The Gatehouse Mystery

The Gatehouse Mystery by Julie Campbell Page A

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Authors: Julie Campbell
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shower."
    "A cold shower?" Honey stared at her. "Why, it'll keep you awake, Trixie, and you told me yourself that you had to get up at dawn to feed the chickens."
    "Nothing could keep me awake," Trixie said. "I'm so tired I can hardly keep my eyes open."
    The cold shower did make her more wide-awake for a short while, but, in spite of the fact that she had gulped down half a cup of strong, black coffee, Trixie fell asleep before it was quite dark outside.
    When she awoke, it was pitch-black and stiflingly hot. Someone was stealthily opening the door to Honey's room. Trixie felt the sound more than she heard it, and, still groggy with sleep and weariness, she yelled at the top of her lungs.
    "Who's there?"
    Too late, she remembered that she had planned to catch one of the two new employees with his hand on Honey's jewelry box. She scrambled out of bed and dashed to the door. Honey was mumbling something in a frightened, bewildered voice, but Trixie didn't pay any attention. Someone had just darted around the comer of the long, carpeted hall. She tore after him and collided with Jim when he burst out of his room. Miss Trask appeared then, too, her crisp gray hair rumpled, her bright blue eyes blinking in the light of the hall.
    "Who yelled?" Jim demanded.
    "Me," Trixie said. "I had a nightmare, I guess." Honey joined them, then. "Wh-what on earth happened?" she asked. "Something woke me up, and then I saw Trixie dashing out of the room."
    Trixie forced herself to smile. If only she hadn't yelled! She might have caught the person who was probably at this very moment tiptoeing down the back stairs—or tiptoeing up them to his room on the third floor. "I had a nightmare," she said again. "I'm sorry I woke you."
    Honey laughed. "It was that cold shower, Trixie. I warned you."
    "Well, go back to bed, all of you," Miss Trask said. "It's midnight."
    The big grandfather clock in the downstairs hall was striking when the girls climbed back into Honey's big bed. Honey fell asleep on the eleventh stroke, but Trixie lay awake for a long time, thinking.
    Why hadn't she told Jim and Miss Trask the truth? If she had, Jim might have caught the prowler before he got away. Who was the prowler? The new chauffeur or the new gardener? It would have been easy for Nailor, if he knew that Honey had the diamond, to sneak down from his room on the floor above. And it would have been almost as easy for Dick to sneak into the house through the kitchen door. Trixie knew that when Miss Trask closed up the house on hot nights, she simply hooked the flimsy latches on the screen doors. Anyone could lift those latches from the outside by slipping a knife through the crack.
    Suddenly, Trixie couldn't stand it another minute. She had to know whether or not the kitchen door was latched. If it was, the midnight prowler must have been Nailor. If the latch was not in place, then the man she had frightened away must be Dick.
    She slipped out of Honey's room and tiptoed down the hall to the back stairs. They were only dimly lighted, and she had to grope her way down, clinging to the railing. It was not a pleasant feeling. Suppose the midnight prowler was lurking in the shadows of the hall below?
    At the bottom, Trixie took a deep breath and dashed across the dark hall and through the swinging door into the kitchen. She knew that Miss Trask always left a light burning above the sink, but it was not turned on now. The door swung shut behind her, leaving her in complete darkness.
    A thick wall of blackness surrounded her on all sides, and Trixie felt as though she couldn't breathe. She wanted to turn around and race back to Honey's room, but she couldn't move. She could only stand there, listening, for someone was coming quietly down the back stairs. Whoever it was, was not groping, so he must be carrying a flashlight. Now he was crossing the hall. Now he was pushing open the swinging door. The beam of a flashlight cut through the darkness, and Trixie whirled around,

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