Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
CHAPTER I - A Risky Adventure
CHAPTER II - New Names
CHAPTER III - Escape
CHAPTER IV - Crocodile Farm
CHAPTER V - A Threat
CHAPTER VI - The Impostor
CHAPTER VII - Sea Detectives
CHAPTER VIII - Indian Tricks
CHAPTER IX - Hurricane Legend
CHAPTER X - The Runaway’s Clues
CHAPTER XI - An Identification
CHAPTER XII - Child in Danger
CHAPTER XIII - Doubloons!
CHAPTER XIV - Periscope Pursuit
CHAPTER XV - Jungle Attack
CHAPTER XVI - Exciting Phone Call
CHAPTER XVII - Deadly Golf Ball
CHAPTER XVIII - Snakes
CHAPTER XIX - Triple Sleuthing
CHAPTER XX - Submarine Prisoners
MYSTERY OF CROCODILE ISLAND
In a response to a friend’s call for help, Nancy’s father, a lawyer, asks her to travel to mysterious Crocodile Island with her friends Bess and George to study the reptiles and try to uncover a group of suspected poachers.
Upon their arrival in Florida, the girls are kidnapped but cleverly escape to pursue their detective work. Dangers mount as they cope with reptiles, enemy boats, and exciting chases after the men who are responsible for a sinister racket that involves many unsuspecting victims. In the end, Nancy makes a bold move to untangle the mass of clues. She and Ned become imprisoned in the enemy’s submarine and are held for ransom!
How Nancy and Ned are saved and the tables turned on the owners of Crocodile Island are left for the reader to discover.
Nancy realized that the child would be bashed against the jagged breakwater!
PRINTED ON RECYCLED PAPER
Copyright © 1978 by Simon & Schuster, Inc. All rights reserved.
Published by Grosset & Dunlap, Inc., a member of The Putnam &
Grosset Group, New York. Published simultaneously in Canada. S.A.
NANCY DREW MYSTERY STORIES® is a registered trademark of Simon & Schuster,
Inc. GROSSET & DUNLAP is a trademark of Grosset & Dunlap, Inc.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 77-76128
eISBN : 978-1-101-07756-6
2005 Printing
http://us.penguingroup.com
CHAPTER I
A Risky Adventure
NANCY Drew and her friend Bess Marvin were seated in the Drew living room, eagerly awaiting the arrival of Nancy’s father.
“I wish your dad would hurry and get here,” Bess said impatiently. “Nancy, have you any idea what the trip he wants us to take is all about?”
The attractive eighteen-year-old strawberry blond shook her head. “I know the place, but not the mystery we’re to solve.”
“Where is the place?” Bess asked
“Florida. Dad didn’t tell me what part, though.”
Bess giggled. “Any part will be all right with me, as long as there’s warm weather and swimming.”
Nancy smiled. “Probably all of us will be glad to swim. At this time of year it can get pretty hot down there.”
A ring at the front door interrupted her. Nancy hurried to answer it. The visitor was Bess’s cousin George Fayne. George was a vivacious dark-haired girl with a winning smile and a great appetite for adventure. She and Bess had helped Nancy with many mysteries.
“Hi, George!” Nancy greeted her friend. “Come in.”
When the two walked into the living room, Bess pointed to a shoe box George carried. “What’s in there?” she inquired.
George’s eyes twinkled. She took off the lid, which had several small holes punched in it. “You can see,” she said, “but don’t touch.”
In the box lay a twelve inch baby crocodile. Since it did not move, the girls assumed it was asleep. George held up the box and tapped the underside. At once the crocodile began to wiggle! It opened its jaws wide and swished its tail.
Bess screamed. “Put the lid on and get that thing out of here!” she demanded.
George laughed. “It’s not real! Nancy, your dad asked me to stop at the River Heights Trick Shop and buy a rubber crocodile. He didn’t explain why.”
