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ry carefully and gave her some hot wine to drink. Once in between the beautiful cool sheets with the breeze blowing in at the open window stirring the dainty white muslin curtains, Helen dropped into a dull heavy sleep, but she was so restless that Marshland dared not leave her. As the clock on the stairs struck 12-30 Helen seemed to grow quieter, so Marshland drew down the blind, snuffed the candle and went downstairs. She bolted the hall door and peeped into the drawing room. "I heard Mr. Sheene go some hours ago" she muttered "and all the windows are bolted, so off I go to bed to rest my weary limbs." So the old woman went to her room, knocking at Gladys's door as she went, to assure that she was going to bed, for Gladys who was highly nervous had insisted on this. Helen slept heavily till about 2 o'clock in the morning, when she was awakened by some strange sounds below. She sat up in bed and listened, the sounds continued and feeling frightened she called Marshland. But the old servant was asleep and for a little while the noises ceased. Helen thinking it was her fancy turned in her bed and fell into a doze. In less than 2 minutes she was awakened by the furious ringing of a bell. For a moment her heart stood still and her very blood ran cold. Then in one desperate moment she recollected the sound of the bell. Springing from her bed she flew to the door crying as she did so "the safe, the safe!!" Wildly she flew down the passage her brain dazed her heart beating loudly. Her eyes were too dilated to see, and in flying along she struck her head against a tall old clock and would have fallen headlong downstairs, to certain death, but a pair of arms were hastily flung around her and in another moment two unconscios figures were lying motionless in the still dark passage with only the pale moonlight lighting up their rigid faces. CHAPTER 16 "SETTLED" Marshland had not been awakened by the bell and so when she got up next morning at 6 o'clock, she was entirely innocent of the nights events. Putting on her apron she hastily went downstairs. Half way down the passage she caught sight of something white. "Tut tut" she exclaimed "I wonder if those are my clean aprons or caps, they must have fallen from the beams." But here her wonderings were overun by the fact that the white things were no other than the prostrate bodies of Helen and Gladys. Marshland uttered a stifled cry, b
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