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"No, but the servants and mother are quite frightened. Could you see who they were?"
"No. Evidently tramps, or fishermen. We'll have to have a look at those----"
Allen did not complete the sentence, but they all knew to what he referred.
"So you--er--missed them?" questioned Percy, when the two groups were together again. "Too bad! I was just coming to join you. I had to have a weapon, you know, and I found--this."
He showed a little stick which he had picked up.
"I should have hit them with it had I gotten near enough," he went on, seriously--for him.
"It's a good thing you didn't," spoke Roy. "You might have killed one of them with that, Percy."
"Oh, so I should! I--I can strike very hard when I am angry. I am just as well pleased that there was no need for desperate measures. I really am!"
But no one paid any attention to him now, though he tried to walk beside Betty. Allen and Roy had taken this vantage place, one on either side of the Little Captain.
"Betty, where are you?" called Mrs. Nelson, from the darkness.
"Here, Mother. Don't worry. It's all right. The men got away in a boat.
We are coming in to hear all about it."
The story was soon told.
One of the maids, going down cellar to get something from the food store-room, had surprised a man prowling about with an electric flashlight.
The girl screamed, and her cries were augmented by the yells of another domestic in the kitchen.
Then the first girl saw two other men come from some part of the cellar and join the first one. They ran out just as the boys came up, and the fruitless chase resulted.
"What sort of men were they?" asked Betty of the girl who had given the alarm.
"Oh, I don't know, Miss Betty," was the half-sobbed reply.
"But you must know! Did he wear a tall hat or----"
"A tall hat? Of course not, miss. He was like a tramp, or a fisherman--maybe a clammer."
"That's how I sized them up," Allen said. "Fishermen. Did they say anything to you?" he asked the maid.
"Not a thing--no, sir. He just caught his breath, sort of frightened like, and ran out."
"Did the one you saw call to the others?"
"Oh, no, sir, they all ran out at once, as soon as I went down. I had a light myself."
"What part of the cellar were they in?"
"I couldn't exactly say. They seemed to be all over."
"Well, we'll have a look for--to see if anything is missing," Allen hastily changed his remarks, for the servants knew nothing about the diamonds; or, at least, they were not supposed to know about them.
"Come on, boys," the young law student went on.
"Oh, but hadn't we better send for the authorities?" asked Percy. "Or at least take a weapon," for Allen and the others had nothing in their hands.
"He's loony on the subject of weapons," grunted Roy.
Allen led the way down cellar, the girls and the servants not venturing, though Betty did want to go. But her mother kept her back.
A glance served to show that the diamonds were in the box, safe. As far as could be learned the intruders had not been near them.
"We'll bring them up, after the servants have gone to bed," Allen confided to his chums.
And when the maids had retired there was a sort of "council of war"
among the others.
Opinion was divided as to whether the men were ordinary tramps, or perhaps sneak thieves, or whether they were after the diamonds.
"But how would they know they were down cellar?" asked Betty. "We are the only ones who know of the hiding place, and we haven't told anyone, except Percy."
"Oh, I never said a word!" Percy cried. Indeed he only heard the story of the find, after the scare.
"Of course if some men from this neighborhood hid the diamonds in the sand, and knew we girls took them out, and if they were around the house and heard something of the excitement the night papa took them down cellar, it would explain how they knew where to look for them," Betty said.
"Too many ifs," commented Allen. "Have there been any strangers around lately--tramps or anyone like that?"
At first Betty said there had been none, but later she recalled that a maid had reported to her that an undesirable specimen of a man had begged something to eat at the kitchen door the morning after Mr. Nelson had hid the diamonds down cellar.
"And," Betty said, "he may have been hanging around when father and Will left for Boston that day."
"But how could he know the stones were hidden down cellar?" asked Mollie.
"I don't know that he could tell that, exactly," Betty admitted, "but if you remember, as papa was going away he called back: 'Be sure to keep the cellar locked!' Don't you remember?"
"Yes, I heard that," Amy contributed.
"Well, if a tramp, who was not really a tramp, but some one in disguise, heard that he might jump to some conclusion," Betty went on.
"Too much jumping," Allen said. "As a matter of fact we're all in the dark about this."
"And it isn't a very pleasant suspense, either," declared Betty, as she looked at the black box with the diamonds safe in the secret compartment. "What are we going to do with that?"
"Hide it in a new place," suggested Henry.
That much was decided on, and the treasure was taken up to the attic, though there the danger of fire was ever present.
"Oh, I wish father were home," said Betty, a worried look on her face.