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

no time in having Hector and the other men

prosecuted, and also brought charges against the

woman who had impersonated the dancer.

“Hooper and Biggs admit having found several

bottles of dye and a formula marked, ‘Perfected

Formula,’ hidden in the cloister walls,” Mr. Drew

told Nancy. “They’ve surrendered them and I’ve

had an analysis made. The dye has dried up but

a newly made liquid would be of great value

commercially if produced under the same condi-

tions that Walter Heath used.”

“What were they?” Nancy asked.

“Sea salt was mixed with the spring water in

the pond. Marine whelks, which are a huge type

of mollusk, were imported and put into it. They

exude a beautiful purple dye. After Heath’s death

the whelks vanished.”

Nancy was thoughtful. “It would take a good

bit of money to start up that business, wouldn’t

it?”

“Yes,” her father replied. “But it would be

profitable for Juliana. The special shade of pur-

ple is difficult to imitate synthetically.”

Nancy had been hoping that Hector’s dire

statement regarding the estate would not be true,

but part of it was. Mr. Drew had learned that the

total Heath assets were twenty dollars, the walled

grounds, and a ruined castle with a few pieces of

furniture. The debts, however, were illegal loans,

which Hector had made against the estate and

which he would have to pay back.

Account books had been falsified to show that

huge sums had been paid to various detective

agencies, supposedly for the purpose of conduct-

ing a search for the missing Juliana. But the wily

lawyer had kept the money.

“Unfortunately we can’t recover it,” Mr. Drew

remarked to his daughter. “Hector has spent it all

and has little of his own left.”

“How about the Heath pearl, Dad? You didn’t

find it?”

“No. I’ll keep on trying, of course. Frankly,

I don’t feel hopeful.”

“Somewhere on those grounds,” said Nancy,

“there must be something of value hidden. After

all, Walter Heath told Sam Weatherby there was

another treasure.”

“I’ve had the place searched, Nancy. Workmen

even removed the imprinted block of cement be-

low the wall fountain, but there was nothing be-

hind it. Heath Castle will have to be sold.

“But I’m afraid,” he went on, “the sale price

won’t be much, considering its present condition.

Juliana wants to keep the property, but she can’t,

She has barely enough funds to operate Jardin

des Fleurs.”

It was some consolation to Nancy that she had

brought the sisters together, but she felt as if she

had failed in one of the most vital tasks of her life.

“Even if I did find Juliana, I wasn’t able to

save the estate or help the Fenimores financially.

And they need money so badly.”

Unwilling to give up. Nancy drove out to the

estate one day after lunch to try to find the treas-

ure which Walter Heath had mentioned.

“What can it be and where?” she asked herself.

“It’s supposed to be in plain sight.”

Nancy worked her way doggedly through the

neglected grounds and examined the statuary.

Though not an expert, she could tell that none of

it was unusual. She looked at a grove of fruit trees

which might become a source of profit. But the

trees were too old.

Finally the young detective, hot, thirsty, and

discouraged, arrived at the little garden off the

cloister. As Nancy walked toward the fountain,

she suddenly stopped short and stared at the

sparkling stream of water.

“That’s it!” she exclaimed softly. “Spring

water! Cold, clear, delicious, and probably pure.

It might even have minerals in it!”

Nancy could visualize the estate as a health

resort where people came to rest and drink the

water.

“Or it could be bottled and sold!” the thought.

Excited by the idea. Nancy quenched her

thirst, then hurried home to telephone her father.

He promised to have the spring tested in the

morning.

The next afternoon the Drews were delighted

to learn that the water was pure and rich in

minerals. A further search of the grounds revealed

several more beneficial springs.

“The supply is plentiful,” Nancy told Bess and

George. “Dad will probably make arrangements

with a bottling company to market it.”

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