<h3>EILEEN EXPLAINS</h3></div>
<p>It was an amazed, bewildered, and sheepish
group that faced each other in the light of
the electric torch after the departure of the
unknown man. Phyllis was the first to recover
self-possession.</p>
<p>“Well, we might as well go indoors,” she
remarked, in her decided way. “There’s evidently
nothing to be gained by staying out
here in the storm!”</p>
<p>The others, still too benumbed in mind to
have any initiative of their own, followed her
obediently. Only when they were at the door
did Leslie arouse to the immediate urgencies.</p>
<p>“Do please be very quiet and not wake Aunt
Marcia!” she begged. “I’m afraid the effect
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_197' name='page_197'></SPAN>197</span>
on her would be very bad if she were to realize
all that has happened here.”</p>
<p>They entered the bungalow on tiptoe, removed
their drenched wraps, and sank down
in the nearest chairs by the dying fire.</p>
<p>“And now,” remarked Phyllis, constituting
herself spokesman, as she threw on a fresh log
and some smaller sticks, “we’d be awfully
obliged to you, Ted and Eileen, if you’ll kindly
explain what this mystery is all about!”</p>
<p>“I don’t see why under the sun <i>you</i> had to
come butting into it!” muttered Ted, resentfully,
nursing some bruises he had sustained in
the recent fray.</p>
<p>“Please remember,” retorted Phyllis, “that
if I hadn’t come butting into it—and Leslie
and Rags,—you’d probably be very much the
worse for wear at this moment!”</p>
<p>“That’s so! Forgive me, old girl! You <i>did</i>
do a fine piece of work—all of you. I’m just
sore because the thing turned out so—badly.
But what I really meant was that I can’t see
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_198' name='page_198'></SPAN>198</span>
how you got mixed up in it at all—from the
very beginning, I mean.”</p>
<p>“That’s precisely what we think about
<i>you</i>!” laughed Phyllis. “We’ve felt all along
as if it were <i>our</i> affair and that <i>you</i> were interfering.
So I think we’d better have explanations
all around!”</p>
<p>“Well, as a matter of fact, it’s Eileen’s affair,
most of all, so I think she’d better do her
explaining first,” Ted offered as a solution of
the tangle.</p>
<p>They all looked toward Eileen, sitting
cowered over the fire, and she answered their
look with a startled gaze of her own.</p>
<p>“I—I don’t know whether I ought!” she
faltered, turning to Ted. “Do you think I
ought?”</p>
<p>“I guess you’d better!” he declared. “It’s
got to a point where these folks seem to have
some inside information of their own that perhaps
might be valuable to you. How they got
it, I can’t think. At any rate, there’ll be no
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_199' name='page_199'></SPAN>199</span>
harm done by it, I can vouch for that. So—just
fire away!”</p>
<p>Thus adjured, Eileen drew a long breath
and said hesitantly:</p>
<p>“I—I really don’t know just where to begin.
A lot of it is just as much a mystery to me as
it is to you. I think you all have heard that I
have a grandfather who is very ill, in a hospital
over in Branchville. He is the Honorable
Arthur Ramsay, of Norwich, England.
He has been for many years a traveler and
explorer in China and India and Tibet.
