John Marshall Glenarm had probably never been so
happy in his life as on that day of his amazing home-coming.
He laughed at us and he laughed with us, and
as he went about the house explaining his plans for its
completion, he chaffed us all with his shrewd humor
that had been the terror of my boyhood.
"Ah, if you had had the plans of course you would
have been saved a lot of trouble; but that little sketch
of the Door of Bewilderment was the only thing I left,
-and you found it, Jack,-you really opened these good
books of mine."
He sent us all away to remove the marks of battle, and
we gave Bates a hand in cleaning up the wreckage,-
Bates, the keeper of secrets; Bates, the inscrutable and
mysterious; Bates, the real hero of the affair at Glenarm.
He led us through the narrow stairway by which he
had entered, which had been built between false walls,
and we played ghost for one another, to show just how
the tread of a human being around the chimney sounded.
There was much to explain, and my grandfather's
contrition for having placed me in so hazardous a predicament
was so sincere, and his wish to make amends
so evident, that my heart warmed to him. He made me
describe in detail all the incidents of my stay at the
house, listening with boyish delight to my adventures.
"Bless my soul!" he exclaimed over and over again.
And as I brought my two friends into the story his delight
knew no bounds, and he kept chuckling to himself;
and insisted half a dozen times on shaking hands with
Larry and Stoddard, who were, he declared, his friends
as well as mine.
The prisoner in the potato cellar received our due attention;
and my grandfather's joy in the fact that an
agent of the British government was held captive in
Glenarm House was cheering to see. But the man's detention
was a grave matter, as we all realized, and made
imperative the immediate consideration of Larry's future.
"I must go-and go at once!" declared Larry.
"Mr. Donovan, I should feel honored to have you remain,"
said my grandfather. "I hope to hold Jack
here, and I wish you would share the house with us."
"The sheriff and those fellows won't squeal very hard
about their performances here," said Stoddard. "And
they won't try to rescue the prisoner, even for a reward,
from a house where the dead come back to life."
"No; but you can't hold a British prisoner in an
American private house for ever. Too many people
know he has been in this part of the country; and you
may be sure that the fight here and the return of Mr.
Glenarm will not fail of large advertisement. All I can
ask of you, Mr. Glenarm, is that you hold the fellow a
few hours after I leave, to give me a start."