<h3>THE DRAGON GIVES UP THE SECRET</h3></div>
<p>THE man also started back at the sight of
all four of them together. And Rags,
who had been drying himself quietly by the
fire, rose with a snarl and leaped toward his
enemy of the earlier part of the evening.</p>
<p>“Heavens! don’t let that animal loose on me
again!” cried the man, backing off. “I’ve
just been down to the village doctor and had
my arm cauterized, as it is. I stopped in to
tell you something you’d better know. Probably
you haven’t noticed it, if you haven’t
looked out recently. The water is rising rapidly
and will soon be very nearly up to your
bungalow. You may want to get out before it
sweeps under it!”
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_220' name='page_220'></SPAN>220</span></p>
<p>With a cry of alarm, they all leaped toward
the door, Ted grasping Rags firmly by the
collar. It was even as the man had said.
Peering through the darkness, they could see
the water spreading inward from a recent
breaker, only about twenty-five feet from the
veranda. And the next breaker spread in even
a few inches further.</p>
<p>“What <i>shall</i> we do?” cried Leslie. “Aunt
Marcia will be frightened to death if she knows
it, and how I’m to get her out of here in this
howling storm, or where I can take her, I can’t
imagine!”</p>
<p>But Ted had been critically examining the
weather. “Don’t worry, Leslie!” he soothed
her. “The wind is shifting. I noticed just
now that it seemed to be around to the north
and is getting farther west also. That means
the storm is almost over. And the tide ought
to turn in ten minutes or so. It’s practically
at its highest now. Ten chances to one it
won’t rise more than a foot or two further.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_221' name='page_221'></SPAN>221</span>
But we’ll keep watch, and if it does, we’ll get
your aunt out of here in Eileen’s car, which is
just down the road, and take her either to our
place or to the village. Our bungalow isn’t
likely to be damaged, as it’s farther up the
dune than these. Don’t worry!”</p>
<p>Thus encouraged, Leslie turned indoors
again, and the man, who was still lingering on
the porch, remarked:</p>
<p>“If it isn’t too much trouble, friends, I’d
like to come in for a minute or two and ask
you folks a few questions about that little
fracas this evening and how you came to be
mixed up in it. It’s all right and perfectly
proper!” he hastened to add, seeing their
startled glances. “I can show you my credentials.”
He opened his coat and exhibited a
shield on his vest—the shield of a detective of
the New York police force!</p>
<p>So amazed were they that they could scarcely
reply, but the man took matters in his own
hands and walked into the house. And Leslie
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_222' name='page_222'></SPAN>222</span>
never even thought to warn him to speak softly
because of Aunt Marcia!</p>
<p>Unconsciously they grouped themselves
about him at the open fire. And Rags, now
that the obnoxious stranger had been admitted
to the house on a hospitable footing, made no
further demonstrations of enmity.</p>
<p>“My name is Barnes—Detective Barnes of
the New York force,” he began, “and I’d like
to clear up one or two little puzzles here before
I go on with this business. It’s a rather
peculiar one. I heard this young gentleman
refer to a car that was standing in the road
near here and say it belonged to one of you
young ladies named Eileen. I’d like to inform
Miss Eileen that the party who got that
little article we were all scrapping for to-night,
jumped into her car when he got to the road,
tore like mad in it to the station, left it there,
and caught the express for New York. I
was just in time to see him disappearing in it,
but of course <i>I</i> had to walk to the village. I
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_223' name='page_223'></SPAN>223</span>
suspected what he was going to do, though,
and I went straight to the station and found
the car standing there. So I took the liberty
of getting in it, driving myself to the village
doctor, and then back out here. You will find
your car, Miss Eileen, standing just where you
left it, but I thought you’d like to know it
had had the little adventure!”</p>
<p>Eileen opened her mouth to reply, but the
man gave her no chance, turning immediately
to Ted. “And as for you, young man, I suppose
you thought you were doing a wonderful
stunt when you landed into me to-night, just
as I’d unearthed the thing I’ve been on the
trail of for a week; but I’ll have to tell you
that you’ve spoiled one of the prettiest little
pieces of detective work I’ve undertaken for
several years, and may have helped to precipitate
a bit of international trouble, beside. I
don’t know what your motive was,—I suppose
you thought me a burglar,—but—</p>
<p>“Just a moment!” cried Eileen, springing
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_224' name='page_224'></SPAN>224</span>
forward. “Tell me, why are you concerned in
this? My name is Ramsay and I have a right
to ask!”</p>
<p>Detective Barnes was visibly startled.
“Are you a relative of the Honorable Arthur
Ramsay?” he demanded; and when she had
told him, he exclaimed: “Then you must know
all about Geoffrey Gaines and how he disappeared!”</p>
<p>“I’ve known him since I was a baby,” she
answered; “but how he disappeared is still an
awful mystery to us. My grandfather is very
ill in the Branchville hospital, you know.”</p>
<p>“But didn’t he receive my letter?” cried Mr.
Barnes. “I sent it two days ago!”</p>
<p>“He has been too ill to read any mail for
the last two days,” replied Eileen, “and, of
course, I have not opened it.”</p>
<p>“Well, that explains why I haven’t heard
from him!” the man exclaimed, with a sigh of
relief. “Then I guess you will be interested
to hear that Gaines is alive and well, but kept
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_225' name='page_225'></SPAN>225</span>
a close prisoner by some heathen Chinese in a
house on a west side street in New York.”</p>
<p>“But how?—Why?—Did it happen the—the
night he—came down here?” she ventured.</p>
<p>“I see you’re pretty well informed about
the matter,” he remarked cautiously. “And
if these others are equally so, I guess it’s safe
for me to go on and give you a history of the
thing.”</p>
<p>Eileen nodded, and he went on:</p>
<p>“Gaines and I used to know each other in
England, years before he entered your grandfather’s
service. In fact, we had been schoolmates
together. Then I came over to this
country and entered the detective service, and
he went into another walk of life. But we
kept in touch with each other by writing occasionally.
A week or so ago I was astonished
to receive a letter from him, written on all sorts
of odds and ends of paper and in an envelope
plainly manufactured by himself. It contained
some very singular news.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_226' name='page_226'></SPAN>226</span></p>
<p>“It gave me first the history of those letters
and how anxious your grandfather was to keep
hold of them. Then it told how he (Gaines)
had taken the box down here that night and
tried first to conceal it in the bungalow. But
no place in the house seemed safe enough to
him. He tried to dig up a brick in the fireplace
and bury it there, but gave it up after he
had broken his knife in the attempt. Then he
had the inspiration to bury it in the sand somewhere
outside, and he described where he <i>did</i>
locate it, right by that log. If Gaines had
known much about the tides here, he wouldn’t
have thought that a very good scheme. He
didn’t, though, and thought he’d found an
excellent place. He then turned to walk back
to the hotel, but hadn’t gone more than a mile
(it was storming hard, if you remember) when
a terrific blow on the back of the head knocked
him senseless. He never knew another thing
until he came to, after what must have been a
number of days, to find himself a prisoner in a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_227' name='page_227'></SPAN>227</span>
house he judged to be somewhere in New York.
And from his description I’ve located it about
west Sixty-first street.</p>
<p>“He appeared to be in the keeping of a
Chinaman who dressed American fashion and
spoke good English. He was told that he was
a prisoner and that it was hopeless to try to
communicate with any one until he had reported
exactly where and how those letters had
been concealed. He begged for a day or two
to consider the matter and was granted it, but
told that if he did not comply with their wishes
he would disappear for good and no one would
ever be the wiser.</p>
<p>“In the meantime, he managed to get together
a few scraps of paper, and with the stub
of a pencil he happened to have about him, he
wrote this letter to me, describing the location
of the letters and how he had hidden them in a
bronze box wrapped in a burlap bag. He
urged me to go and get them at once, and then,
later, he could safely describe to his captors
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_228' name='page_228'></SPAN>228</span>
where he had hidden them. Perhaps you wonder
how he expected to get this letter to me,
since he was so carefully guarded. He said
that he was on the third floor, front, of the
house, near a corner where he could see a post-box.
He happened to have a solitary stamp
in his pocket, which he put on the letter.
Then, at some hour when he thought his captors
were busy elsewhere, he expected to attract
the attention of some children playing
in the street and offer to throw them some
money if they would mail the letter in the
nearby box. As I received the letter, no doubt
his plan worked successfully. At any rate,
I got it a week ago and started on the trail immediately.</p>
<p>“I landed out here one morning while it was
still dark, and dug all around the spot mentioned,
but couldn’t find a trace of the bag
or box.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I saw you that morning!” cried Leslie.
