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

ledge they hesitated. The dogs had come back and

began to growl fiercely.

“Maybe if we feed them-” George said. She

got the rest of the sandwiches from the car. At

the sight of the food the hounds became friendly,

but the instant they had gobbled it up, they lay

down on the ground, panting. Again and again

George tried to descend, but each time the dogs

rose menacingly.

Bess would not even try to re-enter the grounds.

“It’s no use,” she said.

“I suppose you’re right,” George said, and

jumped down on the outside.

“Tell you what,” Bess said. “You stay here and

I’ll go for help!”

CHAPTER IX

Trap Door

For hours Nancy had refused to acknowledge that

there was no means of escape from the tower. She

had pried at the lock with a nail file from her bag.

She had tried to break the door panels by sheer

force, but their strength had defied her.

Now she wandered aimlessly about the dimly

lighted circular room. Hungry and thirsty, she

grew more and more desperate. What had become

of George? And Bess? In utter dismay Nancy

realized that she had the car keys with her.

She sank down on the bottom step of the wind-

ing iron staircase to try to figure things out.

Staring straight ahead at the dusty wooden floor,

she thought, “This is the worst trap I’ve ever been

in!”

Suddenly she became aware of something in the

floor. A tiny crack outlined a space about three

feet square. Because of the gloom and dust, she

had not noticed it before.

“Speaking of traps,” Nancy muttered, “maybe

this is a trap door!”

Quickly she dropped to her hands and knees

and inspected the crack. Obviously it marked the

outline of an opening, but there was no ring or

handle with which to pull up the wood.

Nancy pried at first with her fingers, then with

the nail file. The slender bit of steel snapped in

her hands!

“Oh, how can I get this door open?” she

thought, looking for something heavier.

There was not a single object in the tower

room. After a while she sighed in despair. The

room seemed to be growing stuffy. Or was it be-

cause she felt almost ill from hunger? Her tongue

parched and her head aching, she slowly climbed

the stairs and went out on the parapet for some

fresh air.

The sky became overcast. In a short time it

would be almost dark. Except for the occasional

hoot of an owl and the intermittent croaking of

frogs, there was no sound.

Then suddenly Nancy heard approaching foot-

steps. Her first impulse was to shout, but intu-

ition warned her to remain silent.

Cautiously she looked over the parapet. A man

was unlocking the door far below her! He

snapped on a flashlight and entered the tower.

Nancy’s heart pounded. Should she walk boldly

down the stairs and try to bluff her way out?

“No,” she decided. “I’m sure something sinister

is going on at Heath Castle, and this man proba-

bly is involved. Maybe I can get out of here while

he’s busy. He may have opened that trap door and

gone below.”

Nancy tiptoed across the little balcony room.

Suddenly a light flashed through the open door-

way. The beam missed her by a fraction of an

inch!

As she shrank into the shadows, Nancy heard

the man coming up the iron staircase. With sink-

ing heart, she stepped in back of the door and

pressed herself against the wall.

The intruder went directly to the parapet. As

Nancy peered out, he began to flash his light

slowly as if he were signaling. The backward re-

flection of the rays dimly revealed his face. Nancy

had never seen this cruel-looking man before.

Though the young detective longed to watch

what he was doing, she dared not linger. Silently

she slipped through the door and darted down the

steps. Upon reaching the courtyard garden, she

hurried to the arched doorway. Luckily it was still

unlocked.

Nancy groped her way through the dark corri-

dor in the castle. A moment later she bumped her

knee into a piece of furniture and struck it so

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