Keene, Carolyn – Nancy Drew 006 – The Secret of Red Gate Farm

“Now I’ll sleep better,” Bess sighed. The girls

went to bed happy and excited.

The next day everyone’s attention was focused

on a new boarder. Shortly after church services,

Mrs. Alice Salisbury and her daughter Nona ar-

rived in an expensive sedan. Mrs. Salisbury

walked with a cane, and complained loudly of her

arthritis as the girls helped her into the house.

Nona waited only long enough to see that her

mother was made comfortable. Then she an-

nounced that she must hurry back to the city

nearby, where she lived.

“Mother was born on a farm,” she told Mrs.

Byrd as she stepped into the car, “and she simply

pines for the country. I thought this arrangement

might be ideal since she’s never entirely happy

with me in the city. I’ll drive down to see her

week ends. I do hope she’ll be happier here at

Red Gate Farm.”

Joanne and her friends hoped so too, but they

were not at all certain, for it became increasingly

apparent that Mrs. Salisbury could not be happy

anywhere. She found no fault with the immacu-

late farmhouse or the lovely view from her bed-

room window, but she constantly complained of

her various aches and pains. She talked inces-

santly about her many operations. She had a sharp

tongue and delighted in using it.

“She wouldn’t be so bad, if only she’d stop

talking operations,” George burst out. “Makes

me feel as though I’m ready for the hospital

myself!”

By the time the girls had adjusted themselves .

to Mrs. Salisbury, the second boarder arrived. He

was Karl Abbott, a diamond-in-the-rough type of

man. In spite of his sixty-three years, he boasted

that he was as spry as his son Karl Jr., who had

brought him.

Karl Jr., who worked in a nearby city, was a

personable young man. The girls, particularly

Bess, were sorry he could not remain with his

father.

The girls liked Mr. Abbott very much, but

they were appalled by his tremendous appetite.

“I wish we could turn him out in the yard to

forage for himself,” Joanne sighed several days

later as she peeled her second heaping pan of

potatoes. “It’s all I can do to keep one helping

ahead of him!”

At first Mr. Abbott insisted upon remaining in

the kitchen, teasing the girls as they worked and

sampling the food. Then he fell into the habit of

sitting on the front porch with Mrs. Salisbury

and chatting with her for hours. Frequently they

became involved in violent arguments about

trivial matters just for diversion.

After one of their disagreements Mrs. Salisbury

would maintain a stony silence which was refresh-

ing. But Mr. Abbott would once again take refuge

in the kitchen!

In spite of such slight annoyances, the days at

Red Gate Farm passed very pleasantly. Nancy

would go into town on various errands for the

boarders and sometimes Mrs. Byrd.

One day she had just returned to the farm from

a shopping trip and on her way to the house

stopped at the mailbox.

“There might be a letter from Dad,” she

thought, and drew out a stack of mail.

She took it all into the house, where Mrs. Byrd

asked Nancy to distribute the letters. As she was

sorting them out, she came to one addressed to

the Black Snake Colony.

“Look!” Nancy exclaimed. “This letter be-

longs to the nature cult. The mailman must have

put it in our box by mistake.”

“What will you do?” asked Bess seriously.

“Drive over with it?”

“Of course not,” growled Mr. Abbott, who had

just entered the room. “You keep away from

those outrageous people. Take it back to the post

office.”

Nancy studied the postmark. It was very

blurred. Could it be Riverside Heights, or was

she mistaken? Her curiosity about the mysterious

cult was now even more aroused. Perhaps she

could deliver the letter in person! But she got no

further in her plan, for just then a neighbor

passed on his way to town. Mrs. Byrd handed him

the letter to remail.

Nancy felt disappointed, but was determined

to find out in some way what was going on “over

the hill.” “If I can only be alone with Bess and

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