“Farewell to the Highlands, farewell to the north,
The birthplace of Valour, the country of Worth;
Wherever I wander, wherever I rove,
The hills of the Highlands for ever I love.”
- Robert Burns
At the very outset of the story we learn that Nancy’s great-grandmother, Lady Douglas, lives on a large estate named Douglas House on Inverness-shire, Scotland.
She’s written a letter to Nancy’s father, Carson, a well-respected lawyer in the town of River Heights. The matriarch intends to bequeath her estate to the National Trust of Scotland and requested that the lawyer make the trip there to confer with her attorneys in Glasgow and Edinburgh. The letter also contained a vague reference to a missing heirloom, one of great value that Lady Douglas intended to pass on to Nancy.
Mr. Drew, knowing how busy he will be with the estate business, decides to invite his daughter to come along with him. She could focus on the mystery of the missing heirloom for her great-grandmother.
Nancy readily agrees with her dad’s plan, and in her excitement tell her friend Ned Nickerson about the trip. Ned listens, then goes on to tell her about yet another Scottish mystery involving the theft of sheep and lambs in the Highlands of Scotland.
That’s two mysteries, at the same time and in the same place. A dream scenario for Nancy Drew.
That same afternoon, Nancy receives a call from her friend Bess Marvin who breathlessly informs her friend that she just won a trip to the European country of her choice. Apparently, Bess had entered a photo of a “Sleuthing Nancy” to a magazine named Photographie Internationale. Bess’s was the winning photo that the magazine promised would be widely seen in their publications. Bess tells Nancy that she would like to invite her along for the vacation, especially since it was, she who modeled for the winning photo.
Nancy tells Bess that her father has also invited her to travel with him to Scotland but mentions that she’ll check with her father about the prospect of a future European trip with Bess.
Nancy discusses the contest win with her father, she also mentions the other “sheep theft” mysteries in Scotland. Mr. Drew comes up with the idea that since he and Nancy were already planning to take the trip, Bess could join them, asking Nancy’s friend George Fayne to also come along. It would be advisable to have some help, Carson Drew suggested, especially now that there was yet another mystery to solve.
Nancy agrees, calling Bess back to suggest the revised plan. Beth loves the idea and George is contacted. She happily agrees to come along as well.
The four were to depart in three days’ time, Mr. Drew announces. And in the next 72 hours, Nancy encounters three separate threatening situations: First, a truck slams into her car. A truck with no driver, no license plates and no engine serial number. Second was a note that arrives for Nancy that threatens that an accident will befall her if she gets into any kind of vehicle. The note was tacked to a tiny square of plaid cloth. The third and most disturbing situation came when a bomb was discovered in the Drew Family mailbox by Nancy and the Drew housekeeper Hannah Gruen.
Nancy draws a package from the mailbox. She hears a strange ticking sound, so she throws it onto the front lawn. Seconds later the bomb explodes!
Moments later, Nancy examines the area where the bomb exploded, there she finds several paper fragments which she collects an takes into the house. She spreads them out on the kitchen table and begins the task of reassembling them. It turns out to be a note of warning that Hannah Gruen guessed was placed in the mailbox sometime before the bomb. Hours earlier, the doorbell had rung, the housekeeper recollects, but when she opened the door, nobody was there. That may well have been when the note was left to warn her, Nancy decides. Just then Carson Drew walks into the room and Nancy tells him what the note said,
“Even if I have a mysterious person for an enemy, I think I have another as a friend.”
About this time, River Heights Chief of Police McGinnis knocks on the door. Mr. Drew invites him in. He asks Nancy about what happened, and she explained all the day’s strange events. She then shows the chief the assembled paper fragment note. The chief asks her if she could glue together the paper pieces while he and the other officers inspect the remains of the exploded bomb.
The next day, Nancy is walking down the street when suddenly she sees her contest winning photo posted in a druggist’s storefront window. Several kids gather around to ask for her autograph. Nancy sees that they are all children, and based on that fact, agrees to sign the papers they thrust out in front of her. Amidst the flurry of activity, she notices that one of the boys has sold her signature to a man. As the man hands the boy the money, she calls out to him, telling him that she wishes to speak to him. The man turns to her, then seeing she’s spotted him, turns and flees.
Nancy breaks away from the group and begins to chase the man, but he is too fast and soon loses her. She’s now faced with the fact that someone is threatening her and now someone else has a copy of her signature.
To what devious purpose this man would use a copy of her signature she doesn’t know, but it concerned about it all the same.
She recalls that he is a thin man with black hair and red cheeks. She’s determined to find him.
She returns to the drug store, asking the druggist, Mr. Gregg if he recognized the man who fit the description of the man who fled with her signature. The druggist thought it over, then recalled a man who came into the store fitting that description. He remembered that the man wanted to use the store phone, and that he had done this same thing a few times before. He also suddenly remembered that someone passing the man called him. Pete.
Nancy thanked him and left the drug store. She made her way to the police station where she told Chief McGinnis about the stolen autograph and that the man may be named Pete. The chief promised to investigate, and Nancy gave him the name of the hotels she would be staying at in Glasgow and Edinburgh. She also provided the address of her great-grandmother’s Scottish estate.
She leaves for home, arriving to meet Hannah Gruen and Ned Nickerson. Ned has some disturbing news that earlier that day he received an anonymous phone call in which the person on the other end of the line said:
“If you expect to keep your girlfriend alive, don’t let her go to Scotland!”
The next day, Mr. Drew, Nancy, Bess and George fly out to New York, then after a brief layover, onto Prestwick International Airport near Glasgow. Hours later, they arrive in the land of their new adventures.
The plane ride had not been without its turbulence, so much so that the pilot had to switch from autopilot to manual control. And the flight was not the only bumpy aspect of their Scottish excursion, one that included: A shadowy Stirling Castle dungeon, confusing coded messages written in Gaelic, the practice of “sheep shedding,” an elusive phantom piper and a wildcat encounter are but a few of the happenings in the Highlands adventure of Nancy and her friends.
I moved through page after page, devouring chapter after chapter, till suddenly, I was finished.
Always a sure sign of great storytelling.