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

perfect name.

Nancy realized that if she did not try to get

away and bring help now, she and her friends

would fail. There was nothing they could do by

themselves.

Nancy turned to relay her intentions to Bess

and George. A slight tug on their robes was all

that was needed to make them understand, but to

put the plan into operation was another matter.

The girls attempted to edge toward the cham-

ber entrance by degrees, but Al Snead stood bar-

ring the door. For the time being escape was out

of the question. They must bide their time.

As long as some members of the organization

remained masked, the girls knew they would be

comparatively safe. But already several people

had stripped off their robes and headpieces.

Every minute that the girls’ escape was delayed

increased the danger of detection.

Since it was impossible to sneak away, Nancy

made careful note of her surroundings and tried

to identify the faces on her mind. Except for

Yvonne, the leader Maurice Hale, Al Snead, and

the man she had seen on the train, all were

strangers. Six people besides Bess, George, and

herself remained masked.

As Nancy surveyed the elaborate equipment

in the workroom, she realized that this was an un-

usually large gang of counterfeiters. The en-

graved plate which had been copied from an ac-

tual United States Government twenty-dollar bill

was a work of art. Probably the leader of the gang

had at one time been noted as a skilled engraver

and had decided to use his talents to unlawful ad-

vantage.

Nancy carefully glanced about the room. Mau-

rice Hale was looking over some stacks of coun-

terfeit money while several members of the gang

talked quietly. Bess and George automatically fol-

lowed Nancy’s gaze but stood perfectly still next

to her near the table.

Nancy, under ordinary circumstances, could

not have told the counterfeit money from the real

thing-with the picture of Jackson on the face,

and the White House on the back. But now that

she had been alerted to examine the bills care-

fully, she noted that the color and texture of the

paper appeared to be at fault.

When Nancy felt sure that she was not being

observed, she stealthily picked up one of the bills

and tucked it inside her robe as evidence.

“We made a pretty fair week’s profit,” Maurice

Hale said gruffly as he stacked the bills into sev-

eral large piles. You distributors and passers keep

up like this for another month and I’d say we’ll

all be on Easy Street.”

“The racket won’t last another month,” Al

Snead growled. “I tell you, the federal agents are

getting wise that the phony stuff’s being passed

around here.”

“Bah!” Hale replied contemptuously. “Let

them be suspicious! They wouldn’t think of this

out-of-the-way place as our headquarters in a

thousand years!”

Nancy could not help but smile at his words.

“That’s what he thinks!”

The next voice that spoke startled Nancy. She

recognized it instantly as belonging to Mr. Kent

-the would-be buyer of Red Gate Farm!

“Yeah, maybe not,” he was saying. “Still, it’s

too bad the old lady wouldn’t sell her place.

Then we’d really have a setup!”

It flashed through Nancy’s mind that her

hunch had been right about Mr. Kent being in-

volved with the hillside cult. No wonder they

wanted to obtain Red Gate Farm; it would have

been a better headquarters for the gang than the

cave.

The girl detective strained her ears as the con-

versation continued. A woman next to Kent said

scornfully, “I only hope your bright idea about

that fake letter we took to the Drew girl, and cut-

ting the farm telephone wires, doesn’t backfire.”

So, Nancy told herself, it was Kent, and the

woman who had just spoken, who were the ones

responsible for that part of the mystery. Mr. Kent

also was undoubtedly the driver of the car which

had slowed down one evening near the farm-

house.

Meanwhile, the leader went on deftly stacking

the money. Nancy and her friends watched him

with increasing uneasiness. When the various

members of the organization were called upon to

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