Read The Secret of the Mansion Online
Authors: Julie Campbell
Tags: #Mystery, #YA, #Trixie Belden, #Julie Campbell
The Secret of the Mansion | |
Trixie Belden [1] | |
Julie Campbell | |
(2012) | |
Tags: | Mystery, YA, Trixie Belden, Julie Campbell |
Trixie Belden 01
The Secret of the Mansion
by Julie Campbell illustrated by Mary Stevens
cover illustration by Michael Koelsch
Random House New York 1 Copyright (0 1948, renewed 1976 by Random House, Inc. Cover art copyright
0C 2003 by Michael Koelsch. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Random House
Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published
by Golden Books, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, in 1948. www.randombouse.com/kids
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Campbell, Julie, 1908-1999.
The secret of the mansion
by Julie Campbell ; illustrated by Mary Stevens cover illustration by Michael Koelsch.<
p>
p. cm. - (Trixie Belden; #I)
Summary: Thirteen-year-old Trixie Belden and her friends search for hidden treasure in a mysterious mansion owned by an old miser.
ISBN 0-375-82412-X (trade) - ISBN 0-375-92412-4 Gib. bdg.) [1. Buried treasure-Fiction. 2. Mystery and detective stories.]
1. Stevens, Mary, ill. 11. Koelsch, Michael, ill. 111. Title. IV Series. PZ7.C1547 Se 2003 [Ficl-dc2l 2002036990
Printed in the United States of America First Random House Edition
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
RANDOM HOUSE and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
2 CONTENTS
5. Copperhead! 68
1O.The Old Ladder 129
15. Mr. Lytell’s Curiosity 188
The Missing Heir 249 3
The Haunted House
“Oh, Mums,” Trixie moaned, running her hands through her short, sandy curls. “I’ll just die if I don’t have a horse.”
Mrs. Belden looked up from the row of tomato plants she was transplanting in the fenced-in vegetable garden.
“Trixie,” she said, trying to look stern, “if you died as many times as you thought you were going to, you’d have to be a cat with nine lives to be with
us for one day.”
“I don’t care!” Tears of indignation Welled up in Trixie’s round blue eyes. She scooped up a fat little worm, watched it wriggle in the palm of her hand
for a minute, then gently let it go. “With Brian and Mart at camp this summer, I’ll die of boredom. I mean it, Moms.”
Mrs. Belden sighed. “You declared you’d suffer the same fate if we didn’t buy you a bike three years ago. Remember?” She stood up, frowning in the glare
of the hot July sun. “Now listen, Trixie, once and for all. If you want to buy a horse like the one you fell in love with at 4 the horse show yesterday,
you will have to earn the money yourself. You know perfectly well the only reason your brothers could go to camp is because they are working as junior
counselors.”
Crabapple Farm, Trixie reflected, was really a grand place to live, and she had always had a lot of fun there, but she did wish there was another girl in
the neighborhood. The big estate, known as the Manor House, which bounded the Belden property on the west had been vacant ever since Trixie could remember.
There were no other homes nearby except the crumbling mansion on the eastern hill, where queer old Mr. Frayne lived alone.
The three estates faced a quiet country road two miles from the village of Sleepyside that nestled among the Tolling hills on the east bank of the Hudson
River. Trixie’s father worked in the bank in Sleepyside, and Trixie and her brothers went to the village school. She had many friends in Sleepyside, but
she rarely saw them except when school was in session. Now that her brothers Brian and Mart had gone to camp, there was nobody but her little brother,
Bobby, to play with.
Trixie impatiently kicked a hole in the dust of the path with her shoe.
“It’s not fair. You wouldn’t let me try for a job as a waitress or anything. Maybe I could have gone, too.”
“You’re only thirteen,” her mother said patiently.
“Next year we might consider something of the sort. Dad and I are really sorry, dear,” she added gently, “that we couldn’t afford to send you to camp this
year.”
Trixie suddenly felt ashamed of herself, and she impulsively threw her arms around her mother. “Oh, I know, Moms, and I’m a pest to nag at you. I won’t
any more. I promise.”
“You can begin to earn the money for your horse right here, Trixie,” Mrs. Belden said, laughing. “There’s plenty to do around here with Brian and Mart away.
I’ll pay you something every week if you help me with Bobby and the housework. And I know Dad would be glad to increase your allowance if you do some weeding
in the garden every day and take over Mart’s chore of feeding the chickens and gathering the eggs.”
“Oh, Moms!” Trixie hugged her mother tighter. “Maybe I could earn five dollars a week. Do you think I could?”
Mrs. Belden nodded and smiled. “Something like that,” she said. “At any rate, if you really work, I should think you could count on having a horse next
summer.” She shaded her eyes with one hand and stared at the car that was just coming into the driveway. “Why, isn’t that Dad now? What could have happened
to bring him home from the bank before lunch?”
Trixie had already darted through the gate and was racing up the path from the vegetable garden, calling over her shoulder, “I’ll talk to him right now,
and then maybe I can start earning the money for my horse today.”
At the top of the driveway, Mr. Belden backed and turned the car around. Trixie jumped on the running board, shouting, “Dad! Mother said I could earn the
money for a horse if I help with the garden and chickens and Bobby. May I? Please, Dad, may I?”
