Nancy Drew Files – Case 22 – The Clue in the Crumbling Wall

“Are you sure we won’t get hopelessly lost?”

Bess asked.

“Just follow me.”

Nancy and Bess were quite willing to have

George lead the way. She pushed ahead con-

fidently, tramping down the high grass and thrust-

ing aside thorny bushes. But as the going became

more difficult, her pace slackened.

“It seems to me we’re moving in a wide circle,”

Nancy said at last.

George paused to catch her breath. Her gloomy

silence confirmed Nancy’s suspicion.

“George, are we lost?” she asked.

“I don’t know about you,” the girl answered

ruefully. “Myself-yes.”

“It’s going to rain any minute, too,” Bess said,

sinking down on a mossy log. “Oh, why did we

come to this horrible, gloomy place? Imagine any-

one building a home here!”

“If the roads were opened and some shrubs cut

down, the estate would be very lovely,” Nancy

pointed out.

After resting for a few minutes the girls decided

to continue their trek. Nancy proved a better

pathfinder than George and before long they came

to recently trampled grass.

“Now I know where we are!” Nancy ex-

claimed Jubilantly. “We’re near the front bound-

ary wall.”

A few hundred feet farther on they saw the

wall itself and scrambled over it. The trio reached

the shelter of the car just as the first raindrops

splashed against the windshield. Fortunately

Nancy was able to drive to the paved highway

before the side road became a mire of mud.

She dropped the cousins at their houses, then

went home. Over a late lunch of milk and a

sandwich, she thought about the mystery.

“I might get some kind of a lead from Walter

Heath’s will,” she decided, “and I’d like to find

out where Juliana did her banking. There might

be a clue in the last withdrawals.”

Nancy called Lieutenant Masters. “The police

couldn’t locate any bank accounts,” the officer

told her. “A very large sum of money was found

in Juliana’s apartment in New York. But she had

several bills from stores, and by the time they

were paid from this cash, there was nothing left.”

“Then that’s a dead end,” said Nancy. “How

about the will?”

“I don’t know,” said the officer. She agreed to

meet Nancy the next morning at the courthouse

to examine the document. Daniel Hector was

named as sole executor.

A quick reading confirmed what Mrs. Feni-

more had told her. The entire Heath estate had

been bequeathed to Juliana Johnson on the con-

dition that she claim it within five years of Wal-

ter Heath’s death.

One clause in the will held Nancy’s attention.

It read:

“It is my belief and hope that Juliana still lives

and will claim the property within the allotted

time. She will be able to identify herself in a

special way, thus insuring that no impostor can

receive my estate.”

“I wonder what that means,” Nancy mused.

“I haven’t any idea,” Lieutenant Masters said.

They went over the document again, but it

gave no clue to the way in which Juliana might

establish her identity.

“I must find out what Mr. Heath meant by

this,” said Nancy. “Obviously it’s a very impor-

tant duel”

CHAPTER V

Suspicious Figures

Nancy suggested to Lieutenant Masters that they

go at once to see Mrs. Fenimore. “She may know

by what special means Walter Heath expected

Juliana to identify herself.”

The young officer agreed. She and Nancy drove

to the Fenimore house in their own cars. They

found the woman seated in the living room.

“Good morning,” Mrs. Fenimore, who seemed

to be feeling better, greeted the visitors warmly.

She stared anxiously at the policewoman. “It’s-

it’s not Joan again?”

“No. In fact, my two rosebushes have been re-

turned. We came to ask you a few more questions

about your sister,” Nancy replied.

The woman relaxed but spoke wearily. “I’ll

tell you everything I can. A couple of years ago I

gave up hope that she would be found, but I’ve

never told Joan this.”

“Then you believe that your sister may not be

living?” Nancy asked soberly.

“Oh no. I’m sure Julie is alive,” Mrs. Fenimore

replied, “but I’m afraid she may have disappeared

for good, and I’ll never see her again.”

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