(#30) The Clue of the Velvet Mask

(#30) The Clue of the Velvet Mask Read Online Free PDF

Book: (#30) The Clue of the Velvet Mask Read Online Free PDF
Author: Carolyn Keene
Englishman, and this guy—I mean the Earl—fit the bill. Your husband couldn’t identify him.”
    “Of course not. They’ve never met. I hope you make no further mistakes of this nature.”
    Suddenly Nancy realized that if the thief and his accomplices had been waiting for a chance to get into the house without showing invitations, they had had a golden opportunity. Both the detective and the butler had been away from the front door for several minutes and the elderly servant had been left alone to guard the valuable presents!
    Worried, Nancy returned to the house and hastened to the second floor. The door to the room in which the wedding gifts were displayed now was closed. She gently twisted the knob and was startled to discover that the door was locked.
    “Perhaps one of the plainclothesmen locked the door when the trouble started,” she said to herself, trying not to think the worst.
    Nancy noticed that a door to an adjoining bedroom stood ajar. She peered inside. Seeing no one there, she tiptoed in.
    A velvet curtain screened the entranceway into the locked room. Moving noiselessly to the heavy drapery, Nancy cautiously parted it and stepped inside.
    Involuntarily she drew back at the sight before her. The elderly servant lay sprawled on the floor, apparently unconscious.
    In front of a table on which silver pieces were displayed stood a man in formal summer attire with gloves. He wore a velvet hooded mask over his head! The thief was putting the wedding gifts into a dark cloth, drawstring bag.
    “I must get help!” Nancy thought. She glanced at the nearby telephone.
    The thief, sensing he was being watched, whirled. “So it’s the great girl detective!” he hissed at Nancy.
    His voice was that of the brusque man who had danced with her at the Hendricks’ masquerade! The one who had mistaken her for an assistant of his!
    He yanked the long cord from the bag and stretched it taut between his fingers. Nancy stiffened as he stepped menacingly toward her.

CHAPTER V
    Strange Numbers
     
     
     
    INSTANTLY Nancy seized the house telephone and pushed the signal button. “Help!” she screamed into the mouthpiece.
    To her amazement, the thief flung himself away from her and jumped across one of the tables. He opened a mirrored door in the wall and fled, banging it after him.
    Still shouting for help, Nancy pursued him. The man evidently knew every inch of the rambling house. He ran along a back hall, through a door, and directly to the servants’ stairway.
    Nancy followed him down the stairs, crying, “Stop, thief!”
    Reaching the foot of the stairs, she found he had locked the door. Nancy pounded on it and presently the door was opened by a startled maid. In a moment the place was in an uproar with everyone trying to locate the fugitive. No one had seen him come through the stairway door.
    The shouts had attracted Detective Ambrose and the other plainclothesmen. At once they made a search for the thief. Nancy listened to the voice of every man wearing summer formals, hoping to discover the one who had spoken to her upstairs. But apparently the thief had escaped.
    “Maybe I can learn something from that old servant,” Nancy said to herself.
    She went upstairs and found that her first cry of help on the telephone had brought a maid to aid the elderly man. By now he had revived and was seated in a chair in the bedroom.
    “I don’t know how it happened,” he said. “I never even saw the person who hit me. He sneaked up from behind.”
    Detective Ambrose came in at that moment. He reported no success in apprehending the would-be thief.
    “At least he didn’t get away with anything this time,” the officer remarked. “Our quick work saved the wedding silver.”
    “Yes, we were lucky,” Nancy replied, smiling at the detective’s use of the word our.
    Since the servant guard could offer no clues, she returned to the reception. The gaiety which had prevailed half an hour earlier was gone from the
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Layers Crossed

Lacey Silks

Sweet Texas Fire

Nicole Flockton

Calder

Allyson James

Who's the Boss

Vanessa Devereaux

Creatures of Snow

Dr. Doctor Doctur

Ponzi's Scheme

Mitchell Zuckoff