destroy you, mentally and bodily!â
âWell!â Vera looked at the door and then folded her arms. âTo think of that! A piece of screwed-up wood between me and the booby hatch! Who fastened the door like this anyway?â
âIt was done at your uncleâs order last year, after he had entered here. He had the key thrown away and the room has never been entered since.â
Vera considered for a while, then she gave a shrug.
âWell, for the moment Iâll leave the matter alone, but I intend to have this room opened finally, so you may as well make up your mind to it. At the moment I am rather too sleepy to care about anything, ghosts included. Does this end the tour?â
âUnless you wish to see the closed wing?â
âNot tonight.â
âThen you have seen everything, miss.â
âNot quite everything, Mrs. Falworth,â Vera said. âAnyway, thank you for showing me round. Iâll go on to bed, I think, while I am upstairs.â
The housekeeper nodded. She was her tall, impassive self again with that strange light shining in her dark eyes.
* * * * * * *
To Vera, despite her trying day with its unexpected excitements, there came little desire for sleep. She was overtired and could not compose herself as she lay awake in the big, old-fashioned bedroom thinking over all she had seen and done. Once or twice she must have dozed, but only briefly. Then toward three in the morning, according to the big grandfather clock in the hall, which seemed to chime with needless somberness, she heard a sound in the corridorâthe softest of footsteps.
For a time she lay listening intently, half expecting to see the knob on her locked door move back and forth in the moonlight. But nothing happened and the sound presently died away. The huge residence was deathly still again.
The only explanation for the sound seemed to be that the Falworths were on the prowl. Vera got out of bed and into her dressing gown and slippers. Picking up the old poker from the fireplace, she tiptoed to the door and unlocked it. Opening it an inch she listened. There was no sound save the tick-tock of the grandfather clock below.
âWell, come what may, here I go,â she said to herself, and went into the corridor.
It was desertedâwith the moon casting a faint tracery of colored beams through the stained glass window. Feeling none too sure of herself, Vera crept to the staircase and then went down it silently, pausing to listen at every five steps.
She had gained the bottom when the first sounds reached herâcurious sounds, like the clanking of two pieces of metal on each other.
She frowned in bewilderment and looked over the staircaseâs stone rail at the dim, shadowy outline of the door leading into the basement. It was from that spot that the sounds had come. She took a firmer grip of the poker and went to the cellar door and opened it. Down below everything was dark but there were sounds, the unmistakable clink of metal and an odd swishing sound as though somebody were having a bath.
For quite a while Vera hesitated, then clinging to the basement stair-rail with her free hand she felt her way down into the darkness. But she only got halfway down before her nerve began to fail her. Alone here in this strange old house, facing a doubtful old man and an icily respectful housekeeperâ It was no place to be at three in the morning.
Then there came to her an awful smell. It surged up in waves as she went lower. It seemed to be drifting from the direction of a thin bar of light low down in the gloom. Holding her nose and staring fixedly, Vera saw that it was leaking from under the door of the cellar Mrs. Falworth had said was full of disused articles.
Vera realized it required no genius to judge that all was not as it should be in Sunny Acres. Quite the opposite, in fact. Finally, though, curiosity overrode fears and she crept down the remaining steps. When she reached the