FRANK AND HIS JAILER
It was twenty minutes before Frank,
waiting impatiently, heard the steps of his late companion
ascending the stairs.
But the door was not unlocked.
Instead, a slide was revealed, about eight inches
square, through which his late traveling companion
pushed a plate of cold meat and bread.
“Here’s something to eat,” he said;
“take it.”
“Why do you lock me in?” demanded our
hero.
“You can get along without knowing,
I suppose,” said the other, with a sneer.
“I don’t mean to,”
said Frank, firmly. “I demand an explanation.
How long do you intend to keep me here?”
“I am sorry I can’t gratify
your curiosity, but I don’t know myself.”
“Perhaps you think that I am
rich, but I am not. I have no money. You
can’t get anything out of me,” said Frank.
“That may be so, but I shall keep you.”
“I suppose that was all a lie about your keeping
store?”
“It was a pretty little story,
told for your amusement, my dear boy,” said
Graves. “I was afraid you wouldn’t
come without it.”
“You are a villain!” said Frank.
“Look here, boy,” said
Graves, in a different tone, his face darkening, “you
had better not talk in that way. I advise you
to eat your dinner and be quiet. Some supper
will be brought to you before night.”
So saying, he abruptly closed the
slide, and descended the stairs, leaving Frank to
his reflections, which it may be supposed, were not
of the pleasantest character.
Frank did not allow his unpleasant
situation to take away his appetite, and though he
was fully determined to make the earliest possible
attempt to escape, he was sensible enough first to
eat the food which his jailer had brought him.
His lunch dispatched, he began at
once to revolve plans of escape.
There were three windows in the room,
two on the front of the house, the other at the side.
He tried one after another, but the
result was the same. All were so fastened that
it was quite impossible to raise them.
Feeling that he could probably escape
through one of the windows when he pleased, though
at the cost of considerable trouble, Frank did not
trouble himself much, or allow himself to feel unhappy.
He decided to continue his explorations.
In the corner of the room was a door,
probably admitting to a closet.
“I suppose it is locked,”
thought Frank, but on trying it, he found that such
was not the case. He looked curiously about him,
but found little to repay him. His attention
was drawn, however to several dark-colored masks lying
upon a shelf.
He also discovered a small hole in
the wall of the size of a marble. Actuated by
curiosity, he applied his eye to the opening, and peeped
into what was probably the adjoining room. It
was furnished in very much the same way as the one
in which he was confined, but at present it was untenanted.
Having seen what little there was to be seen, Frank
withdrew from his post of observation and returned
to his room.
It was several hours later when he
again heard steps ascending the stairs, and the slide
in the door was moved.
He looked toward it, but the face
that he saw was not that of Nathan Graves.
It was the face of a woman.