Mr. Belden left the motor running but pulled on the emergency brake. “I guess so, Trixie,” he said, “but we’ll talk about that later. I’ve just been to
the hospital,” he spoke to Mrs. Belden as she joined Trixie beside the car. “On my way into the village this morning I found old Mr. Frayne lying at the
foot of his driveway. He was unconscious, and I took him right into the hospital.”
“Oh, Peter!” Mrs. Belden cried. “That poor old man living up there all alone! I’ve worried about him so often, but he would never let anyone come near him.
He’s probably been sick for days.”
“That’s right,” Mr. Belden said. “He’s suffering from pneumonia complicated by malnutrition. The doctors said 5 there was very little chance that he would
pull through.” “Serves him right,” Trixie said, wiping her grimy hands on her rolled-up blue jeans. “The mean old miser. You should have left him lying
in the driveway, Dad.” Mr. Belden frowned. “Why, Trixie! I don’t like you to talk that way, and you know you don’t mean it. Although Mr. Frayne may not
have always been a very pleasant neighbor, he is still a neighbor.”
“I’m sorry, Dad.” Trixie squinted up at the big rambling mansion half-hidden by the trees on top of the hill. “He never seemed like a neighbor to me,” she
added under her breath.
As her father drove away, she turned to her mother. “Why, old man Frayne said he’d call the police if he ever caught any of us trespassing. Remember that
time he yelled at Mart and-?”
“Now, Trixie,” Mrs. Belden interrupted. “You’re old enough to understand Mr. Frayne’s attitude. He and your father had a disagreement about the boundary
line between the two properties. Of course, Dad didn’t want to take the matter to court because nobody really cares who owns that little patch of the woods,
but Mr. Frayne insisted. Naturally, when the decision went against him he resented it.”
Trixie pulled up a piece of grass and chewed it 6 thoughtfully. “Well, his game chickens come down on our property whenever they please, and you don’t complain.
And just last week, Moms, Reddy chased Queenie, the black hen, into Mr. Frayne’s property. I tore after him because I didn’t want him to hurt Queenie,
even though she does belong to the old miser. But I needn’t have worried, because I guess those game hens can take care of themselves. Just as I caught
up to them, she suddenly turned and flew right into Reddy’s face, flapping her wings and squawking and scratching like anything.” Trixie laughed. “Reddy
was the most surprised Irish setter you ever saw. He tucked his tail between his legs and dashed off into the woods, and just then Mr. Frayne burst out
of his house, waving a shotgun and shouting at me. Golly, I was awfully scared for a minute, Moms. He said he’d shoot Reddy if he ever crossed the boundary
line again.”
“I’m sorry that happened, dear,” Mrs. Belden said as they strolled back to the garden. “But I honestly don’t think Mr. Frayne would really shoot Reddy.”
“I do.” Trixie kicked a pebble across the path. “He’s such a wrinkled little old man with such a cross face. I bet he doesn’t weigh much more than Bobby
does, and in those funny, patched clothes, he looks like a scarecrow. And his land’s in a terrible state. It’s all choked
10 7 with weeds and vines except for a clearing right around the house which isn’t a lawn any more, because the chickens have scratched it bare.”
“He wasn’t always a wrinkled old man, Trixie,” Mrs. Belden said quietly. “And Ten Acres was once as much of a showplace as the Manor House on the other
hill is now. Grief sometimes changes people, you know. Before Mrs. Frayne died, he was a charming old gentleman, and he and his wife were very kind to
your father and me when we moved up here from the city. That was before you were born, and Brian and Mart were still babies.” She carefully slipped a cardboard
collar around one of the tomato plants. “I’ll never forget the night Mrs. Frayne died. It was a terrible shock to all of us.”
“What happened, Mother?” Trixie knelt in the next row and began thinning the feathery little carrots. “All I know is that she was bitten by a copperhead
snake. But you don’t have to die from a copperhead bite. Dad told us all long ago what to do in case any of us were bitten. First, you put on a tourniquet;
then you cut into the fang marks with a knife or a razor blade, and then you suck out the blood to keep the poison from spreading. Didn’t Mr. Frayne know
what to do, Moms?”
Mrs. Belden pressed the last tomato plant into place with her fingers and stood up.
11 8 “I don’t know, Trixie, but he must have been terribly upset. He absolutely adored his wife. She was a beautiful little old lady, and everyone loved
her.” She slipped off her gloves and wiped her face with her handkerchief. “It happened one evening when they were sitting out in their summerhouse. The
snake must have been curled under Mrs. Frayne’s chair, and she probably kicked it accidentally. When Mrs. Frayne cried out, Mr. Frayne just picked her
up in his arms to rush her to the hospital for the antivenin. Naturally, he took the short cut, and right in the middle of that deserted upper road, the
car broke down. Whether he didn’t know what to do, or was too excited to do anything, I do not know. At any rate, they simply waited there until a car
came along. They waited for hours, and, by that time, it was too late.”
“How dreadful, Moms,” Trixie gasped.
Shading her eyes with her hand, Mrs. Belden glanced up at the old mansion on the eastern hill.