Early this year he had a severe attack of Indian
fever and could not seem to recuperate, so he
started for England, coming by way of the
Pacific and America. When he got to the
Atlantic coast, this last summer, some one
recommended that he should try staying a few
weeks at this beach; so he took a bungalow and
spent part of the summer and autumn here,
and thought he was much benefited.”</p>
<p>“Do excuse me for interrupting!” exclaimed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_200' name='page_200'></SPAN>200</span>
Phyllis; “but was the bungalow he rented Curlew’s
Nest?”</p>
<p>“Why, yes,” hesitated Eileen, with a startled
glance at her “it—it was.”</p>
<p>“Then, do you mind telling me how it was
that the name was so different?” persisted
Phyllis. “Mrs. Danforth understood that she
rented it to a Mr. Horatio Gaines.”</p>
<p>“Oh, that was because Grandfather didn’t
want it in his own name, because, you see, he’s
a rather well-known person in England and
even over here, and he needed a complete rest,
with no danger of having to be interviewed or
called upon or anything like that. So he had
his man, Geoffrey Horatio Gaines, hire the
place, and transact all the business here in <i>his</i>
name. It saved Grandfather a lot of trouble,
for Geoffrey simply took charge of everything;
and as Grandfather never went among people
here, no one was the wiser.</p>
<p>“After he left the cottage, he expected to
go to New York and remain there till he sailed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_201' name='page_201'></SPAN>201</span>
for home. And he <i>did</i> go there for a few days,
but his health at once grew worse, so he returned
to the beach. Of course, the bungalow
was closed by that time, so he took rooms at
the hotel, farther along. It was there that I
joined him. I had come over here with friends
of Mother’s, earlier in the summer, and had
been visiting at their summer camp in the
Adirondacks until I should join Grandfather
and return to England with him.</p>
<p>“I hadn’t been with him more than two or
three days when I realized that something
had gone awfully wrong, somehow or other.
Grandfather was worried and upset about
something, and he began to watch his mail
and be anxious to avoid meeting any one. He
couldn’t or wouldn’t explain things to me,
but had long interviews with his man, Geoffrey,
who has been with him for years and years and
whom he trusts completely.</p>
<p>“At last, one awfully stormy night, about
two weeks ago, Geoffrey disappeared, and has
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_202' name='page_202'></SPAN>202</span>
never been seen or heard of since. We can’t
imagine what has become of him. And the
next day Grandfather was so worried about
him and the other troubles that a cold he had
ran into a severe attack of pneumonia. Of
course, it wasn’t feasible for him to remain
at the hotel, especially as it was soon to close,
so he had himself taken to the nearest good
hospital, which happened to be this one at
Branchville. Since he didn’t have Geoffrey
to wait on him, he wanted to be where he could
have the best attention and nursing, and as I
could run his car, which Geoffrey had always
done, I could get easily there to see him.
Then, as you probably know, the hotel closed
for the season, and the manager very kindly
found me a place to stay—with Aunt Sally
Blake—in the village. She has been very good
and kind to me, but I expect I’ve worried her
a lot, not because I didn’t care, but because
I couldn’t help it and I couldn’t tell her about—things!
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_203' name='page_203'></SPAN>203</span></p>
<p>“But, oh! I have been so troubled—so fairly
<i>desperate</i>, at times! You cannot even guess
the awful burden I’ve had to bear—and all
alone,—at least till I came quite by accident
to know your brother Ted. He has helped
me so much—but that is another part of the
story!</p>
<p>“One night Grandfather’s fever was very
high and he was delirious. I begged his nurse
to let me sit with him awhile, and I heard him
constantly muttering about the bungalow, and
Geoffrey hiding something there, and it being
safe at Curlew’s Nest, and a lot more half-incoherent
remarks of that kind. Next morning
he was a little better and in his right mind
again, so I asked him what he had meant by
the things he had talked about the night before.
And then he said:</p>
<p>“‘Eileen, I’ll have to trust you with some
of the secret, I believe, since you’ve overheard
what you have. Perhaps you may even be able
to help, and of course I can trust you to keep
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_204' name='page_204'></SPAN>204</span>
your own counsel—absolutely. There’s been
a very mysterious mix-up here, and it involves
far more than you may imagine. In fact, it
might even become an affair of international
moment—if something is not found, and
quickly too. The gist of the matter is this:
while I was in China last year, I had some informal
correspondence with an official very
high in government circles there, concerning
his attitude in regard to the province of Shantung.
As he was inclined to be very friendly
toward me at the time he was just a little expansive
and indiscreet (I think those were
Grandfather’s words) in regard to his Government’s
plans. Later, I think, he regretted
this, and made some half-joking overtures to
have his letters returned. But I pretended not
to understand him and the matter was dropped.