She replaced the lid and set the box on the table. “The clerk in the store said if you tickle the trick crocodile, it will wiggle. It’s meant to scare people, but it can’t possibly hurt you.”
“Get that thing out of here!” Bess demanded.
Bess looked doubtful, and George went on, “If this reptile were real, the government would take it and fine me twenty thousand dollars.”
“What!” Bess cried out. “That’s incredible.”
“Or I could spend five years in jail for possessing it without government permission.”
“But why?” Bess asked.
“Because crocodiles are a vanishing species,” Nancy put in. “There used to be plenty of them in this country, but now there are only a few left in Florida.”
Bess’s eyes opened wide. “Do you think your father is going to send us to the part where there are crocodiles?”
Nancy was looking out the window. “We’ll soon know,” she replied. “He’s driving in now.”
Carson Drew, a leading attorney in River Heights, parked his car in the garage, then came into the house by way of the kitchen. When he reached the living room, he kissed Nancy and greeted the other two girls.
“Don’t keep us in suspense any longer,” Nancy pleaded. “Are we going to crocodile land?”
Her tall, handsome father sat down on the couch. “In a way, yes. This is the story. An old college friend of mine named Roger Gonzales lives in Key Biscayne outside of Miami. Biscayne Bay is full of small islands, which are called keys. Most of them are inhabited, but some of the smaller ones are like jungles and nobody lives on them. Some twenty miles from Key Biscayne there’s a key that has been nicknamed Crocodile Island. A group of men operate a crocodile farm on it. They breed these reptiles to sell to zoos or other places where sightseers can view them.”
As Mr. Drew paused, Bess spoke, with fright in her voice. “And you’re going to ask us to go to this alligator farm?”
Mr. Drew smiled. “Crocodile farm, Bess. There’s a difference.”
“There is?”
“Yes. The American alligator has a much broader snout than the crocodile, and is less vicious and active. The two reptiles are about equal in size and can grow up to twelve feet in length, but the croc weighs about a third less than the ’gator.”
Bess shivered. “I don’t want to meet either one.”
George laughed. To tease Bess, she said, “Mr. Drew, tell us some more scary things about crocodiles.”
Bess groaned.
“They like to live in large bodies of shallow salty water,” Mr. Drew continued, “preferably in sluggish rivers, open swamps, and marshes that are brackish. They raise their heads when you go near them and—”
“Oh, stop!” Bess begged.
Mr. Drew grinned. “But I’m not finished. In this country crocs were formerly found around the southernmost tip of Florida, but because so many people went to live on Key Biscayne, the crocs moved into the Everglades. They have webbed feet and can walk on soft ground.”
“How fast can they run?” George asked.
“Very fast. Like horses!”
“Forget it!” Bess declared. “I’m staying home. Who wants to be eaten?”
“American crocodiles occasionally do attack animals and people,” Mr. Drew admitted. “A croc can twist a large animal to pieces by seizing one part of it, then turning rapidly in the water.”
George grimaced. “I think I agree
with Bess!”
“Don’t worry,” Mr. Drew said. “You probably won’t meet any wild crocs. What I’m talking about is a farm where they’re bred in captivity. There’s a mystery connected with the place that I hope you girls can solve.”
“What kind of mystery?” George asked.
“I’ll tell you in a minute.” Mr. Drew looked at the shoe box. “I see you did the errand, George. Thank you very much. I thought you girls might want to study a rubber crocodile to get acquainted with its looks.”
He rose and walked over to the table and removed the lid. George suggested that he lift the box and tap the bottom. He did, and once more the baby crocodile wiggled its tail and opened and closed its jaws.
“This is certainly a good imitation,” Mr. Drew remarked. He sat down again and went on with his story. “Mr. Gonzales has stock in the crocodile farm, which is called Crocodile Ecology Company. He doesn’t live or work there, however. He’s a silent partner, so to speak.
“Recently he has become suspicious that the business arrangements on the island are not what they should be, and that his partners are up to something dishonest.”
Nancy asked, “And this Mr. Gonzales has requested that we investigate Crocodile Island?”
