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<h2> CHAPTER XII. SEARCHINGS </h2>
<p>I seemed bound to be the prey of a divided duty. As I crossed the street,
I asked myself which of the two experiments I had in mind should occupy my
attention first. Should I proceed at once with that close study and
detailed examination of the house, which I contemplated in my eagerness to
establish my theory of a secret passage between it and the one now
inhabited by the Misses Quinlan, or should I wait to do this until I had
recovered the box, which might hold still greater secrets?</p>
<p>I could not decide, so I resolved to be guided by circumstances. If Mrs.
Packard were still out, I did not think I could sit down till I had a
complete plan of the house as a start in the inquiry which interested me
most.</p>
<p>Mrs. Packard was still out,—so much Nixon deigned to tell me in
answer to my question. Whether the fact displeased him or not I could not
say, but he was looking very sour and seemed to resent the trouble he had
been to in opening the door for me. Should I notice this, even by an
attempt to conciliate him? I decided not. A natural manner was best; he
was too keen not to notice and give his own interpretation to uncalled for
smiles or words which contrasted too strongly with his own marked
reticence. I therefore said nothing as he pottered slowly back into his
own quarters in the rear, but lingered about down-stairs till I was quite
sure he was out of sight and hearing. Then I came back and took up my
point of view on the spot where the big hall clock had stood in the days
of Mr. Dennison. Later, I made a drawing of this floor as it must have
looked at that time. You will find it on the opposite page.</p>
<p>[transcriber’s note: The plan shows the house to have two<br/>
rows of rooms with a hall between. In the front each room<br/>
ends in a bow window. On the right the drawing-room has two<br/>
doors opening into the hall, equally spaced near the front<br/>
and rear of the room. Across the hall are two rooms of<br/>
apparently equal size; a reception room in front and the<br/>
library behind it, both rooms having windows facing on the<br/>
alley. There is a stairway in the hall just behind the door<br/>
to the reception room. The study is behind the drawing-room.<br/>
Opposite this is a side hall and the dining-room. The<br/>
library and dining-room both open off this hall with the<br/>
dining room also having doors to the main hall and kitchen.<br/>
The side hall ends with a stoop in the alley. A small room<br/>
labeled kitchen, etc. lies behind the dining-room and the<br/>
hall extends beyond the study beside the kitchen with the<br/>
cellar stairs on the kitchen side. There is a small<br/>
rectangle in the hall about two-thirds of the way down the<br/>
side of the drawing-room which is labeled A.]<br/></p>
<p>Near the place where I stood [marked A on the plan], had occurred most of
the phenomena, which could be located at all. Here the spectral hand had
been seen stopping the clock. Here the shape had passed encountered by Mr.
Weston’s cook, and just a few steps beyond where the library door opened
under the stairs Mr. Searles had seen the flitting figure which had shut
his mouth on the subject of his tenants’ universal folly. From the front
then toward the back these manifestations had invariably peeped to
disappear—where? That was what I was to determine; what I am sure
Mayor Packard would wish me to determine if he knew the whole situation as
I knew it from his wife’s story and the record I had just read at the
agent’s office.</p>
<p>Alas! there were many points of exit from this portion of the hall. The
drawing-room opened near; so did Mayor Packard’s study; then there was the
kitchen with its various offices, ending as I knew in the cellar stairs.
Nearer I could see the door leading into the dining-room and, opening
closer yet, the short side hall running down to what had once been the
shallow vestibule of a small side entrance, but which, as I had noted many
times in passing to and from the dining-room, was now used as a recess or
alcove to hold a cabinet of Indian curios. In which of these directions
should I carry my inquiry? All looked equally unpromising, unless it was
Mayor Packard’s study, and that no one with the exception of Mr. Steele
ever entered save by his invitation, not even his wife. I could not hope
to cross that threshold, nor did I greatly desire to invade the kitchen,
especially while Nixon was there. Should I have to wait till the mayor’s
return for the cooperation my task certainly demanded? It looked that way.