As a matter of fact, I thought them too suggestive
and important to my own Government to
part with them!’</p>
<p>“It is these letters that are the heart of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_205' name='page_205'></SPAN>205</span>
whole trouble, Grandfather says. He heard
nothing more about them till he came to stay
at the hotel here. Then he received a very
threatening letter, declaring that if this packet
was not returned to the writer, serious consequences
would result. It didn’t say <i>what</i> consequences,
but Grandfather suspected they
might even go as far as an attempt on his life.
But he was determined not to give up the letters.
You see, they concerned a matter that
might involve his own country with China,
and he felt they should be delivered to his own
Government. Beside that, he is just stubborn
enough not to be bullied into anything by
threats.</p>
<p>“His man Geoffrey tried to persuade him
to put the letters in a safe-deposit vault in
New York, but Grandfather says he is old-fashioned
in some things and doesn’t trust
even to safe-deposit boxes—says he prefers to
keep things he values in his own possession.
He had the letters in a queer little bronze box
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_206' name='page_206'></SPAN>206</span>
that was given him, years ago, by the late Empress
Dowager of China. It had a secret lock
that was quite impossible to open unless one
knew the trick. He carried this in his pocket,
and slept with it under his pillow at night, and
felt perfectly safe about it.”</p>
<p>Here Eileen paused a moment for breath,
and the two other girls glanced at each other
guiltily, but they said nothing. Then Eileen
went on:</p>
<p>“One night, just after I came, there was an
attempt to rob him at the hotel. The attempt
failed because Geoffrey happened to be awake
and discovered some one prowling about
Grandfather’s sitting-room. Whoever it was
escaped through the window without even his
face being seen, and there was no trace of him
later. Grandfather made Geoffrey keep the
thing quiet and not report it to the hotel, because
he didn’t want any publicity about the
matter. But he decided then that it would be
safer to have the thing hidden somewhere for a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_207' name='page_207'></SPAN>207</span>
time—in some place where no one would dream
of hunting for it. And it struck him that
down at the bungalow where he had spent those
quiet weeks, and which he supposed was all
shut up and deserted, would be as unlikely a
spot as any to be suspected of hiding such a
thing. He supposed that the one next door—this
one—was closed also, or I do not think
he would have considered that hiding-place.</p>
<p>“So the next night, which happened to be
one when there was a very hard storm, he sent
Geoffrey down to the bungalow with the little
box containing the letters. He did not wish
him to take the car, as it might be too conspicuous,
but had him go on foot. Geoffrey had
found out, during the summer, that one could
get into that place through a door at the side
by working at the hook through the crack with
a knife-blade, and he intended to get into the
cottage and conceal the box in some out-of-the-way
hiding-place there.</p>
<p>“But here is where the mystery begins.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_208' name='page_208'></SPAN>208</span>
Geoffrey set off that night, but has never been
seen or heard of since. What has happened to
him, we cannot imagine, unless he was caught
and taken a prisoner by some one concerned
in getting those letters. If he had been killed,
we would surely know it. Yet if he were alive,
it seems as if we should have heard from him,
somehow. He was a most devoted and faithful
and trustworthy soul, so we are sure that
something must have happened to him—that he
is being detained somewhere. Grandfather is
quite certain that he is guarding the secret of
that box, somehow, and that it would be best
to wait till he comes back or sends us some
word.</p>
<p>“What Grandfather asked me to do was to
run out here in the car some day, and, if there
was no one about, to scout around and see if
I could discover any clue to the mystery, without
attracting attention. He supposed, of
course, that the beach was by that time entirely
deserted. I came out the very next day, but
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_209' name='page_209'></SPAN>209</span>
found to my disgust that the cottage next door
was occupied—by you, as I now know! But
I felt it would not be wise to be seen about here
in the daytime, so, without saying anything to
Grandfather (who would be awfully upset if
he knew it), I determined to run out about ten
o’clock that night and scout around when you
people would probably be in bed.</p>
<p>“And here is where Ted comes into it! I
got here that night as I had planned, found no
one about, and tried the experiment of getting
into the side door, as Grandfather had explained,
but I found it very difficult; in fact,
quite impossible—for <i>me!</i> And while I was
fussing with it, I was suddenly startled by a
low voice, right behind me, inquiring <i>very</i> politely
what I was trying to do! It was Ted,
here, who had been out for a stroll, and happening
to catch a glimpse of me at this very
peculiar occupation, and naturally thinking I
was a burglar, had come up unobserved to find
out about it!
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_210' name='page_210'></SPAN>210</span></p>
<p>“You can just imagine what an <i>awful</i> position
it was for me! I did not know what to
say or what to do. I know that, legally, I
had no business there, and if he were inclined
to make a fuss about it, he could have me arrested.
I literally almost went out of my mind
at that moment. But I guess something must
have made him feel that I wasn’t really a
‘lady burglar’ or anything of that sort, for he
just said, very kindly, ‘If you are in trouble,
perhaps I can help you!’</p>
<p>“I didn’t see how he could possibly help me
unless he knew the whole story, and I thought
I ought not tell any one <i>that!</i> But unless I
did, I was certainly in a very terrible position.
So I suddenly made up my mind it would have
to be done, for something made me feel he was
honorable and trustworthy, and that the secret
would be safe with him. What made me feel
all the more sure was that he mentioned that
he was staying up the beach at his father’s
bungalow, and had happened to be out for a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_211' name='page_211'></SPAN>211</span>
walk and had seen me there. I know he said
it to make me feel easier, and that everything
was all right.</p>
<p>“So I told him as much as I could of the
story. And when he had heard it, he said:
‘I happen to know all about opening that door,
because I know the people who own the cottage
very well. Perhaps you had better let
me try.’ I said I’d be only too glad to, and
he had the door unfastened in a moment.
Then he told me to go in and examine the
place all I wished to and he would watch outside.
If I needed any help, I could call and
he would come in and do what he could for
me.</p>
<p>“Well, I went in and examined the whole
place with my electric torch, but I could not
discover a single thing except that one of the
bricks in the fireplace had been partly loosened
and a broken knife-blade was in the corner of
the chimney-place. It was the only thing I
could see to show that possibly Geoffrey had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_212' name='page_212'></SPAN>212</span>
been there. I thought the knife-blade looked
like one I had seen him use.</p>
<p>“But as I didn’t see a sign of the bronze box,
I knew it was useless to stay any longer, so I
came out. Ted fastened the door again, went
with me to the car, which I had left down the
road, and offered to give me any further help
he could, at any time. He promised to keep
the secret from every one, and said that he
would make an even more thorough search
over Curlew’s Nest, if I wished, because he had
much better opportunity to do so. Of course,
I agreed to that and went on back to Aunt
Sally’s.</p>
<p>“Two days later, Ted saw my car going
along one of the back roads near the village,
signaled to me, and told me that, the day before,
he had caught you girls coming out of
Curlew’s Nest and that you acted rather guilty
and refused to explain what you had been in
there for. He told me that you might possibly
suspect something, and to steer clear of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_213' name='page_213'></SPAN>213</span>
you if we should happen to encounter each
other, as it is always likely that people will,
in this town. He described what you both
looked like, so that I couldn’t fail to know you.</p>
<p>“And, sure enough, I met you both that very
morning, in Mrs. Selby’s little store, and I
expect you think I acted in a perfectly abominable
manner. I just hated to do it, for I
liked the looks of you both, but I felt I must
take no chances. Ted also told me that he had
been in Curlew’s Nest the night before and had
gone over the place very carefully once more,
but had found nothing except a string of beads
that had been torn from the fringe of my girdle
that other night, and had been lying on the
floor. I remember that the girdle caught when
I was looking under one of the bureaus. He
also gave me the broken penknife-blade to
keep, as he said it was best to leave nothing
around there that any one else could discover
and use as a clue.</p>
<p>“A day or two later I met you, Phyllis, at
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_214' name='page_214'></SPAN>214</span>
Aunt Sally’s and she <i>would</i> insist on introducing
us, though I could see you were no more
anxious to make the acquaintance, after the
way I’d acted, than I was. But I encountered
Ted again that afternoon, and he said
he had hunted me up to tell me he had news
and also a plan that he wanted to suggest. He
said he had noticed, during the last two or three
days, a strange man who seemed to haunt the
beach, just a short way off and out of sight
of the two bungalows. The man seemed to be
a very ardent fisherman,—and an expert one,
