The Enchanted Castle E. Nesbit (books to read fiction .txt) š
- Author: E. Nesbit
Book online Ā«The Enchanted Castle E. Nesbit (books to read fiction .txt) šĀ». Author E. Nesbit
He opened many doors, wandered into long rooms with furniture dressed in brown holland covers that looked white in that strange light, rooms with chandeliers hanging in big bags from the high ceilings, rooms whose walls were alive with pictures, rooms whose walls were deadened with rows on rows of old books, state bedrooms in whose great plumed four-posters Queen Elizabeth had no doubt slept. (That Queen, by the way, must have been very little at home, for she seems to have slept in every old house in England.) But he could not find the kitchen. At last a door opened on stone steps that went upā āthere was a narrow stone passageā āsteps that went downā āa door with a light under it. It was, somehow, difficult to put out oneās hand to that door and open it.
āNonsense!ā Gerald told himself, ādonāt be an ass! Are you invisible, or arenāt you?ā
Then he opened the door, and someone inside said something in a sudden rough growl.
Gerald stood back, flattened against the wall, as a man sprang to the doorway and flashed a lantern into the passage.
āAll right,ā said the man, with almost a sob of relief. āIt was only the door swung open, itās that heavyā āthatās all.ā
āBlow the door!ā said another growling voice; āblessed if I didnāt think it was a fair cop that time.ā
They closed the door again. Gerald did not mind. In fact, he rather preferred that it should be so. He didnāt like the look of those men. There was an air of threat about them. In their presence even invisibility seemed too thin a disguise. And Gerald had seen as much as he wanted to see. He had seen that he had been right about the gang. By wonderful luckā ābeginnerās luck, a card-player would have told himā āhe had discovered a burglary on the very first night of his detective career. The men were taking silver out of two great chests, wrapping it in rags, and packing it in baize sacks. The door of the room was of iron six inches thick. It was, in fact, the strongroom, and these men had picked the lock. The tools they had done it with lay on the floor, on a neat cloth roll, such as woodcarvers keep their chisels in.
āHurry up!ā Gerald heard. āYou neednāt take all night over it.ā
The silver rattled slightly. āYouāre a rattling of them trays like bloominā castanets,ā said the gruffest voice. Gerald turned and went away, very carefully and very quickly. And it is a most curious thing that, though he couldnāt find the way to the servantsā wing when he had nothing else to think of, yet now, with his mind full, so to speak, of silver forks and silver cups, and the question of who might be coming after him down those twisting passages, he went straight as an arrow to the door that led from the hall to the place he wanted to get to.
As he went the happenings took words in his mind.
āThe fortunate detective,ā he told himself, āhaving succeeded beyond his wildest dreams, himself left the spot in search of assistance.ā
But what assistance? There were, no doubt, men in the house, also the aunt; but he could not warn them.
He was too hopelessly invisible to carry any weight with strangers. The assistance of Mabel would not be of much value. The police? Before they could be got and the getting of them presented difficulties the burglars would have cleared away with their sacks of silver.
Gerald stopped and thought hard; he held his head with both hands to do it. You know the way the same as you sometimes do for simple equations or the dates of the battles of the Civil War.
Then with pencil, notebook, a window-ledge, and all the cleverness he could find at the moment, he wrote:
āYou know the room where the silver is. Burglars are burgling it, the thick door is picked. Send a man for police. I will follow the burglars if they get away ere police arrive on the spot.ā
He hesitated a moment, and endedā ā
āFrom a Friendā āthis is not a sell.ā
This letter, tied tightly round a stone by means of a shoelace, thundered through the window of the room where Mabel and her aunt, in the ardour of reunion, were enjoying a supper of unusual charmā āstewed plums, cream, sponge-cakes, custard in cups, and cold bread-and-butter pudding.
Gerald, in hungry invisibility, looked wistfully at the supper before he threw the stone. He waited till the shrieks had died away, saw the stone picked up, the warning letter read.
āNonsense!ā said the aunt, growing calmer. āHow wicked! Of course itās a hoax.ā
āOh! do send for the police, like he says,ā wailed Mabel.
āLike who says?ā snapped the aunt.
āWhoever it is,ā Mabel moaned.
āSend for the police at once,ā said Gerald, outside, in the manliest voice he could find. āYouāll only blame yourself if you donāt. I canāt do any more for you.ā
āIā āIāll set the dogs on you!ā cried the aunt.
āOh, auntie, donāt!ā Mabel was dancing with agitation. āItās trueā āI know itās true. Doā ādo wake Bates!ā
āI donāt believe a word of it,ā said the aunt. No more did Bates when, owing to Mabelās persistent worryings, he was awakened. But when he had seen the paper, and had to choose whether heād go to the strongroom and see that there really wasnāt anything to believe or go for the police on his bicycle, he chose the latter course.
When the police arrived the strongroom door stood ajar, and the silver, or as much of it as the three men could carry, was gone.
Geraldās notebook and pencil came into play again later on that night. It was five in the morning before he crept into bed, tired out and cold as a stone.
āMaster Gerald!āā āit was Elizaās voice in his earsā āāitās seven o clock and another fine day, and thereās been
Comments (0)