Bella knew more about the lower regions of her ex-home than I would have

thought. She opened a door in a corner and led the way through a narrow

hall past the refrigerating room, to a huge, cemented cellar, with a

furnace in the center, and a half-dozen electric lights making it really

brilliant.

"Get a chair," Bella said over her shoulder, excitedly. "I can get out

easily here, through the coal hole. Imagine my--"

But it was my turn to grip Bella. From behind the furnace were coming

the most terrible sounds, rasping noises that fairly frayed the silk of

my nerves. We stood petrified for an instant. Then Bella laughed. "They

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are not all gone," she said carefully. "Some one is asleep there."

We tiptoed to where we could see around the furnace, and, sure enough,

some one WAS asleep there. Only, it was not one of the servants; it was

a portly policeman, with a newspaper and an empty plate on the floor on

one side, and a champagne bottle on the other. He had slid down in his

chair, with his chin on his brass buttons, and his helmet had rolled a

dozen feet away. Bella had to clap her hand over her mouth.

"Fairly caught!" she whispered. "Sartor Resartus, the arrester arrested.

Oh, Jim and his flawless service!"

But after we got over our surprise, we saw the situation was serious.

The policeman was threatening to awaken. Once he stopped snoring to yawn

noisily, and we beat a hasty retreat. Bella switched off the lights in

a hurry and locked the door behind us. We hardly breathed until we were

back in the kitchen again, and everything quiet. And then Jimmy called

my name from up above somewheres.

"I am going to call him down, Bella," I said firmly. "Let him help you

out. I'm sure I don't see why I should have all this when the two of

you--"

"Oh, no, no! Surely, Kit, you wouldn't be so cruel!" she whispered

pleadingly. "You know what he would think. He--oh, Kit, let them all get

settled for the night, and then come down, like a dear, and help me out.

I know loads of ways--honestly I do."

"If I leave you here," I debated, "what about the policeman?"

"Never mind him"--frantically. "Listen! There's Jim up in the pantry.

Run, for the sake of Heaven!"

So--I ran. At the top of the stairs I met Jimmy, very crumpled as to

shirt-front and dejected as to face.

"I've been hunting everywhere for you," he said dismally. "I thought you

had added to the general merriment by falling downstairs and breaking

your neck."

I went past him with my chin up. Now that I had time to think about it,

I was furiously angry with him.




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