But before yielding to the discouragement following this thought, I
glanced about me again and suddenly remembered, first the creaking board,
which had once answered to the so-called spirit’s flight, and secondly the
fact which common sense should have suggested before, that if my theory
were true and the secret presence, whose coming and going I had been
considering, had fled by some secret passage leading to the neighboring
house, then by all laws of convenience and natural propriety that passage
should open from the side facing the Quinlan domicile, and not from that
holding Mayor Packard’s study and the remote drawing-room.</p>
<p>This considerably narrowed my field of inquiry, and made me immediately
anxious to find that creaking board which promised to narrow it further
yet.</p>
<p>Where should I seek it? In these rear halls, of course, but I hated to be
caught pacing them at this hour. Nixon’s step had not roused it or I
should have noticed it, for I was, in a way, listening for this very
sound. It was not in the direct path then from the front door to the
kitchen. Was it on one side or in the space about the dining-room door or
where the transverse corridor met the main hall? All these floors were
covered in the old-fashioned way with carpet, which would seem to show
that no new boards had been laid and that the creaking one should still be
here.</p>
<p>I ventured to go as far as the transverse hall,—I was at full
liberty to enter the library. But no result followed this experiment; my
footsteps had never fallen more noiselessly. Where could the board be? In
aimless uncertainty I stepped into the corridor and instantly a creak woke
under my foot. I had located the direction in which one of the so-called
phantoms had fled. It was down this transverse hall.</p>
<p>Flushed with apparent success, I looked up at the walls on either side of
me. They were gray with paint and presented one unbroken surface from
base-board to ceiling, save where the two doorways opened, one into the
library, the other into the dining-room. Had the flying presence escaped
by either of these two rooms? I knew the dining-room well. I had had
several opportunities for studying its details. I thought I knew the
library; besides, Mr. Searles had been in the library when the shape
advanced upon him from the hall,—a fact eliminating that room as a
possible source of approach! What then was left? The recess which had once
served as an old-time entrance. Ah, that gave promise of something. It
projected directly toward where the adjacent walls had once held two
doors, between which any sort of mischief might take place. Say that the
Misses Quinlan had retained certain keys. What easier than for one of them
to enter the outer door, strike a light, open the inner one and flash this
light up through the house till steps or voices warned her of an aroused
family, when she had only to reclose the inside door, put out the light
and escape by the outer one.</p>
<p>But alas! at this point I remembered that this, as well as all other
outside doors, had invariably been protected by bolt, and that these bolts
had never been found disturbed. Veritably I was busying myself for nothing
over this old vestibule. Yet before I left it I gave it another glance;
satisfied myself that its walls were solid; in fact, built of brick like
the house. This on two sides; the door occupied the third and showed the
same unbroken coat of thick, old paint, its surface barely hidden by the
cabinet placed at right angles to it. Enough of it, however, remained
exposed to view to give me an opportunity of admiring its sturdy panels
and its old-fashioned lock. The door was further secured by heavy pivoted
bars extending from jamb to jamb. An egg-and-dart molding extended all
around the casing, where the inner door had once hung. All solid, all very
old-fashioned, but totally unsuggestive of any reasonable solution of the
mystery I had vaguely hoped it to explain. Was I mistaken in my theory,
and must I look elsewhere for what I still honestly expected to find?
Undoubtedly; and with this decision I turned to leave the recess, when a
sensation, of too peculiar a nature for me readily to understand it,
caused me to stop short, and look down at my feet in an inquiring way and
afterward to lift the rug on which I had been standing and take a look at
the floor underneath. It was covered with carpet, like the rest of the
hall, but this did not disguise the fact that it sloped a trifle toward
the outside wall. Had not the idea been preposterous, I should have said
that the weight of the cabinet had been too much for it, causing it to sag
quite perceptibly at the base-board. But this seemed too improbable to
consider. Old as the house was, it was not old enough for its beams to
have rolled. Yet the floor was certainly uneven, and, what was stranger
yet, had, in sagging, failed to carry the base-board with it. This I could
see by peering around the side of the cabinet. Was it an important enough
fact to call for explanation? Possibly not; yet when I had taken a short
leap up and come down on what was certainly an unstable floor, I decided
that I should never be satisfied till I had seen that cabinet removed and
the floor under it rigidly examined.</p>
<p>Yet when I came to take a look at this projection from the library window
and saw that this floor, like that of the many entrances, was only the
height of one step from the ground, I felt the folly into which my
inquiring spirit had led me, and would have dismissed the whole subject
from my mind if my eyes had not detected at that moment on one of the
tables an unusually thin paper-knife. This gave me an idea. Carrying it
back with me into the recess, I got down on my knees, and first taking the
precaution to toss a little stick-pin of mine under the cabinet to be
reached after in case I was detected there by Nixon, I insinuated the
cutter between the base-board and the floor and found that I could not
only push it in an inch or more before striking the brick, but run it
quite freely around from one corner of the recess to the other. This was
surely surprising. The exterior of this vestibule must be considerably
larger than the interior would denote. What occupied the space between? I
went upstairs full of thought. Sometime, and that before long, I would
have that cabinet removed.</p>
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