The Story of the Treasure Seekers<br />Being the Adventures of the Bastable Children in Search of a by E. Nesbit (reading diary .TXT) đ
- Author: E. Nesbit
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âI believe we might be detectives ourselves, but I should not like to get anybody into trouble.â
âNot murderers or robbers?â Dicky asked.
âIt wouldnât be murderers,â she said; âbut I have noticed something strange. Only I feel a little frightened. Letâs ask Albertâs uncle first.â
Alice is a jolly sight too fond of asking grown-up people things. And we all said it was tommyrot, and she was to tell us.
âWell, promise you wonât do anything without me,â Alice said, and we promised. Then she saidâ
âThis is a dark secret, and any one who thinks it is better not to be involved in a career of crime-discovery had better go away ere yet it be too late.â
So Dora said she had had enough of tents, and she was going to look at the shops. H. O. went with her because he had twopence to spend. They thought it was only a game of Aliceâs but Oswald knew by the way she spoke. He can nearly always tell. And when people are not telling the truth Oswald generally knows by the way they look with their eyes. Oswald is not proud of being able to do this. He knows it is through no merit of his own that he is much cleverer than some people.
When they had gone, the rest of us got closer together and saidâ
âNow then.â
âWell,â Alice said, âyou know the house next door? The people have gone to Scarborough. And the house is shut up. But last night I saw a light in the windows.â
We asked her how and when, because her room is in the front, and she couldnât possibly have seen. And then she saidâ
âIâll tell you if you boys will promise not ever to go fishing again without me.â
So we had to promise.
Then she saidâ
âIt was last night. I had forgotten to feed my rabbits and I woke up and remembered it. And I was afraid I should find them dead in the morning, like Oswald did.â
âIt wasnât my fault,â Oswald said; âthere was something the matter with the beasts. I fed them right enough.â
Alice said she didnât mean that, and she went onâ
âI came down into the garden, and I saw a light in the house, and dark figures moving about. I thought perhaps it was burglars, but Father hadnât come home, and Eliza had gone to bed, so I couldnât do anything. Only I thought perhaps I would tell the rest of you.â
âWhy didnât you tell us this morning?â Noel asked. And Alice explained that she did not want to get any one into trouble, even burglars. âBut we might watch to-night,â she said, âand see if we see the light again.â
âThey might have been burglars,â Noel said. He was sucking the last bit of his macaroni. âYou know the people next door are very grand. They wonât know usâand they go out in a real private carriage sometimes. And they have an âAt Homeâ day, and people come in cabs. I daresay they have piles of plate and jewellery and rich brocades, and furs of price and things like that. Let us keep watch to-night.â
âItâs no use watching to-night,â Dicky said; âif itâs only burglars they wonât come again. But there are other things besides burglars that are discovered in empty houses where lights are seen moving.â
âYou mean coiners,â said Oswald at once. âI wonder what the reward is for setting the police on their track?â
Dicky thought it ought to be something fat, because coiners are always a desperate gang; and the machinery they make the coins with is so heavy and handy for knocking down detectives.
Then it was tea-time, and we went in; and Dora and H. O. had clubbed their money together and bought a melon; quite a big one, and only a little bit squashy at one end. It was very good, and then we washed the seeds and made things with them and with pins and cotton. And nobody said any more about watching the house next door.
Only when we went to bed Dicky took off his coat and waistcoat, but he stopped at his braces, and saidâ
âWhat about the coiners?â
Oswald had taken off his collar and tie, and he was just going to say the same, so he said, âOf course I meant to watch, only my collarâs rather tight, so I thought Iâd take it off first.â
Dicky said he did not think the girls ought to be in it, because there might be danger, but Oswald reminded him that they had promised Alice, and that a promise is a sacred thing, even when youâd much rather not. So Oswald got Alice alone under pretence of showing her a caterpillarâDora does not like them, and she screamed and ran away when Oswald offered to show it her. Then Oswald explained, and Alice agreed to come and watch if she could. This made us later than we ought to have been, because Alice had to wait till Dora was quiet and then creep out very slowly, for fear of the boards creaking. The girls sleep with their room-door open for fear of burglars. Alice had kept on her clothes under her nightgown when Dora wasnât looking, and presently we got down, creeping past Fatherâs study, and out at the glass door that leads on to the veranda and the iron steps into the garden. And we went down very quietly, and got into the chestnut-tree; and then I felt that we had only been playing what Albertâs uncle calls our favourite instrumentâI mean the Fool. For the house next door was as dark as dark. Then suddenly we heard a soundâit came from the gate at the end of the garden. All the gardens have gates; they lead into a kind of lane that runs behind them. It is a sort of back way, very convenient when you donât want to say exactly where you are going. We heard the gate at the end of the next garden click, and Dicky nudged Alice so that she would have fallen out of the tree if it had not been for Oswaldâs extraordinary presence of mind. Oswald squeezed Aliceâs arm tight, and we all looked; and the others were rather frightened because really we had not exactly expected anything to happen except perhaps a light. But now a muffled figure, shrouded in a dark cloak, came swiftly up the path of the next-door garden. And we could see that under its cloak the figure carried a mysterious burden. The figure was dressed to look like a woman in a sailor hat.
We held our breath as it passed under the tree where we were, and then it tapped very gently on the back door and was let in, and then a light appeared in the window of the downstairs back breakfast-room. But the shutters were up.
Dicky said, âMy eye!â and wouldnât the others be sick to think they hadnât been in this! But Alice didnât half like itâand as she is a girl I do not blame her. Indeed, I thought myself at first that
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