“That’s right,” her father replied. “However, he doesn’t want his partners to know it, so you girls are not to visit his home or his office, or even phone him. Roger Gonzales is afraid his partners are spying on him, and in some way may find out he’s starting an investigation.”
Mr. Drew told the girls they should pretend to be just tourists. “I’d even suggest that while you’re there you act like silly young girls, so that the Crocodile Ecology people won’t catch on. The last thing you want them to know is that you all have high detective IQ’s.”
Bess laughed. “That’ll be easy enough for me. I can act silly any time, but Nancy will really have to play the part.”
Mr. Drew asked to be excused. “I must get back to my office for another case.”
After he had gone, the telephone rang and Nancy hurried to answer it in the hall.
“Is this the Drew home?” a man’s voice asked.
“Yes. Who is this?”
“The River Heights Trick Shop. I want to speak to the girl who bought the crocodile.”
Nancy motioned to George and handed her the receiver.
“Hello?” George said.
“Are you the girl who bought the crocodile?”
“Yes. Why?”
“You’re in great danger!” the man told her. “The boy who was working here gave you a live one by mistake.”
“What!” George cried out.
“Bring it back right away,” the man ordered. “If you don’t, the police will arrest you!”
George was aghast. She could be put in jail for five years or be fined twenty thousand dollars!
Nancy, who had overheard the conversation, looked toward the box on the table. Her father had not bothered to put the lid on after examining the crocodile. Now the reptile was climbing out of the container!
It opened its jaws wide. Though the crocodile was only a baby, there was no doubt about its viciousness. It could easily snap off someone’s finger!
Just then the other girls in the room noticed that the crocodile had escaped from its container. As Nancy dashed toward it, George froze and Bess screamed in fear!
CHAPTER II
New Names
MRS. Hannah Gruen, the Drews’ housekeeper, heard the commotion and rushed in from the kitchen. By now the baby crocodile lay at the edge of the table, making low hissing sounds.
Hannah backed away in alarm, even though she usually had plenty of courage when confronted with a crisis. A middle-aged woman, she had brought Nancy up after Mrs. Drew’s death, when Nancy was three years old. Since then kindly Mrs. Gruen had fostered the girl’s natural instinct to face danger without flinching.
“Wh—what on earth is going on here?” Hannah asked.
Before anyone could answer, Nancy’s bullterrier Togo slipped into the room behind the housekeeper. As soon as he spied the little reptile, he began to bark wildly. He jumped up in the air, trying to reach the crocodile with his paws.
“Don’t hurt it!” Nancy exclaimed. She grabbed Togo by his collar and tried to keep him from nipping the little creature.
“I’ll take Togo,” Hannah offered.
Nancy walked up to the table and turned the shoe carton on its end. Then, with the lid, she gently pushed the crocodile back toward it. Apparently the dog’s barking and yapping had frightened it, and the little reptile willingly crawled into the box.
“Thank goodness!” Hannah Gruen said with a sigh of relief as Nancy put the lid back on.
“I’m glad that’s over!” Bess added. “If one little baby can scare us like that, what’ll we do when we get to a farm full of great big crocs?”
Mrs. Gruen laughed. “No doubt the reptiles are kept in pits and can’t get out,” she said. “Don’t worry, Bess.”
Togo continued to bark and jump, so Nancy led him outside and put him in his run. The dog had helped her many times in her detective work, which had started with The Secret of the Old Clock. Recently she had unraveled The Strange Message in the Parchment.
Meanwhile, Hannah had found a sturdy cord to secure the shoe box. When Nancy returned to the living room, she suggested that the three girls go downtown and deliver the baby crocodile to its owner.
“I second the motion,” Bess said. “The sooner we get this creature out of here, the better I’ll like it!”
When they reached the store, Bess stayed in the car, while Nancy and George went inside the shop. The owner, Noly Reareck, greeted the girls with a look of relief.
