Scarhaven Keep J. S. Fletcher (early reader chapter books TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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âAre you the captain of this vessel?â demanded Vickers in tones of authority. âYou are? I am Mr. Vickers, solicitor, of Norcaster. I give you formal warning that the man you have known as Marston Greyle is not Marston Greyle at all, but an impostor. All the property which you have removed from the house, and now have on this vessel, belongs to this lady, Miss Audrey Greyle, Lady of the Manor of Scarhaven. It is at your peril that you move it, or that you cause this vessel to leave this harbour. I claim the vessel and all that is on it on behalf of Miss Greyle.â
The man addressed listened in silent attention, and showed no sign of any surprise. As soon as Vickers had finished he turned, hurried down a stairway, remained below for a few minutes, and came up again.
âWill you kindly step this way, Miss Greyle and gentlemen?â he said politely. âYou must remember that I am only a servant. If you will come downâ ââ
He led them down the stairs, along a thickly-carpeted passage, and opened the door of a lighted saloon. All unthinking, the three stepped inâ âto hear the door closed and locked behind them.
XX The Courteous CaptainVickers sprang back at that door as the sharp click of the turning key caught his ear, and Copplestone, preceding him and following Audrey, who had advanced fearlessly into the cabin, pulled himself up with a sudden, sickening sense of treachery. The two young men looked at each other, and a dead silence fell on them and the girl. Then Vickers laid his hand on the door and shook it.
âLocked in!â he muttered with a queer glance at his companions. âWhat does that mean?â
âNothing good!â growled Copplestone who was secretly cursing his own folly in allowing Audrey to leave the quay. âWeâre trapped!â âthatâs what it means. Why weâre trapped isnât a question that matters very much under the circumstancesâ âthe serious thing is that we certainly are trapped.â
Vickers turned to Audrey.
âMy fault!â he said contritely. âAll my fault! But I meant it for the bestâ âit was the thing to doâ âand who on earth could have foreseen this. Look here!â âweâve got to think pretty quick, Copplestone, that captain, now? Has he done this on his own hook, orâ âis there somebody on board whoâs at the top of things?â
âI donât see any good in thinking quick, or asking oneâs self questions,â replied Copplestone. âWeâre locked in here. Weâve got Miss Greyle into this messâ âand her mother will be anxious and alarmed. I wish weâd let this confounded yacht go where it liked before ever weâdâ ââ
âDonât!â broke in Audrey. âThatâs no good. Mr. Vickers certainly did what he felt to be bestâ âand who could foresee this? And Iâm not afraidâ âand as for my mother, if we donât return very soon, why, she knows where we are and there are police in Scarhaven, andâ ââ
âHow long are we going to be where we are?â asked Copplestone, grimly. âThe thingâs moving!â
There was no doubt of that very pertinent fact. Somewhere beneath them, machinery began to work; above them there was hurry and scurry as ropes and stays were thrown off. But so beautifully built was that yacht, and so almost soundproof the luxurious cabin in which they were prisoners, that little of the noise of departure came to them. However, there was no mistaking the increasing throb of the engines nor the fact that the vessel was moving, and Vickers suddenly sprang on a lounge seat and moved away a silken screen which curtained a porthole window.
âThereâs no doubt of that!â he exclaimed.
âWeâre going through the outer harbourâ âweâve passed the light at the end of the quay. What do these people mean by carrying us out to sea? Copplestone!â âwith all submission to youâ âwhether itâs relevant or not, I wish we knew more of that captain chap!â
âI know him,â remarked Audrey. âI have been on this yacht before. His name is Andrius. Heâs an Americanâ âor American-Norwegian, or something like that.â
âAnd the crew?â asked Vickers. âAre they Scarhaven men?â
âNo,â replied Audrey. âThere isnât a Scarhaven man amongst them. My cousinâ âI meanâ âyou know whom I meanâ âbought this yacht just as it stood, from an American millionaire early this spring, and he took over the captain, crew, and everything.â
âSoâ âweâre in the hands of strangers!â exclaimed Vickers, while Copplestone dug his hands into his pockets and began to stamp about. âI wish Iâd known all that before we came on board.â
âBut what harm can they do us?â said Audrey, incredulous of danger. âYou donât suppose theyâll want to murder us, surely! My own belief is that we never should have been locked up here if you hadnât let them know how much we know, Mr. Vickers.â
âLet themâ âI donât understand,â said Vickers, turning a puzzled glance on her.
âWhy,â replied Audrey with a laugh which convinced both men of her fearlessness, âyou let the captain see that we know a great deal and he thereupon ran downstairsâ âpresumably to tell somebody of what you said. Andâ âhereâs the result!â
âYou think, thenâ ââ suggested Vickers. âYou think thatâ ââ
âI think the somebodyâ âwhoever he isâ âwants to know exactly how much we do know,â answered Audrey with another laugh. âAnd so weâre being carried off to be cross-examinedâ âat somebodyâs leisure. Letâs hope they wonât use thumbscrews and that sort of thing. And anyway,â she continued, looking from one to the other, âhadnât we better make the best of it? Weâre going out to sea, thatâs certainâ âhereâs the bar!â
A sudden lifting of the thickly-carpeted floor, a dip to the left, another to the right, a plunge forward, a drop back, then a settling down to a steady persistent roll, showed her companions that Audrey was rightâ âthe yacht was crossing the bar which lay at the mouth of Scarhaven Bay. Outside that lay the North Sea, and Copplestone suddenly wondered which course the vessel was going to
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