too,—but Ted had noticed that he kept a very
sharp lookout toward the bungalows when he
thought no one was around to see. He suspected
that perhaps this man had something to
do with the mystery.</p>
<p>“The plan he suggested was that I get acquainted
with you girls, after all, in some way
that seemed the most natural, but without letting
you know that I was also acquainted with
<i>him</i>. And when I had done so, I had better
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_215' name='page_215'></SPAN>215</span>
offer to take you all out for a long drive in
the car and keep you away a good while, and
give him a chance to see what this man was up
to—if anything.</p>
<p>“The getting acquainted was easy, and you
all know how I managed <i>that</i>—and also the
ride, a day or two later. When I was returning
from the ride that night, at dusk, Ted
signaled me from the bushes near Curlew’s
Nest, jumped into the car, and told me what
had happened in the afternoon. He had gone
off to the village first, then hurried back,
slipped up here by way of the creek, and hidden
himself in a clump of rushes across the
road. Just as he had suspected, he saw his
suspicious fisherman sneak up here after a
while, scout around the outside of the bungalow,
disappear into it for a time, by the side
door, come out, apparently empty-handed,
stare at the outside again for a long time, and
then at your bungalow, and finally disappear.
But that was not all.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_216' name='page_216'></SPAN>216</span></p>
<p>“He waited where he was a few minutes,
thinking possibly the man might come back,
and he was just about to come out, when along
came an automobile with <i>two</i> men in it, which
stopped directly in front of Curlew’s Nest.
He could not see their faces, for they had
slouch hats pulled far down on their heads.
They got out and walked about a bit, evidently
to see if any one was around. Then, thinking
themselves alone, they hurried up to the bungalow,
worked at the side door, and finally got in.
Shortly after, they came out again and walked
down to the beach, where he could not see them.
Then they came back, got into the car, and
drove off.</p>
<p>“By that time it was growing so late that
he concluded he would stay where he was and
wait for me to come back, which he did. Before
he left me, we had a slight breakdown,
and in helping me fix it, he hurt his hand. But
that same night, long after midnight, he got
into Curlew’s Nest again to see if he could find
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_217' name='page_217'></SPAN>217</span>
out what had happened, and he found a very
strange message left on the table—a type-written
warning to the one who had taken the
article (as it was called!) from its hiding-place
to return it, and underneath, a printed note in
pencil, saying it would be returned. He
thought probably the first man had left the
type-written part, and the other two had
printed the answer underneath. That was all
he could make of it.</p>
<p>“It was all very mysterious, but while we
couldn’t make much out of it, at least it showed
that something concerning the affair was going
on and that the place must be closely watched.
Ted volunteered to keep this watch. Meanwhile,
Grandfather had had a very bad turn
and I was with him constantly. He was terribly
depressed over the whole affair. Even
his doctor, who knows nothing about this, said
he was evidently worrying about something,
and if the cause of worry were not removed,
he doubted the possibility of recovery. Tonight
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_218' name='page_218'></SPAN>218</span>
I stayed with him later than usual, and
in returning, actually did lose my way in the
storm. But when I at last discovered where
I was, I knew that it was not far from here
and could not resist the temptation to come
over and see if anything was happening. I
found Ted also scouting around, and suddenly
we realized that some one else was on the
ground too, though we could not tell <i>who</i>, in
the darkness and rain. But Ted thought it
very dangerous for me to be out there, so he
made me come in here, as I did. And I need
not tell you what happened after that!”</p>
<p>Eileen ceased speaking, and Phyllis had just
opened her lips to say something when there
was a knock at the door. All four jumped
nervously, but Ted got up and went to open
it.</p>
<p>To their immense alarm, the opened door
revealed the figure of—“the man with the
limp!”</p>
<hr class='major' />
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<SPAN name='XVIII_THE_DRAGON_GIVES_UP_THE_SECRET' id='XVIII_THE_DRAGON_GIVES_UP_THE_SECRET'></SPAN>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_219' name='page_219'></SPAN>219</span>
<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />