mine has gone after her.”

The guard looked as if he was not sure whom to believe. Bess kept insisting that Nancy had nothing to do with the theft.

At that moment George returned. “I didn’t catch her,” she said. “That girl jumped into a car on the road. The driver no doubt was waiting for her. It went racing off.”

“What did the girl look like?” the guard asked her.



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