“You have no idea what a load you’ve taken off my mind,” he said. “You see, I have a license to keep Crocky as a pet and have agreed to keep it in suitable surroundings and never to abuse it, kill it, or sell its hide.”
Mr. Reareck explained that it was unfortunate the little reptile had been sold to George. “I had to go to the post office,” he said, “and asked a neighborhood boy to watch the shop for a few minutes. He decided to play a joke on me. Instead of selling you a rubber crocodile that can be made to wiggle and open its mouth, he gave you my pet. It’s a good thing you told him it was for Carson Drew, or I wouldn’t have been able to trace it. I’m mighty relieved that Crocky didn’t bite anyone.”
Bess, who was waiting in the car, wondered why the girls did not come back and walked into the shop. George explained about the switching of the crocodiles, then Nancy asked Mr. Reareck where the young reptile had come from.
“Crocodile Island in Florida,” he said.
The girls looked at one another in amazement.
“Crocodile Island?” Bess blurted out. “Why, that’s where—”
She stopped suddenly because George stepped on her toes. Nancy was relieved. If Mr. Reareck had any connection with Crocodile Island, she did not want him to know about the girls’ mission.
The three thanked the shop owner and left. Nancy dropped Bess and George off at their homes, then returned to her own house. With Hannah Gruen looking on and offering advice from time to time, Nancy chose a wardrobe to take on the trip. Among her summer clothes were two bathing suits, a terry-cloth beach robe, and a jump suit.
After she finished packing, Nancy learned from Hannah that her father had come home. She went into his room, where he was reading.
“Dad,” she said, “Mr. Reareck told us that he got his pet from Crocodile Island. It would be a good idea if you could find out if he has any connection with the Crocodile Ecology Company other than just having bought Crocky.”
Her father promised to do so. “I’m glad you told me.”
The next day Nancy and her friends climbed into a plane bound for New York, where they would change for a nonstop flight to Miami. After they landed in New York, the girls hurried into the huge airport building and up to a counter to arrange for seats on their jet to Florid
a.
The clerk smiled at Nancy and said, “You are Miss Nancy Drew?”
“Yes, I am.”
“We received a message that you are to get in touch with your father at once. It’s possible your trip will be canceled.”
Puzzled, Nancy hurried to a phone and was soon talking to Mr. Drew. “Is something wrong, Dad?” she asked, worried.
The lawyer replied that his friend Roger Gonzales had called him to say that his suspicions about the Crocodile Ecology Company had been unfounded. “He told me there is no need for legal or protective action,” Mr. Drew explained, “and he has canceled your motel reservations.”
Nancy was stunned by the news, but before she could express her dismay, Mr. Drew went on, “I’m afraid that Roger was forced to make that call, and needs help. That’s why you should go ahead with your trip. But don’t get in touch with him until you hear from me.
“I have arranged for you to stay at the home of friends of mine, named Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cosgrove in Key Biscayne. They have a sixteen-year-old son, Danny, who’s an excellent sailor and familiar with the keys. He can take you around in their motorboat. I’m sure he’ll be of great help to you in your sleuthing.”
“Oh, good,” Nancy said. “I’m glad we don’t have to give up the trip.”
Mr. Drew urged his daughter and her friends to be very careful.
“We will,” Nancy promised, then asked, “Have you had a chance to speak to Mr. Reareck?”
“Yes. He saw an ad in the paper about the Crocodile Ecology Farm and wrote to them, ordering the pet. He doesn’t know the partners or anything about them, Well, good-by, dear, and have a great time.”
When Nancy joined Bess and George, they were worried about the turn of events.
“Do you suppose,” Bess asked, “that somehow the people on Crocodile Island found out that we were coming, and that you’re an amateur detective, Nancy?”
“That’s possible,” Nancy replied. “Anyway, since Dad wants us to go ahead, let’s get our seat numbers.”
The girls did, then went to the lounge and settled on three seats away from other waiting passengers to discuss what they would do when they reached Key Biscayne.