“But when you walked away you seemed to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_229' name='page_229'></SPAN>229</span>
stoop and had a bad limp! I don’t understand!”</p>
<p>“I know you saw me,” he smiled, “or, at
least, that <i>some</i> one did, for as I happened to
glance back at this house, it was growing just
light enough for me to realize there was some
one watching at the window. So I adopted
that stoop and limp as I walked away, just so
you would not be likely to recognize me if
you saw me again. It is a ruse I’ve often
practised.”</p>
<p>“But it didn’t work <i>that</i> time,” laughed Leslie,
“for I recognized you again this afternoon
by the way you dusted the sand off your hands
and threw away the stick!”</p>
<p>“Well, you are certainly a more observing
person than most people!” he answered
gravely. “But to go on. Of course, I was
very much disappointed, but I remained here,
staying at the village hotel, and kept as close
a watch on the place as was possible, pretending
all the time that I was here on a fishing
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_230' name='page_230'></SPAN>230</span>
excursion. I tried very hard to keep out of
sight of these bungalows, in the daytime, anyway.
The day you all went off on the auto
ride the coast seemed clear, and I went through
the place. But I hadn’t been out of it long
and walked down to the beach, when I saw the
two men drive up in a car and enter the bungalow
also, and later come out to dig by that old
log. Of course, they didn’t see me about! I
took care of that. And I knew, beyond a
doubt, that they were Gaines’s Chinamen, come
to find the booty.</p>
<p>“Of course they didn’t find it, any more than
I had, and I felt sure they would go back and
make it hot for Gaines, and I judged that he
would probably try to gain time in some way.
I went back to my hotel that night to think it
all over and make further plans, and didn’t
visit the bungalow again till next evening,
when I found to my astonishment a queer note,
type-written, on the table there—a warning
that the article stolen from its hiding-place had
better be returned. And under it, a reply,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_231' name='page_231'></SPAN>231</span>
printed in lead-pencil, saying it would be returned.”</p>
<p>“I couldn’t make head or tail of the business.
I judged the type-written part to have
been left by the Chinese. But who had scribbled
the other was a dark-brown mystery. At
any rate, I concluded that to-night would probably
be the crucial time, and determined to
get in ahead of every one else. The storm was
a piece of good fortune to me, as it concealed
things so well, and about nine o’clock I was
on the spot, proceeding to dig down by the old
log. Pretty soon I realized, though, that there
was some one else around. And just as I’d
unearthed the bag, which <i>had</i> been mysteriously
returned to its hiding-place, you appeared out
of somewhere, young man, fell on me like a
thousand of bricks, and we had a grand old
tussle. I’ll give you credit for being <i>some</i>
wrestler, but I was getting the best of it, when
along came you others with that terrible beast
and did the business for me!
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_232' name='page_232'></SPAN>232</span></p>
<p>“I thought all along, though, that you, Mr.
Ted, were one of the Chinamen. But that
person must have been on the scene also, probably
lurking in the shelter of the bungalow and
watching the fracas. And when your electric
light blazed on the scene, Miss,” he turned to
Phyllis, “he no doubt saw the bag in my hand.
Then, when the light went out for a moment,
he rushed in and grabbed the prize and was
off while we two were so busy with one another!</p>
<p>“It was a losing game all around. While
I was in the village, I ’phoned my department
in New York to meet his train when it got in
and arrest him, if they could find him, and
search him at once. But after I’d been to the
doctor’s (I had a long session there) I ’phoned
them again and heard that the train had been
met, but no one answering such description as
I could give had got off. No doubt he was
canny enough to get off at some station short
of New York and so was lost to sight.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_233' name='page_233'></SPAN>233</span></p>
<p>“Well, the prize is lost for this time, but
perhaps we can pick up the trail again. At
any rate, Gaines is probably free, for they
promised to release him as soon as the letters
were obtained.”</p>
<p>When he had ceased speaking, Leslie got
up from her chair and disappeared into the
kitchen. When she returned, she laid a dark
bundle in the lap of Eileen.</p>
<p>“I guess the prize was found some time
ago!” she remarked quietly. “Suppose you
open that bag and see, Eileen!”</p>
<p>And amid an astounded silence, Eileen’s
fingers managed to unloose the fastening of
the bag and insert themselves in its depths.
Then with a little cry of joy, she drew out and
held up, for all to view, the bronze box that
had caused all the disturbance—the Dragon’s
Secret!</p>
<hr class='tb' />
<p>The complicated explanations were all over
at last, and the curious, fragmentary story was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_234' name='page_234'></SPAN>234</span>
pieced together. Detective Barnes took up
the little bronze box and examined it carefully,
experimenting, as they all had done, to find a
way of opening it—and, of course, unsuccessfully.</p>
<p>“There’s one thing that puzzles me, though,”
remarked Ted, “about that queer type-written
note. How and why and by whom was it left
originally?”</p>
<p>“It was written on thin, foreign-looking
paper,” replied the detective, “and I can only
guess that the foreigners left it there, though
probably not on their first trip that afternoon.
No doubt they either went to the village, or,
more likely, returned to the city to talk it
over, perhaps with Gaines. And he, supposing
I had long since captured the prize, and to
put them off the scent, suggested that some one
nearby may have been meddling with the matter
and that they leave a warning for them. I
feel rather certain he must have done this to
gain time, for he knew that if I had found
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_235' name='page_235'></SPAN>235</span>
the thing, I would immediately set about having
him released, and he must have wondered
why I hadn’t done so. Perhaps he thought
I was having difficulty locating the house
where they had him hidden. But, Great
Scott!—that makes me think!—They must by
this time have discovered the trick you played,
Miss Phyllis, and be jumping mad over having
been so fooled. Perhaps they think
Gaines is responsible for it, and they’ll certainly
be making it hot for <i>him!</i> I must get
to the city immediately and get him out of
that hole. Oughtn’t to waste another minute.
If you can spare your car, Miss Eileen,
I’d like to run up to the city with it, as I
know there are no more trains to-night. I’ll
guarantee to fetch it and Gaines both back in
the morning!”</p>
<p>“You certainly may have it,” replied Eileen,
“and you may take me with you and leave me
at the hospital, on the way. Grandfather
must know of this at once. I’m positive he’ll
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_236' name='page_236'></SPAN>236</span>
recover now, since the worry is all over. But
first, wouldn’t you all like to see something?
I happen to know the secret of opening this
box. Grandfather showed it to me when I
was a little girl, and he used to let me play with
it.”</p>
<p>She took a pin from her dress, inserted it
into the carved eye of the dragon and pressed
it in a certain fashion—and the lid of the
bronze box flew up! They all pressed forward
eagerly and gazed in. There lay the packet of
foreign letters, safe and sound. Eileen lifted
them and looked curiously underneath. Nothing
else was in the box except some strange,
thin bits of yellow, foreign paper covered with
vague pictures and curious Chinese characters.
They seemed to be so thin and old as to be almost
falling to pieces.</p>
<p>“I don’t know what <i>these</i> things are,” she
remarked, “but they probably have nothing to
do with this affair, anyway. Grandfather
was always picking up queer old things
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_237' name='page_237'></SPAN>237</span>
on his travels. But he must have thought them
interesting, or he never would have kept them
in here. But we must go now,” she ended,
closing the box. “And I’ll see you dear people
all to-morrow. This has surely been a
wonderful night!”</p>
<p>But just as she was ready to go, she said:
“Do show me the dusty shelf where this was
hidden, please!” And then, as she stood gazing
up at it, she exclaimed, “To think that it
lay here behind those worn-out old kitchen
things all the time we were so madly hunting
for it! But perhaps it was the safest place,
after all!”</p>
<p>The two girls escorted Eileen and Mr.
Barnes to the door, Ted offering to see them
to the car. As they came out on the porch,
Leslie uttered a little cry of delight. The
storm, which all had momentarily forgotten in
the later excitement, was over. The ragged
clouds were driving by in a strong northwest
wind, and a few stars could be seen peeping
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_238' name='page_238'></SPAN>238</span>
through the rifts, while, best of all, the water
had already retreated several feet, though the
crash of the breakers was still tremendous.</p>
<p>As Leslie and Phyllis returned to the room,
they were startled to see Aunt Marcia, in a
dressing-gown, peering out of the door of her
room and blinking sleepily.</p>
<p>“What on earth are you two girls doing up
at this unearthly hour?” she inquired. “I
woke and thought I heard voices and came out
to see!”</p>
<p>“Oh, we’ve been talking and watching the
storm!” laughed Leslie. “It’s all over now,
and the stars are shining. You’d better go
back to bed, Aunt Marcia. The fire’s out and
it’s very chilly!”</p>
<p>And as the good lady turned back into her
room Leslie whispered to Phyllis, “And she
slept through all <i>that</i>—and never knew!
How can I be thankful enough!”</p>
<hr class='major' />
<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
<SPAN name='XIX_THE_BIGGEST_SURPRISE_OF_ALL' id='XIX_THE_BIGGEST_SURPRISE_OF_ALL'></SPAN>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_239' name='page_239'></SPAN>239</span>
<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />