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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62963 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62963)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith, by
-Patricia Wentworth
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith
-
-Author: Patricia Wentworth
-
-Release Date: August 18, 2020 [EBook #62963]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASTONISHING ADVENTURE OF JANE SMITH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by D A Alexander, Stephen Hutcheson, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE ASTONISHING ADVENTURE OF
- JANE SMITH
-
-
- BY
- PATRICIA WENTWORTH
-
- Author of
- “A Marriage Under the Terror,” etc.
-
- [Illustration: Publisher logo]
-
- BOSTON
- SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
- Copyright, 1923
- By SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY
- (Incorporated)
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
- THE MURRAY PRINTING COMPANY
- CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
- THE BOSTON BOOKBINDING COMPANY
- CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
-
-
-
-
- THE ASTONISHING ADVENTURE OF JANE SMITH
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-
-The dining-room of Molloy’s flat had not been built to receive
-twenty-five guests, but the Delegates of twenty-five affiliated
-Organisations had been crowded into it. The unshaded electric light
-glared down upon men of many types and nationalities. It did not flatter
-them.
-
-The air was heavy with the smoke of bad tobacco and the fumes of a very
-indifferent gas fire. There was a table in the middle of the room, and
-some dozen of the men were seated at it. The rest stood in groups, or
-leaned against the walls.
-
-Of the four who formed the Inner Council three were present. Most of the
-Delegates had expected that the head of The Council, the head of the
-Federated Organisations, that mysterious Number One whom they all knew
-by reputation and yet had never seen in the flesh, would be present in
-person to take the chair. But the Delegates who had entertained this
-expectation were doomed to disappointment. Once again Number One’s
-authority had been delegated to the other three members of The Council.
-Of these, Number Three was Molloy, the big, handsome Irishman who rented
-the flat. He sat facing the door, a fine figure of a man in the late
-forties. Number Two leaned forward over the fire, warming his hands, his
-pale, intellectual face expressionless, his eyes veiled. Belcovitch, who
-was Number Four, was on his feet speaking. They were large, bony feet,
-in boots which had most noticeably not been made for him. He spoke
-fluently, but with a heavy foreign accent.
-
-“Propaganda,” he said, and laughed; really he had a very unpleasant
-laugh—“propaganda is what you call rot, rubbish, damn nonsense. What
-else have we been about for years—no, generations—and where are we
-to-day?”
-
-Number Two drew his chair closer to the fire with an impatient jerk.
-Number Four’s oratory bored him stiff. The room was cold. This gas fire
-was like all gas fires. He pulled his fur coat together and spoke
-sharply:
-
-“Molloy, this room’s most infernally cold, and where in the world does
-the draught come from?”
-
-“Propaganda is dead,” said Number Four. He looked over his shoulder with
-dislike at Number Two, and mopped his brow with a dirty handkerchief.
-Molloy, just opposite him, turned a little and laughed.
-
-“You bring the cold with you, Number Two,” he said. “Here’s Number Four
-as hot as his own speeches. You’ve got all the fire, and the door’s
-shut, and a screen in front of it, so what more do you want?”
-
-“Propaganda is dead,” repeated Number Four. He stood with his back to
-the door. Only the top panel of it showed above the black screen which
-had been drawn across it. The screen had four leaves. On each leaf a
-golden stork on one leg contemplated a golden water-lily. The light
-shone on the golden birds and the golden flowers.
-
-Number Four thrust his handkerchief back into his pocket, and rapped
-sharply on the table. It was covered with a red cloth which had seen
-better days. Number Fourteen had upset the ink only a few moments
-before, and a greenish-purple patch was still spreading amidst the
-crimson.
-
-Belcovitch leaned forward, both his hands on the table, his raucous
-voice brought to a dead level. “Instead of propaganda, what?” he said.
-“Instead of building here, teaching there, what? That is what I’m here
-to-night to tell you. To-morrow you all go to your own places, each to
-his post; but before you go, I am authorised to prepare you for what is
-to come. It will not be to-day, but it may be to-morrow, or it may not
-be for many to-morrows yet. One final stage is lacking, but in
-essentials The Process is complete. Propaganda is dead, because we no
-longer need propaganda. Comrades”—his voice sank a little—“there are
-enough of us. Every city in the world has its quota. What The Process
-will effect”—he paused, looked round, caught Number Two’s slightly
-sardonic expression, and struck the table with his open hand—“what The
-Process will effect is this,” he cried—“in one word, Annihilation of the
-whole human race! Only our organisation will be left.”
-
-“Now what I am instructed to tell you is this,”—he spoke evenly,
-swiftly, statement following statement—never had the attention of an
-audience been so fully his; and then suddenly the thread was broken.
-With a loud grating sound, Number Fifteen, sitting next to Molloy,
-pushed his chair back, and sprang to his feet.
-
-“The door!” he shouted. “The door!” Every man in the room looked where
-Fifteen was looking. Above the water-lilies and the storks, where the
-top panel of the door had shown, there was a dark, empty space. The door
-was open.
-
-Number Four whipped out a revolver and dragged the screen away. The door
-was open, and in the doorway stood a girl in her nightdress. Her hands
-were stretched out, as if she were feeling her way. Her eyes, of a
-greenish hazel in colour, were widely opened, and had a dazed
-expression. Her brown hair hung in two neat plaits. Her feet were bare.
-Molloy pushed forward quickly.
-
-“Well, there, if that wasn’t the start of our lives,” he said, “and no
-reason for it when all’s said and done. It’s my daughter, Renata,
-comrades, and she’s walking in her sleep. Now I’ll just take her back to
-her room and be with you again.”
-
-“A minute, I think, Molloy,” said Number Two. He got up slowly out of
-his chair, and came across to where the girl stood motionless, blinking
-at the light. “I _said_ there was a most infernal draught. Will you come
-in, Miss Molloy?” he added politely, and took the girl by the hand. She
-yielded to his touch, and came into the room, shivering a little. Some
-one shut the door. Molloy, shrugging his shoulders, pulled the crimson
-cloth from the table and wrapped it about his daughter. The ink-soaked
-patch came upon her bare shoulder, and she cried out, cast a wild look
-at the strange and terrifying faces about her, and burst into a flood of
-tears.
-
-Molloy, standing behind her, looked around as she had looked, and his
-face darkened. Number Four had his back against the door, and his
-revolver in his hand. There was only one face in the whole circle that
-was not stamped with suspicion and fear, and behind the fear and the
-suspicion there was something icy, something ruthless. Number Two, with
-a slightly bored expression, was feeling in his waistcoat pocket. He
-produced a small glass bottle, extracted from it a tiny pellet, and
-proceeded to dissolve it in the glass of water which had stood neglected
-at Number Four’s right hand.
-
-“Now, Miss Molloy,” he said, but Molloy caught him by the wrist.
-
-“What the devil——” he stammered, and Number Two laughed.
-
-“My dear Molloy,” he said, “how crude! You might know me better than
-that.”
-
-He held the glass to Renata’s lips, and she took it and drank. When she
-had set down the glass, she felt her way to a chair and leaned back with
-closed eyes. The room seemed to whirl about her. A confusion of sound
-was in her ears, loud, angry, with sentences that came and went. “If she
-heard,”—then another—“How long was she there? Some one must have seen
-the door open.”
-
-“Who did, then?” Then in the harshest voice of all, “I don’t care if
-she’s Molloy’s daughter fifty times over, if she heard what Four said
-about The Process, she must go.” Go where?
-
-There was something cold and wet touching her shoulder. The cold seemed
-to spread all over her. Now her father was speaking. She had never heard
-his voice quite like that before. And now the man in the fur coat, the
-one who had given her the glass of water:
-
-“Yes, certainly, elimination if it is necessary. We’re all agreed about
-that. But let us make sure.” His voice had quite a gentle sound, but
-Renata’s heart began to beat with great thuds.
-
-“Miss Molloy,”—he was speaking to her now, and she opened her eyes and
-looked at him. His face was of a clear, even pallor. His eyes, light
-blue and without noticeable lashes, looked straight into hers. The veil
-was gone from them. They held a terrifying intelligence.
-
-Renata sat up. The crowd of men had cleared away. She, and her father,
-and the man in the fur coat were in an angle formed by the table and the
-black screen, which had been drawn close around them. Her father sat
-between her and the fire. His head was turned away, and he drummed
-incessantly on the table with the fingers of his right hand. Beyond the
-screen Renata could hear movements, and it came to her that the other
-men were there, waiting. The man in the fur coat spoke to her again. His
-voice was pleasant and cultivated, his manner reassuring.
-
-“You are better now? Please don’t be frightened. I am a doctor; your
-father will tell you that. Being wakened suddenly like that gave you a
-shock, but you are better now.”
-
-“Yes,” said Renata. She wished that her heart would stop beating so
-hard, and she wished that the man in the fur coat would stop looking at
-her.
-
-“Now, Miss Renata, I am your doctor, you know, and I want you to answer
-just a few questions. You have walked in your sleep before?”
-
-“Yes,” said Renata—“oh yes.”
-
-“Often?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What was the first time?”
-
-“I think—I think I was five years old. They found me in the garden.”
-
-Molloy let out a great breath of relief. If she had forgotten, if her
-account had differed from his—well, well, their luck was in.
-
-There was a whispering from behind the screen. Number Two frowned.
-
-“And the last time?”
-
-“It was at school. I walked into another dormitory and frightened the
-girls.”
-
-The man in the fur coat nodded. “So your father said.” And for a moment
-Molloy stared over his shoulder at him. “And to-night? Do you dream on
-these occasions?”
-
-Renata was reassured. Every moment it was more like an ordinary visit to
-a doctor. She had been asked all these questions so often. Her voice no
-longer trembled as she answered. “Yes, I dream. I walk in my sleep
-because of the dream; now to-night....”
-
-“Yes, to-night?”
-
-“I dreamt I was back at school, and I thought I heard talking in the
-next dormitory. You know we are not allowed to talk, and I am—I mean I
-was a prefect. So I got up, and went to see what was the matter, and
-some one pulled the screen away, and there was such a light, and such a
-noise.” She put out a shaking hand, and Number Two patted it kindly.
-
-“Very startling for you,” he said. “So you opened the door and came in
-and heard us all talking. Can you tell me what was being said?” His hand
-was on Renata’s wrist, and he felt the pulses leap. She spoke a shade
-too quickly:
-
-“I don’t know.”
-
-“Perhaps I can help you. Your father, you know, travels for a firm of
-chemists, a firm in which I and my friends are also interested. We were
-discussing a new aniline dye which, we hope, will capture the markets of
-the world. Now did you hear that word—aniline—or anything like it? You
-see I want to find out just what woke you. What tiresome questions we
-doctors ask, don’t we?”
-
-He smiled, and Renata tried to collect her thoughts. They were in great
-confusion.
-
-Aniline—annihilate—the two words kept coming and going. If her head had
-been clearer she would almost certainly have fallen into the trap which
-had been laid for her. Molloy stopped drumming on the table and clenched
-his hand. With all his strength he was praying to the saints in whom he
-no longer believed. Behind the screen twenty-three men waited in a dead
-silence. Renata was not frightened any more, but she was tired—oh, so
-dreadfully tired. Annihilate—aniline—the words and their similarity of
-sound teased her. She turned from them with a little burst of petulance.
-
-“I didn’t hear anything like that. Oh, do let me go to bed! I only heard
-some one call out....”
-
-“Yes?” said Number Two.
-
-“He said, ‘The door, the door!’ and then there were all those lights.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
-Jane Smith sat on a bench in Kensington Gardens. Her entire worldly
-fortune lay in her lap. It consisted of two shillings and eleven pence.
-She had already counted the pennies four times, because there really
-should have been three shillings. She was now engaged in making a list
-in parallel columns of (_a_) those persons from whom she might seek
-financial assistance, and (_b_) the excellent reasons which prevented
-her from approaching them.
-
-Jane had a passion for making lists. Years and years and years ago Mr.
-Carruthers had said to her, “My dear, you must learn to be businesslike.
-I have never been businesslike myself, and it has always been a great
-trouble to me.” And then and there he and Jane had, in collaboration,
-embarked upon the First List. It was a thrilling list, a list of toys
-for Jane’s very first Christmas tree. Since then she had made lists of
-her books, lists of her clothes, shopping lists, and an annual list of
-good resolutions.
-
-Jane stopped writing, and began to think about all those other lists.
-She had always showed them to Mr. Carruthers, and he had always gazed at
-them with the same vague benignness, and said how businesslike she was
-getting.
-
-Dear Cousin James—Jane was rich instead of poor when she thought about
-him. She looked across at the trees in their new mist of green, and then
-suddenly the thin April sunshine dazzled in her eyes and the green swam
-into a blur. Cousin James was gone, and Jane was alone in Kensington
-Gardens with two-and-elevenpence and a list.
-
-She opened and shut her eyes very quickly once or twice, and fixed her
-attention upon (_a_) and (_b_) in their parallel columns. At the top of
-the list Jane had written “Cousin Louisa,” and the reason against asking
-Cousin Louisa’s assistance was set down as, “Because she was a perfect
-beast to my darling Jimmy, and a worse beast to me, and anyhow, she
-wouldn’t.”
-
-In moments of irreverence the late Mr. Carruthers—_the_ Mr. Carruthers,
-author of five monumental volumes on Ethnographical Differentiation—had
-been addressed by his young ward and cousin as “darling Jimmy.”
-
-Professor Philpot came next. “A darling, but he is sitting somewhere in
-Central Africa in a cage learning to talk gorilla. I do hope they
-haven’t eaten him, or whatever they do do to people when they catch
-them.”
-
-It will be observed that Miss Smith’s association with the world of
-science had not succeeded in chastening her grammar.
-
-Jane’s pencil travelled down the list.
-
-“Mr. Bruce Murray. In Thibet studying Llamas.”
-
-“Henry”—Jane shook her head and solemnly put two thick black lines
-through Henry’s name. One cannot ask for financial assistance from a
-young man whose hand one has refused in marriage—“even if it was three
-years ago, and he’s probably been in love with at least fifteen girls
-since then.”
-
-“Henry’s mamma—well, the only time she ever loved me in her life was
-when I refused Henry, so I should think she was an Absolute Wash Out—and
-that’s the lot.”
-
-Jane folded up the list and put it into her handbag. Two silver
-shillings and eleven copper pennies, and then the workhouse!
-
-It was at this moment that a stout lady with a ginger-coloured pug sat
-heavily down upon the far end of Jane’s bench. The ginger-coloured pug
-was on a scarlet leather lead, and after seating herself the stout lady
-bent forward creaking, and lifted him to a place beside her.
-
-Jane wondered vaguely why a red face and a tightly curled fringe should
-go with a passion for bugled bonnets and pugs.
-
-“Was ’ums hungry?” said the stout lady.
-
-The pug breathed stertorously, after the manner of pugs, and his
-mistress at once produced two paper bags from a beaded reticule. From
-one of them she took a macaroon, and from the other a sponge finger. The
-pug chose the macaroon.
-
-“Precious,” cooed the stout lady, and all at once Jane felt entirely
-capable of theft and murder—theft from the stout lady, and murder upon
-the person of the ginger pug. For at the sight of food she realised how
-very, very hungry she was. Bread and margarine for breakfast six hours
-before, and the April air was keen, and Jane was young.
-
-The pug spat out the last mouthful of macaroon, ignored the sponge
-finger, and snorted loudly.
-
-“Oh, naughty, naughty,” said the stout lady. She half turned towards
-Jane.
-
-“You really wouldn’t believe how clever he is,” she observed
-conversationally; “it’s a cream bun he’s asking for as plain as plain,
-and yesterday when I bought them for him, he teased and teased until I
-went back for macaroons; though, of course, a nice plain sponge finger
-is really better for him than either. I don’t need the vet. to tell me
-that. Come along, a naughty, tiresome precious then.” She lifted the pug
-down from the seat, put the paper bags tidily back into her reticule,
-rose ponderously to her feet, and walked away, trailing the scarlet lead
-and cooing to the ginger pug.
-
-Jane watched her go.
-
-“Why don’t I laugh?” she said. “Why doesn’t she amuse me? One needn’t
-lose one’s sense of humour even if one is down and out.”
-
-It was at this unpropitious moment that the tall young man who had sat
-down unseen upon Jane’s other side, laid his hand upon hers and observed
-in stirring accents:
-
-“Darling.”
-
-Jane whisked round in an icy temper. Her greenish-hazel eyes looked
-through the young man in the direction of the north pole. He ought to
-have stiffened to an icicle then and there, instead of which he
-murmured, “Darling,” again, and then added—“but what’s the matter?” Jane
-stopped looking at him or through him. He had simply ceased to exist.
-She picked up her two shillings and her eleven pence, put them into her
-purse, and consigned her purse to her handbag. She then closed the
-handbag with a snap, and rose to her feet.
-
-“Renata!” exclaimed the young man in tones of consternation.
-
-Jane paused and allowed herself to observe him for the first time. She
-saw a young man with an intellectual forehead and studious brown eyes.
-He appeared to be hurt and surprised. She decided that this was not a
-would-be Lothario.
-
-“I think you have made a mistake,” she said, and was about to pass on.
-
-“But, Renata, Renata, darling!” stammered the young man even more
-desperately. Jane assumed what Cousin Louisa had once described as “that
-absurdly grand manner.” It was quite kind, but it induced the young man
-to believe that Jane was conversing with him from about the distance of
-the planet Saturn.
-
-“I think,” she said, “that you must be taking me for my cousin, Renata
-Molloy.”
-
-“But I’m engaged to her—no, I mean to you—oh, hang it all, Renata,
-what’s the sense of a silly joke like this?”
-
-Jane looked at him keenly. “What is my cousin’s middle name?” she
-inquired.
-
-“Jane. I hate it.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Jane. “My name is Jane Renata Smith, and I am Renata
-Jane Molloy’s first cousin. Our mothers were twin sisters, and I have
-always understood that we were very much alike.”
-
-“Alike!” gasped the young man. Words seemed to fail him.
-
-Jane bowed slightly and began to walk away, but, before she had gone a
-dozen paces, he was beside her again.
-
-“If you’re really Renata’s cousin, I want to talk to you—I must talk to
-you. Will you let me?”
-
-Jane walked as far as the next seat, and sat down with resignation.
-
-“I don’t even know your name.”
-
-“It’s Todhunter—Arnold Todhunter.” He seemed a trifle breathless. “My
-sister Daphne was at school with Renata, and she came to stay with us
-once in the holidays. I said we were engaged, didn’t I? Only, nobody
-knows it. You won’t tell Mr. Molloy, will you?”
-
-“I’ve never spoken to Mr. Molloy in my life,” said Jane. “There was a
-most awful row when my aunt married him, and none of us have ever met
-each other since. My aunt died years and years ago. I think Mr. Molloy
-is an Anarchist of some sort, isn’t he?”
-
-“Yes, yes, yes,” said Mr. Todhunter, with violence. He banged the back
-of the iron seat with his hand. Jane reflected that he must be very much
-in love if he failed to notice how hard it was.
-
-“Yes, yes, he is,” repeated Mr. Todhunter, “and worse; and Renata is in
-the most dreadful position. I must talk to somebody, or I shall go mad.”
-
-“Well, you can talk to me,” said Jane soothingly. “I have always wanted
-to meet Renata, and I should love to hear all about her.”
-
-Mr. Todhunter hesitated.
-
-“Miss Smith—you did say Smith, didn’t you?—it’s so difficult to begin.
-You’ll probably think I’m mad, or trying it on, but it’s like this: I’ve
-just qualified as an engineer, and I’ve got a job in South America.
-Naturally I wanted to see Mr. Molloy. Renata wouldn’t let me. She hardly
-knows her father, and she’s most awfully scared of him. We used to meet
-in the Park. Then one day she didn’t come. She went on not coming, and I
-nearly went mad. At last I went to Molloy’s flat and asked to see her.
-They said she had left town, but it was a lie. Just before the door
-shut, I heard her voice.” Mr. Todhunter paused. “Look here, you won’t
-give any of this away, will you? You know, it’s awfully confusing for
-me, your being so like Renata. It makes my head go round.”
-
-“Go on,” said Jane.
-
-“Well, the bit I don’t want you to tell any one is this—I mean to say,
-it’s confidential, absolutely confidential: when I was at the
-Engineering School, I knew a chap who had got mixed up with Molloy’s
-lot. He didn’t get deep in, you’ll understand. They scared him, and he
-backed out. Well, I remembered a yarn he had told me. He was in Molloy’s
-flat one night, and it was raided. And I remembered that he said a lot
-of them got away down the fire-escape into a yard, and then out through
-some mews at the back. Well, I went and nosed about until I found that
-fire-escape, and I got up it, and I found Renata’s room and talked to
-her through the window. It’s not so dangerous as it sounds, because they
-lock her in the flat at night, and go out. And she’s in a frightful
-position—oh, Miss Smith, you simply have no idea of what a frightful
-position she’s in!”
-
-“I might have, if you would tell me what it is,” said Jane dryly. She
-found Mr. Todhunter diffuse.
-
-“Well, she’s a prisoner, to start with. They keep her locked in her
-room.”
-
-“Who’s they?” interrupted Jane.
-
-Mr. Todhunter rumpled his hair. “She doesn’t even know their names,” he
-said distractedly. His voice dropped to a whisper. “It’s the most
-appalling criminal organisation, Miss Smith. Molloy’s one of them, but
-they won’t even let Molloy see her alone now. You see, they think she
-overheard something. They don’t know whether she did or not. If they
-were sure that she did, they would kill her.”
-
-“Well, did she?” said Jane.
-
-“I don’t know,” said Mr. Todhunter gloomily. “She cried such a lot, and
-we were both rather confused, and she’s most awfully frightened, you
-know.” He glared at Jane as if she had something to do with Renata being
-frightened. “If I’m to take up this job of mine, I have to sail in three
-days’ time. I want her to marry me and come too; but she says that, if
-she runs away, they’ll make sure she heard something, and, if it’s the
-farthest ends of the earth, they’ll find her and kill her. It seems
-Molloy told her that. And if she stays here and they bully her again,
-she doesn’t know what she may give away. It’s a frightful position,
-isn’t it?”
-
-“Why don’t you go to the police?” said Jane.
-
-“I thought of that, but they’d laugh at me. I haven’t heard anything,
-and I don’t know anything. Molloy would only say that Renata was under
-age, and that he had locked her in to prevent her running away with me.
-Then they’d kill her.”
-
-“I see,” said Jane. Then—“What do you want me to do?” she asked.
-
-All the time that Mr. Todhunter had been glooming and groaning, running
-his fingers through his hair and depicting Renata’s appalling position,
-the Great Idea had been slowly forming itself in his mind. Every time
-that he looked at Jane, her likeness to Renata made him feel quite
-giddy. The Great Idea intoxicated him. He began to decant it.
-
-“Miss Smith, if you would—you see, if we could only get a clear
-start—what I mean to say is, South America’s a long way off——”
-
-“Quite a distance,” Jane agreed.
-
-“And if they thought that you were Renata, they wouldn’t look for
-her—and once we were clear away——”
-
-“My _dear_ Mr. Todhunter!” said Jane.
-
-“I could take you up the fire-escape,” said Mr. Todhunter, in low,
-thrilling accents. “It would be quite easy. They would never know that
-Renata was not there. You do see what I mean, don’t you?”
-
-“Oh yes,” said Jane in rather an odd voice. “You’ve made it beautifully
-clear. Renata is in a position of deadly peril—I think that’s what you
-called it—and the simple way out is for Renata to elope with you to
-South America, and for me to be in the position of deadly peril instead.
-It’s a beautiful plan.”
-
-“Then you’ll do it?” exclaimed the oblivious Mr. Todhunter.
-
-Jane looked away. Immediately in front of her was a strip of gravelled
-path. Beyond that there was green grass, and a bed of pale blue
-hyacinths, and budding daffodils. Two-and-elevenpence, and then the
-workhouse—the ascent of a fire-escape in the April darkness, and at the
-top of the fire-escape a position of deadly peril.
-
-“Of course,” said Jane, speaking to herself in her own mind. “I might
-try to be a housemaid, but one has to have a character, and I don’t
-believe Cousin Louisa would give me one.”
-
-She turned back to the chafing Mr. Todhunter.
-
-“Let’s talk,” she said briefly.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
-Jane took down the telephone directory, opened it, and began to run her
-finger along the column of “M’s.” As she did so, she wondered why the
-light in public call offices is so arranged as to strike the top of the
-occupant’s head, and never by any chance to illumine the directory.
-
-“Marbot”—“Marbottle”—“March, The Rev. Aloysius”—“March, George William
-Adolphus”—“March, Mrs. de Luttrelle.”
-
-Jane made a mark opposite the number.
-
-When Rosa Mortimer married Henry Luttrell March, she thought, and often
-said, how much nicer the Luttrell would look if it were written de
-Luttrelle. If her husband had died six months earlier than he actually
-did, the name in this improved form would most certainly have been
-inflicted upon an infant Henry. As it was, the child was baptized and
-registered as Henry Luttrell, and ten years later took up the struggle
-over the name where his father had left it. Eventually, a compromise was
-effected, Mrs. March flaunting her de Luttrelle, and Henry tending to
-suppress his Luttrell under an initial. His mother never ceased to
-bemoan his stubbornness.
-
-“Any one would think that Henry was not proud of his family, and he may
-say what he likes, but there were de Luttrelles for hundreds of years
-before any one ever heard of a Luttrell. And Luttrell Marches is bound
-to come to him, or practically bound to, because, whatever Henry may
-say, I am quite sure that Tony will never turn up again.”
-
-The very sound of the aggrieved voice was in Jane’s ears as she unhung
-the receiver and gave the number. She supposed that Henry still lived
-with his mother, and that Mrs. March would still keep an indignant
-bridge table waiting whilst she discoursed upon Henry—his faults, his
-foibles, his ailments, and his prospects of inheriting Luttrell Marches.
-
-At that moment Henry, appropriately enough, was gazing at a photograph
-of Jane. It must not be imagined that this was a habit of his. Three
-years ago was three years ago, and Jane had receded into the distance
-with a great many other pleasant things. But to-night he had been
-looking through some old snapshots, and all of a sudden there was that
-three-years-old Cornish holiday, and Jane. Henry sat frowning at the
-photograph.
-
-Jane—why was one fond of Jane? He wondered where she was. It was only
-last week that some one had mentioned old Carruthers, and had seemed
-surprised that Henry did not know how long he had been dead.
-
-The telephone bell rang, and Henry jumped up with relief.
-
-“Hullo!” said a voice—and “Hullo!” said Henry.
-
-“Is that Captain March?”
-
-“Speaking,” said Henry.
-
-“It’s Jane Smith,” said the voice, and Henry very nearly dropped the
-receiver. There was a pause, and then Jane said:
-
-“I want to come and see you on business. Can you spare the time?”
-
-“Er—my mother’s out,” said Henry, and he heard her say, “Thank
-goodness,” with much sincerity. The next moment she was apologising.
-
-“Oh, I say, Henry, that sounded awfully rude, but I really do want to
-see you about something very important. No, you can’t come and see me.
-I’m one of the great unemployed, and I’m not living anywhere at present.
-No, I won’t meet you at a restaurant either. Just tell me your nearest
-Tube Station, and I’ll come along. All right then; I won’t be more than
-ten minutes.”
-
-Henry turned away, feeling a little dazed. Being a methodical young man,
-he proceeded to put away the photographs with which the table was
-littered. A little snapshot of Jane he kept to the last, and ended by
-not putting it away at all. After he had looked at it for some time, he
-put it on the mantelpiece behind the clock. The hands pointed to nine
-o’clock precisely. Then he looked at himself in the glass that was over
-the mantel, and straightened his tie.
-
-Henry’s mother naturally considered him the most beautiful of created
-beings. Without going quite as far as this, Henry certainly approved of
-his own looks. Having approved of himself, he proceeded to move the
-clock back half an inch, and to alter the position of the twisted
-candlesticks on either side of it. Then he poked the fire. Then he began
-to walk up and down the room. And then the bell rang.
-
-Henry went out into the hall and opened the door of the flat, and there
-on the threshold stood Jane in a shabby blue serge coat and skirt, with
-an old black felt hat. Not pretty, not smart—just Jane. She walked in
-and gave him her hand.
-
-“Hullo, Henry!” she said. Then she laughed. “Or, do I call you Captain
-March?”
-
-“You call me Henry,” said Henry, and he shut the door.
-
-“I expect you’d like to come into the drawing-room”—this came hurriedly
-after a moment’s pause. He moved across the hall, switched on the light,
-and stood aside for her to pass. Jane looked in and saw more pink
-cushions and pink lamp-shades than she would have believed it possible
-to get into one small room. There were also a great many pink roses, and
-the air was heavy with scent.
-
-“I’m sure that’s not where you see people on business,” said Jane, and
-Henry led the way into the dining-room.
-
-“This is my room,” he said, and Jane sat down on a straight, high-backed
-chair and leaned her elbows on the table.
-
-“Now, Henry,” she said, “I’ve come here to tell you a story, and I want
-you to sit down and listen to it; and please forget that you are you,
-and that I am I. Just listen.”
-
-Henry sat down obediently. It was so good to see Jane again that, if she
-liked to sit there and talk till midnight, he had no objection.
-
-“Now attend,” said Jane, and she began her story.
-
-“Once upon a time there were twin sisters, and they were called Renata
-and Jane Carruthers. They had a cousin James—you remember him—my darling
-Jimmy? Jimmy wanted to marry Renata, but she refused him and married
-John Smith, my father, and when I was five years old she and my father
-both died, and Jimmy adopted me. Now we come to the other twin. Her name
-was Jane, and she ran away to America with a sort of anarchist Irishman
-named Molloy. She died young, and she left one daughter, whom she called
-Renata Jane. I, by the bye, am Jane Renata. The twin sisters were so
-much alike that no one ever knew them apart. Jimmy had photographs of
-them, and even he could never tell me which was my mother and which was
-my Aunt Jane. Now, Henry, listen to this. My Cousin Renata is in London,
-and it seems that she and I are just as much alike as our mothers were.
-In fact, it’s because Renata’s young man took me for Renata this
-afternoon that I am here, asking your advice, at the present moment.”
-
-Henry smiled a somewhat puzzled smile. “Have you asked my advice?” he
-said; but Jane did not smile. Instead, she leaned forward a little.
-
-“Are you still at Scotland Yard, Henry?”
-
-He nodded.
-
-“Criminal Investigation Department?”
-
-He nodded again.
-
-“Then listen. Renata is in what her young man calls ‘a position of
-deadly peril.’ In more ordinary language, she’s in a nasty hole. Do you
-know anything about Cornelius Molloy? That’s the Anarchist Uncle,
-Renata’s father, you know.”
-
-“There aren’t any anarchists nowadays,” said Henry meditatively.
-
-“I was brought up on anarchists, and I don’t see that it matters what
-you call them,” said Jane. “‘A’ for Anarchist, ‘B’ for Bolshevik, and so
-on. The point is, do you know anything about Molloy?”
-
-“I’ve heard of him,” Henry admitted.
-
-“Nothing good?”
-
-“We don’t hear much that’s good about people—officially, you know.”
-
-“Well, Arnold Todhunter says that Renata is supposed to have overheard
-something—something that her father’s associates think so important that
-they’re keeping her under lock and key, and seriously contemplating
-putting her out of the way altogether.”
-
-“Did she overhear anything?” asked Henry, just as Jane had done.
-
-“No one knows except Renata, and she won’t tell. Molloy goes back to the
-States to-morrow. They won’t let him take Renata with him, and Arnold
-Todhunter wants to marry her and carry her off to Bolivia, where he’s
-got an engineering job.”
-
-“That appears to be a good scheme,” said Henry.
-
-“Yes, but you see they’ll never let her go so long as they are not sure
-how much she knows. Arnold says she was walking in her sleep, and
-blundered in on about twenty-five of them, all talking the most deadly
-secrets. And they don’t know when she woke or what she heard.
-And”—Jane’s eyes began to dance a little—“Arnold has a perfectly
-splendid idea. He takes Renata to Bolivia, and I take Renata’s place.
-Nobody knows she has gone, so nobody looks for her.”
-
-“What nonsense,” said Henry; then—“What’s this Todhunter like?”
-
-“A mug,” said Jane briefly. She paused, and then went on in a different
-voice:
-
-“Henry, who is at Luttrell Marches now? Did your Cousin Tony ever turn
-up?”
-
-Henry stared at her.
-
-“Why do you ask that?”
-
-“Because,” said Jane, with perfect simplicity, “Renata is to be sent
-down to Luttrell Marches to-morrow, and somebody there—somebody,
-Henry—will decide whether she is to be eliminated or not.”
-
-Henry sat perfectly silent. He stared at Jane, and she stared at him. It
-seemed as if the silence in the room were growing heavier and heavier,
-like water that gathers behind some unseen dam. All of a sudden Henry
-sprang to his feet.
-
-“Is this a hoax?” he asked, in tones of such anger that Jane hardly
-recognised them.
-
-Jane got up too. The hand that she rested upon the table was not quite
-steady.
-
-“Henry, how dare you?” and her voice shook a little too.
-
-Henry swung round.
-
-“No, no—I beg your pardon, Jane, for the Lord’s sake don’t look at me
-like that. It’s, it’s—well, it’s pretty staggering to have you come here
-and say....” He paused. “What was it you wanted to know?”
-
-“I asked you who is living at Luttrell Marches.”
-
-Henry was silent. He walked to the end of the room and back. Jane’s eyes
-followed him. Where had this sudden wave of emotion come from? It seemed
-to be eddying about them, filling the confined space. Jane made herself
-look away from Henry, forced herself to notice the room, the furniture,
-the pictures—anything that was commonplace and ordinary. This was
-decidedly Henry’s room and not his mother’s, from the worn leather
-chairs and plain oak table to the neutral coloured walls with their
-half-dozen Meissonier engravings. Not a flower, not a trifle of any
-sort, and one wall all books from ceiling to floor. Exactly opposite to
-Jane there was a fine print of “The Generals in the Snow.” The lowering,
-thunderous sky, heavy with snow and black with the omens of Napoleon’s
-fall, dominated the picture, the room. Jane looked at it, and looked
-away with a shiver, and as she did so, Henry was speaking:
-
-“Jane, I don’t want to answer that question for a minute or two. I want
-to think. I want a little time to turn things over in my mind. Look
-here, come round to the fire and sit down comfortably. Let’s talk about
-something else for a bit. I want all your news, for one thing. Tell me
-what you’ve been doing with yourself.”
-
-Jane came slowly to the fireside. After all, it was pleasant just to put
-everything on one side, and be comfortable. Henry’s chair was very
-comfortable, and the day seemed to have lasted for weeks, and weeks, and
-weeks. She put out her hands to the fire, and then, because she noticed
-that they were still trembling a little, she folded them in her lap.
-Henry leaned against the mantelpiece and looked down at her.
-
-“Where have you been?” he asked.
-
-“Well, that summer at Upwater—you know we were lodging with the woman
-who had the post office—Jimmy and I stayed on after all the other
-visitors were gone. I expect it was rather irregular, but I used to help
-her. You see her son didn’t get back until eighteen months after the
-armistice, and she wasn’t really up to the work. In the end, you may say
-I ran that post office. I did it very well, too. It was something to do,
-especially after Jimmy died.”
-
-“Yes, I heard. I wondered where you were.”
-
-“I stayed on until the son came home, and then I couldn’t. He was awful,
-and she thought him quite perfect, poor old soul. I came to London and
-got a job in an office, and a month ago I lost it. The firm was cutting
-down expenses, like everybody else. And then—well, I looked for another
-job, and couldn’t find one, and this morning my landlady locked the door
-in my face and kept my box. And that, Henry, is why I am thinking
-seriously of changing places with my Cousin Renata, who, at least, has a
-roof over her head and enough to eat.”
-
-“Jane,” said Henry furiously, “you don’t mean to say—so that’s why
-you’re looking such a white rag!”
-
-Jane was horrified to find that her eyes had filled with tears. She
-laughed, but the laugh was not a very convincing one.
-
-“I did have a cup of coffee and two penny buns,” she began; and then
-Henry was fetching sandwiches from the sideboard and pressing a cup of
-hot chocolate into her not unwilling hands.
-
-“They leave this awful stuff over a spirit lamp for my mother, and she
-always has sandwiches when she comes in. It’s better than nothing,” he
-added in tones of wrath.
-
-“It’s not awful,” protested Jane; but Henry was not mollified.
-
-“I don’t understand,” he said. “Why are you so hard up? Didn’t Mr.
-Carruthers provide for you?”
-
-Jane’s colour rose.
-
-“He hadn’t much, and what he had was an annuity. You know what Jimmy
-was, and how he forgot things. I am really quite sure that he had
-forgotten about its being an annuity, and that he thought that I should
-be quite comfortable.”
-
-Henry swallowed his opinion of Mr. Carruthers.
-
-“Was he your only relation?”
-
-“Well,” said Jane, who was beginning to feel better, “you can’t really
-count Cousin Louisa; she was only Jimmy’s half-sister, and that makes
-her a sort of third half-cousin of my mother’s. Besides, she always
-simply loathed me.”
-
-“And you’ve no other relations at all?”
-
-“Only the Anarchist Uncle,” said Jane brightly. She gave him her cup and
-plate. “Your mother has simply lovely sandwiches, Henry. Thank you ever
-so much for them, but what will she do when she comes home and finds I
-have eaten them all?”
-
-“I don’t know, I’m sure.” Henry’s tone was very short. “Look here, Jane,
-you must let—er, er, I mean, won’t you let....” He stuck, and Jane
-looked at him very kindly.
-
-“Nothing doing, Henry,” she said, “but it’s frightfully nice of you, all
-the same.”
-
-There was a silence. When Jane thought it had lasted long enough, she
-said:
-
-“So, you see, it all comes back again to Renata. Have you done your
-thinking, Henry?”
-
-“Yes,” said Henry. He drew a chair to the table and sat down half turned
-to the fire—half turned to Jane. Sometimes he looked at her, but oftener
-his gaze dwelt intently on the rise and fall of the flames.
-
-“What makes you think that your cousin is to be taken to Luttrell
-Marches? Did these people tell her so?”
-
-“No,” said Jane—“of course not. As far as I can make out from Arnold
-Todhunter, Renata is locked in her room, but there’s another key and she
-can get in and out. She can move about inside the flat, but she can’t
-get out of it. Well, one night she crept out and listened, though you
-would have thought she had had enough of listening, and she heard them
-say that, as soon as her father was out of the way, they would send her
-to Luttrell Marches and let ‘Number One’ decide whether she was to be
-‘eliminated.’ Since then she’s been nearly off her head with terror,
-poor kid. Now, Henry, it’s your turn. What about Luttrell Marches?”
-
-Henry’s face seemed to have grown rigid. “It’s impossible,” he said in a
-low voice.
-
-The clock above them struck ten, and he waited till the last stroke had
-died away.
-
-“I don’t know quite what to say to you, but whatever I say is
-confidential. You’ve heard my mother talk of the Luttrells, and you may
-or may not know that my uncle died a year ago. You have also probably
-heard that his son, my Cousin Anthony, disappeared into the blue in
-1915.”
-
-“Then Luttrell Marches belongs to you?” For the life of her, Jane could
-not keep a little consternation out of her voice.
-
-“No. If Tony had been missing for seven years, I could apply for leave
-to presume his death, but there’s another year to run. My mother—every
-one—supposes that I am only waiting until the time is up. As a matter of
-fact—Jane, I’m telling you what I haven’t told my mother—Anthony
-Luttrell is alive.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“I can’t tell you. And you must please forget what I have told
-you—unless——”
-
-“Unless?”
-
-“Unless you have to remember it,” said Henry in an odd voice. “For the
-rest, Luttrell Marches was let during my uncle’s lifetime to Sir William
-Carr-Magnus. You know who I mean?”
-
-“_The_ Sir William Carr-Magnus?” said Jane, and Henry nodded.
-
-Jane felt absolutely dazed. Sir William Carr-Magnus, the great chemist,
-great philanthropist, and Government expert!
-
-“He is engaged,” said Henry, “on a series of most important
-investigations and experiments which he is conducting on behalf of the
-Government. The extreme seclusion of Luttrell Marches, and the lonely
-country all round are, of course, exactly what is required under the
-circumstances.”
-
-Quite suddenly Jane began to laugh.
-
-“It’s all mad,” she said, “but I’ve quite made up my mind. Renata shall
-elope, and I will go to Luttrell Marches. It will be better than the
-workhouse anyhow. You know, Henry, seriously, I have a lot of
-qualifications for being a sleuth. Jimmy taught me simply heaps of
-languages, I’ve got eyes like gimlets, and I can do lip-reading.”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Yes, I can. Jimmy had a perfectly deaf housekeeper, and it worried him
-to hear us shouting at each other, so I had her taught, and learned
-myself for fun.”
-
-Henry crossed to the bookcase and came back with a photograph album in
-his hand. Taking a loose card from between the pages, he put it down in
-front of Jane, saying:
-
-“There you may as well make your host’s acquaintance.”
-
-Jane looked long at the face which was sufficiently well known to the
-public. The massive head, the great brow with eyes set very deep beneath
-shaggy tufts of hair, the rather hard mouth—all these were already
-familiar to her, and yet she looked long. After a few moments’
-hesitation, Henry put a second photograph upon the top of the first, and
-this time Jane caught her breath. It was the picture of a woman in
-evening dress. The neck and shoulders were like those of a statue,
-beautiful and, as it were, rigid. But it was the beauty of the face that
-took Jane’s breath away—that and a certain look in the eyes. The word
-hungry came into her mind and stayed there. A woman with proud lips and
-hungry eyes, and the most beautiful face in the world.
-
-“Who is it?” she asked.
-
-“Raymond Carr-Magnus. She is Lady Heritage, and a widow now—Sir
-William’s only child. He gave her a boy’s name and a boy’s
-education—brought her up to take his place, and found himself with a
-lovely woman on his hands. This was done from Amory’s portrait of her in
-1915—the year of her marriage. She was at one time engaged to my Cousin
-Anthony. If you do go to Luttrell Marches, you will see her, for she
-makes her home with Sir William.”
-
-Henry’s voice was perfectly expressionless. The short sentences followed
-one another with a little pause after each. Jane looked sideways, and
-said very quick and low:
-
-“Were you very fond of her, Henry?”
-
-And when she had said it, her heart beat and her hands gripped one
-another.
-
-Henry took the photograph from her lap.
-
-“I said she was engaged to Tony.”
-
-“Yes, Henry, but were you fond of her?”
-
-“Confound you, Jane. Yes, I was.”
-
-“Well, I don’t wonder.”
-
-Jane rose to her feet.
-
-“I must be going,” she said. “I have an assignation with Arnold
-Todhunter, who is going to take me up a fire-escape and substitute me
-for Renata.”
-
-Henry took out a pocket-book.
-
-“Will you give me Molloy’s address, please?” And when she had given it:
-“You know, my good girl, there’s nothing on earth to prevent my having
-that flat raided and your cousin’s deposition taken.”
-
-“No, of course not,” said Jane—“only then nobody will go down to
-Luttrell Marches and find out what’s going on there.”
-
-She looked straight at Henry as she spoke.
-
-“I’m going, whatever you say, and whatever you do, and I only came to
-you because——”
-
-“Because——”
-
-“Well, it seemed so sort of lonesome going off into situations of deadly
-peril with no one taking the very slightest interest.”
-
-Jane’s voice shook absurdly on the last word. And in an instant Henry
-had his arm round her and was saying, “Jane—Jane—you shan’t go, you
-shan’t.”
-
-Jane stepped back. Her eyes blazed. “And why?” she said.
-
-She tried to say it icily, but she could not steady her voice. Henry’s
-arm felt solid and comfortable.
-
-“Because I’m damned if I’ll let you,” said Henry very loud, and upon
-that the door opened and there entered Mrs. de Luttrelle March, larger,
-pinker, and more horrified than Jane had ever seen her. She, for her
-part, beheld Henry, his arms about a shabby girl, and her horror reached
-its climax when she recognised the girl as “that dreadfully designing
-Jane Smith.”
-
-“Henry,” she gasped—“oh, Henry!”
-
-Jane released herself with a jerk, and Mrs. de Luttrelle March sat down
-in the nearest chair and burst into a flood of tears. Her purple satin
-opera cloak fell away, disclosing a peach-coloured garment that clung to
-her plump contours and seemed calculated rather for purposes of
-revelation than concealment. Large tears rolled down her powdered
-cheeks, and she sought in vain for a handkerchief.
-
-“Henry—I didn’t think it of you—at least not here, not under my very
-roof. And if you were going to break my heart like your father, it would
-have been kinder to do it ten years ago, because then I should have
-known what to expect, and anyhow, I should probably have been dead by
-now.”
-
-She sniffed and made a desperate gesture.
-
-“Oh, Henry, I can’t find it! Haven’t you got one, or don’t you care
-whether my heart’s broken? And I haven’t even got a handkerchief to cry
-with.”
-
-Henry produced a handkerchief and gave it to her without attempting to
-speak. Years of experience had taught him that to stay his mother’s
-first flood of words was an impossibility.
-
-Jane felt rather sick. Mrs. March was so very large and pink, and the
-whole affair so very undignified, that her one overmastering desire was
-to get away. She heard Henry’s “This is Miss Smith, Mother. She came to
-see me on business”; and then Mrs. March’s wail, “Your father always
-called it business too, and I didn’t think—no, I didn’t think you’d
-bring a girl in here when my back was turned.”
-
-Jane stood up very straight, but Henry had taken her hand again.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” he said, in a very low voice. “She—she had a rotten
-time when she was young”; then, in a tone that cut through Mrs. March’s
-sobs as an east wind cuts the rain, he said:
-
-“My dear mother, you are making some extra-ordinary mistake. The last
-time that I saw Miss Smith was three years ago. I then asked her to
-marry me, and she refused. I would go on asking her every day from now
-to kingdom come if I thought that it was the slightest good. As it
-isn’t, I am only anxious to be of use to her in any possible way. She
-came here to-night to ask my advice on an official matter.”
-
-Mrs. March fixed her very large blue eyes upon her son. They were
-swimming with tears, but behind the tears there was something which
-suddenly went to Jane’s heart—something bewildered and hurt, and rather
-ungrown-up.
-
-“You always were a good boy, Henry,” said Mrs. March, and Henry’s
-instant rigid embarrassment had the effect of cheering Jane. She came
-forward and took the limp white hand that still clutched a borrowed
-handkerchief.
-
-“I’m sure he’ll always be a good son to you, and I wouldn’t take him
-away from you for the world. He’s just a very kind friend. Good-night,
-Mrs. March.”
-
-She went out without looking back, but Henry followed her into the hall.
-
-“You’re not really going to plunge into this foolish affair?” he said as
-they stood for a moment by the door. It was Jane who opened it.
-
-“Yes, I am, Henry. You can’t stop me, and you know it.”
-
-Jane’s eyes looked straight into his, and Henry did know.
-
-“Very well, then. Read the agony column in _The Times_. If I want you to
-have a message, it will be there, signed with the day of the week on
-which it appears. You understand? If the message is in _The Times_ of
-Wednesday, it will be signed, ‘Wednesday.’ And if there are directions
-in the message, you will obey them implicitly.”
-
-“How _thrilling_,” said Jane.
-
-“Is it?”
-
-Henry looked very tired.
-
-“I don’t know if I’ve done right, but I can’t tell you any more just
-now. By the way, Molloy’s flat will be watched, and I shall know whether
-you go to Luttrell Marches or not. Good-bye, Jane.”
-
-“Good-bye, Henry.”
-
-Henry watched the lift disappear.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
-“This,” said Arnold Todhunter, “is the fire-escape.” His tone was that
-of one who says, “This is our Rembrandt.” Proud proprietorship pervaded
-his entire atmosphere.
-
-“Ssh!” said Jane.
-
-They stood together in a small back-yard. It seemed to be quite full of
-things like barrows, paving-stones, old tin cans, and broken crockery.
-Jane had already tripped over a meat tin and collided with two chicken
-coops and a dog kennel. She reflected that this was just the sort of
-back-yard Arnold would find.
-
-Everything was very dark. The blackest shadow of all marked the wall
-that they were to climb. Here and there a lighted window showed, and
-Jane could see that these windows had rounded parapets jutting out on a
-level with the sill.
-
-Arnold, meanwhile, was tugging at something which seemed to be a short
-plank.
-
-“What on earth?” she whispered.
-
-“We shall need it. I’d better go first.”
-
-And forthwith he began to climb, clutching the plank with one hand and
-the iron ladder with the other.
-
-Jane let him get a good start, and followed.
-
-The ladder was quite easy to climb; it was only when one thought of how
-immensely far away the skyline had looked, that it seemed as if it would
-be very uncomfortable to look down instead of up, and to see that horrid
-little yard equally far below.
-
-Jane did look down once, and everything was black and blurred and
-shadowy. It was odd to be clinging to the side of a house, with the dark
-all round one, and the steady roar of the London traffic dulled almost
-to nothingness.
-
-The night was very still, and a little cold. Somewhere below amongst the
-tin cans a cat said, “Grrrwoosh,” not loud, but on a softly inquiring
-note. The inquiry was instantly answered by a long, piercing wail which
-travelled rapidly over four octaves, and then dwelt with soulful
-intensity upon an agonising top note.
-
-With a muttered exclamation, Arnold Todhunter dropped his plank. It
-grazed Jane’s shoulder, and fell among the cats and crockery with a most
-appalling clatter.
-
-Jane shut her eyes, gripped the ladder desperately, and wondered whether
-she would fall first and be arrested afterwards, or the other way about.
-Nothing happened. Apparently the neighbourhood was inured to the
-bombardment of cats.
-
-After a moment Jane became aware of Arnold’s boots in close proximity to
-her head. A wave of fury swept away her giddiness, and she began to
-descend with a rapidity which surprised herself.
-
-Once more they stood in the yard.
-
-Once more Arnold groped for his plank.
-
-“I’m going up first,” said Jane, in a low tone of rage. “I won’t be
-guillotined on a public fire-escape. Which floor is it?”
-
-“The top,” said Arnold sulkily, and without more ado Jane went up the
-ladder.
-
-It was exactly like a rather horrid dream. The ladder was very cold and
-very gritty, and you climbed, and climbed, and went on climbing without
-arriving anywhere.
-
-Pictures of the Eiffel Tower and New York skyscrapers flitted through
-Jane’s mind. She also remembered interesting paragraphs about how many
-million pennies placed on end would reach to the moon. And at long, long
-last the escape ended at a window-sill with a parapet-enclosed space
-beneath it.
-
-Jane sat down on the window-sill and shut her eyes tight. She had a
-horrid feeling that the building was rocking a little. After a moment
-Arnold crawled over the edge of the coping, dragging his plank. He was
-panting.
-
-“This,” he said, with his mouth close to Jane’s ear—“this window only
-leads to the landing where the lift shaft ends. We’ve got to get across
-to the next one, which is inside Molloy’s flat. That’s what the plank is
-for.”
-
-“You’re blowing down my neck,” said Jane.
-
-Arnold Todhunter felt that he had never met a girl whom he disliked so
-much. Extraordinary that she should look so like Renata and be so
-different.
-
-He knelt just inside the parapet, and pushed the board slowly out into
-the dark until it rested on the parapet of the next window.
-
-“Will you go first, or shall I?” he whispered.
-
-“I will.”
-
-Jane felt sure that, if she had to watch Arnold balancing on that plank
-miles above the ground, she would never be able to cross it herself.
-
-The reflection that it was Renata, and not she, who would have to make
-the descent fortified her considerably. Even so, she never quite knew
-how she crossed to the other window. It was an affair of clenched teeth
-and a mind that shut out resolutely everything except the next groping
-clutch of the hand—the next carefully taken step.
-
-She sank against the window-sill and heard Arnold follow her. Just at
-the end he slipped; he seemed to change his feet, and then with a heavy
-thud pitched down on the top of Jane.
-
-She thought he said “Damn!” and she was quite sure that she said
-“Idiot!”
-
-There was an awful moment while they listened for the fall of the plank,
-but it held to the coping by a bare half-inch.
-
-“Thank goodness I’m not Renata!” said Jane, with heartfelt sincerity.
-And—
-
-“Thank goodness, you’re not!” returned Mr. Todhunter, with equal
-fervour, and at that moment the window opened.
-
-There was a little sobbing gasp, and a girl was clinging to Arnold
-Todhunter and whispering:
-
-“Darling—darling, I thought you’d never come.”
-
-Arnold crawled through the open window, and from the pitch-black hall
-there came the sounds of demonstrative affection.
-
-“Good gracious me, there’s no accounting for tastes!” said Jane, under
-her breath. And she too climbed down into the darkness.
-
-Arnold appeared to be trying to explain Jane to Renata, whilst Renata
-alternated between sobs and kisses.
-
-Jane lost her temper, suddenly and completely.
-
-“For goodness’ sake, you two, come where there’s a light, and where we
-can talk sense. Every minute you waste is just asking for trouble.
-What’s that room with the light?”
-
-It is difficult to be impressive in a low whisper, but Renata did stop
-kissing Arnold.
-
-“My bedroom,” she said—“I’m supposed to be locked in.”
-
-Jane groped in the dark and got Renata by the arm.
-
-“Come along in there and talk to me. We’ve got to talk. Arnold can wait
-outside the window. I don’t want him in the least. You’re going to spend
-the rest of your life with him in Bolivia, so you needn’t worry. I
-simply won’t have him whilst we are talking.”
-
-Arnold loathed Jane a little more, but Renata allowed herself to be
-detached from him with a sob.
-
-Inside the lighted bedroom the two girls looked at one another in an
-amazed silence.
-
-In height and contour, feature and colouring, the likeness was without a
-flaw.
-
-Facing them was a small wardrobe of painted wood. A narrow panel of
-looking-glass formed the door. The two figures were reflected in it, and
-Jane, tossing her hat on to the bed, studied them there with a long,
-careful scrutiny.
-
-The same brown hair, growing in the same odd peak upon the forehead, the
-same arch to the brow, the same greenish-hazel eyes. Renata’s face was
-tear-stained, her eyelids red and swollen—“but that’s exactly how I look
-when I cry,” said Jane. She set her hand by Renata’s hand, her foot by
-Renata’s foot. The same to a shade.
-
-The other girl watched her with bewildered eyes.
-
-“Speak—say something,” said Jane.
-
-“What shall I say?”
-
-“Anything—the multiplication table, the days of the week—I want to hear
-your voice.”
-
-“Oh, Jane, what an odd girl you are!” said Renata—“and don’t you think
-Arnold had better come in? It must be awfully cold out there.”
-
-“Presently,” said Jane. “It’s very hard to tell, but I believe that our
-voices are as much alike as the rest of us.”
-
-She opened her bag, and took out The List and a pencil.
-
-“Now, write something—I don’t care what.”
-
-Renata wrote her own name, and then, after a pause, “It is a fine day.”
-
-“Quite like,” said Jane, “but nearly all girls do write the same hand
-now. I can manage that. Now, tell me, where were you at school?”
-
-“Miss Bazing’s, Ilfracombe.”
-
-“When did you leave?”
-
-“Two months ago.”
-
-“Have you been in America?”
-
-“Not since I was five.”
-
-“Anywhere else out of England?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“What languages do you know?”
-
-“French—I’m not good at it.”
-
-“Well, that’s that. Now, Arnold tells me you heard them say you were to
-go to Luttrell Marches?”
-
-Renata looked terrified.
-
-“Yes, yes, I did.”
-
-“You’re not supposed to know? They haven’t told you officially?”
-
-“No—no, they haven’t told me anything.”
-
-“Your father goes away to-morrow. Have they told you that?”
-
-“I can’t remember,” said Renata, bursting into tears. “Oh, Jane, you
-don’t know what it’s like!—to be locked in here—to have them come and
-ask questions until I don’t know what I’m saying—and to know, to know
-all the time that if I make one slip I’m lost.”
-
-“Yes, yes, but it’s going to be all right,” said Jane.
-
-“I can’t sleep,” sobbed Renata, “and I can’t eat.” She held up her wrist
-and looked at it with interest. “I’ve got ever so much thinner.”
-
-Jane could have slapped her. She reflected with thankfulness that
-Bolivia was a good long way off.
-
-“Now, look here,” she said, “you talk about ‘they’—who are ‘they’?”
-
-“There’s a man in a fur coat,” faltered Renata—“that is to say, he
-generally has on a fur coat; he always seems to be cold. He’s the worst;
-I don’t know his name, but they call him Number Two. He’s English. Then
-there’s Number Four. He’s a foreigner of some sort, and he’s
-dreadful—dreadful. I think—I think”—her voice dropped to a whisper—“my
-father is Number Three.” Then almost inaudibly, “Number One is at
-Luttrell Marches. It’s Number One who will decide about me—about me. Oh,
-Jane, I’m so dreadfully frightened!”
-
-Renata’s eyes, wide and terrified, stared past Jane into vacancy.
-
-“You needn’t be in the least frightened; you’re going to Bolivia,” said
-Jane briskly.
-
-“I must tell some one,” said Renata, still in that whispering
-voice—still staring. “I didn’t tell them, I wouldn’t tell them, but I
-must tell some one. Jane, I must tell you what I heard.”
-
-Quick as lightning Jane put her hand over the other girl’s mouth.
-
-“Wait!” she said, and in the pause that followed two things stood out in
-her mind clear and sharp. If Renata told her secret, Jane’s danger would
-be doubled. If Renata did not tell it, the crime these men were planning
-might ripen undisturbed. Jane had a high courage, but she hesitated.
-
-Her hand dropped slowly to her side. She saw Renata’s mouth open
-protestingly, and there came on her a wild impulse to stave things off,
-to have time, just a little time before she let that secret in.
-
-“We’ve got to change clothes,” she said. “Quick, give me that skirt and
-take mine. Yes, put on the coat, and I’ll give you my shoes, too. My
-hat’s on the bed; you’d better put it on.”
-
-Renata obeyed. A resentful feeling of being hustled, ordered about,
-treated like a child, was upon her; but Jane moved and spoke so quickly,
-and seemed so sure of herself, that there seemed no opening for protest.
-She thought Jane’s blue serge shabby and old fashioned—not nearly as
-nice as her own—and Jane’s shoes were terribly worn and needed mending.
-
-“Now, listen,” said Jane.
-
-“If Arnold likes to go to my rooms and pay up two weeks’ rent, he can
-get my box and all my other clothes for you. There’s not very much, but
-it’ll be better than nothing. I’ll write a line for him to take, and put
-the address on it. And will you please remember now and from henceforth
-that you are Jane Renata Smith, and not Renata Jane Molloy?”
-
-Jane was scribbling a couple of lines as she spoke, and as she turned
-and gave the paper into Renata’s hand, she knew that she must decide
-now. The moment of grace was up, and whether she bade Renata speak or be
-silent, there could be no drawing back.
-
-“What were you going to tell me?” she said.
-
-Renata stood silent for a long minute. She was twisting and turning the
-slip of paper which Jane had given her. She looked down at her twisting
-fingers; her breath began to come more quickly. Then with great
-suddenness she pushed the note into her pocket, and caught at Jane with
-both hands.
-
-“Yes, I must tell you—I must. It will be coming nearer all the time, and
-I must tell some one, or I shall go mad.”
-
-“Tell me, then,” said Jane. “You were walking in your sleep, and you
-opened the door and heard—what did you hear?”
-
-Jane’s eyes were bright and steady, her face set. She had taken her
-decision, and her courage rose to meet an unknown shock.
-
-“I was walking in my sleep,” repeated Renata, in a low, faltering voice,
-“and I opened the door, and I heard——”
-
-“What did you hear?”
-
-“There was a screen in front of me, and just beyond the screen a man
-talking. I heard—oh, Jane, I heard every single word he said! I can’t
-forget one of them—if I could, if I only could!”
-
-“What did you hear?” said Jane firmly.
-
-Renata’s grip became desperate. She leant forward until her lips touched
-Jane’s ear. In a voice that was only a breath, she gave word for word,
-sentence by sentence, the speech in which Number Four had proclaimed the
-death sentence of the civilised world. It was just a bald transcript
-like the whisper of a phonograph record, as if the words and sentences
-had been stamped on an inanimate plate by some recording machinery, to
-be released again with utter regularity and correctness.
-
-Every vestige of colour left Jane’s face as she listened. Only her eyes
-remained bright and steady. Something seemed to knock at her heart.
-Renata’s last mechanical repetition died away, and with a sob of relief
-she flung her arms round Jane.
-
-“Oh, Jane, I do hope they won’t kill you! Oh, I do hope they won’t!”
-
-“So do I,” said Jane.
-
-She detached herself from Renata, and as she did so, both girls heard
-the same thing—from beyond the two closed doors the groan and grind of
-the lift machinery in motion.
-
-“They’ve come back,” said Renata, in a whisper of terror.
-
-Jane’s hand was on the electric-light switch before the words had left
-Renata’s lips.
-
-As darkness sprang upon the room she had the door open. Her grip was on
-Renata’s wrist, her arm about Renata’s waist, and they were in the hall.
-It seemed pitch black at first, with a gloom that pressed upon their
-eyes and confused the sense of direction.
-
-The lift rose with a steady rumble.
-
-Then, as Jane stared before her, the oblong of the window sprang into
-view. She took a step forward and felt Renata’s head against her
-shoulder.
-
-“I’m going to faint,” came in a gasp.
-
-“Then you’ll never see Arnold again. Do you want to be caught like
-this?”
-
-“Jane, I can’t.”
-
-Jane dragged her on.
-
-“Renata, you rabbit!—if they don’t kill you, I will. Faint in Bolivia as
-much as you like, but I forbid you to do it here.”
-
-“Oh, Jane!”
-
-Jane’s arm felt the weight of a limp, sagging figure, but they had
-reached the window. From the sill Arnold bent, listening anxiously.
-
-“Quick!” gasped Jane.
-
-And, as his arm relieved the strain, she pinched Renata with all her
-might. There was a sob—a gasp—Arnold lifted, Jane pushed, and somehow
-the thing was done. Arnold and Renata were outside, crouched down
-between the parapet and the window, whilst Jane leaned panting against
-the jamb.
-
-As the lift stopped with a jerk, her rigid fingers drew the window down
-and fastened it. Now, horribly loud, the clang of the iron gate. Steps
-outside—voices—the grate of a key in the lock.
-
-Jane knew now what Renata had felt. Easy, so easy to yield to this
-paralysis of terror, and to stand rooted there until they came! With all
-her might she pushed the temptation from her and roused to action.
-
-Thank Heaven, she had had no time to put on Renata’s shoes!
-
-After the first movement strength and swiftness came to her. She was
-across the hall without a sound. The bedroom door closed upon her. As it
-did so, the door of the flat swung wide.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
-Jane stood in the dark, her hand upon the door knob. Slowly, very
-slowly, she released it. As she leaned there, her head almost touching
-the panelling, she could hear two men talking in the hall beyond. They
-spoke in English, but only the outer sound of the words came to her.
-
-With an immense effort she straightened herself, and was about to move
-away when a thought struck her like a knife-blow—the key—the second
-tell-tale key—if she had forgotten it!
-
-Her hand slid back, touched the cold key, turned and withdrew it, moving
-with a steady firmness that surprised herself.
-
-Then she made a half-turn and tried to visualise the room as she had
-seen it in the light.
-
-Immediately opposite, the cupboard with the looking-glass panel. The
-window in the right-hand wall, and the bed between window and cupboard.
-At the foot of the bed a chair, and on the same side as the window a
-chest of drawers with a looking-glass upon it and Renata’s plain
-schoolgirlish brush and comb.
-
-When she had placed everything, Jane began to move forward in the
-direction of the window. Her left hand touched the rail of the bed-foot,
-her right, groping, brushed the counterpane and rested on something
-oddly familiar. Her heart gave a sudden jerk, for this was her own bag,
-which Renata should have taken. She opened it with quick, trembling
-fingers, took out her handkerchief, and then stuffed the bag right down
-inside the bed.
-
-A couple of steps brought her to the window, and she pressed closely to
-it, listening, and wished she dared to open it. There was no sound from
-outside. She leaned her forehead against the glass, and wondered how
-many years had passed since the morning. It seemed impossible for this
-day to come to an end.
-
-Then quite suddenly a key turned in the lock, and the door opened, not
-widely, but as one opens the door of a room where some one is asleep. A
-man’s head was silhouetted against the hall light. Part of his shoulder
-showed in a dark overcoat.
-
-He spoke, and a hint of brogue beneath a good deal of American twang
-informed Jane that this was her official father.
-
-“Are you awake, Renata?”—and, as he asked the question, a second man
-came up behind him and stood there listening.
-
-“Yes,” said Jane, muffling her voice with her handkerchief.
-
-He hesitated a moment, and then said:
-
-“Well, good-night to you”—and the other man, speaking over his shoulder,
-said in an easy, cultivated voice without any accent at all:
-
-“Pleasant dreams, Miss Renata.”
-
-Jane’s “Good-night” was just audible and no more, but obviously it
-satisfied the two men, for the door was shut, the key turned and
-withdrawn, and presently the hall light went out, and the darkness was
-absolute and unrelieved, except where the midnight sky showed just less
-black than the interior of the room.
-
-After what seemed a long, long time, Jane undressed and got to bed. It
-was strange to grope for and find Renata’s neatly folded nightdress.
-
-Presently she lay down, and presently she slept. Time ceased; the day
-was over.
-
-She woke suddenly a few hours later. It was still dark. She came broad
-awake at once, and sat up in bed as if some one had called to her. Her
-mind was full of one horrifying thought.
-
-The plank—what had Arnold done with the plank?
-
-Impossible that he should have helped Renata down the fire-escape and
-carried the plank as well, and somehow Jane did not see Arnold troubling
-to come back for it.
-
-One thing was certain; if Arnold had left the plank in its compromising
-position, it must be removed before daylight.
-
-Jane got out of bed, shivering. She went to the window, opened it, and
-leaned out. The yard, mews, wall, and parapet—all were veiled in the
-same thick dusk. She strained her eyes, but it was impossible to
-distinguish anything. There was nothing for it but to cross that horrid
-little hall again, open the window, and make sure.
-
-With the key in her hand, and mingled rage and terror in her heart, she
-felt her way to the door, opened it noiselessly, and crossed barefoot to
-the window. The hasp was stiff, it creaked, and the window stuck.
-
-Recklessness took possession of Jane. With a jerk she pushed it up; as
-it chanced, recklessness made less noise than caution would have done.
-She leaned right out, and there, sure enough, was the plank.
-
-Even Jane’s anger could provide her with nothing more cutting than, “How
-exactly like Arnold Todhunter.”
-
-She stood quite still and considered.
-
-A bold course was the only one. Remembering the plank’s previous fall
-and the perfect calm with which the neighbourhood had received it, she
-decided to take the same chance again—only, she must be quick and have
-it all planned in her head: first a shove to the plank, then down with
-the window and latch it, five steps—no, six—across the hall, and then
-her own door, and on no account must she forget the key.
-
-She drew a long breath, leaned out, and pushed. The board was heavier
-than she had supposed—harder to move. She had to pull it in, until the
-sudden weight and strain told her that it was clear of the coping upon
-which the farther end had rested. Then she pushed with all her might,
-and as it fell, her hands were on the window quick and steady. Next
-moment she was crouching in Renata’s bed, the clothes clutched about
-her, the door key cold in her palm. She pushed it far down beneath the
-clothes, and sat breathless—listening.
-
-The crash with which the plank had landed seemed to have deafened her,
-but as the vibrations died away, she heard, sharp and unmistakable, the
-click of a latch and hurrying footsteps.
-
-The next moment her door was opened and her light switched on. Quick as
-thought her hand was over her eyes and the sheet up to her chin.
-
-Molloy stood in the doorway, and beyond him the other.
-
-“What’s doing? Did you hear it?” he stammered, and then the other man
-pushed him aside.
-
-“I’d like a look from your window if you’ll excuse me, Miss Renata,” he
-said, and crossed the room.
-
-As he leaned out, Jane watched him from beneath her hand, and recalled
-Renata’s words, “He generally wears a fur coat; they call him Number
-Two.” This man wore a fur coat over pale blue silk pyjamas. When he
-turned, saying, “I can’t see a thing,” she was ready with her stammered,
-“What was it?”
-
-“You heard it, then?” said Molloy.
-
-“Such a fearful crash! It—it frightened me most dreadfully,”—and here
-Jane spoke the literal truth.
-
-“I don’t know.” It was Molloy who answered again, but the other man’s
-eyes travelled round the room, and a feeling of terror came over Jane.
-
-If she had forgotten anything, if there were one shred of incriminating
-evidence, those eyes would miss nothing! She felt as if they must pierce
-the bedclothes and see her bag and the hidden key, but he merely nodded
-to Molloy, and they left the room, switching out the light and locking
-the door.
-
-Jane drew a long breath of relief, turned upon her side, and in five
-minutes was asleep again.
-
-The day came in with a thick mist. Jane opened her eyes upon it
-sleepily.
-
-She began to think what a strange dream she had had, and then, as sleep
-ebbed from her, she remembered that it was not a dream at all. She was
-Renata Molloy under lock and key, and in front of her stretched a day
-that might be even more crowded with adventure than yesterday.
-
-She jumped out of bed, and as she dressed her eyes brightened and her
-courage rose. With Renata’s scissors she unpicked the initials which
-marked her underclothes. This was a game at which one must not make a
-single slip. Her bag worried her a little, but it was just such a plain
-leather bag as any one might possess. She ransacked it carefully, and
-frowned over an envelope addressed to Miss Jane Smith. What in the world
-was she to do with it?
-
-There were no matches, so it could not be burned. After some thought she
-soaked it in water, scratched the name to shreds with a hairpin, and
-crumpling the wet paper into a ball, tossed it out of the window.
-
-By the time her door was unlocked, she was very hungry. This time, it
-appeared, she was being summoned to bid the departing Mr. Molloy a fond
-farewell.
-
-His luggage was already being carried out to the lift, and two or three
-men were coming and going. The man in the fur coat stood with his back
-to the window, smoking a cigarette. Obviously Molloy’s farewell was not
-to be said in private.
-
-Jane looked at him with some curiosity—a tall man, strongly built, with
-a bold air and a florid complexion.
-
-It was he who had opened the door, and he stood still holding the handle
-and looking, not at Jane, but over her shoulder. For this she felt
-grateful.
-
-“Well, well then, I’m off,” said Molloy. “You’ll be a good girl and do
-as you’re bid, and I’ll be having you out to keep house for me in less
-than no time.”
-
-From what she had seen of Renata, Jane fancied that a sob would meet the
-occasion. She therefore sobbed, and pressed her handkerchief to her
-eyes.
-
-“There, there,” said Molloy hastily.
-
-He bent and deposited an awkward kiss upon the top of her head. Then he
-took his hand from the door and was gone.
-
-The lift gate clanged, and Jane realised that the real adventure had
-begun.
-
-The man by the window threw the end of his cigarette into the fireplace
-and came towards her.
-
-“Parental devotion is a beautiful thing, isn’t it, Miss Renata? Suppose
-we have some breakfast.”
-
-A meal, a proper meal, enough to eat! As she passed into the dining-room
-and beheld a ham, coffee, and boiled eggs, Jane felt as if she could
-confront any one or anything. Besides, the first trick was hers.
-
-In the full light of day, and under those cold, pale eyes, she had
-passed as Renata.
-
-She allowed herself to sigh and dab her eyes, and then—oh, how good was
-the rather stale bread, the London egg, and the indifferent ham.
-
-The man watched her quizzically.
-
-As she finished her second cup of coffee, he remarked that she had a
-good appetite, and there was something in his tone that cast a chill
-upon the proceedings.
-
-Jane pushed back her chair.
-
-“I’ve finished,” she said.
-
-“Well, then,” said the man, “I think we must talk. Yes, sit down again,
-please. I won’t keep you very long.”
-
-Jane did as she was told.
-
-“Well, Molloy’s gone,” he said. “You know what that means? He’s washed
-his hands of you. Just in case—just in case, you’ve been relying on
-Molloy, I would like to point out to you that his own position is none
-too secure. The firm he works for has not been entirely satisfied with
-him for some time. It is, therefore, quite out of the question that he
-should influence any decision that may be come to with regard to
-yourself. His going off like this shows that he realises the position
-and accepts it. Self-preservation is Molloy’s trump suit, first, last,
-and all the time. I shouldn’t advise you to count upon trifles like
-parental devotion, or anything of that sort. In a word—he can’t help
-you, _but I can_.”
-
-The man leaned forward as he spoke, and a sudden smile changed his
-features.
-
-“Just be frank,” he went on. “Tell me what you really heard, and I’ll
-see you through.”
-
-Jane let her eyes meet his. That smile had puzzled her; it was so
-spontaneous and charming, but it did not reach his eyes.
-
-She looked and found them cold and opaque, and as she looked, she saw
-the pupils narrow, expand, and then narrow again.
-
-He got up from his chair, walked to the mantelpiece, stopped for a light
-to his cigarette, and came back again with a thin blue haze of smoke
-about him.
-
-“Perhaps I haven’t been altogether frank with you,” he said. “That
-little romance of mine about a firm of chemists who employ your
-father—you didn’t really believe it? No, I thought not. The fact is,
-that first night I took you for just a schoolgirl, and one can’t tell
-schoolgirls everything. But now, now I’m talking to you as a woman. I
-can’t tell you everything, even so, but I can tell you this. It’s a
-Government matter, a most important one, and it is vital that I should
-know just what you overheard.”
-
-Jane looked down.
-
-“I don’t understand,” she said in a low voice. “I was dreaming and I
-waked up suddenly. There was a screen in front of me, and some one on
-the other side of the screen called out very loud, ‘The door, the door!’
-That’s what I heard.”
-
-She felt the pale eyes upon her face. Then with an abrupt movement the
-man came over to her.
-
-“Stand up,” he said.
-
-Jane stood up.
-
-“Look at me.”
-
-Jane looked at him.
-
-After what seemed like a very long time, he threw out his hand with an
-impatient gesture. It struck the table edge with a sharp rap, the spring
-that held his wrist watch gave, and the watch on its gold curb flew off
-and fell on the floor behind Jane.
-
-She turned, glad of an excuse to turn, and bent to pick it up. The back
-of the watch was open; her fingers caught and closed it instantly, but
-not for nothing had she told Henry that she had gimlet eyes. The back of
-the watch contained a photograph, and Jane had seen the photograph
-before. Henry’s voice sounded in her ears. “It was done from Amory’s
-portrait of her, in 1915—the year of her marriage.”
-
-Number Two, the man in the fur coat, Renata’s “worst of them all,” had
-in the back of his watch a photograph of Lady Heritage!
-
-Jane laid the watch on the table without giving it a second glance.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
-As the watch slid back into its place beneath his shirt cuff, the man
-spoke with an entire change of manner.
-
-“Well, Miss Renata, that was all very stiff and businesslike. You
-mustn’t hold it up against me, because I hope we’re going to be friends.
-Don’t you want to know your plans?”
-
-Jane looked at him with a little frown.
-
-“My plans?”
-
-“What is going to happen to you. Oh, please, don’t look so grave! It’s
-nothing very dreadful. You have heard of Sir William Carr-Magnus?”
-
-“Yes, of course,” said Jane. She hoped that she looked innocent and
-surprised.
-
-“Well,” said the man in the fur coat, “I happen to be his secretary, and
-that reminds me, I don’t believe you know my name. Your father and his
-friends use a ridiculous nickname which sticks to me like a burr ... but
-let me introduce myself—Jeffrey Ember, and your friend, if you will have
-me.”
-
-The charming smile just touched his face, and then he said in a quiet,
-serious way:
-
-“Sir William’s daughter, Lady Heritage, has commissioned me to find her
-an amanuensis—companion—no, that’s not quite right either. She doesn’t
-want a trained stenographer, or a young person with a business training,
-but she wants a girl in the house—some one who’ll do what she’s told,
-write notes, arrange the flowers.... I dare say you can guess the sort
-of thing. She is willing to give you a trial, and your father has
-agreed. As a matter of fact, I’m taking you down there to-day.”
-
-“Oh!” said Jane, because she seemed expected to say something, and for
-the life of her she could not think of anything else to say.
-
-“I’m afraid you’ll have to submit to certain restrictions at Luttrell
-Marches. You see, Sir William is engaged upon some very important
-experiments for the Government, and all the members of his household
-have to conform to certain regulations. Their letters must be censored,
-and they must not leave the grounds, which are, however, extremely
-delightful and extensive. It isn’t much of a hardship, really.”
-
-“Oh no,” said Jane in her best schoolgirl manner.
-
-And there the interview ended.
-
-They made the journey to Luttrell Marches by car, but, after the manner
-of Mrs. Gilpin’s post-chaise, it did not pick them up at the door. An
-ordinary taxi conveyed them to Victoria Station, and it was in the
-station yard that they and their luggage were picked up by the
-Rolls-Royce with the Carr-Magnus crest upon the door.
-
-The mist was thinner, and as they came clear of London, the sun came
-out. The day warmed into beauty, and the green growth of the countryside
-seemed to be expanding before their eyes. So many long hedges running
-into a blur, so many miles of road all slipping past. Jane fell fast
-asleep, and did not know how long she slept.
-
-It was in the late afternoon that they came into the Marsh country—great
-flat stretches of it, set with boggy tussocks and intersected by
-straight lanes of water. Purple-brown and green it stretched for miles.
-To the right a humped line of upland, but to the left, and as far as the
-eye could see in front, nothing but marsh. Then the road rose a little;
-the ground was firmer and carried a black pine or two.
-
-They came to a three-cross way and turned sharply to the right. The
-ground rose more and more. They climbed a steep hill, zigzagging between
-banked-up hedges to make the rise, and came out upon a bare upland.
-Ahead of them one saw a high stone wall pierced by iron gates. The car
-stopped. Mr. Ember leaned out, and after a pause the gates swung
-inwards.
-
-For a mile the drive lay through a flat waste of springing bracken, with
-here and there a group of wind-driven trees, then a second gate through
-a high fencing topped with wire. An avenue of trees led up to the house,
-a huge grey pile set against a sky full of little racing clouds.
-
-Jane felt stiff and bewildered with the long drive. She followed Mr.
-Ember up a flight of granite steps and came into the great hall of
-Luttrell Marches with its panelled walls and dark old portraits of
-half-forgotten Luttrells.
-
-Exactly opposite the entrance rose the stairway which was the pride of
-the house. Its beautiful proportions, the grapes and vine leaves of its
-famous carvings, were lighted from beneath by the red glow of a huge
-open fire, and from above by the last word in electric lighting.
-
-Ember walked straight across the hall and up the stair, and Jane
-followed him.
-
-She thought she knew exactly how a puppy must feel when, blinking from
-the warmth and straw of his basket, he comes for the first time into the
-ordered solemnity of his new master’s house.
-
-And then she looked up and saw The Portrait.
-
-It hung on the panelling at the top of the stair where the long
-corridors ran off to right and left, and it took Jane’s breath away—the
-portrait of Lady Heritage.
-
-Amory had painted more than a beautiful woman standing on a marble
-terrace: he had painted a woman Mercury. The hands held an ivory
-rod—diamond wings rose from the cloudy hair. Under the bright wings the
-eyes looked out, looked far—dark, splendid, hungry eyes.
-
-“The earth belongs to her, and she despises it,” was Jane’s thought.
-
-She stood staring at the portrait. Nineteen-fifteen, Henry had said—the
-year when other women posed with folded linen hiding their hair and the
-red cross worn like a blazon. She could think of several famous beauties
-who had been painted thus. But this woman wore her diamond wings,
-though, even as she wore them, Fate had done its worst to her, for
-Anthony Luttrell was a name with other names in a list of missing, and
-no man knew his grave.
-
-A sharp clang of metal upon metal startled Jane. She looked quickly to
-her right, and saw that a steel gate completely barred the entrance to
-the corridor on that side. It had just closed behind a curious
-white-draped figure.
-
-“Ah, Jeffrey,” said a voice—a deep, rather husky voice—and the figure
-came forward.
-
-Jane saw that it was a woman wearing a long white linen overall, and a
-curious linen head-dress, which she was undoing and pushing back as she
-walked. She pulled it off as she came up to them, saying, “It’s so hot
-in there I can hardly breathe, but too fascinating to leave. You’re
-early. Is this Miss Molloy?”
-
-She put out her hand to Jane, and Jane, with her mind full of the
-portrait, looked open-eyed at its original.
-
-Afterwards she tried to formulate her sensations, but, at the time, she
-received just that emotional shock which most people experienced when
-they first met Raymond Heritage.
-
-Beautiful—but there are so many beautiful women. Charming? No, there was
-rather something that repelled, antagonised. In her presence Jane felt
-untidy, shabby, gauche.
-
-Lady Heritage unbuttoned her overall and slipped it off. She wore a
-plain white knitted skirt and jersey. Her fingers were bare even of the
-wedding ring which Jane looked for and missed. Her black hair was a
-little ruffled, and above the temples, where Amory had painted diamond
-wings, there were streaks of grey.
-
-Bewilderment came down on Jane like a thick mist, which clung about her
-during the brief interchange of sentences which followed, and went with
-her to her room.
-
-It was a queer room with a rounded wall set with three windows and to
-right and left irregular of line, with a jutting corner here and a
-blunted angle there. It faced west, for the sun shone level in her eyes.
-
-Crossing to the window, as most people do when they come into a strange
-room, she looked out and caught her breath with amazement.
-
-The sea—why, it seemed to lie just beneath the windows!
-
-They had driven up from the landward side, and this was her first hint
-that the sea was so near.
-
-There was a wide gravel terrace, a stone wall set with formal urns full
-of blue hyacinths, the sharp fall of the cliff, and then the sea.
-
-The tide was in, the sun low, and a wide golden path seemed to stretch
-almost from Jane’s feet to the far horizon. Overhead the little racing
-clouds that told of a wind high up were golden too.
-
-The humped ridge of upland, which Jane had seen as they drove, ran out
-to sea on the right hand. It ended in low, broken cliff, and a line of
-jagged rocks of which only the points stood clear.
-
-Jane turned from all the beauty outside to the ordered comfort within.
-Hot water in a brass can that she could see her face in, a towel of such
-fine linen that it was a joy to touch it, this pretty white-panelled
-room, the chintzes where bright butterflies hovered over roses and
-sweet-peas—she stood and looked at it all, and she heard Renata’s words,
-“At Luttrell Marches they will decide whether I am to be eliminated.”
-
-This curious dual sense remained with her during the days that followed.
-Life at Luttrell Marches was simple and regular. She wrote letters,
-gathered flowers, unpacked the library books, and kept out of Sir
-William’s way.
-
-Sir William, she decided, was exactly like his photograph, only a good
-deal more so; his eyebrows more tufted, his chin more jutting, and his
-eyes harder. For a philanthropist he had a singularly bad temper, and
-for so eminent a scientist a very frivolous taste in literature. One of
-Jane’s duties was to provide him with novels. She ransacked library
-lists and trembled over the results of her labours.
-
-Sir William did not always join the ladies after dinner, but when he did
-so he would read a novel at a sitting and ask for more.
-
-Mr. Ember was never absent, and when Lady Heritage talked, it was to him
-that her words were addressed. Sometimes she would disappear inside the
-steel gate for hours.
-
-Jane soon learnt that the whole of the north wing was given up to Sir
-William’s experiments. On each floor a steel gate shut it off from the
-rest of the house. All the windows were barred from top to bottom.
-
-She also discovered that the high paling where the avenue began had, on
-its inner side, an apron of barbed wire, and it was the upper strand of
-this apron which she had seen as they approached from outside.
-
-Sir William’s experiments employed a considerable number of men. These,
-she learned, were lodged in the stables, and neither they nor any of the
-domestic staff were permitted to pass beyond the inner paling.
-
-On the coast side there was a high wire entanglement—electrified.
-
-There were moments when Jane was cold with fear, and moments when she
-told herself that Renata was a little fool who had had nightmare.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
-When Jane stood at her window and looked across the sea, she saw what
-might have been a picture of life at Luttrell Marches during those first
-few days. Such a smooth stretch of water, pleasant to the eye, where
-blue and green, amethyst, grey and silver came and went, and under the
-play of colour and the shifting light and shade of day and evening, the
-unchanging black of rocks which showed for an instant and then left one
-guessing whether anything had really broken the beauty and the peace.
-
-Over the surface all was pleasant enough, but incidents, some of them
-almost negligible in themselves, kept recurring to remind Jane that
-there were rocks beneath the sea.
-
-The first incident came up suddenly whilst she was writing Lady
-Heritage’s letters on the second day.
-
-She had beside her a little pile of correspondence, mostly about
-trifles. Upon each letter there was scrawled, “Yes”—“No”—“Tell them I’ll
-think it over,” or some such direction.
-
-Presently Jane arrived at a letter in French, upon which Lady Heritage
-had written, “Make an English translation and enclose to Mrs. Blunt.”
-Mrs. Blunt’s own letter lay immediately underneath. It contained
-inquiries about some conditions of factory labour amongst women in
-France.
-
-The French letter was an excellent exposition of the said conditions.
-
-Jane sat looking at it, and wondering whether Renata could have
-translated a single line of it, and how much ignorance it would behove
-her to display.
-
-After a moment’s thought she turned round and said timidly, “May I have
-a dictionary, please?”
-
-Lady Heritage looked up from the papers before her. She frowned and
-said:
-
-“A dictionary?”
-
-“Yes, for the French letter.”
-
-“You don’t know French, then?”
-
-Jane met the half-sarcastic look with protest.
-
-“Oh yes, I _do_. But, if I might have a dictionary——”
-
-Lady Heritage pointed to the bookcase and went back to her papers.
-
-An imp of mischief entered into Jane.
-
-She took the dictionary and spent the next half-hour in producing a
-translation with just the right amount of faults in it. She put it down
-in front of her employer with a feeling of triumph.
-
-“Please, will this do?”
-
-Lady Heritage looked, frowned, and tore the paper across.
-
-“I thought you said you knew French?”
-
-Jane fidgeted with her pen:
-
-“Of course I know I’m not _really_ good at it, but I looked out all the
-words I didn’t know.”
-
-“There must have been a good many,” was Lady Heritage’s comment, and the
-imp made Jane raise innocent eyes and say:
-
-“Oh, there _were_!”
-
-She went back to her table, and Lady Heritage spoke over her shoulder to
-Mr. Ember, who appeared to be searching for a book at the far end of the
-room. She spoke in French—the low, rapid French of the woman to whom one
-language is the same as another.
-
-“What do they teach at English schools, can you tell me, Jeffrey? This
-girl says she knows French, and if she can follow one word I am saying
-now——” She broke off and shrugged. “Yet I dare say she went to an
-expensive school. Now, I had a Bavarian maid, educated in the ordinary
-village school, and she spoke English with ease, and French better than
-any English schoolgirl I’ve come across. Wait whilst I try her in
-something else.”
-
-She turned back to Jane.
-
-“Just send the original to Mrs. Blunt—I haven’t time to bother with
-it—and make a note for me. I want it inserted after para three on the
-second page of that typewritten article that came back this morning.”
-
-Jane supposed she might be allowed to know what a “para” was. She turned
-over the leaves of the typescript and waited for the dictation. The last
-sentence read, “Woman through all the ages is at the disposal and under
-the autocratic rule of man, but it is not of her own volition.”
-
-She wondered what was to come next, and waited, keenly on the alert.
-
-Lady Heritage began to speak:
-
-“Write it in as neatly as possible, please; it’s only one sentence: ‘It
-is Man who has forced “das ewig Weibliche” upon us.’”
-
-Jane wrote, “It is man——” and then stopped. She repeated the words aloud
-and looked expectant.
-
-“‘Das ewig Weibliche’”—there was a slight grimness in Lady Heritage’s
-tone.
-
-“I’m afraid—” faltered Jane.
-
-“Never heard the quotation?”
-
-“I’m so sorry.”
-
-“You don’t know any German, then?”
-
-“I’m _so_ sorry,” said Jane.
-
-“My dear girl, what did they teach you at that school of yours? By the
-way, where was it?”
-
-“At Ilfracombe.”
-
-“English education is a disgrace,” said Lady Heritage, and went back to
-her papers.
-
-It was next day that she turned suddenly to Jane:
-
-“By the way, you were at school at Ilfracombe—can you give me the name
-of a china shop there? I want some of that blue Devonshire pottery for a
-girls’ club I’m interested in.”
-
-Jane had a moment of panic. Renata’s shoes had fitted her too easily.
-She had felt secure, and then to have her security shattered by a trifle
-like this!
-
-“A china shop?” she said meditatively; then, after a pause, “It’s
-awfully stupid of me—I’m afraid I’ve forgotten the name.”
-
-Lady Heritage stared.
-
-“A shop that you must have passed hundreds of times?”
-
-“It’s very stupid of me.”
-
-Lady Heritage smiled with a sudden brilliance. “Well, it is rather,” she
-said.
-
-It was on the fourth day that Jane really caught her first glimpse of
-the black rocks.
-
-She was writing in the library, dealing with an apparently endless
-stream of begging letters, requests for interviews, invitations to speak
-at meetings or to join committees.
-
-In four days Jane had discovered that Lady Heritage was up to her eyes
-in a dozen movements relating to feminist activities, women’s labour,
-and social reform.
-
-Newspapers, pamphlets, and reports littered a table which ran the whole
-length of the room. Jane was required to open all these as they came,
-and separate those which dealt with social reform and the innumerable
-scientific treatises and reviews. These latter arrived in every European
-language.
-
-Jane sat writing. The day was clear and lovely, the air sun-warmed and
-yet fresh as if it had passed over snow. April has days like this, and
-they fill every healthy person with a longing to be out, to stop
-working, and take holiday.
-
-The windows of the library looked out upon the gravel terrace above the
-sea. The sun was on the blue water.
-
-Jane put down her pen and looked at the hyacinths in the grey stone
-urns. They were blue too. A yellow butterfly played round them. She sat
-up and went to the window.
-
-Lady Heritage and Mr. Ember were walking up and down the terrace, Lady
-Heritage bareheaded, all in white with not even a scarf, and Jeffrey
-Ember with a muffler round his neck, and the inevitable fur coat. They
-were coming towards her, and Jane stood back so that the curtains made a
-screen. She watched Raymond Heritage as she had watched the sea and the
-flowers, for sheer joy in her beauty.
-
-Raymond’s face was towards her, and she was speaking.
-
-Not a word reached Jane’s ears, but as she looked at those beautiful
-lips, their movements spelt words to her—words and sentences. She would
-have drawn back or looked away, but the first sentence that she read
-riveted her attention too closely.
-
-“Are you satisfied about her Jeffrey?”
-
-Ember _must_ have spoken, but his head was turned away. Then Raymond
-spoke again.
-
-“Nor am I—not entirely. She seems intelligent and unintelligent by
-turns, unbelievably stupid in one direction and quick in another.” They
-passed level with the window, and so on to the end of the terrace. Jane
-went round the table to the other side of the window and waited for them
-to come back.
-
-Ember’s face was towards her when they turned, too far away for her to
-see anything. But, as they came nearer, she saw that he was speaking.
-Not easy to read from, however, with those straight, thin lips that
-moved so little. There was only one word she was sure of—“overheard.”
-
-It was too tantalising. If she had to wait until they reached the far
-end of the terrace and turned again, what might she not miss?
-
-As the thought passed through her mind Lady Heritage stopped, walked
-slowly to the grey stone wall, and sat down on it, motioning to Ember to
-do the same.
-
-Jane could see both faces now, and Raymond was saying, “If she overheard
-anything, would she have the intelligence to be dangerous?—that is what
-I ask myself.”
-
-Ember’s lips just moved, but the movements made no sense.
-
-“Perhaps you’re right,” said Lady Heritage; “despise not thine enemy.”
-
-She changed her position, leaned forward, displaying a statuesque
-profile, and appeared to be speaking fast and earnestly. Then Jane saw
-her lips again, and they were saying, “Anything but Formula ‘A.’”
-
-Jane gripped the curtain which she held until the gold galon which
-bordered it marked her hand with its acorn pattern.
-
-“Formula ‘A’!” everything swam round her while she heard Renata’s
-gasping voice:
-
-“He said ‘With Formula “A” you have the key. When Formula “B” is also
-complete, you will have the lock for that key to fit; then the treasures
-of the world are yours.’”
-
-The mist cleared from her eyes; she looked again.
-
-Raymond Heritage had risen to her feet. Ember and she looked out to sea
-for a moment, then crossed the gravel towards the house. They were
-talking of the sunshine and the spring air.
-
-“My bulbs have done well,” Lady Heritage said.
-
-They passed out of sight.
-
-Two days later Jane, coming down the corridor to the library, was aware
-of voices in conversation. She opened the door and saw Jeffrey Ember
-with his back to her. He had pulled a deep leather chair close to the
-fire, and was bending forward to warm his hands. Lady Heritage stood a
-yard or two away. She had a large bunch of violets in one hand; with the
-other she leaned against the black marble mantel.
-
-She and Ember were talking in German. Both glanced round, and Raymond
-asked:
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“The letters for the post,” said Jane.
-
-They went on talking whilst she sorted and stamped the letters.
-
-“Which of us is the better judge of character, it comes to that.”
-Speaking German, Lady Heritage’s deep voice sounded deeper than ever.
-
-“Do we take different sides then?”
-
-“I don’t know. I thought your verdict was inclined to be ‘Guilty, but
-recommended to mercy,’ whereas mine——” She hesitated—stopped rather—for
-there was no hesitation in her manner.
-
-Ember made a gesture with the hand that held his cigarette.
-
-“Expound.”
-
-“I doubt the guilt. But if I did not doubt, I should have no mercy at
-all.”
-
-Jane went out with the letters, and when she was in the corridor again
-she put out her hand and leaned against the wall. It would be horrible
-enough, she thought, to be tried in an open court upon some capital
-count, but how far less horrible than a secret judgment where whispered
-words made unknown charges, where the trial went on beneath the surface
-of one’s pleasant daily life, and every word, every look, a turn of the
-head, an unguarded sigh, a word too little, or a glance too much might
-tip the scale and send the balance swinging down to—what?
-
-Next day Lady Heritage was deep in her correspondence, when she suddenly
-flashed into anger. Pushing back her chair, she got up and began to pace
-the room. There was a letter in her hand, and as she walked she tore it
-across and across, flung the fragments into the fire, and pushed a
-blazing log down upon them with her foot.
-
-Jane and Ember watched her—the former with some surprise and a good deal
-of admiration, the latter with that odd something which her presence
-always called out. She swung round, met his eyes, and burst into speech.
-
-“It’s Alington—to think that I ever called that man my friend! I wonder
-if there’s a single man on this earth who would translate professions of
-devotion to one woman, into bare decent justice to all women.”
-
-“What has Lord Alington done?” asked Mr. Ember, with a slight drawl.
-
-Jane, with a thrill, identified the President of the Board of Trade.
-
-“Nothing that I might not have expected. It is only women that are
-different, Jeffrey. Men are all the same.”
-
-“And still I don’t know what he has done,” said Jeffrey Ember.
-
-“Oh, it’s a long story! I’ve been pressing for women inspectors in
-various directions. It seems inconceivable that any one should cavil at
-a woman inspector wherever women are employed. You have no idea of what
-some of the conditions are. Stewardesses, for instance; I’ve a letter
-there from a woman who has been working on one of the largest liners—not
-a tramp steamer, mind you, but one of the biggest liners afloat. All the
-passengers’ trays, all the cabin meals had to be carried up a
-perpendicular iron stair like a fire-escape—not a permanent stair, you
-understand, but a ladder that is let up and down. Those wretched women
-had to go up and down it all day with heavy trays. They said they
-couldn’t do it, and were told they had to. And that’s a little thing
-compared to some of the other conditions. I want an inspector for them.”
-
-“And Alington?”
-
-Lady Heritage came to a halt by the long, piled-up table. She struck it
-with her open hand. “Lord Alington is just a man,” she said. “He stands
-for what men have always stood for, the sacred right of the vested
-interest. What man ever wants to alter anything? And why should he when
-the existing order gives him all he wants? It doesn’t matter where you
-turn, what you do, how hard you try, the vested interest blocks the way;
-you are up against the Established Order of what has always been. My
-God, how I’d like to smash it all, the whole thing, the whole smug sham
-which we call civilisation!”
-
-Jane stared at her open-eyed. She had never dreamed that the statue
-could wake into such vivid life as this. The colour burned in Raymond’s
-cheeks, the sombre eyes were sombre still, but they held sparks as if
-from inward fire.
-
-Ember touched the hand that was clenched at the table’s edge. A sort of
-tremor passed over her from head to foot. The colour died, the fire was
-gone. With a complete change of manner she said:
-
-“Alington was hardly worth all that, was he?” Then without a change of
-key, but in German:
-
-“Thank you, Jeffrey, the child’s eyes were nearly falling out of her
-head. It was stupid of me; I forgot. These things carry me away.”
-
-The door opened on her last words, and Sir William came in. He was
-frowning, and appeared to be in a great hurry.
-
-“Ridiculous business, ridiculous waste of time. These damned departments
-appear to think I’ve nothing to do with my time except to answer their
-infernal inquiries, and entertain any interfering jackanapes that they
-choose to let loose on me.”
-
-“What is it Father?” said Lady Heritage—“Government inspection?”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Sir William slowly. “Henry March wants to come down for
-the night.”
-
-Jane bent forward over her papers. No one was looking at her, no one was
-thinking of her, but she had felt her cheeks grow hot, and was glad of
-an excuse to hide them.
-
-She did not know whether she was very much afraid or very glad. A
-feeling unfamiliar but overwhelming seemed to shake her to the depths.
-She was quite unconscious of what was passing behind her.
-
-At Henry’s name, Raymond Heritage uttered a sharp, “Oh no!” She came
-quickly forward as she spoke and caught the letter from Sir William’s
-hand.
-
-“He can’t come—I can’t have him here—put him off, Father; you can make
-some excuse!”
-
-“Nonsense!” said Sir William again. “It’s a nuisance, of course—it’s an
-infernal nuisance—but he’ll have to come, confound him!”
-
-Then, as she made a half-articulate protest, he went on with increasing
-loss of temper:
-
-“Good heavens! I can’t very well tell the man I won’t have him in what
-is practically his own house.”
-
-It was Ember, not her father, who saw how frightfully pale Raymond
-became. In a very low voice she said:
-
-“No, I suppose not.”
-
-Sir William was fidgeting. He looked at Jane’s back.
-
-“Of course, he’s coming down on business.”
-
-Then he broke off and stared at Jane again.
-
-Lady Heritage nodded.
-
-“Miss Molloy,” she said. “You can take half an hour off.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-Henry arrived on the following day and was shown straight into Sir
-William’s study.
-
-Half an hour later Sir William rang the bell and sent for Lady Heritage.
-He hardly gave her time to shake hands before he burst out:
-
-“I said you must be told. I take all responsibility for your being told.
-After all, if I am conducting these experiments, something is due to me,
-though the Government appear to think otherwise. But I take all
-responsibility; I insist on your being told.”
-
-He sat at his littered table, and all the time that he was speaking his
-hands were lifting and shuffling the papers on it. At his elbow stood a
-tray with tantalus and glasses and a syphon. Only one glass had been
-used.
-
-“What is it?” said Raymond.
-
-Her eyes went from her father to Henry.
-
-Sir William’s hand was shaking. Henry wore a look of grave concern.
-
-“What is it?” she repeated.
-
-“It’s Formula ‘A’”—Sir William’s voice was just a deep growl. “He comes
-here, and he tells me that Formula ‘A’ has been stolen. I’ve told him to
-his face, and I tell him again, that it’s a damned impossibility.”
-
-The shaking hand fell heavily upon the table and made the glasses ring.
-
-“Formula ‘A’?” said Raymond—“stolen? Henry, you can’t mean it?”
-
-“I’m afraid I do,” said Henry, at his quietest. “I’m afraid there’s no
-doubt about it. We have the most indisputable evidence that Formula ‘A’
-has been offered to—well, to a foreign power.”
-
-The flush upon Sir William’s face deepened alarmingly. Under the
-bristling grey brows his eyes were hard with anger. He began to speak,
-broke off, swept his papers to one side, and, taking up the tantalus and
-the used glass, poured out a third of a glass of whisky. He let a small
-quantity of soda into it with a vicious jerk, and then sat with the
-glass between his hands, alternately sipping from it and interjecting
-sounds of angry protest.
-
-“The information is, I’m afraid, correct.”
-
-Henry’s tone, though studiously moderate, was extremely firm. “There is
-undoubtedly a leak, and, in view of Formula ‘B,’ it is vital that the
-leak should be found and stopped.”
-
-He addressed himself to Lady Heritage:
-
-“Sir William tells me that all employés correspond with the list in my
-possession, that none of them leave the enclosure, and that all letters
-are censored. By the way, who censors them?”
-
-“Ember,” growled Sir William.
-
-Lady Heritage elaborated the remark.
-
-“Mr. Ember—Father’s secretary.”
-
-She and Henry were both standing, with the corner of the writing-table
-between them. She saw inquiry in Henry’s face. He said:
-
-“Who does leave the premises?”
-
-“Father, once in a blue moon, I when I have any shopping to do, and, of
-course, Mr. Ember.”
-
-“And when you go you drive, of course? What I mean is—a chauffeur goes
-too?”
-
-Sir William made a sound between a snort and a laugh; Lady Heritage
-smiled. Both had the air of being pleased to catch Henry out.
-
-“The chauffeur is Lewis, who was your uncle’s coachman here for
-twenty-five years. Are you going to suggest that he has been selling
-Formula ‘A’ to a foreign power? I’m afraid you must think again.”
-
-“Who is Mr. Ember?”
-
-Sir William exploded.
-
-“Ember’s my secretary. He’s been my right hand for ten years, and if
-you’re going to make insinuations about him, you can leave my house and
-make them elsewhere. Why, damn it all, March!—why not accuse Raymond, or
-me?”
-
-“I don’t accuse any one, sir.”
-
-There was a pause, whilst the two men looked at one another. It was Sir
-William who looked away at last. He drained his glass and got up,
-pushing his chair so hard that it overturned.
-
-“You want to see all the men to check ’em by that infernal list of
-yours, do you? The sooner the better then; let’s get it over.”
-
-Later, as the men answered to their names in the long, bare room which
-had once been the Blue Parlour, Henry was struck with the strangeness of
-the scene. Here his aunt had loved to sit doing an interminable
-embroidery of fruits and flowers upon canvas. Here he and Anthony had
-lain prone before the fire, each with his head in a book and his heels
-waving aloft. Memories of Fenimore Cooper and Henty filled the place
-when for a moment he closed his eyes. Then, as they opened, there was
-the room all bare, the windows barred and uncurtained, the long
-stretcher tables with their paraphernalia of glass retorts, queer,
-twisted apparatus, powerful electric appliances, and this row of men
-answering to their names whilst he checked each from his list.
-
-“James Mallaby.” He called the name and glanced from the man who
-answered it to the paper in his hand. A small photograph was followed by
-a description: “5 feet 7 inches, grey eyes, mole on chin, fair
-complexion, sandy hair.” All correct. He passed to the next.
-
-“Jacob Moss—5 feet 5 inches, dark complexion, black hair and eyes, no
-marks....”
-
-“George Patterson—5 feet 10 inches, sallow complexion, brown hair and
-beard, grey on temples, grey eyes, scar....”
-
-The man who answered to the name of George Patterson stepped forward. He
-had the air of being taller than his scheduled height. His beard and
-hair were unkempt, and the scar set down against him was a red seam that
-ran from the left temple to the chin, where it lost itself in grizzled
-hair. He stooped, and walked with a dragging step.
-
-Henry, who for the moment was speaking to Sir William, looked at him
-casually enough. He opened his list, and in turning the page, the papers
-slipped from his hand and fell. George Patterson picked them up. Henry
-went on to the next name.
-
-Jane had keyed herself up to meeting him at teatime, but neither Henry
-nor Sir William appeared.
-
-“Captain March is an extremely conscientious person,” said Lady
-Heritage. It was not a trait which appeared to commend itself to her. “I
-should think he must have interviewed the very black-beetles by now.
-Have you been passed, Jeffrey?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Mr. Ember, “but it hasn’t taken away my appetite
-for tea.”
-
-In fact it had not. It was Raymond who ate nothing.
-
-Jane and Henry did not meet until dinner-time. As she dressed, Jane kept
-looking at herself in the glass. She was pale, and she must not look
-pale. She took a towel and rubbed her cheeks—that was better. Then a
-little later, when she looked again, her eyes were far too bright, her
-face unnaturally flushed.
-
-“As if any one was going to look at you at all—idiot!” she said.
-
-After this she kept her back to the mirror.
-
-In all the books that she had ever read the secretary or companion
-invariably wore a dinner dress of black silk made, preferably, out of
-one which had belonged to a grandmother or some even more remote
-relative. In this garb she outshone all the other women and annexed the
-affections of at least two of the most eligible men.
-
-Renata did not possess a black silk gown.
-
-“Thank goodness, for I should look perfectly awful in it,” was Jane’s
-thought.
-
-With almost equal distaste she viewed the white muslin sacred to
-prize-givings and school concerts. Attired in this garment Renata had
-played the “Sonata Pathétique” amidst the applause of boarders and
-parents. With this pale blue sash about her waist she had recited “How
-they brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix.” Jane tied it in a vicious
-knot. Her only comfort as she went downstairs was that it was impossible
-to look more like a schoolgirl and less like a conspirator.
-
-Sir William and Henry were in the hall—Mr. Ember too, close to the fire
-as usual.
-
-Sir William jerked his head in Jane’s direction and grunted, “Miss
-Molloy, my daughter’s secretary.” Henry bowed. Jane inclined her head.
-
-Next moment they all turned to watch Raymond Heritage come down the
-stair.
-
-She wore black velvet. Her neck and arms were bare. A long rope of
-pearls fell to her knee.
-
-Jane wondered whether the world held another woman so beautiful, then
-looked quickly at Henry, and the same thought was visible upon Henry’s
-face.
-
-Dinner was not a cheerful meal. Lady Heritage hardly opened her lips.
-Sir William sat hunched forward over the table; when addressed, the
-remark had to be repeated before he answered; he drank a good deal.
-
-Jane considered that a modest silence became her, and the conversation
-was sustained with some effect of strain by Captain March and Mr. Ember.
-They talked fitfully of politics, musical comedy, the weather, and the
-American Exchange.
-
-It was a relief, to Jane at least, when she and Lady Heritage found
-their way to the drawing-room.
-
-Henry wondered at their using this large, formal room for so small a
-party. His aunt, he remembered, had kept it shut up for the most part.
-The sense of space was, however, grateful to Jane. The small circle of
-candlelight in the dining-room had seemed to shut them in, forcing an
-intimacy for which no one of them was prepared.
-
-The Yellow Drawing-Room was a very stately apartment. The walls were
-hung with a Chinese damask which a hundred years had not robbed of its
-imperial colour. Beneath their pagoda-patterned blue linen covers Jane
-knew that the chairs and sofas wore a stiff yellow satin like a secret
-pride. Electric candles in elaborate sconces threw a cold, steady light
-upon the scene.
-
-Lady Heritage sat by the fire, the _Revue des Deux Mondes_ in her hand.
-Her eyes were on the page and never left it, but she was not reading. In
-fifteen minutes her glance had not shifted, and the page remained
-unturned.
-
-Then the door opened, and the two younger men came in. Lady Heritage
-looked up for a moment, and then went back to her _Revue_. She made no
-attempt to entertain Captain March, who, for his part, showed some
-desire to be entertained.
-
-“You are using the big rooms, I see. Aunt Mary always said they were too
-cold. You remember she always sat in the Blue Parlour, or the little oak
-room at the head of the stair.”
-
-Raymond’s lip lifted slightly.
-
-“I’m afraid the Blue Parlour would not be very comfortable now,” she
-said without looking up.
-
-Henry possessed a persevering nature. He produced, in rapid succession,
-a remark about the weather, an inquiry as to the productiveness of the
-kitchen garden, and a comment upon the pleasant warmth of the log fire.
-The first and last of these efforts elicited no reply at all. To the
-question about the garden produce Lady Heritage answered that she had no
-idea.
-
-Mr. Ember’s habitual expression of cynicism became a trifle more marked.
-
-Jane had the feeling that the pressure in the atmosphere was steadily on
-the increase.
-
-“Won’t you sing something, Raymond,” said Henry. His pleasant ease of
-manner appeared quite impervious to snubs.
-
-Lady Heritage closed the _Revue des Deux Mondes_ and, for the first
-time, looked full at Captain March. If he was startled by the furious
-resentment of that gaze he did not show it.
-
-“And what do you expect me to sing, Henry?” she said—“the latest out of
-the _Jazz Girls_?”
-
-“I don’t mind; whatever you like, but do sing, won’t you?”
-
-Raymond got up with an abrupt movement. Walking to one of the long
-windows which opened upon the terrace, she drew the heavy yellow brocade
-curtain back with a jerk. Beyond the glass the terrace lay in deepest
-shadow, but moonlight touched the sea. She bent, drew the bolt, and
-opened half the door.
-
-“The room is stifling,” she said. “Jeffrey, it’s your fault they pile
-the fire up so. I wish you’d sometimes look at a calendar and realise
-that this is April, not January.”
-
-Then, turning, she crossed to the piano.
-
-“If I sing, it will be to please myself, and I shall probably not please
-any one else.”
-
-Ember came forward and opened the piano. He bent as he did so, and said
-a few words very low. She answered him.
-
-Henry, left by the fireside with Jane, leaned forward conversationally,
-the last _Punch_ in his hand.
-
-“This is a good cartoon,” he said. “Have you seen it, Miss Molloy?”
-
-And as she bent to look at the page, he added in that low, effaced tone
-which does not carry a yard:
-
-“Which room have they given you?”
-
-“I like the line,” said Jane in her clear voice, “and that very black
-shadow.” Then, in an almost soundless breath—“The end room, south wing.”
-
-“Don’t go to bed,” said Henry. “Wonderful how they keep it up, week
-after week. I mean to say, it must put you off your stroke like
-anything, knowing you’ve got to come right up to time like that.”
-
-“Your department doesn’t work by the calendar, then? You don’t have to
-bother about results?”
-
-Ember strolled back to his favourite place by the fire as he spoke, and
-Lady Heritage broke into a resounding chord. She played what Henry
-afterwards described as “an infernal pandemonium of a thing.” It
-appeared to be in several keys at once, and marched from one riot of
-discord to another until it ended with a strident crash which set up a
-humming jangle of vibrations.
-
-“Like that, Henry?” said Lady Heritage.
-
-“No,” said Henry, monosyllabic in his turn.
-
-“No one ever likes to hear the truth,” said Raymond. “You all want
-something pleasant, something smooth, something like this”—her fingers
-slipped into the “Blue Danube” waltz. She played it exquisitely, with a
-melting delicacy of touch and a beautiful sense of rhythm. After a dozen
-bars or so she stopped suddenly, leaned her elbow on the keyboard, and
-through the little clang of the impact said:
-
-“Well?”
-
-“That’s topping,” said Henry. He looked across at her admiringly—the
-long sweep of the ebony piano, the white keyboard with the black notes
-standing clear, Raymond in her velvet and pearls, and behind her the
-imperial yellow of China.
-
-“Soothing syrup,” she said. “You’re not up to date, Henry, I’m afraid.
-The moderns show us things as they are, and we don’t like it, but the
-soothing syrups lose their power to soothe once you find out that they
-are just ... dope.”
-
-“I wish you’d sing,” said Henry.
-
-She looked across him at Ember, and an expression difficult to define
-hardened her face.
-
-“This isn’t modern, but will you like it?” she said, and preluded. Then
-she began to sing in a deep mezzo:
-
- “The Worldly Hope Men set their Hearts upon
- Turns Ashes—or it prospers; and anon,
- Like Snow upon the Desert’s dusty Face
- Lighting its little Hour or two—is gone.
-
- Here in this battered Caravanserai,
- Whose Portals are alternate Night and Day,
- How Sultan after Sultan with his Pomp
- Abode his destined Hour, and went his Way.”
-
-The notes came heavy and tragic. In her voice there seemed to be
-gathered all the tragedy, all the emotion of human life. The sound fell
-almost to a whisper:
-
- “The Worldly Hope Men set their Hearts upon
- Turns Ashes—or it prospers; and anon,
- Like Snow upon the Desert’s dusty Face
- Lighting its little Hour or two—is gone.”
-
-Suddenly the voice rose ringing like a trumpet, a great chord crashed
-out:
-
- “Waste not your Hour!”
-
-The deep octaves followed. Then she passed into modulating phrases and
-began to sing again.
-
-“Her voice is nearly as beautiful as she is,” thought Jane, “but
-somehow—she shakes one.”
-
- “Ah Love, could you and I with Fate conspire
- To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,
- Would we not shatter it to bits, and then
- Re-mould it nearer to the Heart’s Desire?”
-
-With the last word she rose, turned from the piano and the room, and
-went out to the terrace.
-
-Henry got up, strolled casually across the room, and followed her. She
-was standing by the low parapet looking over the sea. The night was
-still, the scent of hyacinths was heavy on the air, but every now and
-then a breath—something not to be called a wind—came up from across the
-water and brought with it cold, and a tang of salt.
-
-The moon was still behind the house, but near to clearing it, and though
-they stood in the dusk, Henry could see Lady Heritage’s features as
-though through a veil.
-
-Her icy mood was broken; the tears were rolling down her cheeks. She
-turned on him with a flame of anger.
-
-“Why did you come? Why did you come? Do you know what Father said to me
-yesterday? I said I wouldn’t have you here, and he said—he said, ‘Good
-heaven! how can I keep the man away from what is practically his own
-house?’ Is it yours now?—have you come to see your property?”
-
-Henry looked at her gravely.
-
-“No, it is not mine yet,” he said, “and I came for a very different
-reason, as I think you know.”
-
-“And you expected me to welcome you ... as if it wasn’t enough to be
-here, to live here—without——” She broke off, gripping the rough stone of
-the parapet with both hands. “You ask me why I don’t use the Oak Room—do
-you forget how you and I and Tony used to roast chestnuts there, and
-tell ghost stories—till we were afraid to go to bed? If there were no
-worse ghosts than those.... Do you know, every time you come into the
-room I expect to see Anthony behind you, and when you speak I catch
-myself listening for his voice?... Do you still wonder why I don’t use
-the Oak Room? What are men made of?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Henry. “Did I hurt you, Raymond? I’m sorry if I
-did, but it wasn’t meant.”
-
-She sank down upon the parapet. All the vehemence went out of her.
-
-“You see,” she said in a whispering voice—“you see, I can’t forget. God
-knows how hard I’ve tried. Every one else has forgotten, but I can’t
-forget. If I could, I should sleep—but I can’t. Henry, have you ever
-tried very hard to forget anything?”
-
-“Yes,” said Henry.
-
-“Will you tell me what it was?”
-
-“I’m afraid I can’t.”
-
-“Oh well, it doesn’t matter, and if you really understand, you know that
-the more one tries the more vivid it all becomes.”
-
-“It’s Tony?” asked Henry.
-
-“Yes, it’s Tony,” said Raymond, in an odd voice—“but it’s not because
-he’s dead—I don’t want you to think that. I could have borne that; I
-could have borne anything if I could have seen him once again, or if he
-had known that I cared, but he went away in anger and he never knew.”
-
-“I didn’t know,” said Henry—“I’m sorry.”
-
-Lady Heritage looked away across the sea. The moonlight showed where the
-jagged line of rocks cut sharp through the sleeping water.
-
-“There’s a verse in the Bible—do you ever read the Bible, Henry? I
-don’t, but I remember this verse; one was taught it as a child. ‘Let not
-the sun go down upon your wrath.’ I let the moon rise and go down on
-mine.” She spoke very, very quietly. “Anthony stood there, just by that
-urn. He said, ‘You’ll have all the rest of your life to be sorry in....’
-That was the last thing he said to me. He never forgave, and he never
-wrote. I didn’t think any man would let me go so easily, so I married
-John Heritage to show that I didn’t care. And, whilst we were on our
-honeymoon, I saw Anthony’s name in the list of missing. Now, do you
-wonder that I hate you for coming here, and for being alive, and taking
-Tony’s place? And do you wonder that there are times when I hate
-everything so much that I’d like well enough to see this whole sorry
-scheme shattered to bits—if it could be done?”
-
-“I’m not so keen on this shattering business, Raymond,” said Henry.
-“Don’t you think there’s been about enough of it? There are a lot of
-rotten things, and a lot of good things, and they’re all mixed up. If
-you start shattering, the odds are you bring down everything together.”
-
-“Well?” said Raymond, just one word, cold and still.
-
-There was a little pause. Then she laughed.
-
-“Is Henry also among the preachers?” she said mockingly. “You should
-take Orders; a surplice would be becoming.”
-
-Henry was annoyed to feel that he was flushing.
-
-“Shall I go on preaching?” he said, and as he spoke, Mr. Ember came
-through the open glass door with a cloak over his arm.
-
-“I am a relief expedition,” he announced. “You must be frozen. Never
-trust a moonlight night.”
-
-He put the wrap about Raymond’s shoulders, but she did not fasten it.
-
-“I’m coming in,” she said.
-
-She and Ember passed into the lighted room. Henry stood still for a
-minute, listened acutely; then he followed them.
-
-There was a hedge of stiffly growing veronica bushes at the foot of the
-terrace wall. After Henry had gone in, the man called George Patterson
-came out from behind the bushes at the far end of the terrace. He walked
-slowly with a dragging step, keeping in the shadow of the house, and he
-made his way to the far end of the north wing.
-
-Inside the Yellow Drawing-Room Henry was bidding his hostess good-night,
-and announcing his intention of taking a moonlight stroll.
-
-Presently he emerged upon the terrace, descended the steps on the right,
-and made his way in the direction taken by George Patterson.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
-When Jane reached her own room, she stood a long time in front of the
-glass frowning at herself. It might be safe to look so exactly like a
-schoolgirl, but it was very, very humiliating. Henry had never glanced
-at her once. That, of course, was all in the line of safety too. Also,
-why should Henry look at her? Why should she wish him to do so? She was
-not in love with him; she had, in fact, refused him—could it be that
-there was a little balm in this thought? What did it matter to her how
-long he looked at Raymond Heritage?
-
-She took off the white muslin dress and put it away.
-
-The worst part of being Renata was, not the risk, but having to wear
-Renata’s clothes. All the things were good, horribly good, and they were
-all quite extraordinarily dull. “If your shoes want mending, and your
-things are threadbare, every one knows it’s because you’re poor, and not
-because you like being down at heel and out at elbows. But Renata’s
-things must have cost quite a lot, and, of course, every one thinks they
-are my choice.”
-
-By some deflected line of reasoning “every one” meant Henry.
-
-Jane folded up the pale blue sash and shut it sharply into a drawer.
-Then she put on Renata’s dressing-gown. It was made of crimson flannel,
-very thick and soft, with scalloped edges to the collar and
-cuffs—“exactly like one’s grandmother’s petticoat.”
-
-She rumpled the bedclothes and disarranged the pillows. Then she put out
-the light, sat down on the window-seat, and waited.
-
-The blind was up; she had slipped behind the chintz curtains. The
-terrace lay beneath her, only half in shadow now. There was no sound in
-the house, no sound from the sea. The line of shadow moved backwards
-inch by inch.
-
-When Jane sat down to wait, she told herself that she would not listen
-and strain; she would just sit there quite peacefully, and if anything
-was going to happen—well, let it happen. But as she sat there, she
-became afraid against her will, aware once more of that sense of
-pressure which had come upon her in the drawing-room. It was as if
-something was steadily approaching not her alone, but all of them—as if
-their thoughts and actions were being, at one and the same time,
-dictated by an outside force and scrutinised—watched—spied upon.
-
-With all her might she resisted this sensation and the fear that it
-suggested. But, as the night passed to midnight and beyond, a strange
-feeling of being one watcher in a slumbering household detached itself
-from the general confusion, and she began to long with great intensity
-for something—anything—to happen.
-
-Once something moved in the foot-wide strip of shadow against the house.
-Jane caught her breath and then saw that it was only a cat, a half-grown
-kitten rather, beloved of the cook. It came out into the moonlight and
-walked solemnly the entire length of the terrace with delicately taken
-steps and a high waving tail. It was as soundless and black as the
-shadow out of which it had come, and presently it was gone again, and
-second by second, minute by minute, slow, interminable, the night
-dropped away. In the hall a clock struck the quarters. The silence,
-shattered for a moment, closed again.
-
-When the rapping came, it brought the oddest sense of interruption. Jane
-sprang to her feet, stood for a moment catching at her self-control, and
-then went noiselessly to the door. She listened before opening it, and
-could hear nothing; and, as she listened, the knocking came again, but
-from behind her.
-
-Bewildered, she edged the door open and looked out. A shaded light
-burned far away to the left. The long, dim corridor was empty. She shut
-the door.
-
-Some one was knocking—somewhere—but where?
-
-She turned and stood facing the windows. Up in the far corner a large
-cupboard filled the angle and blunted it. Jane had hung her serge dress
-there hours and hours ago. The knocking seemed to come from the
-cupboard, just where the room was at its darkest because next the
-lighted window.
-
-Jane crossed the floor very slowly, put both hands on the cupboard
-doors, and flung them wide. For a moment everything was quite black,
-then, with a most unpleasant suddenness, a narrow white ray cut the
-dark, and Henry’s voice said, “It’s only me.”
-
-Jane’s hand went to her lips, pressing them firmly. She would not have
-admitted that this action alone saved her from screaming. After a moment
-she gave a little gasp, and located Henry, or rather Henry’s head, which
-was almost under her feet.
-
-In the cupboard floor there was a square black hole, and, just above
-floor-level, Henry’s face looked up at her, tilted at an odd angle,
-whilst his one visible hand manipulated a small electric torch.
-
-“Wait,” said Jane, in a whisper.
-
-She went quickly to the door, locked it, removed the key, and put it in
-one of the dressing-table drawers. She did not know quite what made her
-do this, only suddenly when her eyes saw Henry, her mind had a vivid
-impression of that long corridor with its one faintly glimmering light.
-
-Then she sat down on the cupboard floor, close to Henry’s head, and
-breathed out:
-
-“Henry!—how on earth?”
-
-Henry, who appeared to be standing upon a ladder or something equally
-vertical, came up a few steps, sat down on the edge of the hole, and
-switched off his torch.
-
-“I had to see you,” he said. “This was my room in the old days, and Tony
-and I found this passage. It leads down to another cupboard in the
-garden room where they keep the tennis and croquet gear. How are
-you?—all right?”
-
-“Yes, quite all right.”
-
-“That’s good. Now which of us is going to talk first?”
-
-“I think I had better,” said Jane. “You see, I saw Renata, and she told
-me things, and I think, if you don’t mind, Henry, that I had better tell
-you everything that she told me.”
-
-“Yes, please.” He hesitated. “One minute, Jane, I just wanted to say,
-you don’t mind talking to me like this, do you? I wouldn’t have asked
-you to if there had been any other way—what I mean to say is....”
-
-Jane gave a very small laugh, which was instantly repressed. She
-reflected that it was pleasanter to suppress a laugh than a scream.
-
-“What you mean to say is, there aren’t any chaperons in this scene. You
-needn’t apologise, Henry. Sleuths never have chaperons—it’s simply not
-done; and, anyhow, I’m sure you’d make a beautiful one. Shall I go on?”
-
-It may be doubted whether Henry really cared about being described as a
-chaperon. His tone was rather dry as he said:
-
-“Go on, please.”
-
-As for Jane, who had prodded him on purpose just to see if anything
-would happen, she certainly felt a slight disappointment accompanied by
-a sense of increased respect.
-
-“You saw Renata. What did she tell you?”
-
-“She told me what she overheard,” said Jane, speaking slowly. “Henry, if
-I tell you what it was, will you promise me not to let any one guess
-that you know? If they were certain that I knew, I shouldn’t be alive
-to-morrow; and if they thought you knew the secret, you’d never get back
-to London alive.”
-
-“Who is ‘they,’ Jane?” said Henry.
-
-“I want to tell you about Renata first. She really did walk in her
-sleep, you know. She must have waked when she opened the door. She said
-the first thing she knew was the cold feel of the hall linoleum under
-her feet. The door was open, and she was standing just on the threshold.
-There was a screen in front of her, and beyond the screen a man talking.
-She heard every word he said, and I am sure that what she repeated to me
-was just exactly what she heard. The first words that she caught were
-‘Formula “A.”’”
-
-Henry gave a violent start.
-
-“Good Lord!” he said under his breath. “You’re sure?”
-
-“Quite. Then he went on, and this is what he said: ‘You all have Formula
-“A.” You will go to your posts and from your directions you will prepare
-what is needful according to that formula, carrying out to the last
-detail the cipher instructions which each of you has received. As soon
-as the experiments relating to Formula “B” are completed, you will
-receive a summons in code. You will then assemble at the rendezvous
-given, and Formula “B,” with all instructions for its employment, will
-be entrusted to you. With Formula “A” you have the key. When Formula “B”
-is also complete you will have the lock for that key to fit; then the
-treasures of the world are yours. The annihilation of civilisation and
-of the human race is within our grasp. When the key has turned in the
-lock we only shall be left, and....’ Just then, Renata said, some one
-else cried out, ‘The door! The door!’ They pushed the screen away and
-pulled her in. She nearly fainted. When she revived a little, her father
-and Mr. Ember were trying to find out what she had heard. Fortunately
-for herself, she told me, at first it was all confusion. The only thing
-that stood out clearly was that shout at the end, but afterwards, when
-she was alone, it all came back. She said it was like a photographic
-plate developing, hazy at first, and then everything getting clearer and
-sharper until each detail came out. She repeated the whole thing as if
-it were a lesson.”
-
-“Wait,” said Henry. “My head’s going round. I want to sort things out.”
-
-Jane waited. She had been prepared for Henry to be impressed or
-incredulous. What took her by surprise was the puzzled note in his
-voice. “Lord, what a mix-up!” she heard him say.
-
-Then he addressed her again.
-
-“Did you ever play ‘Russian Scandal,’ Jane?” he said.
-
-“Yes, of course. But if you had heard Renata—the sort of queer
-mechanical way she spoke, exactly like a gramophone record—why, the
-words weren’t words she’d have used, and all that about Formula ‘A’—do
-you think that’s the sort of thing that a schoolgirl makes up?”
-
-“No,” said Henry unexpectedly. “I think it is quite possible that she
-overheard something about Formula ‘A,’ and I’d give a good deal to know
-just what she did hear.”
-
-“I’ve told you what she heard,” said Jane. “Jimmy always said I had a
-photographic memory, and I said the whole thing over to myself until I
-had it by heart. You see, I didn’t dare to write it down.”
-
-“Can you say it again?” said Henry. “I’d like to get it down in black
-and white, and have a look at it. At present it makes me feel giddy.”
-
-“You mustn’t write it down,” said Jane breathlessly. “Oh, you mustn’t,
-Henry! It’s not safe.”
-
-Henry turned on his torch, propped it against the wall, and produced a
-notebook and a pencil. The cold, narrow beam of light showed his knee,
-the white paper, a pencil with a silver ring, and Henry’s large, brown
-hand.
-
-“He has a _horribly_ determined hand,” thought Jane.
-
-“Now,” said Henry, “will you start at the beginning and say it all over
-again, please?”
-
-Jane did so meekly, but her inward feelings were not meek. Once more she
-repeated, word for word, and sentence for sentence, the somewhat
-flamboyant speech of Number Four.
-
-Henry’s hand travelled backwards and forwards in the little lane of
-light, and, word for word, and sentence by sentence, he wrote it down.
-When he had finished, he read over what he had written. If he had not a
-photographic memory, he was, at any rate, aware that Jane in her
-repetition had not varied so much as a syllable from her first
-statement.
-
-He went on looking at what he had written. At last he said:
-
-“Jane, I think I must tell you something in confidence. Sir William, as
-you know, is conducting important experiments for the Government. How
-important you may perhaps have gathered from the extraordinary
-precautions which are taken to prevent any leakage of information. These
-experiments have resulted in two valuable discoveries represented, for
-purposes of official correspondence, by the terms Formula ‘A’ and
-Formula ‘B.’ Within the last week we have had indisputable proof that
-Formula ‘A’ has been offered to a foreign power. That is the reason for
-my presence here. Now these are facts. Let them sink into your mind,
-then read over what I have just taken down, and tell me how you square
-those facts with Renata’s statement.”
-
-Jane picked up the notebook, stared at the written words, set Henry’s
-facts in the forefront of her mind, and remarked candidly:
-
-“It does make your head go round rather, doesn’t it?”
-
-Henry assented. They both sat silent. Then Jane put down the notebook.
-
-“Never mind about our heads going round,” she said. “Let me go on and
-tell you the rest of it. It isn’t only what Renata heard; it’s the
-things that keep happening—little things in a way, but oh, Henry,
-sometimes I think they are more frightening just because they are little
-things. I mean, supposing you know you’re going to be executed, you
-brace yourself up, and it’s all in the day’s work, but if you are out at
-a dinner-party and you suddenly find poison in the soup, or a bomb in
-the middle of the table decorations, it’s ... well, it’s unexpected—and,
-and _perfectly beastly_.”
-
-Jane’s voice broke just for an instant.
-
-Henry’s hand came quickly through the torchlight, and rested on both
-hers. It was a satisfactorily large and heavy hand.
-
-She told him about her interview with Ember at the flat, and one by one
-she marshalled all the small happenings which had startled and alarmed
-her.
-
-Henry waited until she had quite finished. Then he said:
-
-“This lip-reading—you know, my dear girl, it’s a chancy sort of thing;
-it seems to me that there are unlimited possibilities of mistake.”
-
-“Some people are much easier to read from than others. Lady Heritage is
-very easy. I’m sure I was not mistaken; she was saying, ‘If she
-overheard anything, would she have the intelligence to be dangerous?
-That is what I ask myself,’ and she said, ‘Despise not thine enemy,’ and
-‘Anything but Formula “A.”’ Now Mr. Ember is very difficult. I can’t
-really make him out at all. His lips don’t move. It’s no use not
-believing me, Henry. Look here, I’ll show you.”
-
-She caught up the little torch, and turned the light upon his face.
-
-“Say something,” she commanded.
-
-Henry’s lips formed the words, “Jane, I love you very much indeed”—and
-Jane switched off the light.
-
-“Henry, you’re a perfect beast! Play fair,” she said, in a low, furious
-whisper.
-
-“Sorry. Wasn’t it all right? Try again.”
-
-Jane allowed the ray to light up Henry’s mouth and chin. The hand that
-held the torch was not quite steady. This may have been the result of
-anger—or of some other emotion. As a result the light wavered a good
-deal.
-
-Henry’s lips moved, and Jane read aloud, “A sleuth should never lose its
-temper.”
-
-Henry’s hand caught the little shaking one that held the torch, and gave
-it a great squeeze.
-
-“How frightfully clever you are, and—oh, Jane, what a goose!”
-
-“I’m not,” said Jane.
-
-“But don’t you see that, with Renata’s story in your mind, you would be
-looking out for things? You couldn’t help it.”
-
-“What do you think, then, of Lady Heritage saying that Mr. Ember’s
-verdict was inclined to be ‘Guilty, but recommended to mercy,’ whereas
-she said that she herself doubted the guilt, but that if she did not,
-she would have no mercy at all? Do you know, that frightened me almost
-more than anything. I don’t know why. That wasn’t lip-reading; I heard
-the words with my own ears.”
-
-“But—don’t you see——” He paused. “Let’s get back to facts: Formula ‘A’
-has been stolen and offered for sale. Renata, undoubtedly, overheard
-something relating to Formula ‘A.’ Now, supposing Mr. Molloy or one of
-his friends to be the person who is doing the deal, don’t you see that
-the possibility of Renata having overheard something compromising would
-be sufficient to account for a good deal of alarm?
-
-“If Molloy and his friends had stolen Formula ‘A’ and were trying to
-dispose of it, it would naturally be of the highest importance to them
-to find out how much Renata knew, and to take steps which would ensure
-her silence. They would almost certainly try and frighten her—that’s how
-it seems to me.”
-
-“Then where does Mr. Ember come in?” said Jane. “He was there.”
-
-“Are you sure?”
-
-“Renata described him,” said Jane. “She said he was the worst of them
-all.”
-
-“She knew him by name?”
-
-“No. But ... but”—a little chill breath of doubt played on Jane’s
-certainty—“she called him the man in the fur coat. The others spoke of
-him as Number Two.”
-
-“But you don’t know that it was Ember?”
-
-For a moment Jane felt that she was sure of nothing; then, with a swift
-revulsion, her old fears, suspicions, certainties, received vigorous
-reinforcement.
-
-“Henry,” she said, “listen. You’re on the wrong scent—I know you are. I
-can’t tell you how I know it, but I’m quite, quite sure. If you were an
-anarchist, and wanted to produce some horrible thing that would smash
-civilisation into atoms, how would you set about it?—where would you go?
-Don’t you see that the very safest place would be somewhere like this,
-somewhere where you could carry on your experiments under the cover of
-real experiments? It’s like the caterpillars that pretend to be
-sticks—what do you call it?—protective mimicry.”
-
-“Jane!” said Henry.
-
-“I’m sure that’s what they have done. I’m sure that there is something
-dreadful going on in this house. And if you can’t square what Renata
-heard with what you know of Formula ‘A,’ why, then I believe that there
-must be more than one Formula ‘A.’ Don’t you see how cunning it would be
-for them to take the name of a real Government invention to cover up
-whatever horrible thing it is that they are working at?”
-
-There was a dead silence.
-
-“Another Formula ‘A’?” said Henry slowly. Then, with an abrupt change of
-manner:
-
-“Leave it—all of it—and tell me some things I want to know. Sir William,
-for instance—he was put out at my coming down, I know—but what is he
-like as a rule? He does not always drink as much as he did to-night,
-does he?”
-
-“I think he does. Henry, I think he takes too much—I do, really; and
-he’s frightfully irritable. But that’s not what strikes me most. The
-thing I notice is that he doesn’t seem to do any work. Mr. Ember is
-supposed to be his secretary, but he really does all his work with Lady
-Heritage. She goes on all the time. She spends hours in the
-laboratories. I believe she works there till ever so late, but Sir
-William just sticks in his study and broods. I thought how strange it
-was from the very first day.”
-
-“And Lady Heritage? Put all this mysterious business on one side and
-tell me what you make of her?”
-
-Jane hesitated.
-
-“She’s—she’s disturbing. I think she has too much of everything, and it
-seems to upset the balance of everything she touches. She’s too
-beautiful for one thing, and she has too much intellect, and too much,
-far too much, emotion. I think she is dreadfully unhappy too, with the
-sort of unhappiness that makes you want to hurt somebody else. You know
-what she sang this evening. I think she really feels like that, and
-would like to smash—everything. That’s why....” Jane broke off suddenly;
-her voice dropped to the least possible thread, “Oh, what’s that—what’s
-that?”
-
-As she spoke, her hand met Henry’s on the switch of the torch. The light
-went out. Jane clung to one of the hard, strong fingers as she listened
-with all her ears. She heard a footstep, light and unmistakable, and it
-stopped upon the threshold.
-
-There were about twenty seconds of really terrifying silence, and then
-the handle of the door turned slowly. Jane heard the creak of the hinge,
-the minute rattle of the latch. Then the handle was released, but slowly
-and with the least possible noise. There was another silence.
-
-Jane pinched Henry as hard as she could, and though this, of course,
-relieved the strain she felt dreadfully afraid that she would scream
-unless something broke through this dreadful quiet.
-
-Something did break through it next moment, for there came a low
-knocking on the door, and with the first sound of that knocking Jane
-recovered herself. With an extraordinary quickness and lightness she was
-on her feet and out of the cupboard, the cupboard was shut, and Jane,
-her shoes noiselessly discarded, was sitting on the side of a rumpled
-bed, a fold of the sheet across her mouth, inquiring in sleepy, muffled
-accents:
-
-“What is it? Who’s there?”
-
-The knocking had gone on steadily. Now it stopped, and a voice said, “It
-is I, Lady Heritage. Open the door.”
-
-Jane threw back the bedclothes so as to cover the chair at the
-bed-foot—a chair upon which there should have been a neatly folded pile
-of clothes—pulled off her stockings, and took the key out of the
-dressing-table drawer.
-
-“Oh, what is it?” she said, and fumbled at the lock.
-
-Next moment the door was open, and she saw Lady Heritage in her white
-linen overall and head-dress, the latter pushed back and showing her
-hair.
-
-Lady Heritage saw a startled girl in a red flannel dressing-gown.
-Between the moonlight and the light from the passage there was a sort of
-dusk. Lady Heritage put her hand on the switch, but did not pull it
-down. Instead, she said quickly:
-
-“I saw a light under the door. Are you ill?”
-
-Jane rubbed her eyes.
-
-“A light?” she said.
-
-Raymond crossed the room quickly and felt each of the electric bulbs.
-
-“A light?” said Jane again.
-
-Lady Heritage went back to the door and turned all the lights on.
-
-“Do you always lock yourself in?” she said. “And why did you take the
-key out of the door?”
-
-“Was it wrong? They say that if you lock your door and put the key away,
-even if you walk in your sleep, you don’t go out of the room. I
-shouldn’t like to walk in my sleep in a big house like this, and perhaps
-wake up in a cellar or out on the terrace.”
-
-Lady Heritage did an odd thing. Something flashed across her face as
-Jane was speaking, and she put both hands on the girl’s shoulders and
-pulled her round so that she faced the light.
-
-Jane met, for a moment, a most extraordinary look. It did not seem to go
-through her as Mr. Ember’s scrutiny had done, but it shook her more. She
-looked down and said shakily:
-
-“What is it? Oh, please tell me if I have vexed you—oh, please....”
-
-Lady Heritage took her hands away.
-
-“I had forgotten you walked in your sleep,” she said. “I don’t like
-locked doors as a rule, but I suppose you had better keep yours
-fastened. I shouldn’t like you to walk into the sea and get drowned, or
-break your neck falling off the terrace. Get back to your bed. I’m just
-going to mine. I’ve been working late.”
-
-She went out, and it was a long, long time before Jane, who had heard
-the soft footfalls die away in the distance, dared open the door and
-take a hasty look along the corridor. It was quite empty.
-
-After another pause she went to the cupboard door and opened it. The
-flooring stretched unbroken; there was no square hole, and no Henry. She
-sat down on the floor, hesitated, and then knocked lightly.
-
-Under her very hand a board rose with a little jerk—a line of light
-showed, and Henry’s voice said softly:
-
-“All clear?”
-
-“Yes, be quick, I daren’t wait.”
-
-“Who was it?”
-
-“Lady Heritage.”
-
-“What did she want?”
-
-“I don’t know. She said she saw a light. Henry, she frightens me, she
-really does.”
-
-The board rose a little higher.
-
-“A sleuth who gets frightened is no earthly——” said Henry firmly. “Now
-look here, Jane, I can get you out of this quite easily if you want to
-come. You are the only person in the house whom I haven’t interviewed.
-Mr. Ember said that of course I shouldn’t want to see you, as you did
-not get here until after the leakage must have taken place. I made no
-comment at the time, but it is perfectly open to me to insist on seeing
-you, to say that I am not satisfied with the interview, and to take you
-back to London for further interrogation.”
-
-Henry had opened the trap door about a foot. His face, lighted from
-below, looked very odd with the chin almost resting on a board at Jane’s
-feet and the trap held up by one hand and only just clearing his hair.
-Jane would have wanted to laugh if his last suggestion had appalled her
-less.
-
-“Oh, you mustn’t,” she said. “If you do that, it’s all up. Mr. Ember
-would never, never, never, allow you to interview me. He’d be afraid of
-what I might say, and he’d find some awful way of keeping me quiet. As
-to letting me go off to London with you, well, if we started we’d
-certainly never get there. And oh, Henry, please, please go away. I’m
-sure they suspect something, and if she comes again, or if he comes—oh,
-Henry, do go.”
-
-“All right,” said Henry. “Now, Jane, look here. I’m off before
-breakfast, but I can make an excuse to come down at any time if you want
-me. If anything is going wrong, or you get frightened, or if you want to
-get out of it write for patterns of jumper wool to the Misses Kent,
-Hermione Street, South Kensington. It’s a real wool shop and they’ll
-send you real patterns, but Miss Kent will ring me up the minute she
-gets your letter. I’ll come down straight away, and you look out for me
-here.”
-
-“Do you mean you’ll come and stay? Won’t they suspect something?”
-
-“They won’t know,” said Henry. “Don’t ask me why, but send for me if you
-want me, and be very sure that I shall come. Got that address all
-right?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then I’ll be off.”
-
-“Yes, please go.”
-
-As a preliminary to going, Henry came up a step higher, set the torch on
-the floor, and took Jane by the hand.
-
-“Don’t get frightened, Jane,” he said. “I hate you to be frightened.”
-
-“I’m not, not really.”
-
-Henry came up another step; the trap now rested on his shoulders.
-
-“Oh, Henry, _please_....”
-
-“I’m going,” said Henry. He continued to hold Jane’s hand and appeared
-immovable. Jane could of course have taken her hand away and left the
-cupboard, but this did not occur to her till afterwards.
-
-Quite suddenly Henry kissed her wrist, and a piece of the red flannel
-cuff. The next minute he was really gone. Perhaps it had occurred to him
-that he was a chaperon.
-
-Jane lay awake for a long time.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
-Henry went away by an early train, and Jane came down to what, as a
-child, she had once described as a crumpled kind of day. She remembered
-“darling Jimmy” looking at her in a vague way, and saying in his gentle,
-cultivated voice:
-
-“Crumpled, my dear Jane? What do you mean by crumpled?”
-
-And Jane, frowning and direct:
-
-“I mean a thing that’s got crumps in it, Jimmy darling,” and when Mr.
-Carruthers did not appear to find this a sufficient explanation, she had
-burst into emphatic elucidation:
-
-“I was cross, and Nurse was cross, and you were cross. Yes, you were,
-and I had only just opened the study door ever so little; and I didn’t
-mean to upset the milk or to break the soap-dish; and oh, Jimmy, you
-must know what a crump is, and this day has been just chock-full of
-them. That’s why I said it was crumpled.”
-
-The day of Henry’s departure was undoubtedly a crumpled day. To start
-with, a letter from Mr. Molloy awaited Jane at the breakfast table. It
-began, “My dear Renata,” and was signed, “Your affectionate father,
-Cornelius R. Molloy.” Mr. Ember remarked at once upon the unusual
-circumstance of there being a letter for Miss Molloy, and Jane, acting
-on an impulse which she afterwards regretted, replied:
-
-“It’s from my father. Do you want to see what he says?”
-
-“Thank you,” said Jeffrey Ember. He glanced casually at the bald
-sentences in which Mr. Molloy hoped that his daughter was well, and
-expressed dislike of the climatic conditions which he had encountered on
-the voyage. His eyes rested for a moment upon the signature, and quite
-suddenly he cast a bombshell at Jane.
-
-“What does the ‘R’ stand for?” he said.
-
-Jane had the worst moment of panic with which her adventure had yet
-provided her. She was about to say that she did not know, and take the
-consequences, when Mr. Ember saved her.
-
-“Is it Renatus?” he asked. Jane broke into voluble speech.
-
-“Oh no,” she said, “my name has nothing to do with his. I was called
-Renata after an aunt, my mother’s twin sister. They were exactly alike
-and devoted to each other, and I was called after my Aunt Renata, and
-her only daughter was called after my mother.” Here Jane bit the tip of
-her tongue and stopped, but she had not stopped in time. Mr. Ember’s
-eyes had left Molloy’s signature and were fixed upon her face.
-
-“And your mother’s name?” he said.
-
-“Jane,” faltered Jane.
-
-“And are you and your cousin as much alike as your mothers were?”
-
-Jane stared at her plate. She stared so hard that the gilt rim seemed to
-detach itself and float like a nimbus above a half-finished slice of
-buttered toast.
-
-“I—I don’t know,” she replied. “I don’t remember my mother, and I never
-saw my aunt.” Once again she bit her tongue, and this time very hard
-indeed. She had been within an ace of saying, “My Aunt Jane——”
-
-“But you have seen your cousin; by the way, what is her surname?”
-
-“Smith—Jane Smith.”
-
-“You have seen your cousin, Jane Smith? Are you alike?”
-
-“I have only seen her once.” Jane grasped her courage, and looked
-straight at Mr. Ember. He either knew something, or this was just idle
-teasing. In either case being afraid would not serve her. A spice of
-humour might.
-
-“You’re frightfully interested in my aunts and cousins,” she said. “Do
-you want to find another secretary just like me for some one? But I’m
-afraid my Cousin Jane isn’t available. She’s married to a man in
-Bolivia.”
-
-At this point Lady Heritage looked over the edge of _The Times_ with a
-frown, and the conversation dropped. Jane finished her buttered toast,
-and admired herself because her hand did not shake.
-
-Lady Heritage seemed to be in a frowning mood. This, it appeared, was
-not one of the days when she disappeared behind the steel grating with
-Ember, leaving Jane to pursue her appointed tasks in the library.
-Instead, there was a general sorting of correspondence and checking of
-work already done, with the result that Jane found herself being played
-upon, as it were, by a jet or spray of hot water. The temperature
-varied, but the spray was continuous. A letter to which Lady Heritage
-particularly wished to refer was not to be found, a package of papers
-wrongly addressed had come back through the Dead Letter Office, and an
-unanswered invitation was discovered in the “Answered” file. By three
-o’clock that afternoon Jane had been made to feel that it was possible
-that the world might contain a person duller, more inept, and less
-competent than herself—possible, but not probable.
-
-“I think you had better go for a walk, Miss Molloy,” said Lady Heritage;
-“perhaps some fresh air....” She did not finish the sentence, and Jane,
-only too thankful to escape, made haste from the presence.
-
-Ember had been right when he said that the grounds were extensive.
-
-Jane skirted the house and made her way through a space of rather
-formally kept garden to where a gravel path followed the edge of the
-cliff. For a time it was bordered by veronica and fuchsia bushes, but
-after a while these ceased and left the bare down with its rather coarse
-grass, tiny growing plants, tangled brambles, and bright yellow clumps
-of gorse. The path went up and down. Sometimes it almost overhung the
-sea. Always a tall hedge of barbed wire straggled across the view and
-spoilt it.
-
-The fact that a powerful electric current ran through the wire and made
-it dangerous to touch added to the dislike with which she regarded it.
-
-It was a grey afternoon with a whipping wind from the north-west that
-beat up little crests of foam on the lead-coloured waves and made Jane
-clutch at her hat every now and then. She thought it cold when she
-started, but by and by she began to enjoy the sense of motion, the
-wind’s buffets, and the wide, clear outlook. At the farthest point of
-the headland she stopped, warm and glowing. The path ran out to the edge
-of the cliff. On the landward side the rock rose sharply, naked of
-grass, and heaped with rough boulders. A small cave or hollow ran
-inwards for perhaps four feet. In front of it, in fact almost within it,
-stood a stone bench pleasantly sheltered by the overhanging rock and
-curving sides of the hollow. Jane felt no need of shelter. Instead of
-sitting down, she climbed upon the back of the bench and, steadying
-herself against a rock, looked out over the wire and saw how the cliff
-fell away, sheer at first, and then in a series of jagged, tumbled steps
-until the rocks went down into the sea.
-
-After a time Jane scrambled down and was hesitating as to whether she
-would turn or not when a sound attracted her attention.
-
-The path ended by the stone bench, but there seemed to be quite a
-practicable grassy track beyond.
-
-The sound which Jane had heard was the sound made by a stone which has
-become displaced on a hillside. It must have been a very heavy stone. It
-fell with a muffled crash. Then came another sound which she could not
-place. She looked all round and could see nothing.
-
-Something frightened her.
-
-All at once she realised that she was a long way from the house and
-quite out of sight. Turning quickly, she began to walk back along the
-way that she had come, but she had not gone a dozen paces before she
-heard scrambling footsteps behind her. Looking over her shoulder, she
-saw the man George Patterson standing beside the stone seat which she
-had just left. He made some sort of beckoning sign with his hand and
-called out, but a puff of wind took away the words, and only a hoarse,
-and as she thought, threatening sound reached her ears.
-
-Without waiting to hear or see any more she began to run, and with the
-first flying step that she took there came upon her a blind, driving
-panic which sent her racing down the path as one races in a nightmare.
-
-George Patterson started in pursuit. He called again twice, and the
-sound of his voice was a whip to Jane’s terror. After at the most a
-minute he gave up the chase, and Jane flew on, pursued by nothing worse
-than her own fear.
-
-Just by the first fuchsia bush she ran, blind and panting, into the very
-arms of Mr. Ember. The impact nearly knocked him down, and it may be
-considered as certain that he was very much taken aback.
-
-Jane came back to a knowledge of her whereabouts to find herself
-gripping Mr. Ember’s arm and stammering out that something had
-frightened her.
-
-“What?” inquired Ember.
-
-“I—don’t—know,” said Jane, half sobbing, but already conscious that she
-did not desire to confide in Jeffrey Ember.
-
-“But you _must_ know.”
-
-“I don’t.”
-
-With a little gasp Jane let go, and wished ardently that her knees would
-stop shaking. Ember looked at her very curiously.
-
-Jane had often wondered what his queer cold eyes reminded her of.
-Curiously enough, it was now, in the midst of her fright, that she knew.
-They were like pebbles—the greeny-grey ones which lie by the thousand on
-the seashore. As a rule they were dull and hard, just as the pebbles are
-dull and hard when they are dry. But sometimes when he was angry, when
-he cross-questioned you, or when he looked at Lady Heritage the dullness
-vanished and they looked as the pebbles look when some sudden wave has
-touched them. Jane did not know when she disliked them most.
-
-They brightened slowly now as they fixed themselves upon her, and Ember
-said:
-
-“Do you know, I was hoping I might meet you. We haven’t had a real talk
-since you came.”
-
-“No,” said Jane.
-
-Her manner conveyed no ardent desire for conversation.
-
-“Shall we walk a little?” pursued her companion; “the wind’s cold for
-standing. I really do want to talk to you.”
-
-Jane said nothing at all. If Ember wished to talk, let him talk. She was
-still shaky, and not at all in the mood for fencing.
-
-“Well, how do you like being here? How do we strike you?”
-
-Ember spoke quite casually, and Jane thought it was strange that he and
-Henry should both have asked her the same question. Her reply, however,
-differed.
-
-“I don’t know,” she said.
-
-“Don’t you? My dear Miss Renata, what a really extraordinary number of
-things you—don’t know! You don’t know what frightened you, and you don’t
-know whether you like us or not.”
-
-Jane’s temper carried her away.
-
-“Oh yes, I do,” she said viciously, and looked full at the bright pebble
-eyes.
-
-Ember laughed.
-
-“What do you think of Lady Heritage? Wonderful, isn’t she?”
-
-“Oh yes,” said Jane. “She’s the most beautiful person I’ve ever seen.
-Too beautiful, don’t you think?”
-
-If she desired to interest Jeffrey Ember, it appeared that she had
-succeeded. His attention was certainly arrested.
-
-“Why too beautiful?”
-
-Jane had an impulse towards frankness.
-
-“I think she’s too ... everything. She has so many gifts, it does not
-seem as if there could be scope for them all.”
-
-Ember looked at Jane for a moment. Then he looked away. In that moment
-Jane saw something—she could not really tell what. The nearest that she
-could get to it was “triumph.” Yes, that was it, triumph.
-
-As he looked away he said, very low, “She will have scope enough,” and
-there was a little tingling silence.
-
-He broke it in an utterly unforeseen manner. With an abrupt change of
-voice he asked:
-
-“Ever learn chemistry?”
-
-“No,” said Jane, and then wondered whether she was telling the truth
-about Renata.
-
-“’M—know what a formula is?”
-
-Jane put a dash of ignorant conviction into her voice:
-
-“Oh, I think so—oh yes, of course.”
-
-“Well, what is it?”
-
-She looked puzzled.
-
-“It’s difficult to explain things, isn’t it? Of course I know
-‘formulate,’ and er—‘formal.’ But it’s—it’s something learned, isn’t
-it?”
-
-Ember’s sarcastic smile showed for a moment. With a horrid inward qualm
-Jane wondered whether she had overdone Renata’s ignorance.
-
-“A formula is a prescription,” said Ember slowly. “If you remember that,
-I think you’ll find it all quite simple. So that Formula ‘A’ is simply a
-prescription for making something up, labelled ‘A’ for convenience’
-sake.”
-
-Jane let her eyes become quite round.
-
-“Is it?” she said in the blankest tone at her command. “But ... but what
-is Formula ‘A,’ Mr. Ember?”
-
-“That, my dear Miss Renata, is what a good many people would like to
-know.”
-
-“Would they? Why?”
-
-“They would. In fact, some of them—person or persons unknown—wanted to
-know so much that they have gone to the length of stealing Formula ‘A.’
-That, at least, is Captain March’s opinion, and the reason for his visit
-here. So I should be careful, very careful indeed, about betraying any
-knowledge of Formula ‘A.’”
-
-Jane whisked round, stared blankly, and said in largest capitals:
-
-“ME?”
-
-Then, after a pause, she burst out laughing. “What do you mean?”
-
-“You either know, or you don’t know,” said Jeffrey Ember. “If you don’t
-know, I’m not going to tell you. If you do, I have just given you a
-warning. A very valuable Government secret has been stolen, and if
-Captain March were to suspect that you were in any way involved—well, I
-suppose ... I need not tell you that the consequences would be serious
-beyond words.”
-
-Jane gazed at him in a breathless delight which she hoped was not
-apparent. The day had been singularly lacking in pleasantness, but it
-was undoubtedly pleasing to receive a solemn warning of the dreadful
-fate that might overtake her if Henry should suspect that she knew
-anything about Formula “A.”
-
-“But I haven’t the slightest idea what Formula ‘A’ can be,” she said.
-“It sounds frightfully exciting. Do tell me some more. Was it stolen?
-And how could anything be stolen here?”
-
-“Who frightened you?” he said suddenly.
-
-Jane caught her breath.
-
-“It was a stone,” she said. “I don’t know why it frightened me so. It
-fell over the edge of the cliff and gave me a horrid nightmare-ish sort
-of feeling. I started running and then I couldn’t stop. It was
-frightfully stupid of me.”
-
-They walked on a few paces. Then Ember said:
-
-“Captain March will probably come down here again. I managed to save you
-from an interview with him this time, but if he comes again, and if he
-sees you, remember there is only one safe way for you—you know nothing,
-you never have known anything, as far as you are concerned there is
-nothing to know. You shouldn’t find that difficult. You have quite a
-talent for not knowing things. Improve it.” He paused, smiled slightly,
-and went on, “You said just now that it was frightfully stupid of you to
-be frightened. Sometimes, Miss Renata, it is a great deal more stupid
-not to be frightened. Believe me, this is one of those times.”
-
-They walked home in silence.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
-Whilst Jane was running away from fear, down the gravel path of the
-cliff’s edge, Captain March was about midway through an interview with
-his chief.
-
-Henry’s chief was a large man who strongly resembled a clean and highly
-intelligent pig. A very little hair appeared to grow reluctantly on his
-head; his face was pink and clean-shaven. He had inherited the
-patronymic of Le Mesurier, his parents in his baptism had given him the
-romantic name of Julian, and a grateful Government had conferred upon
-him the honour of knighthood. It is, perhaps, unnecessary to add that,
-from the moment that he emerged from the nursery and set foot within the
-precincts of his first preparatory school, he had been known exclusively
-as “Piggy.”
-
-There is a story of a débutante who, at a large and formal dinner-party,
-was discovered during a sudden silence to be addressing him as Sir
-Piggott. The dinner-party waited breathlessly. Piggy smiled his benign
-smile and explained that it had not been his good fortune to be called
-after his aunt, Miss Piggott.... “I expect you have heard of her? She
-left all her money to a home for cats, whereas, if my parents had done
-their duty and invited her to be my godmother, I should be paying at
-least twice as much income tax as I do now. Never undervalue your
-relations, my dear Miss Browne.” The aunt was, of course, apocryphal;
-and after dinner each of the older ladies in turn took the débutante
-aside, and told her so—as a kindness. To each of them she made the same
-reply, which was to the effect that “Piggy” was a darling. She married
-him two years later. But all this has nothing to do with Henry’s
-interview with his chief.
-
-Sir Julian was speaking:
-
-“It’s very unsatisfactory. You say they have been complying with all the
-suggestions in the original Government instructions?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-Sir Julian frowned.
-
-“It’s very unsatisfactory,” he repeated. “Sir William ... well, it’s six
-months since I saw him, and he looked all right then.”
-
-“He looks all right now,” said Henry. “He is all right except on his own
-particular subject. He’d discuss politics, unemployment, foreign
-affairs, or anything else, and you wouldn’t notice anything, but the
-minute he comes to his own subject everything worries and irritates him.
-He’s lost grip. As far as I can make out, he leaves everything to his
-daughter and the secretary. They are competent enough, but....” Henry
-did not finish his sentence.
-
-“Ah yes, the secretary,” said Sir Julian. “What’s his name? Yes, Ember,
-Jeffrey Ember....” He turned an indicator under his hand, and spoke
-rapidly into the telephone beside him. “As soon as possible,” he
-concluded.
-
-“This girl now,” he said, looking at Henry. “I don’t see how this
-statement of hers can be squared with any of the facts as we know them.”
-
-As he spoke he picked up the notes which Henry had taken in the dark
-cupboard.
-
-“She made a suggestion herself,” said Henry. He paused, and looked with
-a good deal of diffidence at Sir Julian.
-
-“Well?”
-
-“It is just within the bounds of possibility that the Government
-experiments are being used as a blind. That was her suggestion, sir.”
-
-Sir Julian was busily engaged in drawing on his blotting-paper. He drew
-in rapid succession cats with arched backs and bottle-brush tails,
-always beginning with the tail and finishing with the whiskers, three on
-each side. Henry rightly interpreted this as a sign that he was to
-continue.
-
-“The conversation which was overheard at Molloy’s flat referred to a
-Formula ‘A,’ which cannot possibly be the Formula ‘A’ which we know.
-There may be a Formula ‘A’ of which we know nothing, and it may
-constitute a grave danger. Ember”—Henry paused—“Ember is not only in a
-position of great responsibility with regard to our—the official Formula
-‘A,’ but he also appears to be mixed up with this other unofficial and
-possibly dangerous Formula ‘A.’ The question, to my mind, is, ‘What
-about Ember?’”
-
-Sir Julian continued to draw cats. Suddenly he looked up, and said:
-
-“How long has Patterson been there?”
-
-“A fortnight,” said Henry. “We recalled Jamieson, you remember, and sent
-him down.”
-
-“Then, if there were unofficial experiments, they would be before his
-time?”
-
-“Yes,” said Henry.
-
-“Would it be possible—no, I’ll put it another way. Officially Luttrell
-Marches is impregnable, but unofficially—come March, the place
-practically belongs to you—is there any way in which there might be
-coming and going that would defy detection? You see, your hypothesis
-demands either wholesale corruption of Government workmen, or the
-introduction of other experiments.”
-
-There was a pause. Then Henry said:
-
-“In confidence, sir, there _is_ a way, but, to the best of my knowledge,
-it is known only to myself and one other person.”
-
-“It might be discovered.”
-
-“I don’t think so. It never has been.”
-
-“Well, I would suggest your ascertaining, in conjunction with the other
-person, whether there is any evidence to show that the secret has been
-discovered and the way made use of.”
-
-The telephone bell rang. Sir Julian lifted the receiver and listened.
-
-“Yes,” he said—“yes.” Then he began to take notes. “Spell the name,
-please—yes. Nineteen hundred and five? Is that all? Thank you.”
-
-He hung up the receiver, and turned to Henry.
-
-“Ember’s dossier,” he said. “Not much in it at first sight. ‘Born 1880.
-Son of Charles Ember, partner in Jarvis & Ember—manufacturing chemists;
-firm liquidated in 1896. Education till then at Harrow, and subsequently
-at Heidelberg, where he took degrees in medicine and science. From 1905
-to 1912 at Chicago, U. S. A., as personal assistant to Eugene K.
-Blumfield of Nitrates Ltd. Engaged as secretary by Sir William
-Carr-Magnus during his American tour in autumn of 1912. Total exemption
-during War on Sir William’s representations.’ ’M—blameless as a
-blancmange—at first sight. We wouldn’t have him here at all if we hadn’t
-been told to get the record of every one employed at Luttrell Marches.
-Well, March?”
-
-Henry looked up with his candid, diffident air.
-
-“Heidelberg—Chicago—nitrates,” he said, with a little pause after each
-word. Then—“I wonder if it was in Chicago that he met Molloy. Molloy was
-a leading light of the I. W. W. there in 1911.”
-
-Piggy looked up for a moment.
-
-“’M, yes,” he said. “Did you get on to the subject of Molloy at all?”
-
-“I had to be very careful,” said Henry, with a worried air. “I was
-introduced to Miss Molloy, so I felt that it would look odd if I asked
-no questions. On the other hand, I was afraid of asking too many. You
-see, sir, if there’s really some infernal, underground plot going on,
-with the general smash-up of civilisation as its object, that girl is in
-a most awfully dangerous position. I wish to Heaven she was out of it,
-but I’m not at all sure that she isn’t right when she says that the most
-dangerous thing of all would be for her to give the show away by
-bolting.”
-
-“’M, yes,” said Piggy. “Your concern for the young lady’s safety does
-you credit—attractive damsel in distress, eh? Nice, pretty young thing,
-and all that?”
-
-Henry blushed furiously, and said with some stiffness, “As I told you,
-sir, we are old friends, and I think, it’s natural——”
-
-“Entirely, entirely.” Piggy waved a large, fat hand with a pencil in it.
-“But to get back to Ember—what did you ask him?”
-
-“Well, I said I had known one or two Molloys, and asked whether Miss
-Molloy was the cricketer’s daughter. Ember was quite forthcoming, rather
-too forthcoming, I thought. Said he’d met Molloy in the States, and that
-he was a queer card, but good company. Explained how surprised he was
-when he ran into him at Victoria Station after not seeing him for years.
-Then, quite casually and naturally, gave me to understand that Molloy
-had put him up for a couple of nights. He really did it very well. Said
-the daughter was a nice little thing just from school, that he thought
-she would suit Lady Heritage, and how grateful Molloy was, as he was
-just off to the States, and didn’t know what to do with the girl. The
-impression I got was that he was taking no chances—not leaving anything
-for me to find out afterwards.” Henry hesitated for a moment, and then
-said, “The thing that struck me most was this. I didn’t ask to interview
-Miss Molloy because I didn’t want to make her position more dangerous
-than it already is. That is to say, I assumed that there _was_ danger,
-which really means assuming a criminal conspiracy. Now, if there were no
-danger and no criminal conspiracy, why on earth did every one make it so
-easy for me not to interview Miss Molloy? It seems a little thing, but
-it struck me—it struck me awfully, sir. You see, I took a roll-call of
-the employés first, and checked them by the official list. Then I went
-down to the stables with Sir William, and we went through all the
-outdoor servants. And I finished up in Sir William’s study, where I saw
-the domestic staff—and Mr. Ember. From first to last, no one suggested
-that I should see Miss Molloy. In the end, I thought it would be too
-marked not to bring her in at all, so I said to Lady Heritage, ‘What
-about your secretary?’ and she said, ‘Why, she’s only just come ... you
-don’t need to see her.’ I got nervous and left it at that. I think now
-that I ought to have seen her, with Lady Heritage and Ember in the room;
-then they couldn’t have suspected her of telling me anything.”
-
-Piggy looked up from his cats, and looked down again. Very carefully he
-gave each cat a fourth whisker on the left-hand side. Then he fixed his
-small, light eyes on Henry and said:
-
-“_They?_”
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-At 9.30 that evening Sir Julian marked a place in his book with a
-massive thumb, glanced across the domestic hearth at his wife, and
-observed:
-
-“M’ dear.”
-
-Lady Le Mesurier raised her charming blue eyes from the child’s frock
-which she was embroidering.
-
-“I have news to break to you—news concerning the lad Henry. Prepare for
-a shock. He is another’s. You have lost him, my poor Isobel.”
-
-“I never had him,” said Isobel placidly.
-
-“His mamma thought you had. She did her very best to warn me. I rather
-think she considered that your young affections were also entangled. I
-said to her solemnly, ‘My dear Mrs. March—I beg your pardon—my dear Mrs.
-_de Luttrelle_ March—of course he is in love with Isobel. I expect young
-men to be in love with her. I am in love with her myself.’”
-
-“Piggy, you didn’t!”
-
-“No, m’ dear, but I should have liked to. She is so very large and pink
-that the temptation to say it, and to watch the pink turn puce, was
-almost more than I could resist. But you have interrupted me. I was
-about to break to you a portentous fact. Our Henry is in love.”
-
-“Oh, Piggy!” said Isobel.
-
-“Yes,” continued Henry’s chief—“Henry is undoubtedly for it. Another
-lost soul. It’s always these promising lads that are snatched by the
-predatory sex.”
-
-“Piggy—we’re not——”
-
-“M’ dear, you _are_. It’s axiomatic, beyond cavil or argument. Like the
-python in the natural history books, you fascinate us first, and then
-engulf us.”
-
-Isobel allowed a fleeting smile to lift the corners of her very pretty
-mouth.
-
-“Oh, Piggy, what a mouthful you would be!” she murmured.
-
-“Henry,” pursued Sir Julian—“Henry is in the fascinated stage. He
-blushed one of the most modestly revealing blushes I have ever beheld.
-The whole story is of the most thrillingly romantic and intriguing
-nature, and I regret to say, m’ dear, that I cannot tell you a single
-word of it.”
-
-Lady Le Mesurier took up a blue silk thread.
-
-“Oh, Piggy!” she said reproachfully.
-
-Sir Julian beamed upon her.
-
-“My official duty forbids,” he said, with great enjoyment. “Dismiss the
-indecent curiosity which I see stamped upon your every feature. Upon
-Henry’s affair my lips are sealed. I am a tomb. I merely wish to have a
-small bet with you as to whether Henry’s mamma will queer his pitch or
-not.”
-
-“But, Piggy darling, how can I lay odds if I don’t know anything? Tell
-me, is she pretty?”
-
-“Isobel, is that the spirit in which to approach this solemn subject? As
-an old married woman, you should ask, Is she virtuous? Is she thrifty?
-Is she worthy of Henry? And to all these questions I should make the
-same reply—I do not know.”
-
-Isobel leaned forward, and still with that faint, delightful smile she
-pricked the back of Sir Julian’s hand sharply with the point of her
-embroidery needle.
-
-“The serpent’s tooth!” he said, and opened his book. “Isobel, you
-interrupt my studies. I merely wish to commend three aspects of the case
-to your feminine intuition. First—Henry is in love; second—he has yet to
-reckon with his mamma; third—I may at any time ring you up and instruct
-you to prepare the guest chamber for Henry’s girl.”
-
-Lady Le Mesurier began to work a blue ribbon bow round the stalks of
-some pink and white daisies.
-
-“You’re rather a lamb, Piggy,” she said.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
-It was next morning, whilst Jane was sorting and arranging the papers
-for the library table, that she caught sight of Henry’s first message.
-She very nearly missed it, for the fold of the paper cut right across
-the agony column, and what caught her eye was the one word that passed
-as a signature, “Thursday.” It startled her so much that she dropped the
-paper, and, in snatching at it, knocked over a pile of magazines.
-
-Lady Heritage looked over her shoulder with a frown, tapped with her
-foot, and then went on with her writing in a silence that uttered more
-reproof than words could have done.
-
-Jane picked everything up as silently as possible. As she put the papers
-on the table, she laid _The Times_ out flat, and, bending over it, read
-the message:
-
-“You will receive a letter from me. Trust the bearer. Thursday.”
-
-She put all the papers neatly in their places, and went to her
-writing-table with an intense longing to be alone, to be able to think
-what this might mean, and to wonder who—who would be the bearer of
-Henry’s letter. She hoped ardently that Lady Heritage would have
-business in the laboratories, and whilst these thoughts, and hopes, and
-wonderings filled her mind, she had to write neat and legible replies to
-the apparently inexhaustible number of persons who desired Lady Heritage
-to open bazaars, speak at public meetings, subscribe to an indefinite
-number of charities, or contribute to the writer’s support.
-
-When, at last, she was alone in her own room, she was tingling with
-excitement. At any moment some one, some unknown friend and ally, might
-present himself. It was exciting, but, she thought, rather risky.
-
-For instance, supposing Henry’s letter came, by any mischance, into the
-wrong hands—and letters were mislaid and stolen sometimes—what a
-perfectly dreadful chapter of misfortunes might ensue. She frowned, and
-decided that Henry had been rash.
-
-It was with a pleasant feeling of superiority that she put on her hat
-and went out into the garden to pick tulips.
-
-The weather had changed in the night, and it was hot and sunny, with the
-sudden dazzling heat of mid-April. In the walled garden the south border
-was full of violet-scented yellow tulips, each looking at this new hot
-sun with a jet-black eye. A sheet of forget-me-nots repeated the sheer
-blue of the sky.
-
-Jane picked an armful of tulips and a sheaf of leopard’s bane. Strictly
-speaking, she should then have gone in to put the flowers in water for
-the adornment of the Yellow Drawing-Room. Instead, she made her way to
-the farthest corner of the garden and basked.
-
-At first she looked at the flowers, but after a while her eyelids fell.
-
-Jane has never admitted that she went to sleep, but, if she was thinking
-with her eyes shut, her thoughts must have been of an extremely
-engrossing nature, for it is certain that she heard neither the opening
-nor the shutting of a door in the wall beside her. She did feel a shadow
-pass between herself and the sun, and opening her eyes quickly she saw
-standing beside her the very man from whom she had fled in terror
-yesterday.
-
-The sunlight fell from upon him, showing the shabby clothes, the tall,
-stooping figure, the grizzled beard, and that disfiguring scar.
-
-With a great start Jane attempted to rise, only to discover that a
-wheelbarrow may make a very comfortable chair, but that it is uncommonly
-difficult to get out of in a hurry. To her horror the man, George
-Patterson, took her firmly by the wrist and pulled her to her feet. She
-shrank intensely from his touch, received an impression of unusual
-strength, and then, to her overwhelming surprise, she heard him say in a
-low, well-bred voice, “I have a letter for you, Miss Smith.”
-
-“Oh, hush!” said Jane—“oh, please, hush!”
-
-“All right, I won’t do it again. Look here, I want to say a few words to
-you, but we had better not be seen together. Here’s your letter. Stay
-where you are for five minutes, and then come down to the potting-shed.
-Don’t come in; stay by the door and tie your shoe-lace.”
-
-He went off with his dragging step, and left Jane dumb. There was a
-folded note in her hand, and in her mind so intense a shock of surprise
-as to rob her very thoughts of expression.
-
-After what seemed like a long paralysed month, she opened the note which
-bore no address, and read, pencilled in Henry’s clear and very
-ornamental hand, “The bearer is trustworthy.—H. L. M.”
-
-When she had looked so long at Henry’s initials that they had blurred
-and cleared again, not once but many times, she walked mechanically down
-the path until she came to the shed. Beside it was a barrel full of
-rain-water. Into this she dipped Henry’s note, made sure that the words
-were totally illegible, poked a hole in the border, and covered the
-sodden paper with earth. Then at the potting-shed door she knelt and
-became occupied with her shoe-lace.
-
-“Henry saw me after he saw you,” said George Patterson’s voice. “He
-thought it might be a comfort to you to know there is a friend on the
-spot; but I’m afraid I gave you a fright yesterday.”
-
-“You did,” said Jane, “but I don’t know why. I was a perfect fool, and I
-ran right into Mr. Ember’s arms.”
-
-“Did you tell him what frightened you?” said Patterson quickly.
-
-“No, I wasn’t quite such a fool as that. Please, who are you?”
-
-“My name here is George Patterson. I’m a friend of Henry’s. If you want
-me, I’m here.”
-
-“If I want you,” said Jane, “how am I to get at you?”
-
-Mr. Patterson considered.
-
-“There’s a wide sill inside your window.” (And how on earth do you know
-that? thought Jane.) “If you put a big jar of, say, those yellow tulips
-there, I’ll know you want to speak to me, and I’ll come here to this
-potting-shed as soon as I can. You know they keep us pretty busy with
-roll-calls and things of that sort. I only got back yesterday by the
-skin of my teeth—I had to bolt.”
-
-“Did you—you didn’t pass me.”
-
-“No, I didn’t pass you.” There was just a trace of amusement in Mr.
-Patterson’s voice.
-
-Jane pulled her shoe-lace undone, and began to tie it all over again.
-
-“Hush!” she said very quick and low. “Some one is coming.”
-
-Just where the path ended, not half a dozen yards away, the red-brick
-wall was pierced by a door. Two round, Scotch rose-bushes, all tiny
-green leaf and sharp brown prickle, grew like large pin-cushions on
-either side of the interrupted border. Bright pink nectarine buds shone
-against the brick like coral studs. The ash-coloured door, rough and
-sun-blistered, was opening slowly, and into the garden came Raymond
-Heritage, pushing the door with one hand and holding a basket of bulbs
-in the other. She was looking back over her shoulder, at something or
-someone beside her.
-
-From inside the potting-shed came Patterson’s voice—just a breath:
-
-“Who?”
-
-“Lady Heritage.”
-
-Jane was up as she spoke and moving away. She reached the door just as
-Raymond closed it and, turning, saw her.
-
-“Oh, Miss Molloy—I was really looking for you. Is Garstin anywhere
-about?”
-
-“I haven’t seen him,” murmured Jane, as if the absent gardener might be
-blooming unnoticed in one of the borders.
-
-“He’s not in the potting-shed? I’ll just look in and see. I want to
-stand over him and see that he puts these black irises where I want them
-to go. They come from Palestine, and the last lot failed entirely
-because he was so obstinate. I’ll get a trowel and mark the place I
-think.” She moved forward as she spoke, and Jane, horror-struck,
-stammered:
-
-“Let _me_ look. It’s so dusty in there.”
-
-She was back at the door of the shed, but Lady Heritage was beside her.
-“I want a trowel, too,” she said, and Jane felt herself gently pushed
-over the threshold.
-
-They were both just inside the door. It seemed dark after the strong
-light outside. There was a row of windows along one side, and a broad
-deal shelf under them. There were piles and piles of pots and boxes.
-There were hanks of bass and rows of tools, There were watering-cans.
-There was a length of rubber hose. But there was no George Patterson.
-
-Jane put her hand behind her, gripped the jamb of the door, and moved
-back a pace so that she could lean against it. The pots, the tools, the
-bass and the rubber hose danced before her bewildered eyes.
-
-Lady Heritage put her basket of bulbs down on the wide shelf and said:
-
-“Garstin ought to be here. He’s really very tiresome. That’s the worst
-of old servants. When a gardener has been in a place for forty years as
-Garstin has, he owns it.”
-
-“Shall I find him?” said Jane.
-
-“No, not now. I really want to talk to you. I’ve just been speaking to
-Jeffrey Ember, and he tells me you had a fright yesterday. What
-frightened you?”
-
-“Nothing—my own silliness.”
-
-Jane felt as if she must scream. George Patterson had disappeared as if
-by a conjuring trick. Where had he gone to? Where was he? It was just
-like being in a dream.
-
-Raymond Heritage seemed to tower before her in her white dress. Her
-uncovered head almost touched the low beam above the door.
-
-“Jeffrey said you were blind with fright—that you ran right into him. He
-said you were as white as a sheet and shaking all over. I want to know
-what frightened you?”
-
-“A stone—it fell into the sea——”
-
-“What made it fall? A man? What man?”
-
-Jane leaned against the door-post, her breath coming and going, her eyes
-held by those imperious eyes.
-
-“A stone,” she said; “it fell—I ran away.”
-
-“Miss Molloy,” said Lady Heritage, “you walked to the end of the
-headland, out of sight of the house. Whilst you were there something
-gave you a serious fright. Something—or somebody. This is all nonsense
-about a stone. Whom did you see on the headland, for you certainly saw
-somebody? No, don’t look away; I want you to look at me, please.”
-
-“I don’t know why I was so frightened,” said Jane. “It just came over
-me.”
-
-Lady Heritage looked at her very gravely.
-
-“If you saw any stranger on the headland, it is your absolute duty to
-tell me. Where secrets of such value are in question it is necessary to
-watch every avenue and to neglect no suspicious circumstance. If you are
-trying to screen any one, you are acting very foolishly—very foolishly
-indeed. I warn you, and I ask you again. What frightened you?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Jane in a little whispering voice. “Why, why do you
-think there was any one?”
-
-“I don’t think,” said Lady Heritage briefly. “I know. Mr. Ember went up
-to the headland after he left you, and there were footmarks in the
-gravel. Some man had undoubtedly been there, and you must have seen him.
-Mr. Ember made the entire round and saw no one, but some one had been
-there. _Now_ will you tell me what you saw?”
-
-“Oh!” said Jane. Rather to her own astonishment she began to cry. “Oh,
-that’s why I was frightened then! The stone fell so suddenly, and I
-didn’t know why—why——”
-
-The sobs choked her.
-
-Lady Heritage stood looking at her for a moment.
-
-“Are you just an arrant little fool,” she said in a low voice, “or....”
-
-“Oh, I’m not!” sobbed Jane. “Oh, I’ve never been called such a thing
-before! I know I’m not clever, but I don’t think you ought to call me a
-f—f—fool.”
-
-Lady Heritage pressed her lips together, and walked past Jane and out
-into the sunshine. She stood there for a moment tapping with her foot.
-Then she called rather impatiently:
-
-“Miss Molloy! Dry your eyes and come here.”
-
-Jane came, squeezing a damp handkerchief into a ball.
-
-“Bring your flowers in; I see you’ve left them over there to die in the
-sun. I’m driving into Withstead this afternoon and you can come with me.
-I have to see Mrs. Cottingham about some University extension lectures,
-and she telephoned just now to say would I bring you. She has a girl
-staying with her who thinks she must have been at school with you or one
-of your cousins. Her name is Daphne Todhunter.”
-
-Jane stood perfectly still. Daphne Todhunter? Arnold Todhunter’s sister
-Daphne! Renata’s friend! But Daphne must know that Arnold was married?
-The question was—whom _had_ Arnold married. Had his family welcomed (by
-letter) Jane Smith or Renata Molloy to its bosom? If Renata Molloy, how
-in the world was a second Renata to be explained to Miss Daphne
-Todhunter?
-
-“Miss Molloy, what’s the matter with you?” said Lady Heritage.
-
-Jane could not think quickly enough. Supposing Lady Heritage went to
-Mrs. Cottingham’s without her; and supposing Daphne Todhunter were to
-say that her brother Arnold had married a girl called Renata Molloy?
-
-It was too much to hope that Arnold had carried discretion to the point
-of telling his own family that he had married an unknown Jane Smith.
-
-Jane suddenly threw up her chin and squared her shoulders. The colour
-came back into her cheeks.
-
-“Nothing,” she said, with a little caught breath. “I’m sorry I was so
-silly, and for crying, and if I was rude to you. It’s most awfully kind
-of you to take me into Withstead.”
-
-If there were any music to be faced, Jane was going to face it. At least
-the tune should not be called behind her back.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-A feeling of exhilaration amounting to recklessness possessed Jane as
-she put on the white serge coat and skirt sacred to the Sabbath
-crocodile. Attired in it Renata, side by side with Daphne Todhunter,
-had, doubtless, walked many a time to church and back. In front of her
-two white serge backs, behind her more white serge, and more, and more,
-and more. Jane’s head reeled. She detested this garment, but considered
-it appropriate to the occasion.
-
-They drove into Withstead across the marshes. The sun blazed, and all
-the tiny marsh plants seemed to be growing and stretching themselves.
-
-Mrs. Cottingham lived in a villa on the outskirts of the town, and was
-ashamed of it. She had married kind little Dr. Cottingham, but imagined
-that she had condescended in doing so. Her reasons for thinking this
-were not apparent.
-
-Jane followed Lady Heritage into the dark, rather stuffy drawing-room,
-and beheld a middle-aged woman with a rigidly controlled Victorian
-figure, a tightly netted grey fringe, and a brown satin dress with a
-good many little gold beads upon it. She had a breathless sense of the
-extraordinary way in which the room was overcrowded. Every inch of the
-walls was covered with photographs, fans, engravings, and china plates.
-Almost every inch of floor space was covered with small ornamental
-tables crowded with knick-knacks. There was a carved screen, and an
-ebonised overmantel with looking-glass panels. There was a Japanese
-umbrella in the fireplace.
-
-Jane’s eyes looked hastily into every corner. There were more things
-than she had ever seen in one room before, but there was no Daphne
-Todhunter. Mrs. Cottingham was shaking hands with her. She had a fat
-hand and squeezed you.
-
-“And are you Daphne’s Miss Molloy?” she said. “She was _wildly_ excited
-at the prospect of meeting you, and I said at once, ‘I’ll just ring up
-Luttrell Marches, and ask Lady Heritage to bring her here this
-afternoon.’ I thought I _might_ do that. You see, I only happened to
-mention your name this morning, and Daphne was so _excited_, and she
-goes away tomorrow, so it was the only chance. So I thought I would just
-ring up and ask Lady Heritage to bring you. I said to Daphne at once,
-‘Lady Heritage is so kind, I’m sure she will bring Miss Molloy.’”
-
-Jane saw Lady Heritage’s eyebrows rise very slightly. She moved a step,
-and instantly Mrs. Cottingham had turned from Jane:
-
-“Why Lady Heritage, you’re standing! Now I always say _this_ is the most
-comfortable chair.”
-
-Her voice went flowing on, but Jane suddenly ceased to hear a word she
-said, for a door at the far end of the room was flung open. On the
-threshold appeared Miss Daphne Todhunter.
-
-In common with most other Daphnes, Cynthias and Ianthes, she was short
-and rather heavily built. Her brown hair was untidy. She wore the twin
-coat and skirt to that which was adorning Jane.
-
-With an exclamation of rapture, she rushed across the room, dislodging a
-book from one little table and an ash-tray from another.
-
-(“Her eyes are exactly like gooseberries which have been boiled until
-they are brown,” thought Jane, “and I _know_ she’s going to kiss me.”)
-
-She not only kissed Jane, she hugged her. Two stout arms and a waft of
-white rose scent enveloped Jane’s shrinking form.
-
-After a moment in which she wondered how long this embrace would last,
-Jane managed to detach herself. Mrs. Cottingham’s voice fell gratefully
-upon her ears:
-
-“Daphne, Daphne, my dear, come and speak to Lady Heritage.—She’s wildly
-excited, as I told you—the natural enthusiasms of youth, dear Lady
-Heritage, so beautiful, so quickly lost; I’m sure you agree with
-me.—Daphne, Daphne, my dear.”
-
-Daphne came reluctantly and thrust a large hand at Lady Heritage without
-looking at her. Raymond looked at it for a moment, and, after a
-perceptible pause, just touched the finger-tips. Mrs. Cottingham never
-stopped talking.
-
-“So it _is_ your friend, and you’re just too excited for words. Take her
-away and have a good gossip. Lady Heritage and I have a great deal to
-talk about.—You were saying....”
-
-“I was saying,” said Lady Heritage wearily, “that you must write at once
-if you want Masterson to lecture for you next winter.”
-
-Daphne dragged Jane to the far end of the room.
-
-“Oh, Renata, how perfectly delicious! But how did you come here? And
-what are you doing, and where’s Arnold, and why aren’t you with him?”
-She made a pounce at Jane’s left hand, and felt the third finger.
-
-“Oh, where’s your ring?” she said.
-
-“Hush!” said Jane.
-
-They reached a sofa and sank upon it. Immediately in front of them was
-an octagonal table of light-coloured wood profusely carved. Upon it,
-amongst lesser portraits, stood a tall photograph of Mrs. Cottingham in
-a train, and feathers, and a tiara. The sofa was low, and Jane felt that
-fate had been kinder than she deserved.
-
-“Oh, Renata, aren’t you married?” breathed Daphne.
-
-She breathed very hard, and Jane was reminded of Arnold on the
-fire-escape.
-
-“Oh, Renata, tell me! When she ... Mrs. Cottingham said, ‘Miss Renata
-Molloy,’ I nearly died. I said, ‘Miss Molloy?’ And she said, ‘Yes, Miss
-Renata Molloy,’ and oh, I very nearly let the cat out of the bag.” She
-grasped Jane’s hand and pressed it violently. “But I didn’t. Arnold told
-me not to, and I didn’t, but, of course, I’m simply _dying_ to know all
-about everything. Now, darling, tell me ... tell me everything.”
-
-Never in her life had Jane felt so much aloof from any human creature.
-There was something so inexpressibly comic in the idea of pouring out
-her heart to Daphne Todhunter that she did not even feel nervous, only
-aloof—aloof, and cool. She looked earnestly at Daphne, and said:
-
-“What did Arnold tell you?”
-
-“It was the greatest shock,” said Daphne, “and such a surprise. One
-minute there he was, moving about at home, and not knowing when he would
-get a job, and perfectly distracted with hopelessness about you; and the
-next he rushed down to say good-bye because he was going to Bolivia, and
-his heart was broken because you wouldn’t go too....” She stopped for
-breath, and squeezed Jane’s hand even harder than before. “And then,”
-she continued, “you can imagine what a shock it was to get the
-letter-card.”
-
-“Yes,” said Jane, “it must have been. What did it say?”
-
-Daphne opened her eyes and her mouth.
-
-“Didn’t he show it to you? How perfectly extraordinary of him!”
-
-“Well, he didn’t” said Jane. “What did he say?”
-
-“I know it by heart,” said Daphne ardently. “I could repeat every word.”
-
-“Well, for goodness’ sake do!”
-
-“Renata! How odd you are, not a bit like yourself!” Fear stabbed Jane.
-
-“Tell me what he said—tell me what he said,” she repeated.
-
-With an effort she pressed the hand that was squeezing hers.
-
-“What, Arnold, in the letter-card? But I think it was just too weird of
-him not to have shown it to you—too extraordinary.”
-
-Jane felt that she was becoming dazed.
-
-“What did he say?”
-
-“I know it all by heart. I could say it in my sleep. He said, ‘Just off;
-we sail together. We were married this morning, and I’m the happiest man
-in the world. Don’t tell any one at present. If you love me, not a word
-to a soul. Will write from Bolivia.—Arnold. P. S.—On no account tell
-Aunt Ethel.’ So you see why I nearly died when she said Miss Renata
-Molloy, for of course I thought you were in Bolivia with Arnold, and oh,
-Renata, where is he and what has happened? Tell me everything?”
-
-She flung her arms about Jane’s neck as she spoke and gave her a long,
-clinging kiss. Jane endured it under pressure of that, “You are not a
-bit like yourself.” When she had borne it for as long as she could, she
-drew back.
-
-“Listen,” she said.
-
-“Tell me—tell me the worst—tell me everything. Where is Arnold?”
-
-“Arnold is in Bolivia,” said Jane.
-
-“And why aren’t you with him?”
-
-Jane produced a pocket-handkerchief. It was a very little one, but it
-sufficed. In her own mind Jane described it as local colour.
-
-“We have parted,” she said, and dabbed her eyes.
-
-“Renata! But you’re married to him!”
-
-“No,” said Jane, quite truthfully.
-
-An inward thankfulness that she was not married to Arnold supported her.
-
-Daphne stared at her with bulging eyes.
-
-“You’re not! But he said, ‘We were married this morning.’ I read it with
-my own eyes, and I could repeat it in my sleep. I know it by heart....”
-
-Jane checked her with a look that held so much mysterious meaning that
-the flood of words was actually stemmed.
-
-“He didn’t marry _me_,” said Jane, in a tense whisper. She looked
-straight into the boiled gooseberry eyes, and then covered her own.
-
-“He didn’t marry you?” repeated Daphne, gasping.
-
-“No,” said Jane, from behind the handkerchief.
-
-“But he’s married?”
-
-“Y—yes,” said Jane.
-
-“Oh, Renata!”
-
-Miss Todhunter cast herself upon Jane’s neck and burst into tears. The
-impact was considerable and her weight no light one.
-
-“Daphne, please—please—Lady Heritage is looking at us. Do sit up. I
-can’t tell you anything if you cry. There’s really nothing to cry
-about.”
-
-Daphne sat up again. She also produced a handkerchief, a very large one
-with “Daphne” embroidered across the corner in coral pink. A terrific
-blast of white rose emerged with the handkerchief.
-
-“But he was so much in love with you,” she wailed. “I don’t understand
-it. How _could_ he marry any one else and break your heart!”
-
-“My heart is not broken,” said Jane.
-
-“Then it was your fault, and you’ve broken his, and he’s got married
-just to show he doesn’t care, like people do in books. I don’t believe
-you love him a bit.”
-
-Jane looked modestly at the carpet, which was of a lively shade of
-crimson.
-
-“I’m afraid I don’t,” she said, in a very small voice.
-
-An unbecoming flush mounted to Daphne’s cheeks.
-
-“I don’t know how you’ve got the face,” she said.
-
-Much to Jane’s relief, she withdrew from her to the farthest corner of
-the sofa, and then glared.
-
-“Poor Arnold! Aunt Ethel always did say you were sly. She always said
-she wouldn’t trust you a yard.” She paused, sniffed, and then added, in
-what was meant for a tone of great dignity:
-
-“And please, whom _has_ Arnold married?”
-
-“Her—her name is Jane, I believe,” said Jane, with a tremor.
-
-At this moment she became aware that Lady Heritage had risen to her
-feet. Mrs. Cottingham’s voice clamoured for attention.
-
-“Oh, Lady Heritage, not without your tea! It won’t be a moment. Indeed,
-I couldn’t dream of letting you go like this. Just a cup of tea, you
-know, so refreshing. Indeed, it would distress me to think of your
-facing that long drive without your tea.”
-
-Raymond stood perfectly still, her face weary and unresponsive.
-
-“I am afraid my time is not my own,” she said, and crossed the room to
-where the two girls were sitting. They both rose, Daphne with a jerk
-that dislodged a photograph frame.
-
-“I am afraid I must interrupt your talk,” said Lady Heritage. “Were you
-living school triumphs over again? I suppose you swept off all the
-prizes between you?”
-
-If there was irony in the indifferent voice, Miss Todhunter was unaware
-of it. She laughed rather loudly, and said:
-
-“Renata never won a prize in her life.”
-
-“Oh!” said Raymond, with a lift of the brows. “I am surprised. I
-pictured her always at the head of her class, and winning everything.”
-
-Daphne laughed again. She was still angry.
-
-“I’m afraid she’s been putting on side,” she said. “Why, Miss Basing
-would have fainted with surprise if she had found Renata anywhere near
-the top of anything. Or me either,” she added, with reluctant honesty.
-
-“Miss Molloy,” said Raymond, “ask Mrs. Cottingham if she will let Lewis
-know that we are ready;” and as Jane moved away, she continued, “I
-should have thought her languages now....”
-
-Daphne’s mouth fell open.
-
-“Oh, my goodness,” she said, “she _must_ have been piling it on. Why,
-her languages were rotten, absolutely rotten. Why, Mademoiselle said
-that I was enough to break her heart, but when it came to Renata it was
-just, ‘Mon dieu!’ the whole time; and then there were rows because Miss
-Basing thought it was profane. Only, somehow it seems different in
-French—don’t you think?”
-
-Lady Heritage looked at Daphne as though she had some difficulty in
-thinking about her at all.
-
-“I see,” she said gravely, and then Mrs. Cottingham bore down upon them.
-
-“Tea should have been ready if I had known,” she said. Her colour had
-risen, and her voice shook a little. “If I could persuade you ... I’m
-sure it won’t be more than a moment. But, of course, if you must ... but
-if I had only known. You see, I thought to myself we would have our talk
-first, and then enjoy our tea comfortably, and indeed it is _just_
-coming in—but, of course, if you are _obliged_ to go....”
-
-“Thank you very much; I am obliged to go. Good-bye, Mrs. Cottingham.
-You’ll write to Masterson and let me know what the answer is? I think I
-hear the car.”
-
-Miss Todhunter, who had embraced her friend so warmly half an hour
-before, parted from her with a tepid handshake; but if neither Daphne
-nor Mrs. Cottingham considered the visit a success, Lady Heritage seemed
-to derive some satisfaction from it, and Jane told herself that not only
-had a danger been averted, but a distinct advantage had been gained.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-Jane ran straight up to her room when they got back, but she was no
-sooner there than it came into her mind to wonder whether she had put
-away the files which she had been working on just before she went into
-the garden. Think as she would, she could not be sure.
-
-She ran down again and went quickly along the corridor to the library.
-The door was unlatched. She touched the handle, pushed it a little, and
-stood hesitating. Lady Heritage was speaking.
-
-“It’s a satisfaction to know just where one is. Sometimes I’ve been
-convinced she was a fool, and then again ... well, I’ve wondered. I
-wondered this afternoon in the garden. That man on the headland gives
-one to think furiously. Who on earth could it have been?”
-
-“I ... don’t ... know.”
-
-“But I don’t believe she saw him. I don’t believe she saw anything or
-knew why she was frightened. She just got a start ... a shock—began to
-run without knowing why, and ran herself into a blind panic. She looked
-quite idiotic when I was questioning her.”
-
-“Oh,” thought Jane. “It’s horrible to listen at doors, but what am I to
-do?”
-
-What she did was to go on listening. She heard Lady Heritage’s rare
-laugh.
-
-“Then this afternoon—my dear Jeffrey, it would have convinced you or any
-one. The friend—this Daphne Todhunter—well, only a fool could have made
-a bosom friend of her, and, as I told you, even she had the lowest
-opinion of her adored Renata’s brains.”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Ember again. “You say she’s a fool, I say she’s a
-fool, her friend says she’s a fool, but something, some instinct in me
-protests.”
-
-“Womanly intuition,” said Lady Heritage, with a mocking note.
-
-There was silence; then:
-
-“These girls—were they alone together?”
-
-“No. They conducted what appeared to be a curiously emotional
-conversation at the other end of Mrs. Cottingham’s dreadful
-drawing-room, which always reminds me of a parish jumble sale.”
-
-Ember’s voice sounded suddenly much nearer, as if he had crossed the
-room.
-
-“Emotional? What do you mean?” he said quickly. Lady Heritage laughed
-again.
-
-“Mean?” she said. “Does that sort of thing mean anything?”
-
-“What sort of thing? Please, it’s important.”
-
-“Oh, hand-holding, and a tearful embrace or two. The usual
-accompaniments of schoolgirl _schwärmerei_.”
-
-Jane could hear that Ember was moving restlessly. Her own heart was
-beating. She knew very well that in Ember’s mind there was just one
-thought—“Suppose she has told Daphne Todhunter.”
-
-“Which of them cried?” said Ember sharply.
-
-“I think they both did—Miss Todhunter most.”
-
-“And you couldn’t hear what they were saying?”
-
-“Not a word.”
-
-“I must know. Will you send for her and find out? It’s of the first
-importance.”
-
-“You think....”
-
-“She may have told this girl what we’ve been trying to get out of her. I
-must know. Look here, I’ll take a book and sit down over there. She
-won’t notice me. Send for her and begin about other things, then ask her
-why her friend was so distressed....”
-
-Jane heard Ember move again and knew that this time it was towards the
-bell. She turned and ran back along the way by which she had come. Five
-minutes later she was entering the library to find Lady Heritage at her
-table and Ember at the far end of the room buried in a book.
-
-“I want the unanswered-letter file.” Lady Heritage’s voice was very
-businesslike.
-
-Jane brought it over and waited whilst Raymond turned over the letters,
-frowning.
-
-“I don’t see Lady Manning’s letter.”
-
-“You answered it yesterday.”
-
-“So I did. Miss Molloy—why did your friend cry this afternoon?”
-
-“Daphne?”
-
-“Yes, Daphne. Why did she cry?”
-
-“Oh, she does, you know.”
-
-“But I suppose not entirely without some cause.”
-
-“She was angry with me,” said Jane very low.
-
-“Yes? I noticed that she did not kiss you when you went away.”
-
-“No, she’s angry. You see”—Jane hung her head—“you see, she thinks—I’m
-afraid she thinks that I didn’t treat her brother very well.”
-
-“Her brother?”
-
-“Yes. She wanted me to be engaged to him, but he’s married some one
-else, so I think it’s rather silly of her to be cross with me, don’t
-you?”
-
-“I really don’t know.”
-
-Out of the tail of her eye Jane saw Mr. Ember nod his head just
-perceptibly. Lady Heritage must have seen it too, for she pushed the
-letter file over to Jane.
-
-“Put this away. No, I don’t want anything more at present.”
-
-Tea came in as she spoke.
-
-Afterwards in her own room Jane sat down on the broad window ledge with
-her hands in her lap, looking out over the sea. The lovely day was
-drawing slowly to a lovelier close, the sun-drenched air absolutely
-still, absolutely clear. The tide was low, the sea one sheet of unbroken
-blue, except where the black rocks, more visible than Jane had ever seen
-them, pierced the surface.
-
-Jane did not quite know what had happened to her. Her moment of
-exhilaration was gone. She was not afraid, but she felt a sense of
-horror which she had not known before. She had thought of this adventure
-as _her_ adventure, her own risk. Somehow she had never really related
-it to other people. For the first time, she began to see Formula “A,”
-not as something which threatened her, but as something that menaced the
-world. It was ridiculous that it was Mrs. Cottingham and Daphne
-Todhunter who had caused this change.
-
-It is one thing to think vaguely of civilisation being swept away, and
-_quite_ another to visualise some concrete, humdrum Tom, Dick, or Harry
-being swept horribly out of existence. Jane’s imagination suddenly
-showed her Formula “A”—The Process, whatever they chose to call the
-horrible thing—in operation; showed it annihilating fussy Mrs.
-Cottingham, with her overcrowded drawing-room and her overcrowded talk;
-showed it doing something horrible to fat, common Daphne Todhunter. The
-romance of adventure fell away, the glamour that sometimes surrounds
-catastrophe shrivelled and was gone. It was horrible, only horrible.
-
-Jane kept seeing Mrs. Cottingham’s ugly room, and Raymond Heritage
-standing there, as she had seen her that afternoon, like a statue that
-had nothing to do with its surroundings. All at once she knew what it
-was that Lady Heritage reminded her of—not Mercury at all, but Medusa
-with the lovely, tortured face, stone and yet suffering.
-
-As she looked out over that calm sea she had before her all the time the
-vision of Medusa, and of hundreds and hundreds of quite ordinary,
-vulgar, commonplace Mrs. Cottinghams and Daphne Todhunters being turned
-to stone. A tremor began to shake her. It kept coming again and again.
-Then, all at once, the tears were running down her face. It was then it
-came to her that she could not bear to think of Daphne as she had seen
-her at the last, with that hurt, angry, puzzled look.
-
-“She’s a fat lump, but Arnold is her brother, and Renata is her friend,
-and she thinks they’ve failed each other and been horrid to her. I can’t
-bear it.”
-
-At that moment Jane hated herself fiercely because Daphne’s tears had
-amused her.
-
-“You’ve got a brick instead of a heart, and, if you get eliminated,
-it’ll serve you right.”
-
-She dabbed her eyes very hard, straightened her hair, and ran downstairs
-to the library again.
-
-Ember was the sole occupant, and Jane addressed him with diffidence:
-
-“Mr. Ember, do you think I might ... do you think Lady Heritage would
-mind ... I mean, may I use the telephone?”
-
-“What for?” said Ember, looking at her over the edge of his paper.
-
-“I thought perhaps I might,” said Jane ... “I mean, I wanted to say
-something to my friend, the one who is staying with Mrs. Cottingham.”
-
-“Ah—yes, why not?”
-
-“Then I may?”
-
-“Oh yes, certainly. Do you want me to go?”
-
-Jane presented a picture of modest confusion. It was concern for Daphne
-Todhunter that had brought her downstairs, concern and the prickings of
-remorse, but at the sight of Ember, she experienced what she would have
-described as a brain-wave.
-
-“If you wouldn’t mind,” she said. “I’m so sorry to disturb you, but I
-did rather want to talk privately to her.”
-
-“Oh, by all means.” Ember’s tone was most amiable, his departure most
-courteously prompt.
-
-Jane would have been prepared to bet the eighteen-pence which
-constituted her sole worldly fortune to a brass farthing that upon the
-other side of the door his attentive ear would miss no word of her
-conversation.
-
-She gave Mrs. Cottingham’s number, and waited in some anxiety.
-
-The voice that said “Hullo!” was unmistakably Miss Todhunter’s, and Jane
-began at once:
-
-“Oh, Daphne, is that you? I want to speak to you so badly. Are you
-alone? Good! I’m so glad.”
-
-At the other end of the line Daphne was saying grumpily:
-
-“I don’t know what you mean. There are three people in the room. I keep
-telling you so.”
-
-“Good!” said Jane, with a little more emphasis. “I want to speak to you
-most particularly. I’ve been awfully unhappy since this afternoon; I
-really have. And I wanted to say—— I mean to ask you not to be upset
-about Arnold. It’s all for the best, really. Please, please, don’t think
-badly of him. It’s not his fault, and I know you’ll like his wife very
-much indeed. He’ll tell you all about it some day, and you’ll think it
-ever so romantic. So you won’t be unhappy about it, will you? I hate
-people to be unhappy.”
-
-Without waiting for Miss Todhunter’s reply, Jane hung up the receiver.
-After a decent interval she opened the door. Mr. Ember was at the far
-end of the passage, waiting patiently.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
-Jane waked that night, and did not know why she waked. After a moment it
-came to her that she had been dreaming. In her dream something
-unpleasant had happened, and she did not know what it was. She sat up in
-the darkness with her hands pressed over her eyes, trying to remember.
-
-The vague feeling of having passed through some horrifying experience
-oppressed her far more than definite recollection could have done.
-
-She got up, switched on the light, and began to pace up and down, but
-she could not shake off that feeling of having left something, she did
-not know what, just behind her, just out of sight. She looked round for
-the book she had been reading, but she remembered now that she had left
-it downstairs. She looked at her watch. It was three o’clock. The house
-would be absolutely still and empty. It would not take her two minutes
-to fetch the book from the drawing-room. She slipped on Renata’s
-dressing-gown, put out her light, and opened the door.
-
-With a little shock of surprise she saw that the corridor was dark. Some
-one must have put out the light which always burned at the far end.
-Instead of the usual faintly rosy glow, there was darkness thinning to
-dusk, and just at the stairhead a vivid splash of moonlight. After a
-moment’s hesitation Jane slipped out of her room, leaving the door ajar.
-Somehow she had not reckoned upon having to cross that brightly lighted
-space. She came slowly to the head of the stairs and looked down into
-the hall. It was like looking into the blackness and silence of a vast
-well. She could see nothing—nothing at all. The moon was shining in
-through the rose window above the great door. There was a shield in the
-window, a shield with the Luttrell arms, and the light came through the
-glass in a great beam shot with colour, and struck the portrait of Lady
-Heritage and the vine leaves and grapes on the newel just below. The
-window and the portrait were on the same level, and the ray seemed to
-make a brilliant cleavage between the silvery dusk above and the dense
-gloom below.
-
-Jane descended the stairs, walking carefully so as to make no noise. At
-the foot she turned sharply to the left and passed the study door, the
-fireplace, and the steel gate which shut off the north wing. The door of
-the Yellow Drawing-Room was straight in front of her. She opened it
-softly and went in.
-
-The book would be on the little table to the right of the fireplace,
-because she remembered putting it there when Lady Heritage made an
-unexpectedly early move. She stood for a moment visualising the
-arrangement of the chairs, and then walked straight to the right place.
-The book was where she had left it, put down open, a bad habit for which
-Jimmy had often rebuked her. She was back at the door with it, and just
-about to pass the threshold when she heard a sound. Instantly she stood
-still, listening. The sound came from the other end of the hall, where
-the shadows lay deepest round the massive oak door.
-
-“But there can’t be any one at the door at this hour,” said Jane—“there
-can’t, there can’t possibly.”
-
-The sound came again, something between a rustle and a creak, but so
-faint that no hearing less acute than Jane’s would have caught it.
-
-“It’s on the left of the door, underneath Willoughby Luttrell’s
-picture....”
-
-Jane suddenly pressed her hand to her lips and made an involuntary
-movement backwards, for there was an unmistakable click, and then, slow
-and faint, a footfall. Jane stood rigid, staring into the darkness of
-the corner. She thought she heard a sigh, and then the footsteps crossed
-the hall, coming nearer. At the stair foot they paused, and then began
-to ascend.
-
-Jane gazed into the deeply shadowed space where the footfall sounded,
-but nothing—not the slightest glimpse of anything moving—came to her
-straining sight.
-
-She looked up and saw the level ray of moonlight overhead. Whoever
-climbed the stair must pass up into the light and be visible, but from
-where she stood she could only see the side of the stair like a black
-wall. But she must see—she must. If some one had come out of the
-darkness where there was no door she must know who it was. Her bare feet
-made no sound as she moved from the sheltering doorway. Step by step she
-kept pace with those slow mounting footsteps. She passed the steel gate,
-and, feeling her way along the wall, came to a standstill by the cold
-black hearth. Then, with her whole body tense, she turned and looked up.
-There was a darker shadow among the shadows, a shadow that moved
-upwards, towards the beam of moonlight. Jane watched, breathless, and
-from where The Portrait hung, the sombre eyes of Raymond Heritage seemed
-to watch too. Out of blackness into dusk a something emerged; one step
-more and the moonlight fell on a dark hood. Up into the light came a
-cloaked figure, draped from head to foot, shapeless.
-
-On the top step it turned. Jane caught her breath. It was Lady Heritage.
-She stood there for a long minute, her left hand just resting on the
-newel post with its twining tendrils and massive overhanging grapes. The
-light shone full upon her, and her face was sharpened, blanched, and
-sorrowful. Her eyes seemed to look into unfathomable depths of gloom.
-The amber, the rose, and the violet of the stained glass fell in a hazy
-iridescence upon the black of her cloak.
-
-In front the cloak fell away and showed the straight white linen of an
-overall, and cloak and overall were deeply stained with dull wet smears.
-A piece of the stuff hung jagged from a tear.
-
-Jane looked, and could not take her eyes away.
-
-“Oh, she’s so unhappy,” she said to herself.
-
-With a quick movement Raymond Heritage pushed the hood back from her
-hair. Then she turned, faced her own portrait for a moment, and passed
-slowly out of sight. Jane heard a door close very softly.
-
-She stood quite still and waited, gathering her courage. She would have
-to mount the stair and pass through that light before she could reach
-the safely shadowed corridor. Just for a moment it seemed as if she
-could not do it. Her feet seemed to cleave to the ground. Five minutes
-passed, and another five.
-
-Jane felt herself becoming rigid, and with a tremendous effort, she took
-one step forward, but only one, for as her foot touched a new cold patch
-of floor, some one moved overhead.
-
-For an instant a little pencil of electric light jabbed into the
-darkness and went out again. The next moment Mr. Ember stepped into the
-moonlight. He too wore a linen overall, and in his left hand he carried
-the mask-like head-dress which was in use in the laboratories. His right
-hand held a torch.
-
-He came down the stairs, walking with astonishing lightness. Half-way
-down the torch came into play again. He sent the little ray in a sort of
-dazzle-dance about the hall. With every leaping flash Jane’s heart gave
-a jump, and she only stopped her teeth from chattering by biting hard
-upon the cuff of Renata’s dressing-gown. She had covered her face
-instinctively, and peered, terror-stricken, between her fingers.
-
-The light skimmed right across her once, and but for the crimson
-flannel, she would certainly have screamed aloud. If Mr. Ember had been
-looking, he could have seen a semicircle of white forehead, two
-clutching hands, and a quivering chin. But his eyes were elsewhere, and
-the dancing flash passed on.
-
-Ember crossed the hall to the far corner out of which Lady Heritage had
-come. Suddenly the light went out.
-
-Jane heard again the very, very small creaking noise which she had heard
-before. It was followed by a faint click, and then unmitigated silence.
-The seconds added themselves together and became minutes, and there was
-no further sound. The minutes passed, and the beam of moonlight slipped
-slowly downwards. Now The Portrait was in darkness, now the newels were
-just two black shadows. It was a long, long time before Jane moved. She
-climbed the staircase with terror in her heart. At the edge of the
-moonlight she waited so long that it moved to meet her. When the edge of
-it touched her bare, hesitating foot she gave a violent start, and ran
-the rest of the way.
-
-The dark corridor felt like a haven of refuge.
-
-She came panting to her own door, and suddenly there was no haven of
-refuge anywhere. The door was shut. She had left it ajar. It was shut.
-
-Jane stood with her outstretched hand flat on the panel of the door. She
-kept saying over and over to herself:
-
-“I left it open, but it’s shut. I left it open, but it’s shut.”
-
-Once she pushed the door as if it could not really be shut at all, but
-it did not yield; the latch had caught. It was shut. At last she turned
-the handle slowly and went in. A gust of wind met her full. Perhaps it
-was the wind that had shut the door. She left it ajar, moved to the
-middle of the room, and waited. For a moment there was a lull. Somewhere
-in the house a clock struck four. The sound came just over the edge of
-hearing, with its four tiny distant strokes. Then the wind rushed in
-again through the open window, and the door fell to with a click.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-By next morning the wind had brought rain with it. A south-west gale
-drove against the dripping window-panes, and covered the sea with crests
-of foam.
-
-Jane, rather pale, wrote a neat letter to the Misses Kent, Hermione
-Street, South Kensington, mentioning that she would be much obliged if
-they would send her patterns of jumper wool by return. She hesitated,
-and then underlined the last two words.
-
-“I always think big shops do you better,” was Lady Heritage’s comment,
-and Mr. Ember added, “Do you knit, Miss Renata? I thought you were the
-only girl in England who didn’t”—to which Jane replied, “I want to
-learn.”
-
-It was after the letter had been posted that she found Henry’s second
-message, “Hope to see you to-day, Friday.” She could have cried for pure
-joy.
-
-At intervals during the day, the thought occurred to her that Henry was
-a solid comfort. She wasn’t in love with him, of course, but undoubtedly
-he was a comfort. She had plenty of time to think, for she spent the
-entire day by herself. Sir William had gone to town for three or four
-days. Lady Heritage disappeared into the north wing at eleven o’clock,
-and very shortly after, Mr. Ember followed her. Neither of them appeared
-again until dinner-time. Jane went to sleep over a book and awoke
-refreshed, and with a strong desire for exploration.
-
-If only last night’s mysterious happenings had taken place anywhere but
-in the hall. The dark corner from which Raymond had emerged and into
-which Mr. Ember had vanished drew her like a magnet, but not until every
-one was in bed and asleep would she dare to search for the hidden door.
-
-“If I were just sitting here and reading,” she thought to herself,
-“probably no one would come into the hall for hours; but if I were to
-look for a secret passage, all the servants would begin to drift in and
-out, and the entire neighbourhood would come and call.”
-
-When the lights had been turned on, she wandered round, looking at the
-Luttrell portraits. This, she thought, was safe enough, and if not the
-rose, it was at least near it. Willoughby Luttrell’s picture hung
-perhaps five feet from the ground and about half-way between the hall
-door and the corner. Jane had always noticed it particularly because
-Henry undoubtedly resembled this eighteenth century uncle.
-
-Mr. Willoughby Luttrell had been painted in a Court suit of silver-grey
-satin. He wore Mechlin ruffles and diamond shoe-buckles. He had the air
-of being convinced that the Court of St. James could boast no brighter
-ornament, but his face was the face of Henry March, and Henry’s grey
-eyes looked down at Jane from beneath a Ramillies wig.
-
-After an interval Jane stopped looking at Mr. Luttrell’s eyes, and
-reflected that the click which she had heard the night before came from
-a point nearer the corner. She did not dare go near enough to feel the
-wall, and no amount of staring at the panelling disclosed any clue to
-the secret.
-
-Jane went back to her book.
-
-By sunset the rain had ceased to fall, or, rather to be driven against
-the land. The wind, lightened of its burden of moisture, kept coming
-inland in great gusts, fresh and soft with the freshness and softness of
-the spring. The entire sky was thickly covered with clouds which moved
-continually across its face, swept on by the currents of the upper air,
-but these clouds were very high up. Any one coming out of an enclosed
-place into the windy night would have received an impression of
-extraordinary freedom, movement, and space.
-
-Henry March received such an impression as he turned a pivoting stone
-block and came out of the small sheltering cave behind the seat on the
-headland above Luttrell Marches. At the first buffet of the gale he took
-off his cap, and stuffed it down into the pocket of the light ulster
-which he wore, and stood bareheaded, looking out to sea. His eyes showed
-him blackness and confused motion, and his ears were filled with the
-strange singing sound of the wind and the endless crash and recoil of
-the waves against a shingly beach.
-
-He stood quite still for a time and then turned his wrist and glanced at
-the luminous dial of the watch upon it, after which he passed again
-behind the stone seat and was about to re-enter the blacker shadows when
-a tall figure emerged.
-
-“Have you been here long?” said a voice.
-
-“No, I’ve only just come. How are you, Tony?”
-
-“All right. I didn’t think you’d be down here again so soon. It was
-touch and go whether I could get here.”
-
-“Piggy’s orders,” said Henry. “Look here, Tony, don’t let’s go inside.
-It’s a topping night, and that passage I’ve just come along smells like
-a triple extract of vaults—perfectly beastly. I don’t suppose our friend
-Ember is addicted to being out late. He doesn’t strike me as that sort
-of bird somehow.”
-
-“All right,” said Anthony Luttrell. He sat down on the stone seat as he
-spoke, and Henry followed his example.
-
-“Piggy sent you down, did he? What for?”
-
-Henry was silent. It seemed like quite a long time before he said:
-
-“Tony, who knows about the passages beside you and me?”
-
-“No one,” said Anthony shortly.
-
-“Uncle James told me when he thought the Boche had done you in. He said
-then that no one knew except he and I. He drew out a plan of all the
-passages and made me learn it by heart. When I could draw it with my
-eyes shut, we burnt every scrap of paper I had touched. I’ve been into
-the passages exactly three times—once that same week to test my
-knowledge, again the other day, and to-night. I’ll swear no one saw me
-go in or come out, and I’ll swear I’ve never breathed a word to a soul.”
-
-“Are you rehearsing your autobiography?” inquired Anthony Luttrell, with
-more than a hint of sarcasm.
-
-“No, I’m not. I want to know who else knows about the passages.”
-
-“And I have told you.”
-
-“Tony, it is no good. I had my suspicions the other night, but to-night
-I’ve got proof. The passages have been made use of. Unfortunately
-there’s no doubt about it at all. I want to know whether you have any
-idea—hang it all, Tony, you must see what I’m driving at! Wait a minute;
-don’t go through the roof until you’ve heard what I’ve got to say. You
-see, I know that Uncle James gave you the plan when you were only
-sixteen, because he thought he was dying then, and I’ve come down here
-to ask you whether any one might have seen you coming and going as a
-boy, or whether ... Tony, _did_ you ever tell any one?”
-
-“I thought you said that it was Piggy’s orders that brought you down
-here.”
-
-“Yes, it was,” said Henry.
-
-“Am I to gather then that Piggy has suggested these damned impertinent
-questions?” Mr. Luttrell’s tone was easy to a degree.
-
-Henry, on the verge of losing his temper, rose abruptly to his feet,
-walked half a dozen paces with his hands shoved well down in his
-pockets, and then walked back again.
-
-“Tony, what on earth’s the good of quarrelling?”
-
-Anthony Luttrell was leaning back, his head against the back of the
-stone seat, his long legs stretched out in front of him. He appeared to
-be watching the race of clouds between the horizon and the zenith. He
-said something, and the wind took his words away.
-
-Henry sat down again.
-
-“Look here, Tony,” he said, “you’ve not answered my question. Did you
-ever tell any one? Damn it all, Tony, I wouldn’t ask if I didn’t have
-to!... Did you ever tell Raymond?”
-
-A great gust swept the headland, another and more violent one followed
-it, battered against the cliff, and then dropped suddenly into what,
-after the tumult, seemed like a silence.
-
-“Piggy speaking, or you?” said Anthony Luttrell quite lightly.
-
-“Both,” said Henry.
-
-“You sound heated, Henry. Now I should have thought that that would have
-been my rôle. Instead, I merely repeat to you, and you in your turn, of
-course, repeat to Piggy that I have told no one about the passages, and,
-after you have admired my moderation, perhaps we might change the
-subject.”
-
-“I’m afraid it can’t be done,” said Henry. “Tony, do you mind sitting up
-and looking at this?”
-
-As he spoke he placed “this” on the seat between them and turned a light
-upon it, holding the torch close down on to the seat so that the beam
-did not travel beyond its edge. Mr. Luttrell turned lazily and saw a
-small handkerchief of very fine linen with an embroidered “R” in the
-corner. He continued to look at it, and Henry continued to hold the
-torch so that the light fell upon the initial. Then quite suddenly
-Anthony Luttrell reached sideways and switched off the light. His hand
-dropped to the handkerchief and covered it.
-
-“No, I don’t want it,” said Henry, “but I thought you ought to know that
-I found it in the passage behind us, just where one stoops to shift the
-stone.”
-
-“It’s one I found and dropped,” said Anthony, putting it into his
-pocket.
-
-Henry said nothing at all.
-
-A somewhat prolonged silence was broken by Luttrell. “I’m chucking my
-job here,” he said. “I’ve written to Sir Julian. Here’s the letter for
-you to give him.” He pushed it along the seat as he spoke, and Henry
-picked it up reluctantly. “I’ve asked to be replaced with as little
-delay as possible. You might urge that point on him, if you don’t mind.
-I want it made perfectly clear that under no circumstances will I stay
-on more than three days. I will, in fact, see the whole department
-damned first.”
-
-He spoke without the slightest heat, in the rather cold, drawling manner
-which Henry had known as a danger-signal from the days when he was a
-small boy, and Anthony a big one and his idol.
-
-“Are you giving any reason?”
-
-“No, there’s no reason to give.”
-
-“Piggy,” said Henry thoughtfully, “will want one. It’s all very well for
-you, Tony, to write him a letter and say you’re going to chuck your job
-without giving a reason. I’ve got to stand up at the other side of his
-table and stick out a cross-examination on the probable nature of the
-reasons which you haven’t given. You’re putting me in an impossible
-position.”
-
-“It’s that damned conscience of yours, I suppose! I cannot tell a lie,
-and all that sort of thing.”
-
-“Not to Piggy about this.”
-
-“All right,” said Anthony, getting to his feet, “tell him the truth. Why
-should I care? I suppose, in common with everybody else, he is perfectly
-well aware that I once made a fool of myself about Lady Heritage. Well,
-I thought I could stick being down here and seeing her, but I can’t. It
-just comes to that. I can’t stick it.”
-
-“Does she know you’re here?”
-
-“No, she doesn’t. She sees me in an overall and a mask. She has been
-pleased to commend my skill. This afternoon she leaned over my shoulder
-to watch what I was doing. Well, I came away and wrote to Piggy. I can’t
-stand it, and you can tell him so with the utmost circumstance.”
-
-Henry was leaning forward, chin in hand. He looked past Anthony at the
-black moving water.
-
-“Why don’t you see Raymond?” he said. “No, Tony, you’ve just got to
-listen to me. What you’ve been saying is true as far as it goes, but it
-doesn’t go very far. You wouldn’t chuck your job just for that. You
-know, and I know that you’re chucking it because you are afraid that
-Raymond is involved. If you know it, and I know it, don’t you think
-Piggy will know it too? That’s why I say, see Raymond. If she’s let
-herself get mixed up with this show, it’s because she’s had a rotten
-time and wants to hit back. She said as much to me—oh, not à propos of
-this, of course; we were just talking.”
-
-“I heard her,” said Anthony Luttrell. He paused, and added with a
-distinct sneer, “You displayed an admirable discretion.”
-
-“Thank you, Tony. Now what’s the good of you clearing out? If you do,
-Piggy will send some one else down here, and if Raymond has got mixed up
-with any of Ember’s devilry, she’ll get caught out. For the Lord’s sake,
-Tony, see her, let her know you’re alive! I believe she’d chuck the
-whole thing and go to the ends of the earth with you. Nobody would press
-the matter. We should catch Ember out, and you and Raymond could go
-abroad for a bit. I don’t see any other way out of it.”
-
-“You seem to me to be assuming a good deal, Henry,” said Anthony
-Luttrell.
-
-“I’m not assuming anything”—Henry’s tone was very blunt. “I know three
-things.”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“One”—Henry ticked his facts off on the fingers of his left hand: “the
-passages are being used. Two: they’ve been wired for electric light.
-Three: Raymond has been through them, and quite lately. Those three
-facts, taken in conjunction with a deposition stating that something of
-a highly dangerous and anti-social nature is being manufactured on these
-premises, and under cover of the Government experiments—well, Tony, I
-don’t suppose you want me to dot the ‘i’s’ and cross the ‘t’s.’”
-
-“It never occurred to you that my father might have had the place wired,
-I suppose?”
-
-“He didn’t,” said Henry. “It’s no good, Tony. You can’t bluff me, and I
-hate your trying to. There’s only one way out of this. You’ve got to see
-Raymond.”
-
-Anthony made an impatient movement.
-
-“You assume too much,” he said, “but I’ll put that on one side. From the
-cold, official standpoint, where does my interview with Lady Heritage
-come in? Wouldn’t it rather complicate matters? You appear to assume
-that there is a conspiracy, and then to suggest that I should warn one
-of the conspirators.”
-
-“No, I do not. I ask you to let Raymond know that you are alive, nothing
-more. In my view nothing more is necessary. She’ll naturally think you
-are here to see her, and you can let her think so. As to the cold,
-official standpoint, the last thing that the department would want is a
-scandal about a woman in Raymond’s position. Piggy would say what I
-say—for the Lord’s sake get her out of it and let us have a free hand.
-She’s an appalling complication.”
-
-“Women always are,” said Anthony Luttrell in his bitter drawl.
-
-He moved a pace or two away, and then turned back again. “You’re not a
-bad sort in spite of the conscience, Henry,” he said. “From your
-standpoint, what you’ve just said is sense—good, plain common sense—in
-fact, exactly the thing which one has no use for in certain moods.”
-
-“Scrap the moods, Tony,” said Henry, in an expressionless voice.
-
-Anthony laughed, rather harshly.
-
-“My good Henry,” he said—there was affection as well as mockery in his
-tone—“does one ask for one’s temperament? Look here, I haven’t seen
-Raymond because I haven’t dared—I don’t know what I might do or say if I
-did see her. Now that is the plain, unvarnished truth. When I was in
-Petrograd I once hid for three days in a cellar with a temperamental
-Russian lady. There was nothing to do except to talk, and we talked
-endlessly. She told me a lot of home truths—said my nature was like a
-glacier, cold and slow, and that once I had got going I had to go on,
-even if I ground all my own dearest hopes to powder in doing so.”
-
-“In other words, if you’ve got a grouch, you’re a devil to keep it,”
-said Henry. “It’s quite true; you always were. But, look here, Tony, why
-all this to my address? Why not get it off your chest to Raymond, and if
-you _will_ deal in geological parallels, well—she’s rather in the
-volcano line, or used to be, and I don’t mind betting she’ll blow your
-glacier to smithereens?” Henry looked at his watch.
-
-“I must go,” he said. “Think it over, Tony, and same place, to-morrow,
-same time.”
-
-He turned, without waiting for an answer, and walked into the darkness
-of the cave.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Jane went to her room that night, but she did not undress. Two entirely
-opposite lines of reasoning had ended in inducing one and the same
-decision. On the one hand, it might be argued that Lady Heritage and Mr.
-Ember, having passed the greater part of last night abroad upon their
-mysterious business, would be most unlikely to spend a second sleepless
-night so soon, and Jane might, therefore, count on finding the coast
-clear for a little exploring on her own account. On the other hand, an
-equally logical train of thought suggested that these midnight comings
-and goings might be part of a routine, and that Jane, if on the watch,
-might acquire some very valuable information.
-
-She therefore locked her door and proceeded to consider the question of
-what she should wear with as much attention as if she had been going to
-a ball. Neither barefoot nor with only stockings would she go into any
-passage which had left those unpleasant dark stains upon Lady Heritage’s
-overall. A really heartfelt shudder passed over her at the very idea.
-No, Renata possessed slippers of maroon felt. Misguided talent had
-stenciled upon the toe of one a Dutch boy in full trousers, and upon the
-toe of the other a Dutch girl in full petticoats. Jane had a fierce
-loathing for the slippers, but they had cork soles and would at once
-keep out the damp and be very silent. She therefore placed them in
-readiness.
-
-Prolonged hesitation between the claims of the crimson flannel
-dressing-gown and an aged blue serge dress resulted in a final selection
-of the latter. She decided that it would flap less, and that if it got
-stained and damp the housemaids would be less likely to notice it.
-
-“Of course, on the other hand,” said Jane to herself, “if I’m caught, it
-absolutely does in any excuse about walking in my sleep, but I don’t
-think that’s an earthly, anyhow. If I’m caught, they’ll jolly well know
-what I was doing. The thing is not to be caught.”
-
-At half-past eleven precisely she made her way down to the hall.
-
-To-night there was no patch of moonlight to pass through, only a vague
-greyness which showed that the moon had risen and that the clouds
-outside were thin enough to let some of the light filter through.
-
-Jane felt her way downstairs and across the hall to Sir William’s study.
-The study door afforded the nearest point from which she could watch
-what she called Willoughby Luttrell’s corner without exposing herself to
-detection.
-
-She made up her mind that she would wait until she heard twelve strike,
-and then explore the corner. She had so thoroughly planned a period of
-waiting that it was with a feeling of shocked surprise that she became
-aware, even as she reached and crossed the threshold of the study, that
-some one was coming down the stairs behind her.
-
-If she had been one moment later, if she had stayed, as she very nearly
-did stay, to look out of the window and see whether the night was fair,
-they would have walked into one another at the top of the stairs. As it
-was, she had escaped by the very narrowest margin.
-
-The door opened inwards, and she had just time to get behind it and
-close all but a crack, when through that crack she saw Raymond Heritage
-pass, wrapped in the same black cloak which she had worn the night
-before, only this time she wore beneath it, not her linen overall, but
-the dress she had worn for dinner. She held an electric lamp in her left
-hand.
-
-As soon as she had passed the door, Jane opened it a little wider and
-came forward a step.
-
-Lady Heritage went straight to the corner of the hall. She put the torch
-down upon a chair which stood immediately under Willoughby Luttrell’s
-portrait. Then she went quite close to the wall and reached up, with her
-arms stretched out widely. Her right hand touched the bottom left-hand
-corner of the portrait and her left rested in the angle of the corner.
-
-Jane heard the same click which she had heard the night before.
-
-Lady Heritage stepped back, took up her light, and, going to the corner,
-pushed hard against the wall.
-
-Jane watched with all her eyes, and saw a section of the panelling turn
-on some unseen pivot, leaving a narrow door through which Raymond
-passed. For a moment she stared at the lighter oblong in the wall; then
-there was a second click and the unbroken shadow once again.
-
-Tingling with excitement, Jane stepped from her doorway and came to the
-corner. She must, oh she must, find the spring, and find it in time to
-follow. Raymond stood here and reached up, but she was tall, much taller
-than Jane. She stood on her tiptoes and could not reach the lowest edge
-of the portrait.
-
-With the very greatest of care she moved the chair that was under the
-picture a yard or two to the left. It weighed as though it were made of
-lead instead of oak, and she was gasping as she set it down, but she had
-made no noise. Renata’s cork soles slipped as she climbed on to the
-polished seat, but she gripped the solid back and did not fall.
-
-Raymond had pressed something in the wall with both hands at once. Jane
-began to feel carefully along the lower edge of the portrait until she
-came to the massively foliated corner with its fat gilt acanthus leaves.
-A cross-piece of the panelling came just on the same level. She felt
-along it with light, sensitive finger-tips. There was a knot in the
-wood, but nothing else. “If there is another knot in the corner, I’ll
-try pressing on them,” she thought to herself, and on the instant her
-left hand found the second knot. She pressed with all her might, and for
-the third time that evening she heard the little scarcely audible click.
-This time it spelt victory.
-
-In a curiously methodical manner Jane got down, put the chair carefully
-back into its place, and pushed against the wall as she had seen Lady
-Heritage do. The panelling yielded to her hand and swung inwards.
-
-There was a black gap in the corner. Jane passed through it without any
-hesitation, and pulled the panelling to. She meant to leave it just
-ajar, but her hand must have shaken, or else there was some controlling
-spring, for as she stood in the black dark she heard the click again.
-She drew a long breath and stood motionless for a moment, but only for a
-moment. She had come there to follow Raymond Heritage, and follow her
-she would.
-
-She put out a cautious foot and it went down, so far down that for a
-sickening instant she thought that she must overbalance and fall
-headlong; then, just in time, it touched a step, the first of ten which
-went down very steeply. At the bottom she felt her way round a corner,
-and then with intensest thankfulness she saw, a good way ahead, a moving
-figure with a light.
-
-The passage that stretched before her was about six feet high and four
-feet wide. The air felt very damp and heavy. At intervals there were
-openings on the left-hand side where other passages seemed to branch
-off. Jane began to have a growing horror of these other passages. If she
-lost Lady Heritage, how would she ever find her way back, and—yet more
-horrid thought—who, or what, might at any moment come out of one of
-those dark tunnels behind her? It was at this point that she began to
-run, only to check herself severely. “She’ll hear you, you fool. Jane, I
-absolutely forbid you to be such a fool; and Renata’s slippers will come
-off if you run, nasty sloppy things, and then you’ll tread in green
-slime, and get it between all your toes. _It will squelch._” The horror
-of the black passages was eclipsed; Jane stopped running obediently, but
-she took longer steps and diminished the distance between herself and
-her unconscious guide.
-
-The passage had begun to run uphill. Jane wondered where they were
-going. At any moment Lady Heritage might turn. If she did so, Jane must
-infallibly be caught unless she were near enough to one of the side
-tunnels. She went on with her heart in her mouth.
-
-A line from one of Christina Rossetti’s poems came into her head:
-
- “Does the road wind uphill all the way?
- Yes, to the very end.”
-
-“The sort of cheery thing one _would_ remember,” thought Jane to
-herself; and she continued to climb the endless slope, her eyes fixed on
-the dark, moving silhouette of Lady Heritage.
-
-At last there was a pause. The light ceased to move. Jane crept closer,
-but dared not come too near. Next moment she saw what looked like a slab
-of stone in the passage wall swing round on a pivot as the panelling had
-done. Lady Heritage passed out of sight through the opening, and at the
-same moment a great breath of wind from the sea drove into the passage,
-clear, fresh, exquisite.
-
-Jane hurried to the opening and looked out. She saw first the dark,
-curving walls of a small cave, and, immediately in front of her, the
-black outline of a bench, beyond that a stretch of uneven ground, a
-tangle of wire, and the black movement of the sea. The moon behind the
-clouds made a vague, dusky twilight, and the wind blew. Lady Heritage
-was standing just on the other side of the stone seat. It startled Jane
-to find that she was so near. She stood quite still looking at the
-shadowed water and the cloudy sky.
-
-Then, without any warning, a tall, dark figure came into sight. To Jane
-it seemed as if it rose out of the ground. Afterwards she thought that,
-if any one had been sitting on the grass and then had risen, it would,
-of course, have looked like that. At the time she leaned against the
-rock for support and had much ado not to scream.
-
-It was Lady Heritage who called out, with an inarticulate cry that
-mingled with the wind and was carried away.
-
-The dark figure stood still just where it had so suddenly appeared, and
-in an instant Raymond had turned her light upon it. In the circle of
-light Jane saw a man—a tall man, bareheaded. He had thrown up his arm as
-if to screen his face, but it only hid the mouth and chin. Over it his
-eyes looked straight at Raymond Heritage.
-
-And Raymond gave a great cry of “Anthony!” The light dropped from her
-hand, fell with a crash on the stones, rolled over, and went out.
-Anthony Luttrell did not stir, but Raymond began to move towards him
-after a strange rigid fashion, and as she moved, she kept saying his
-name over and over:
-
-“Tony—Tony—Tony—Tony.”
-
-Her voice fell lower and lower. As she reached him it was nearly gone.
-
-Jane turned from the stone wall where she was leaning, and stumbled back
-along the dark passage with the tears running down her face.
-
-At that last whisper of his name, Anthony spoke:
-
-“I’m not a ghost, Raymond. Did you think I was?”
-
-They were so close together that if she had stretched out those groping
-hands another inch they would have touched him. Something in his tone
-set a barrier between them and Raymond’s hands fell empty. The world was
-whirling round her. Life and death, love and hate, their parting and
-this meeting were merged in a confusion that robbed her of thought and
-almost of consciousness. It seemed to her as if they had been standing
-there for a long, long time, or, rather, as if time had nothing to do
-with them, and they had been cast into a strange eternity. Out of the
-turmoil of her thought arose the remembrance of the last time she and
-Anthony had trysted in this place—a sky almost unbearably blue and the
-sea brilliant under the noonday sun. Now there was no light anywhere.
-
-Anthony was alive. That should have been joy unbelievable. All through
-the years since she had read his name in the list of missing with what
-an overwhelming surge of joy would her heart have lifted to the words,
-“Anthony is alive.” Now she said them to herself and felt only a deeper,
-more terrible sense of separation than any that had touched her yet.
-They stood together, and between them there was a gulf unpassable—and no
-light anywhere.
-
-Raymond moved very slowly back along the way that she had come. She came
-to the stone seat, caught at the back of it with a hand that suddenly
-began to shake, and sat down. A few slow moments passed. Then she bent
-and began to grope for the torch which she had dropped.
-
-Anthony came towards her.
-
-“What is it?” he said, and she answered him in a low, fluttering voice:
-
-“My light—I dropped—it’s so dark—I want the light.”
-
-The strong, capable hand groping without aim stirred something in
-Anthony. He said, almost roughly:
-
-“I’ll find it.”
-
-Then a moment later he had picked it up, found it intact save for a
-crack in the glass, and, switching it on, put it down on the seat beside
-her.
-
-He was not prepared for her immediately flashing the light on to his
-face. An exclamation broke from him, and to cover it he said:
-
-“I am changed out of knowledge.”
-
-“Changed—yes—Tony, that scar.”
-
-Her voice trembled away into silence. Her hand fell. The dusk was
-between them.
-
-“Ugly, isn’t it? But I haven’t the monopoly of change, have I? You, I
-think, have changed also.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-With an impulse she hardly understood, she raised the light and turned
-it until her face and her bare throat were brilliantly illuminated. The
-dark cloak fell away a little. The dark eyes looked at him with defiance
-and appeal. Her beauty, seen like that, had something that startled; it
-was so devoid of life and colour, and yet so great! After a long,
-breathless minute Anthony said in his slow voice:
-
-“You have changed more than I have, Lady Heritage, for you have changed
-your name.”
-
-He saw the last vestige of colour leave her face. She put the lamp down,
-and her silence startled him.
-
-“No one would have known me,” he said after a pause that was all strain.
-
-“I knew you,” said Raymond very low.
-
-“Only because the lower part of my face was hidden. You’d have passed me
-in daylight. You have passed me.”
-
-She winced at that, turned the light full on to him again, and said:
-
-“You are working in the laboratory—that’s—that’s why....” She broke off
-for a minute and went on with a sort of violence, “You say that I didn’t
-know you, but I did—I did. All this week I’ve been tormented with your
-presence. All this week I’ve felt you just at hand, just out of reach. I
-kept saying to myself, ‘Tony’s dead,’ and expecting to meet you round
-every corner. It was driving me mad.”
-
-“It sounds most uncomfortable,” said Anthony dryly.
-
-Raymond saw a mocking look pass over his face. She turned the light away
-and set it down. If she had not felt physically incapable of rising to
-her feet, she would have left him then. This was not Anthony at all,
-only the anger, the bitterness, the cold resentment which she had hated
-in him. These, not Anthony, had come back from the grave.
-
-He was speaking again:
-
-“Perhaps I shouldn’t ask, but ... are you expecting to meet any one
-here? Am I in the way?”
-
-She answered him with a sort of heartbroken simplicity quite beyond
-pride:
-
-“I don’t know what I expected. You were haunting me so. I came here
-because ... oh, Tony, don’t you remember at all?”
-
-“I remember something that you appear to have forgotten, Raymond. When
-like a fool, and a dishonourable fool at that, I gave you the secret of
-these passages, I remember very well the rather enthusiastic terms in
-which you asserted your conviction that the secret was a sacred trust,
-and one that you would keep absolutely inviolate. As, however, I broke
-my own trust in giving you the secret, I can, I suppose, hardly complain
-because you have imitated my lack of discretion.”
-
-Raymond did rise then.
-
-“Tony, what do you mean?” she cried.
-
-“My dear Raymond, you know very well what I mean.”
-
-“I do not.” Her voice had risen; this was more the Raymond of their old
-quarrels, a creature quick to passionate anger, vehement and reckless.
-
-“I say you know very well.”
-
-“And I say that I do not. That I haven’t the shadow of an idea—and that
-you must explain, Tony; explain.”
-
-“Oh, I’ll explain all right!”
-
-The last word was almost lost in a battering gust of wind. He waited for
-it to die away, and then:
-
-“How soon did you give away the secret to Ember?” he said, and heard her
-gasp.
-
-“To Jeffrey—you think I told Jeffrey?”
-
-Anthony laughed. It needed only her use of Ember’s name.
-
-“I know that you told Ember,” he said in a voice like ice.
-
-Raymond put her hands to her head. She pressed her throbbing temples and
-stared at this shadow of Anthony. It was beyond any nightmare that they
-should meet like this. She made a very great effort, and came up to him,
-touching his wrist, trying to take his hand.
-
-“Tony, I don’t know what you’re thinking of. I don’t know how you can
-speak to me like this. I don’t know what you mean—I don’t indeed. Since
-you went I have only been into the passages twice, last night and
-to-night. I went there because—oh, why do people go and weep upon a
-grave? I had no grave to go to, but I thought that, if I came here where
-we used to meet, perhaps the you that was haunting me would take shape
-so that I could see it, or else leave me. I felt driven, and I didn’t
-know what was driving me.”
-
-In the breathless silence that followed she heard him say:
-
-“I _know_ that you told Ember”—and quite suddenly all the strength went
-out of her.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-When Jane turned, and ran back down the dark passage, she had just the
-one thought—to get away out of earshot. That she, or any one but Anthony
-Luttrell, should have heard that breaking tone in Raymond’s voice
-shocked her profoundly. She felt guilty of having intruded upon the
-innermost sacred places of another woman’s life. It shocked and moved
-her very deeply. Tears blinded her, and she ran into the dark without a
-thought for herself. It was only when, looking back, she could not see
-even a glimmer of outside twilight that she halted and began to think
-what she must do.
-
-The practical was never very long in abeyance with Jane. She began to
-plan rapidly, even whilst she dried her eyes. She would feel her way to
-the foot of the stairs. If she kept touching the left-hand wall, there
-would be very little risk of losing her way. Only one passage had led
-off in that direction and that one diverged at right angles, so that she
-would not run the risk of going down it unawares. When she came to the
-foot of the stairs, she would turn back again and wait in the first
-cross-passage until Raymond passed. Then she would follow her up the
-steps and watch to see how the door opened on this side.
-
-Jane was very much pleased with her plan when she had made it. It made
-her feel very intelligent and efficient. She began to put it into
-practice at once, walking quite quickly with her right hand feeling in
-front of her and the left just brushing the wall. Of course the stone
-was horrid to touch—cold, damp, slimy. She was sure the slime was green.
-Once she jabbed her finger on a rock splinter, and once she touched
-something soft which squirmed. The dark seemed to get darker and darker,
-and the silence was like a weight that she could hardly carry.
-
-Her little glow of self-satisfaction died down and left her coldly
-afraid. Then, quite suddenly, she came to the cross-passage. Her fingers
-slid from the stone into black air, groped, stretched out, and
-touched—something—warm, alive.
-
-Jane’s gasping scream went echoing down the dark. A hand came up and
-caught her wrist, another fell upon her right shoulder.
-
-“Jane, for the Lord’s sake, hush!” said Henry’s voice.
-
-Jane caught her breath as if she were going to scream again.
-
-“Henry, you utter, utter, _utter_ beast!” she said, and incontinently
-burst into tears.
-
-Henry put his arms round her, and Jane wept as she had never wept in her
-life, her face tightly pressed against the rough tweed of his coat
-sleeve, her whole figure shaking with tumultuous sobs.
-
-Presently, when she was mopping her eyes and feeling quite desperately
-ashamed, she exclaimed:
-
-“I had just touched a slug, and you were worse. I didn’t think anything
-could be worse than a slug, but you were.”
-
-Henry had kissed the back of her neck twice while she was crying. Now he
-managed to kiss a little bit of damp cheek.
-
-“You’re not to,” said Jane, in a muffled whisper.
-
-“Why not?” said Henry, with the utmost simplicity. “You don’t mind it,
-you know you don’t.” He did it again. “Jane, if you had minded, you
-wouldn’t have clung to me like that. Jane darling, you do like me a
-little bit, don’t you?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t! And I didn’t cling, I didn’t.”
-
-“You did. Take it from me, you did.”
-
-Jane made a very slight effort to detach herself. It was unsuccessful
-because Henry was a good deal stronger than she was and he held her
-firmly.
-
-“Henry, I really hate you,” she said. “Any one might cling, if they
-thought it was a slug or Mr. Ember and then found it wasn’t.” Then,
-after a pause, “Henry, when a person says they hate you, it’s usual to
-let go of them.”
-
-“My book of etiquette,” said Henry firmly, “says—page 163, para. ii.—‘A
-profession of hatred is more compromising than a confession of love; a
-woman who expresses hatred in words has love in her heart.’ And I really
-did see that in a book yesterday, so it’s bound to be true, isn’t
-it?—isn’t it, darling?”
-
-“Henry, I told you to stop,” said Jane; “I simply _won’t_ be kissed by a
-man I’m not engaged to.”
-
-“Oh, but we are,” said Henry. “I mean you will, won’t you?”
-
-Jane came a very little nearer.
-
-“We should quarrel,” she said, “quite dreadfully. You know there are
-some people you feel you’d never quarrel with, not if you lived with
-them a hundred years; and there are others, well, you know from the very
-first minute that you’d quarrel with them and keep on doing it.”
-
-“Like we’re doing now?” said Henry hopefully. Jane nodded. Of course
-Henry could not see the nod, but he felt it because it bumped his chin.
-
-“All really happily married people quarrel,” he said. “The really
-hopeless marriages are the polite ones. And you know you’ll like
-quarrelling with me, Jane. We’ll make up in between whiles, and there
-won’t be a dull moment. Will you?”
-
-“I don’t mind promising to quarrel,” said Jane. “No, Henry, you’re
-positively not to kiss me any more. I’m here on business, if you’re not.
-How did you get here? And why were you lurking here, pretending to be a
-slug?”
-
-“Suppose you tell me first,” said Henry. “How did _you_ get here?”
-
-“I followed Lady Heritage. I’ve got an immense amount to tell you.”
-
-She leaned against Henry’s arm in the darkness, and spoke in a soft,
-eager voice:
-
-“It really began yesterday. I woke up and couldn’t go to sleep again, so
-I came down for a book, and just as I was at the drawing-room door, I
-saw Lady Heritage come out of the corner by Willoughby Luttrell’s
-picture. Did you know there was a door there, Henry?”
-
-“Yes. Go on.”
-
-“She went upstairs, and I was trying to screw up my courage to cross the
-hall when Mr. Ember came down the stairs and disappeared into the same
-corner. Of course then I _knew_ there must be a door there, so I made up
-my mind to come down to-night and look for it.”
-
-“Jane, wait,” said Henry. “You say Ember came down the stairs and went
-through the door. Do you think Lady Heritage left it open? Or do you
-think he watched her come out, and then found the way for himself?”
-
-“No,” said Jane; “neither. I mean I’m quite sure it wasn’t like that at
-all. She shut the door, for I heard it, and it certainly wasn’t the
-first time Mr. Ember had been that way. Why, he even put his light out
-before he came to the wall, and any one would have to know the way very
-well to find it in the dark.”
-
-“Yes. Then what happened?”
-
-“I went back to bed. Henry, you simply haven’t any idea how much I hated
-going up those stairs. There was a perfectly fiendish patch of
-moonlight, and I felt as if I couldn’t go through it and perhaps be
-pounced on by some one just round the corner. If it hadn’t been for the
-housemaids finding me in the morning, I believe I should just have stuck
-where I was.”
-
-Henry’s arm tightened a little.
-
-“Well, to-night I hid in the study quite early, but I had hardly got
-there when Lady Heritage came down. I watched to see what she did, and
-as soon as she had gone through the door and shut it, I hauled that
-great heavy chair along and climbed on to it, and found the spring. Your
-old secret door was made for much taller people than me, and I was just
-dreadfully frightened that some one would come and find me standing on
-the chair in the corner, and looking like a perfect fool. Oh, I _was_
-thankful when I really got into the passage and found that Lady Heritage
-was still in sight.”
-
-“I think it was frightfully clever of you,” said Henry, “frightfully
-clever and frightfully brave; but you’re not to do it again. You might
-have run into Ember or any one.”
-
-“Then you do believe there’s something dreadful going on,” said Jane
-quickly.
-
-“I don’t know about what I believe, but I know that the passages are
-being used, and that they’ve been wired for electric light. I haven’t
-explored them yet, but people don’t do that sort of thing for nothing.
-Now go on. I may say that I saw Raymond pass, and you after her. What
-happened next?”
-
-Jane hesitated.
-
-“I’ll tell you,” she said. “She opened another door, and went out—why,
-it’s been puzzling me, but of course I know now, the passage leads to
-the headland. And the other day, when I was so frightened, Mr. Patterson
-must have come out of it; and he was there to-night.”
-
-“Yes, go on. Did they meet?”
-
-“Yes,” said Jane, in a queer, shy voice. “I couldn’t help hearing. I ran
-away at once, but I couldn’t help hearing her call him Tony. It’s your
-cousin, Anthony Luttrell, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes, it’s Tony,” said Henry. “Thank the Lord they’ve met. I’d just left
-him there after jawing him about seeing Raymond.”
-
-“Oh, I hope they’ve made it up,” said Jane. “She looked so dreadfully
-unhappy last night that I felt I simply couldn’t bear it. It’s so
-dreadful to see people hurt like that, and not be able to do anything.
-Do you think they’ll make it up?”
-
-“I hope so,” said Henry not very hopefully. “Tony’s a queer sort of
-fellow, you know—frightfully hard to move, and a perfect devil for
-hugging a grievance. He’s had a rotten time of it too. What with Raymond
-marrying some one else, and then getting knocked out himself, and coming
-round to find himself a prisoner—well, there wasn’t much to take his
-mind off it. He escaped three times before he actually got away, and
-then he went to Russia and had the worst time of the lot. So that he’s
-got a good deal of excuse for sticking to his grouch.”
-
-Jane suddenly pinched Henry very hard, put her lips quite close to his
-ear, and breathed:
-
-“Some one’s coming.”
-
-As she spoke Henry drew her noiselessly back a yard or two. The faint
-glow which Jane had seen brightened until it seemed dazzling. The arched
-entrance to the tunnel in which they stood became sharply defined. The
-light struck the opposite wall, showing it rough and black, with patches
-of dull green slime.
-
-Instantly Jane felt that her finger-tips would never be clean again. As
-the thought shuddered through her mind the light went by. That’s what it
-looked like, the passing of a light. Raymond’s dark figure hardly showed
-behind it. The lighted archway faded. The darkness spread an even
-surface over everything again.
-
-Jane laid her face against Henry’s sleeve, pressed quite close to him,
-and said in a little voice that trembled:
-
-“Oh, they haven’t made it up—they haven’t. He’d have come with her if
-they had.”
-
-“I’m afraid so.”
-
-“Of _course_ he’d have come with her. You wouldn’t have let me go by
-myself, you know you wouldn’t. No, they haven’t made it up, they can’t
-have, and—oh, Henry, why do people quarrel like that? You won’t with me,
-will you—ever? I mean that dreadful world-without-end sort. I couldn’t
-bear it. You won’t, will you?”
-
-Jane was shaking all over. Henry put his arms round her very tight, laid
-his cheek against hers, and said:
-
-“Not much! It’s a mug’s game.”
-
-After a little while Jane said:
-
-“I must go. You know she came to my room before, and last night when I
-got back I found the door shut. I had left it open so as not to make any
-noise, but it was shut when I got back. That frightened me more than
-anything, but now I think it must have been the wind that shut it. I
-think so, only I’m not sure. It might have been the wind, or it might
-have been ... somebody. It’s much more frightening not to be sure. So
-I’d better go, hadn’t I?”
-
-“Yes, you must go,” said Henry. “I’ll come with you and show you how to
-get out. And you must promise me, Jane, that you won’t come down here by
-yourself?”
-
-“How can I promise? I might have to.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“I don’t know why,” said Jane, “but I might have to. Supposing they were
-murdering some one, and I heard the screams? Or suppose I knew that they
-were just going to blow the house up?”
-
-“Well,” said Henry, with strong common sense, “I don’t see what good
-you’d do by getting murdered and blown up too, which is what it would
-come to. You really must promise me.”
-
-“I really won’t.”
-
-Henry gave her an exasperated shake.
-
-“Look here, Jane,” he said, “the whole thing’s most infernally
-complicated. Tony’s chucking his job here, says he can’t stand it, and I
-must go back to town and see Piggy about that.”
-
-“Who on earth is Piggy?” said Jane.
-
-“Sir Julian Le Mesurier, my chief. Every one calls him Piggy. I must see
-him about Tony, and I also want to report what I told you about the
-passages being wired and in use. I’ll try and see Tony again before I
-go. You see the thing is, I don’t know how far Raymond is involved, and
-I want to get her out of the way. Tony’s the only man who can get her
-out of the way. I suppose I ought to go through all the passages
-to-night, but I’m not going to. I shall tell Piggy why. As a matter of
-fact, he’ll be just as keen as I am on getting Raymond out of it. Once
-she’s clear, we can come down on Ember like a cartload of bricks and
-smash up any devilry he may have been contriving. Now do you see why you
-must keep clear? I can’t possibly do my job if I’m torn in bits about
-your running into danger. And next time you went feeling along these
-passages you might really run into your friend Ember, you know.”
-
-“I won’t unless I’ve got to,” said Jane. “You don’t imagine I like green
-slime, and slugs, and the pitch dark, do you? But I won’t promise. Now
-I’m going. Good-bye, Henry.”
-
-“You’re an obstinate little devil, Jane,” said Henry.
-
-Jane gave a little gurgling laugh.
-
-“We haven’t made an assignation yet,” she said. “When are you coming
-back?”
-
-“Well, I’ve made an appointment with Tony for to-morrow night, but I’ll
-try and catch him now and put that off for twenty-four hours. If for any
-reason I have to come down sooner, I will come and tap on your cupboard
-door. If I’m not there by midnight to-morrow, don’t expect me. But I’ll
-be there for certain the following night—let me see, that’s Sunday.”
-
-“But if you don’t come?”
-
-“I will.”
-
-“Well, just supposing something prevented you?”
-
-“It won’t,” said Henry cheerfully.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-Henry found Anthony Luttrell sitting on the stone bench and so oblivious
-of his surroundings that it needed a hand on his shoulder to rouse him.
-Then he said vaguely:
-
-“Oh, you’re back.”
-
-“Rouse up a bit, Tony. It might have been Mr. Jeffrey Ember, you know.
-He was in the passages last night, and, for all I know, he may be there
-every night. I came back to say that I shan’t be down to-morrow. Make
-our appointment Sunday night instead.”
-
-“I want to be out of this by then,” said Anthony. “I’ll go sick if
-there’s no other way. Stay here another forty-eight hours I cannot, and
-will not. I tell you I can’t answer for myself.”
-
-Henry gave an inward groan. Jane had evidently been entirely right. They
-had not made it up.
-
-“You’ve seen Raymond. I saw her pass.”
-
-“I’ve seen ... Lady Heritage. Henry, will you tell me what the devil
-women are made of? She seemed to expect to take things up exactly as if
-the last seven years had never been at all, exactly as if there had been
-no breach, no war, no John Heritage, and no Jeffrey Ember. Oh, damn
-Jeffrey Ember!...”
-
-“And I suppose you stood there and fired off sarcastic remarks at the
-poor girl, instead of thanking heaven for your luck. What’s the good of
-brooding over the past, Tony, and letting it spoil everything for you
-now? Raymond cares a heap more for you than you deserve, and if she’s
-got into a mess, it’s up to you to get her out of it. After all, you
-don’t want a scandal, do you?”
-
-“I’ve got to get away. It’s no good, Henry.”
-
-“I’ll give Piggy your letter,” Henry went on, “and tell him how you
-feel. He’ll recall you all right. But I know he’s very strong on your
-coming to life again. You ought to have done it ages ago; when you came
-back from Russia, in fact. Look here, Tony, be a reasonable being. Shave
-off your beard, and take the artistic colour off that scar. Turn up in
-London as yourself, and wire Raymond to come up and meet you. I want her
-got away from here.”
-
-“Then get Piggy to wire to her, or her father. There are a dozen ways in
-which it can be done. I refuse quite definitely to have anything to do
-with it. If Piggy hasn’t recalled me by Monday, I shall simply go. You
-can tell him that, if you like; and you can tell him that I shall
-probably kill some one if I stay here.”
-
-Without another word he got up, walked round the seat, and disappeared
-into the passage.
-
-A little later Henry emerged from a cave upon the seashore. There were a
-number of these caves, some large, some small, under the far side of the
-headland.
-
-The boundary of Luttrell Marches lay a quarter of a mile behind.
-
-Henry walked briskly along the shore, keeping close to the cliff so that
-he might walk on rock instead of shingle. Presently he left the beach
-and climbed a steep zigzagging path. Twenty minutes’ walk brought him to
-a small inn where he picked up his car and drove away.
-
-Next day in Sir Julian’s room he unburdened himself and delivered
-Anthony’s letter.
-
-“’M, yes; I’ll recall him,” said Piggy frowning. “He’s no good where he
-is, if that’s his frame of mind. But it’s a pity—a pity. It bears out
-exactly what I’ve always said. He has extraordinary abilities; I suppose
-he might have made a brilliant success in almost any profession, but
-he’s _impayable_.... I don’t think we’ve got a word for it in English
-...; he lacks the vein of mediocrity which I maintain is
-indispensable—the faculty of being ordinary which, for instance, you
-possess.”
-
-Henry blushed a little, and Sir Julian laughed.
-
-“I think I’ll send him abroad again. Of course it’s high time he came to
-life, as you say, if it’s only for the sake of getting you out of what
-must be an extremely awkward position. My wife tells me that
-match-making mammas of her acquaintance regard you with romantic
-interest as the owner of Luttrell Marches. Well, I’ll see him when he
-comes up. Meanwhile, I’ve had Simpson’s report. He says that, according
-to reliable information, two men were concerned in the sale of Formula
-‘A.’ One is a man called Belcovitch, the other, who seems to have kept
-in the background, is described as a big good-looking man—florid
-complexion, blue eyes, either English or American, though he passed
-under the name of Bernier and professed to be Swiss. Does that fit your
-friend Ember by any chance?”
-
-“No,” said Henry, “but it sounds very much like Molloy.”
-
-“Molloy was supposed to have gone to the States, wasn’t he?”
-
-Piggy had been drawing a neat brick wall at the foot of a sheet of
-foolscap. He now sketched in rapidly two fighting cats. It was a
-spirited performance. Each cat had wildly up-ended fur and a waving
-tail.
-
-“Well, he and Ember told Miss Smith that he was going to the States. I
-don’t know that that goes for very much.”
-
-“’M, no,” said Piggy. “Well, Bernier passed through Paris yesterday, and
-is in London to-day. Belcovitch has gone to Vienna. Now, if Bernier is
-Molloy, he’ll probably communicate with Ember. I was having him
-shadowed, of course, but the fool who was on the job has managed to let
-him slip. I’m hoping to pick him up again, but meanwhile....”
-
-Piggy was putting in the cats’ claws as he spoke, his enormous hand
-absolutely steady over the delicate curves and sharp points.
-
-“There’s nothing more about Ember?” said Henry.
-
-Sir Julian shook his head, and went on drawing. “He wore the white
-flower of a blameless life in Chicago, and was absolutely unknown to the
-police,” he said. “There’s a three-volume novel about Molloy, though.
-You’d better have it to read. Now you go off and have some sleep, and
-... er, by the way, if Miss Smith ... what’s her other name?”
-
-“Jane,” said Henry.
-
-“Well, if she wants to get away at any time, my wife will be very
-pleased to put her up.”
-
-“Thank you awfully, sir,” said Henry.
-
-When he had gone, Sir Julian asked the Exchange for his private number.
-He sat holding the receiver to his ear and touching up his cats until
-Isobel’s voice said:
-
-“Yes, who is it?”
-
-Then he said:
-
-“M’ dear, in the matter of Henry.”
-
-“Yes? Has anything happened?”
-
-“In the matter of Henry,” said Piggy firmly, “I should say, from his
-conscious expression, that he had brought it off. Her name is Jane
-Smith.”
-
-“And I mayn’t ask any questions?”
-
-“Not one. I just thought you’d better know her name in case she suddenly
-arrived to stay with you. That’s all. I shall be late.”
-
-He rang off.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
-It was not till next day that Jane missed her handkerchief. When she
-reached her room after saying good-bye to Henry she had rolled the serge
-dress, the wet felt slippers and the damp stockings into a bundle, and
-pushed them right to the back of her cupboard. She was so sleepy that
-she hardly knew how she undressed.
-
-The instant her head touched the pillow, she slept, a pleasant,
-dreamless sleep, and only woke with the housemaid’s knock.
-
-It was when she was drinking a very welcome cup of tea that she began to
-wonder whether she was engaged to Henry or not. On the one hand, Henry
-undoubtedly appeared to think that she was; on the other, Jane felt
-perfectly satisfied that she had pledged herself to nothing more
-formidable than a promise to quarrel. A small but very becoming dimple
-appeared in Jane’s cheek as she came to the conclusion that Henry was
-possibly engaged to her, but that she was certainly not engaged to
-Henry. It seemed to her to be a very pleasant state of affairs. It was,
-in fact, with great reluctance that she transferred her thoughts to more
-practical matters.
-
-Having dressed, she extracted the bundle of clothes from the cupboard,
-and decided that the serge dress might be hung up. There were one or two
-damp patches and several green smears, but the former would dry and the
-latter when dry would brush off.
-
-“But the slippers are awful,” she said.
-
-They were; the cork soles sopping wet, the felt drenched and slimy. She
-made a brown paper parcel of them, and put it at the extreme back of the
-cupboard. The stockings she consigned to the clothes basket.
-
-“I can wash them out later on,” she thought.
-
-It was at this point that she missed her handkerchief. She had had a
-handkerchief the night before. She was sure of that, because she
-remembered drying her eyes with it after she had cried.
-
-A little colour came into her face at the recollection of how vehemently
-she had wept on Henry’s shoulder with Henry’s arm round her, but it died
-again at the insistently recurring thought:
-
-“I had a handkerchief. I dried my eyes with it. Where is it?”
-
-Not only had she dried her eyes with it, but after that she remembered
-scrubbing the finger-tips that had touched the slug. The handkerchief
-must be horribly smeared and wet. It was one of Renata’s, of course,
-white with a blue check border, and “R. Molloy, 12” in marking-ink
-across one corner. Imagine buying twelve horrors like that! Mercifully
-Renata must have lost most of them, for Jane had only inherited four.
-
-She brought her thoughts back with a jerk. Where was it? If she had
-dropped it in the house it would have been either in the hall, on the
-stairs, or in the corridor, and one of the housemaids would have brought
-it to her by now. It must have fallen in the cross-passage where she had
-stood with Henry, and if it were found....
-
-Jane moved a step or two backwards, and sat down on the edge of the bed.
-
-“Of all the first-class prize _idiots_!” she said, and there words
-failed her.
-
-If she had dropped it in the cross-passage, it might lie there until
-Sunday night when she could get Henry to retrieve it, or it might not.
-Ember—Lady Heritage—Anthony Luttrell, any one of these three people
-might have business in that cross-passage, in which case a handkerchief,
-even if stained, was just the most unlikely thing in the world to pass
-unnoticed. Even if no one went up that passage, it might be seen from
-the main tunnel. Of course, if it were Anthony Luttrell who found it, it
-would not matter. But it was so very much more likely to be one of the
-others.
-
-At intervals during the morning, Jane continued to argue the question,
-or rather two questions. First, the probabilities for and against the
-handkerchief being discovered; and second, should she, or should she
-not, go and look for it herself in defiance of Henry’s prohibition? She
-had spoken the truth, but not the whole truth, when she told Henry that
-she hated the idea of going into the passages alone. She hated going,
-but she wanted to go. Most ardently she desired to find things out
-before Henry found them out. It would be nice and safe to sit with her
-hands in her lap whilst Henry explored secret subterranean caverns, and
-unravelled dangerous conspiracies—safe but hideously dull. When Henry
-had finished exploring and unravelling, he would come along frightfully
-pleased with himself and want her to be engaged to him, and he would
-always, always feel superior and convinced that he had done the whole
-thing himself. It was a most intolerable thought, more intolerable than
-green slime and being alone in the dark. It was at this point that Jane
-made up her mind that she would go and look for her handkerchief herself
-without waiting for Henry.
-
-Having made her decision, she found an unlooked-for opportunity for
-carrying it out, for at lunch Lady Heritage announced her intention of
-putting in several hours of laboratory work, whilst it transpired that
-Ember was going out in the two-seater car which he drove himself, and
-that he was quite uncertain when he would be back. Jane at once made up
-her mind that, as soon as the coast was quite clear, she would slip down
-into the passages. She would wait until lunch had been cleared and the
-servants were safely out of the way. No one was likely to come into the
-hall, and the whole thing would be so much less terrifying than another
-midnight expedition.
-
-Ember excused himself before lunch was over, and she heard him drive
-away a few minutes later; but Lady Heritage sat on, her untasted coffee
-beside her. She sat with her chin in her hand, looking out of the
-window, and it was obvious enough that her thoughts were far away. She
-was probably unconscious of Jane’s presence, certainly undesirous of it,
-and yet, for the life of her, Jane could not have risen or asked if she
-might go. Once or twice she looked from under her lashes at Raymond’s
-still white face. There was a new look upon it since yesterday. She was
-sadder and yet softer. She looked as if she had not slept at all.
-
-After a very long half-hour she turned her eyes on Jane. There was a
-flash of surprise and then a frown.
-
-“You needn’t have waited,” she said in a cold voice, and then got up and
-went out without another word.
-
-Jane took a book into the hall and sat there.
-
-Presently she caught a glimpse of Raymond’s white overall in the upper
-corridor, and heard the clang with which the steel gate closed behind
-her. She sat quite still and went on reading until all sounds from the
-direction of the dining-room had ceased. Silence settled upon the house,
-and she told herself that this was her opportunity.
-
-She ran up to her room, changed into the serge dress, and put on a pair
-of outdoor shoes. She did not possess an electric torch, and the
-question of a light had exercised her a good deal. The best she could do
-was to pocket a box of matches and one of the bedroom candles which was
-half burnt down. She then went downstairs, and, after listening
-anxiously for some moments, she once more moved the heavy chair and,
-climbing on it, began to feel for the knots on the panelling. As her
-fingers found and pressed them, she heard, simultaneously with the click
-of the released spring, a faint thudding noise. With a spasm of horror
-she knew that some one had passed through the baize door that shut off
-the servants’ wing. The sound she had heard was the sound of the door
-falling back into place, and at any other moment it would have gone
-unnoticed.
-
-Fortunately for herself Jane was accustomed to a rapid transition from
-thought to action. She was off the chair, across the hall, and sitting
-with a book on her lap when the butler made his usual rather slow
-entrance.
-
-She had recognised at once that it would be impossible for her to
-replace the chair and escape discovery. It stood in the shadow, and she
-hoped for the best.
-
-Blotson crossed the hall and disappeared into Sir William’s study.
-
-Jane gazed at a printed page upon which the letters of the alphabet were
-playing “General post.” After some interminable minutes Blotson
-reappeared. He shut the study door, approached Jane, and in a low and
-confidential voice inquired would she have tea in the hall, the
-drawing-room, or the library.
-
-“Oh, the library,” said Jane, “the library, Blotson.” And with a
-majestic, “Very good, miss,” Blotson withdrew.
-
-Blotson’s “Very good” always reminded Jane of the Royal Assent to an Act
-of Parliament. It was doubtless a form, but how stately, how dignified a
-form.
-
-When the chill superinduced by the presence of Blotson had yielded to a
-more natural temperature, Jane went on tiptoe across the hall and
-replaced the chair. It was a comfort to reflect that it had escaped
-Blotson’s all-embracing eye. With a hasty glance she swung the panel
-inwards, slipped through, and closed it again.
-
-She descended all the steps before she ventured to light her candle, and
-she was careful to put the spent match into her pocket. Renata’s dress
-really did have a pocket, which, of course, made the dropping of the
-handkerchief quite inexcusable.
-
-The passage was much less terrifying when one had a light of one’s own
-instead of the distant glimmer of somebody else’s and the horrid
-possibility of being left at any moment in total darkness, with no idea
-of one’s whereabouts or of how to get out.
-
-Jane’s spirits rose brightly. To dread a thing and then to find it easy
-provides one with a pleasant sense of difficulty overcome. In great
-cheerfulness of spirit Jane walked along until she came to the
-cross-passage on her right. She turned up it, walked a few steps holding
-her candle high, and there, a couple of yards from the entrance, lay the
-handkerchief rolled into a wet and very dirty ball. She picked it up
-gingerly, and put it into her convenient pocket.
-
-“And I suppose I ought to go back at once; but what a waste, when every
-one is safely out of the way, and I’ve got through the really horrid
-part, which is opening that abominable spring.”
-
-Jane hesitated, weighing the duty of a swift return against the pleasure
-of exploring and perhaps getting ahead of Henry. The recollection that
-Henry had forbidden her to explore turned the scale—towards pleasure.
-
-She had four inches of candle and a whole box of matches. She had at
-least two hours of liberty, and, most important of all, she felt herself
-to be in a frame of mind which invited success. The question was where
-to begin.
-
-On the right-hand side there was only this single passage. Jane did not
-feel attracted by it. She was almost sure that it must lead to the
-potting-shed, and to descend from conspiracies to garden lumber would
-indeed be an anti-climax.
-
-On the left there were four passages. Jane walked back along the way she
-had come. The first passage left the main tunnel at an acute angle which
-obviously carried it back under the main block of the house. Jane
-decided to explore it. She held her candle high in one hand and her
-skirts close with the other. The passage was low, and she had to bend a
-little. After half a dozen yards she came to a flight of steps. They
-were wet, slippery, and very steep. Jane stood on the top step and
-looked down.
-
-The walls oozed moisture, the candlelight showed her a pale slug about
-five inches long—Jane said six to start with, but, under pressure from
-Henry, retreated as far as five and would not yield another half-inch;
-she also said that the slug waved its horns at her and was crawling in
-her direction. Right there, as the Americans say, she made up her mind
-that this would be a good passage to explore with Henry, later on. She
-caught a glimpse of another slug on a level with the fifth step, whisked
-round, and ran.
-
-“The _one_ point about slugs is that they can’t run,” she said as she
-came back into the main corridor.
-
-Without giving herself time to think, she plunged into the next opening
-on the left. It ran at right angles to the central passage, and was
-comparatively dry. It kept on the same level too, and Jane, trying to
-make a mental plan, thought that it must run under the house, cutting
-across the north wing. It occurred to her that there might be vaults of
-some kind under the terrace, and that this passage would perhaps lead to
-them. If this were so, it must soon either curve gradually to the left
-or take a sudden sharp turn. She wished she had thought of counting her
-steps, but it was difficult to pace regularly on a slippery floor and in
-such a poor light.
-
-Just as she had begun to think that the passage must run out to sea, she
-came to the sharp turn which she had expected. A wall of black rock
-faced her, to her right a tunnel ran in at a sharp angle, and to her
-left there was a dark stone arch, a few feet of a new sort of tunnel
-built of brick, and then a steel gate exactly like the gates which shut
-off the laboratories in the house above.
-
-Jane stared at the gate as if she expected it to dissolve into the
-surrounding darkness. The candle-light danced on the steel. It was
-rusty, but not so very rusty, and therefore it could not have been for
-very long in its present position. She came closer and touched it. It
-was real.
-
-Her amazing good fortune almost overcame her. What a thing to tell
-Henry! What a justification for flouting his orders!! _What a score!!!_
-
-Jane transferred the candle to her left hand, put out a right hand which
-trembled with excitement, and tried the gate. It was open. For a moment
-she drew back. Like the child who sits looking at a birthday parcel, the
-mere sight of which provides it with so many thrills that it cannot
-bring itself to cut the string and unwrap the paper, Jane stood and
-looked at her gate, her discovery—hers, not Henry’s.
-
-As she looked, her eyes were caught by a small knob on the right-hand
-wall. It was about four feet above the floor and quite close to the
-steel bars. It was made of some dull metal and looked exactly like an
-electric-light switch. By going quite close to the gate and looking
-through she could see that a cased wire ran along the bricks on the same
-level, and she remembered that Henry had said the passages were wired.
-
-Had Henry been first on the field after all? She turned, held her light
-high, and looked back. The wire went up to the roof and ran along until
-she lost it in the darkness. She reflected hopefully that Henry might
-have seen the wire much farther along, and turned back again.
-
-Her fingers were on the switch when a really dreadful thought pricked
-her. Suppose the switch controlled some horrible explosive! It might
-turn on a light, most likely it did; but, on the other hand, it might
-let loose a raging demon of destruction that would blow the whole place
-to smithereens. It was an unreasonable thought, the sort of thought that
-one dismisses instantly in the daylight, but which by candlelight in an
-underground tunnel assumes a certain degree of credibility.
-
-“The question is, am I going on or not?”
-
-The silence having failed to supply her with an answer, she said
-viciously, “You’re a worse rabbit than Renata,” shut her eyes, held her
-breath, and jerked the switch down.
-
-Through her closed lids came a red flash. She clung to the switch and
-waited. A drop of boiling wax guttered down upon her left forefinger.
-She opened her eyes and saw the steel gate like a black tracery against
-a lighted space beyond. With a quickly drawn breath of relief she pushed
-the steel gate, took one step forward, and then stood rigid, listening
-to the muffled yet insistent whir of an alarm bell. After one horrified
-moment she pulled the door towards her again. The sound ceased. Jane
-considered.
-
-As a result of her consideration she turned out the electric light,
-opened the gate, slipped through, and closed it again so quickly that
-the bell was hardly heard. She did not allow it to latch, and, stooping,
-set a piece of broken brick to hold it ajar. The candlelight seemed very
-inadequate, but she decided that she must make it do, and holding it
-well up in front of her, she came through a brick arch into a long
-chamber with walls of stone.
-
-Jane looked about her with ignorant, widely opened eyes. She had never
-been in a laboratory, but she knew that this must be one. The printed
-page does not exist for nothing. The vague yellow light flickered on
-strange cylindrical shapes and was flung back by glass jars and odd
-twisted retorts. A great many appliances, for which she could find no
-name, emerged from dense shadow into the uncertain dusk.
-
-“It’s like a mediæval torture chamber—only worse, colder—more
-calculating! It’s a sort of torture chamber. I _hate_ it. It gives me
-the grues,” said Jane.
-
-She moved slowly down the room. It was quite dry in here. There was no
-slime, and there were no slugs.
-
-“I hate it a thousand times more than the passages,” she said.
-
-Her feet moved slowly and unwillingly. In the far corner there were two
-more arches. She thought she would just see what lay beyond them and
-then return. She took the one on the right hand first. It ran along a
-little way and then terminated in a small round chamber which was full
-of packing-cases. She returned and went down the second passage. She was
-just inside it when with startling suddenness she found herself looking
-at her own shadow. It lay clear and black on the brick floor in front of
-her. Some one had turned on the electric light.
-
-Jane’s candle tilted and the wax dropped. Her horrified eyes looked
-about wildly for a place of refuge. The light showed her one. Within a
-yard of the entrance there was an arched hollow. With a sort of gasp she
-blew her candle out and bolted for the shelter. The whir of the electric
-bell sounded as she gained it, sounded and then ceased. She heard Ember
-say, “Quite a good run, wasn’t it?” and a voice which she did not expect
-answer, “Well enough.” The voice puzzled her. It was a pleasant voice,
-deep and rich. It had something of a brogue and something of a twang.
-
-A most unpleasant light broke upon Jane. It was the voice of the
-Anarchist Uncle. It was the voice of Mr. Molloy.
-
-Jane got as far back into her hollow as she could. It was not very far.
-There had evidently been a tunnel here, but the roof had fallen in, and
-the floor was rough and uneven with the débris.
-
-She heard the two men moving in the room beyond, and she experienced a
-most sincere repentance for not having attended to the counsels of
-Henry.
-
-“And now we can talk,” said Ember. “You’ve got the cash?”
-
-“Not with me,” said Mr. Molloy.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Oh, just in case....”—a not unmelodious whistle completed the sentence.
-
-“They paid the higher figure?”
-
-“They did,” said Mr. Molloy. “Belcovitch was for taking their second
-bid, but I told him ‘No.’ Belcovitch has his points, but he’s not the
-bold bargainer. I told him ‘No.’ I told him ‘It’s this way—if they want
-it they’ll pay our price.’ And pay it they did. I don’t know that I ever
-handled that much money before, and all for a sheet or two of paper.
-Well, well——”
-
-“You should have brought the money with you. Why didn’t you?”
-
-In the now brightly lighted laboratory Molloy sat negligently on the end
-of a bench and lifted his eyebrows a little.
-
-“Well, I didn’t,” he said.
-
-“Where is it?”
-
-“In a place of safety.”
-
-Ember shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Well, we’ve pulled it off,” he said. “By the way, the fact of the sale
-is known. We’ve had an interfering young jack-in-office down here making
-inquiries, and Sir William has gone up to town in a very considerable
-state of nerves.”
-
-“The Anarchist Uncle,” said Jane to herself, “has been selling the
-Government Formula ‘A.’ He doesn’t trust Mr. Ember enough to hand the
-money over. Pleasant relations I’ve got!”
-
-Molloy whistled again, a long-drawn note with a hint of dismay in it.
-
-“I wonder who let the cat out of the bag,” he said.
-
-“These things always leak out. It doesn’t really signify. With this
-money at our command we can complete our arrangements at once, and be
-ready to strike within the next few weeks. You and Belcovitch had better
-keep out of the way until the time comes. He should be here in four
-days’ time, travelling by the route we settled; then you’ll have
-company. You must both lie close here.”
-
-“That’s the devil of a plan now, Ember,” said Molloy. “We’ll be no
-better than rats in a drain.”
-
-“Well, it’s for your safety,” said Ember. “They’re out for blood over
-this business of Formula ‘A,’ I can tell you, and there’s nowhere you’d
-be half so safe.”
-
-Jane was listening with all her ears. She decided that Mr. Ember’s
-solicitude was not all on Molloy’s account. “He thinks that if Molloy
-and Belcovitch are arrested, they’ll give him away over the big thing in
-order to save themselves. I expect they’d be able to make a pretty good
-bargain for themselves, really.” She heard Molloy give a sulky assent.
-Then Ember was speaking again:
-
-“I want to check the lists with you. Not the continental ones—I’ll keep
-those for Belcovitch—but those for the States and here. I’ve got them
-complete now, but I’m not very sure about all the names. Hennessey now,
-he’s down for Chicago, but I don’t know that I altogether trust
-Hennessey.”
-
-“It’s late in the day to say that,” said Molloy.
-
-“Well, what about Hayling Taylor?”
-
-Jane listened, and heard name follow name. Ember appeared to be reading
-from a list. He would name a large town and follow it with a list of
-persons who apparently acted as agents there. Sometimes these names were
-passed with an assenting grunt by Molloy, sometimes there was a
-discussion.
-
-There are a great many large towns in the United States of America. Jane
-became stiffer and stiffer. At last she could bear her constrained
-half-crouching position no longer. Very gingerly, moving half an inch at
-a time, she let herself down until she was sitting on the pile of broken
-bricks which blocked the tunnel. The names went on. It was dull and
-monotonous to a degree, but behind the dullness and the monotony there
-was a sense of lurking horror.
-
-“It’s like being in a fog,” said Jane—“the sort you can’t see through at
-all, and knowing that there’s a tiger loose somewhere.”
-
-One thing became clearer and clearer to her. Those lists that sounded
-like geography lessons must be got hold of somehow. Henry must have
-them.
-
-After what seemed like a long time Ember folded up one paper and
-produced another. If Jane had been able to watch Mr. Molloy’s face, she
-would have noticed that, every now and then, it was crossed by a look of
-hesitation. He seemed constantly about to speak and yet held his peace.
-
-“I’d like you to check the names for Ireland too,” said Ember. “Grogan
-sent me the completed list two days ago. You’d better look at it.”
-
-Molloy took the paper and ran his finger down the names, mumbling them
-only half audibly. His finger travelled more and more slowly. All at
-once he stopped, and threw the paper from him along the bench.
-
-“What is it?” said Ember, in his cool tones.
-
-Molloy frowned, got up, walked to the end of the room, and came back
-again. He appeared to have something to say, and to experience extreme
-difficulty in saying it. His words, when he did speak, seemed
-irrelevant:
-
-“That’s a big sum they paid us for Formula ‘A,’” he said. “Did you ever
-handle as much money as that, Ember?”
-
-“No,” said Jeffrey Ember, short and sharp.
-
-“Nor I. It’s a queer thing the feeling it gives you. I tell you I came
-across with fear upon me, not knowing for sure whether I’d get away with
-it; but there was a lot besides fear in it. There was power, Ember, I
-tell you—power. Whilst I’d be sitting in the train, or walking down the
-street, or lying in my bed at an hotel, I’d be thinking to myself, I’ve
-got as much as would buy you up, and then there would be leavings.”
-
-“What are you driving at, Molloy?” said Ember.
-
-Molloy’s florid colour deepened. He narrowed his lids and looked through
-them at Ember.
-
-“Maybe I was thinking,” he said, “that there’s a proverb we might take
-note of.”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“It’s just a proverb,” said Mr. Molloy. “It’s been in my mind since I
-had the handling of the money—‘A bird in the hand is worth two in the
-bush.’”
-
-Ember’s eyes lost their dull film. They brightened until Mr. Molloy was
-unable to sustain their glance. He shifted his gaze, and Ember said very
-quietly:
-
-“Are you thinking of selling us?”
-
-Molloy broke into an oath. “And that’s a thing no one shall say of me,”
-he said, with a violence that sent his voice echoing along through the
-open arches.
-
-“Then may I ask you what you meant?”
-
-“Why, just this.” Molloy dropped to an ingratiating tone. “There’s the
-money safe—certain—in our hands now. What’s the need of all this?”
-
-He came forward with two or three great strides, picked up the list from
-where he had thrown it, and beat with it upon his open hand.
-
-“All this,” he repeated—“this and what it stands for. You may say
-there’s no risk, but there’s a big risk. It’s a gamble, and what’s the
-need to be gambling when we’ve got the money safe?”
-
-“In plain English, you want to back out at the last moment?”
-
-“I do not, and I defy you to say that I do.”
-
-“Then what’s come to you?”
-
-“Here’s the thing that’s come to me. It came to me when I ran me eye
-down this list. See there, and that’ll tell ye what has come to me.”
-
-He thrust the list in front of Ember.
-
-“It’s Galway you’ve got set down there.”
-
-“Well, and what of it?” said Ember.
-
-“What of it?” said Mr. Molloy. “I was born in Galway, and the only
-sister I ever had is married there. Four sons she has, decent young men
-by all the accounts I’ve had of them. If I haven’t been in Galway for
-thirty years, that’s not to say that I’ve no feeling for my own flesh
-and blood. Why, the first girl I ever courted lived out Barna way.
-Many’s the time I’ve met her in the dusk on the seashore, and she half
-crying for fear of what her father would do. Katie Blake her name was.
-They married her to old Timmy Dolan before I’d been six months out of
-the country. A fistful of gold he had, and a hard fist it was. I heard
-tell he beat her, poor Katie. But ye see now, Ember, it’s the same way
-with your native place and your first love, ye can’t get quit of them.
-Now I hadn’t been a month in Chicago before I was courting another girl,
-but to save my neck I couldn’t tell ye what her name was, and ye may
-blow Chicago to hell to-morrow and I’ll not say a word.”
-
-“But not Galway?” Mr. Ember’s tone was very dry indeed.
-
-“You’ve said it. Not Galway. I’ll not stand for it.”
-
-Ember laughed. It was a laugh without merriment, cool, sarcastic.
-
-“Molloy, the man of sentiment!” he said. “Now doesn’t it strike you that
-it’s just a little late in the day for this display of feeling? May I
-ask why you never raised the interesting subject of your birthplace
-before?”
-
-“Is it sentiment that you’re sarcastic about?” said Molloy. “If it is,
-I’d have you remember that I’ve never let it interfere with business
-yet, and I wouldn’t now. Many’s the time I’ve put my feelings on one
-side when I was up against a business proposition. But I tell you right
-here that when I see my way to good money and to keeping what I call my
-sentiment too it looks pretty good to me, and I say to myself what I say
-to you, ‘What’s the sense of going looking for trouble?’”
-
-Ember laughed again.
-
-“I will translate,” he said. “From the sale of the Government formula
-you see your way to deriving a competency. You become, in a mild way, a
-capitalist. Luxuries before undreamed of are within your grasp—romantic
-sentiment, childhood’s memories, the finer feelings in fact. As a poor
-man you could not dream of affording them, though I dare say you’d have
-enjoyed them well enough. Is it a correct translation?”
-
-“It is,” said Molloy.
-
-“Molloy the capitalist!” Ember’s voice dropped just a little lower.
-“Molloy the man of sentiment! Molloy the traitor! No you don’t, Molloy,
-I’ve got you covered. Why, you fool, you don’t suppose I meet a man
-twice my own size in a place that no one knows of without taking the
-obvious precautions?”
-
-Molloy had first started violently, and next made a sort of plunge in
-Ember’s direction. At the sight of the small automatic pistol he checked
-himself, backed a pace or two, and said:
-
-“You’ll take that word back. It’s a damned lie.”
-
-He breathed hard and stared at the pistol in Ember’s hand.
-
-“Is it?” said Ember coolly. “I hope it is, for your sake. I’d remind
-you, Molloy, that no one would move heaven and earth to find you if you
-disappeared, and that it would be hard to find a handier place for the
-disposal of a superfluous corpse. Now listen to me.”
-
-He set his left hand open on the lists.
-
-“This is going through. It’s going through in every detail. It’s going
-through just as we planned it.” He spoke in level, expressionless tones.
-He looked at Molloy with a level, expressionless gaze. A little of the
-colour went out of the big Irishman’s face. He drew a long breath, and
-came to heel like a dog whose master calls him.
-
-“Have it your own way,” he said. “It was just talk, and to see what you
-thought of it. If you’re set on the plan, why the plan it is.”
-
-“We’re all committed to the plan,” said Ember. “You were talking a while
-ago as if you and I could do a deal and leave the rest of the Council
-out. Setting Belcovitch on one side, weren’t you forgetting to reckon
-with Number One?”
-
-“Maybe I was,” said Molloy. “And come to that, Ember, when are we to
-have the full Council meeting you’ve been talking of for months past?
-Belcovitch and I had a word about it, and he agrees with me. We want a
-full meeting and Number One in the chair instead of getting all our
-instructions through you. It’s reasonable.”
-
-“Yes, it’s reasonable.” Ember paused, and then added, “You shall have
-the full Council when Belcovitch comes.”
-
-Jane on her pile of débris leaned forward to catch the words. Ember’s
-voice had dropped very low. She was shaking with excitement. Her
-movement was not quite a steady one. A small piece of rubble slid under
-the pressure she placed on it. Something slipped and rolled.
-
-“What’s that?” said Ember sharply.
-
-“Some more of the passage falling in,” said Molloy, “by the sound of
-it.”
-
-“Just take a light and see.”
-
-“It might have been a rat,” said Molloy carelessly.
-
-There was a pause. Jane remained absolutely motionless. If they thought
-it was a rat perhaps they would not come and look. She stiffened
-herself, wondering how long she could keep this cramped position. Then,
-with a spasm of terror, she heard Molloy say, “I’ll have a look round.
-We don’t want rats in here,” heard his heavy footfall, and saw a
-brilliant beam of light stream past the entrance of her hiding-place.
-
-Before she had time to do more than experience a stab of fear, Molloy
-walked straight past. She heard him go up the passage, heard him call
-out, “There’s nothing here.” Then he turned. He was coming back. Would
-he pass her again? It was just possible. She tried to think he would,
-and then she knew that he would not. The light flashed into the broken
-tunnel mouth. It flashed on the sagging roof, the damp walls and the
-broken rubble. It flashed on to Jane.
-
-Jane saw only a white glare. She knew exactly what a beetle must feel
-like when it is pinned out as a specimen. The light went through and
-through her. It seemed to deprive her of thought, volition, power to
-move. She just stared at it.
-
-Mr. Molloy using his flashlight cheerfully, and much relieved at a break
-in his conversation with Ember, received one of the severest shocks of
-his not unadventurous life. One is not a Terrorist for thirty years
-without learning a little elementary self-control in moments of
-emergency. He did not therefore exclaim. He merely stared. He saw a
-sagging roof and damp walls. He saw a muddled heap of broken bricks
-unnaturally clear cut and distinct. He saw the shadows which they cast,
-unnaturally black and hard. He saw Jane, whom he took to be his daughter
-Renata. His brain boggled at it. He passed his hand across his eyes, and
-looked again. His daughter Renata was still there. She was half sitting,
-half crouching on the pile of rubble. Her body was bent forward, her
-elbows resting on her knees, her hands one on either side of her
-colourless cheeks. Her face was tilted a little looking up at him. Her
-mouth was a little open. Her eyes stared into the light.
-
-Jane stared, and Mr. Molloy stared. Then, with a sudden turn he swung
-round and passed back into the laboratory. As he went he whistled the
-air of “The Cruiskeen Lawn.”
-
-Jane remained rigid. The beetle was unpinned. The light was gone. But
-the darkness was full of rockets and Catherine-wheels. Her ears were
-buzzing. From a long way off she heard Ember speak and Molloy answer.
-The rockets and the Catherine-wheels died away. She put her head down on
-her knees, and the darkness came back restfully.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-The clang of the steel gate was the next really distinct impression
-which Jane received. In a moment she was herself. It was just as if she
-had been asleep, and then, to the jar of a striking clock, had come
-broad awake. She listened intently.
-
-That clang meant that the gate had been shut. One of the men had gone,
-probably Ember. One of them certainly remained, for she could see that
-the lights in the laboratory were still on. If it were Molloy, he would
-come and find her. But it was just possible that it was Jeffrey Ember
-who had remained behind, so she must keep absolutely still, she knew.
-
-At this moment Jane felt that she had really had as much adventure as
-she wanted for one day. She thought meekly of Henry, and soulfully of
-her tea. Blotson would be laying it in the library. There would be
-muffins. She was dreadfully thirsty. Jane could have found it in her
-heart to weep. The thought of the slowly congealing muffins unnerved
-her. She would almost have admitted that woman’s place is in the home.
-There is no saying what depths she might not have arrived at, had the
-return of the Anarchist Uncle not distracted her thoughts. The heavy
-tread convinced her that it was not Mr. Ember, but she did not stir
-until he came round the corner and flashed the light upon her face. Jane
-blinked.
-
-“Holy Niagara!” said Mr. Molloy. “It was the fright of my life you gave
-me.”
-
-Jane scrambled to her feet. She was not quite sure what the situation
-demanded of her in the way of filial behaviour. Did one embrace one’s
-Anarchist Parent? Or did one just lean against the wall and look dazed?
-She thought the latter.
-
-Molloy turned the light away, and then flashed it back again with great
-suddenness. Jane shut her eyes. Mr. Molloy pursed his lips and emitted a
-whistle which travelled rapidly up the chromatic scale and achieved a
-top note of piercing intensity. Without a word he took Jane by the arm
-and brought her out of her hiding-place into the lighted laboratory. He
-then pushed her a little away, took a good look at her, and repeated his
-former odd expletive:
-
-“Holy Niagara!” he said in low but heartfelt tones.
-
-Jane felt a little giddy, and she sat down on the bench. Her right hand
-went out, feeling for support, and touched a sheaf of papers. Through
-all the confusion of her thought she recognised that these must be the
-lists from which Ember had been reading.
-
-“What is it?” she said faintly.
-
-Molloy put down his electric torch, came quite close to her, bent down
-with a hand on either knee until his face was on a level with hers, and
-said in what he doubtless intended for a whisper:
-
-“And _where_ is me daughter Renata?”
-
-Jane leaned back so as to get as far away from the flushed face as
-possible. She opened her mouth without knowing what she was going to
-say, and quite suddenly she began to laugh. She leaned her head against
-the brick wall behind her, and the laughter shook her from head to foot.
-
-“Glory be to God, is it a laughing matter?” said Mr. Molloy; “whisht, I
-tell you, whisht, or you’ll be having Ember back.”
-
-He straightened himself, and made a gesture in the direction of the
-roof.
-
-“It’s crazy she is,” he said.
-
-Jane put her hand to her throat, gasped for breath, and stopped
-laughing.
-
-“I’m sorry,” she said. “It was—you were—I mean, what did you say?”
-
-“I said, where is me daughter Renata?” said Molloy in his deepest tones.
-
-Jane gulped down a gurgle of laughter.
-
-“Your daughter Renata?” she said.
-
-“Me daughter Renata,” repeated Mr. Molloy sternly. “Where is she?”
-
-Jane felt herself steadying.
-
-“Why do you think—what makes you think——?”
-
-“That you’re not my daughter? They say it’s a wise child that knows its
-own father, but it’s a damn fool father that wouldn’t know his own
-daughter.”
-
-“_How_ do you know?” said Jane.
-
-Molloy laughed.
-
-“That’s telling,” he said; “but I don’t mind telling you. You’re my
-niece Jane Smith and not my daughter Renata Molloy; and, even if I
-wasn’t her father, I’d always know you from Renata, the way I could
-always tell your two mothers apart when no one else could. Your mother
-had a little mole on her left eyelid, just in the corner where it
-wouldn’t show unless she shut her eyes. My wife hadn’t got it, and
-that’s the way I could always tell her from her sister. And my daughter
-Renata hasn’t got it, but you have; and when you blinked, in yonder, I
-got a glimpse of it; and when I flashed the light on to you again and
-you shut your eyes, I made sure. And now, perhaps you’ll tell me where
-in all the world is Renata?”
-
-Jane’s gaze rested intelligently upon Mr. Molloy. The corners of her
-mouth lifted a little. The dimple showed in her left cheek.
-
-“Renata,” she said in a very demure voice, “is in a safe place, like the
-money you went abroad for.”
-
-Molloy looked at her uncertainly; in the end he laughed.
-
-“Meaning you won’t tell me,” he said.
-
-“Meaning that I’m not sure whether I’ll tell you or not.”
-
-“Maybe it would be better if I didn’t know. That’s what you’re
-thinking?”
-
-“Yes, that was what I was thinking.”
-
-“Well, well,” said Mr. Molloy. Then he laughed again. “I’ve the joke on
-Ember anyhow,” he said. “He thinks he’s got a patent for most of the
-brains in the country, and here he’s been led by the nose by a slip of a
-girl just out of school. And what’s more, he was taken in and I wasn’t.
-He’ll find that hard to swallow, will Mr. Jeffrey Ember. You’d not have
-taken me in, you know, even if I’d not had the mole to go by. And one of
-these fine days I shall twit Ember with that.”
-
-“Are you so sure you’d have known me?” said Jane. “Why?”
-
-“My dear girl,” said Mr. Molloy, “if you knew your cousin Renata, you’d
-not be asking me that. If I find a girl in an underground passage all in
-the dark, well, that girl is not my daughter Renata. And if, by any
-queer sort of chance, Renata had been in that hole where I found you,
-she’d have screamed blue murder when I turned the light on her. Then, at
-an easy guess, I should say you had Renata beat to a frazzle in the
-matter of brains. I’m not saying, mind you, that I’m an admirer of
-brains in a woman. It’s all a matter of opinion, and there’s all sorts
-in the world. But you’ve got brains, and Renata hasn’t, and Ember’s had
-you under his nose all this time without ever knowing the difference.”
-
-Jane laughed.
-
-“Perhaps I didn’t exactly obtrude my superior intelligence on Mr.
-Ember,” she said. Her eyes danced. “You’ve no idea how stupid I can be
-when I try, and I’ve been trying very hard indeed.”
-
-“The devil you have?” said Mr. Molloy. “Well, you had Ember deceived and
-that’s a grand feather in your cap, I can tell you. He’s a hard one to
-deceive is Ember.”
-
-Jane gurgled suddenly.
-
-“As a matter of fact,” she said, “I deceived you, too. Yes, I did, I
-really did. You know the morning you went off to America, or rather the
-morning you went off _not_ to America? At the flat? You said good-bye to
-me, not to Renata.”
-
-“And where was Renata then?”
-
-Jane twinkled.
-
-“In the safe place,” she said.
-
-“I’ll swear it was Renata the night before,” said Molloy.
-
-“Yes, that’s clever of you. It was.”
-
-Molloy was thinking hard.
-
-“And which of you was it in the night when we thought the roof had
-fallen in, and came into Renata’s room to look out of the window? I’d my
-heart in my mouth, for I thought it was a bomb. Was it you or Renata
-sitting up in bed like a ghost?”
-
-“That was me,” said Jane. “You couldn’t have been nearly so frightened
-as I was.”
-
-“Then you changed places between eight and eleven that night?”
-
-“We changed places,” said Jane, “just as you and Mr. Ember came home. I
-shut Renata’s door just as you opened the door of the flat. I was in the
-hall when the lift stopped.”
-
-“Then I think I know how you did it,” said Molloy. He seemed interested.
-“But I’d like to know who put you up to it; and I’d like to know who
-gave the back entrance away; and I’d like to know how Renata, who hasn’t
-the nerve of a mouse, got down that blamed fire-escape alone.”
-
-Jane dimpled again.
-
-“You do want to know a lot, don’t you?” she said.
-
-There was a pause. Then Jane said:
-
-“And now, what happens next, please?”
-
-“That,” said Molloy, “is just what I’m wondering.”
-
-“I ought to be getting back, I think,” said Jane.
-
-“Ah, ought you now?” said Mr. Molloy thoughtfully.
-
-There was another pause. Jane thought she would leave Mr. Molloy to
-break it this time. She sat considering him. Her eyes dwelt upon him
-with a calm scrutiny which he found extremely embarrassing. The longer
-it continued, the more embarrassing he found it. In the end he said:
-
-“You want me to let you go?”
-
-Jane nodded.
-
-“And not tell Ember?”
-
-Jane gave another nod, cool and brief.
-
-“Oh, the devil’s in it,” said Molloy, with sudden violence.
-
-“You don’t need the devil; you’ve got Mr. Ember,” said Jane.
-
-“And that’s true enough, for it’s the very devil and all he is, and, if
-I let you go, I’ll have him to reckon with—some day. I’d rather face the
-Day of Judgment myself.”
-
-“I tell you what I think,” said Jane. “I think Mr. Ember is mad. That is
-to say, I think he is the sort of fanatic who sees what he wants and
-sets out to get it, without knowing half the difficulties and obstacles
-that block the way. When he does begin to know them he doesn’t care, he
-just goes along blind. Where a reasonable man would alter his plan to
-suit the circumstances, this sort of fanatic just goes on because he’s
-made his plan and will stick to it whatever happens. He isn’t governed
-by reason at all. He doesn’t care what risks he runs, or what risks he
-makes other people run. He goes right on, whatever happens. If the next
-step is over a precipice he’ll take it. He must go on. Mr. Ember is like
-that. I think he is mad.”
-
-Mr. Molloy stared hard at Jane, then he nodded slowly three times.
-
-“Now you’re not like that,” said Jane. “You’re reasonable. You don’t
-want to run appalling risks when there’s absolutely nothing to be gained
-by it. Of course, every one’s willing to run risks if it’s worth while.
-I’m sure you are. I’m sure you’ve done awfully dangerous things.”
-
-“I have,” said Mr. Molloy, with simple pride. “There’s no one that’s
-done more for The Cause, or run greater risks. I could tell you
-things—but there, maybe I’d better not.”
-
-Jane clasped her hands round her knees. She leaned back against the wall
-and regarded Mr. Molloy with what he took to be admiration.
-
-“Now do tell me,” she said—“when you speak of The Cause, what do you
-mean?”
-
-In her heart of hearts Jane had a pretty firm conviction that, to Mr.
-Molloy, The Cause stood for whatever promoted the wealth, welfare, and
-advancement of himself, the said Molloy.
-
-“Ah,” said Mr. Molloy reverentially. He spread out his hands with a fine
-gesture. “That’s a big question.”
-
-“Well, what I mean,” said Jane, “is this. What do you really call
-yourself? You know, I always used to call you ‘The Anarchist Uncle,’ but
-the other day some one said that there were no Anarchists any more, so I
-wondered what you really were. Are you a Socialist, or a Communist, or a
-Bolshevist, or what?”
-
-A doubtful expression crossed Mr. Molloy’s handsome face.
-
-“Well, now,” he said, “it would depend on the company I was in.”
-
-Jane had a struggle with the dimple and subdued it.
-
-“You mean,” she ventured, “that if you were with Socialists, you would
-be a Socialist; and if you were with Bolshevists, you would be a
-Bolshevist?”
-
-“Well, it would be something like that,” admitted Mr. Molloy.
-
-“I see,” said Jane. “And, of course, whatever you were, you’d naturally
-want to be sure that it was going to be worth your while. I mean you’d
-want to get something out of it?” She waited a moment, and then went on,
-with a complete change of voice and manner, “What are you going to get
-out of this?” She spoke with the utmost gravity. “If you don’t know, I
-can tell you. Disaster—at best a long term of imprisonment, at the worst
-death, the sort of death one doesn’t care about having in one’s family.
-The question is, is it worth it? You’re not in the least mad. You’re not
-a fanatic either. You are a perfectly sane and reasonable person, and
-you know that what I’m saying is the sane and reasonable truth. Isn’t
-it?”
-
-“Faith, and wasn’t I saying so to Ember myself,” said Molloy in gloomy
-agreement. “We’ve got money enough, and we can live on it retired, so to
-speak. The life’s all very well when you’re young, but a man of my age
-isn’t just so keen on taking chances as he was, and that’s the truth.
-Then there’s the old times come over him, and he thinks of the place
-where he was born, and he thinks, maybe, he’d like to see it again. Why,
-with the money I’ve got,” said Mr. Molloy, “it’s a fine house I could
-have in Galway, and a car, and a horse or two. That’s what I’d like.”
-
-Jane saw his face light up.
-
-“It’s a fine town Galway,” he said, “and there are people I’d like to
-see there, and places too. The people would be changed, I’m thinking,
-but not the places. I’d like well enough to go up the river past
-Menlough again. It’s the grand woods there are there, and then there’s a
-place where you’d see nothing but reeds, and no way at all for a boat.
-But let you push through the reeds and a way there is, and you come out
-to the grey open water and the country round it just as bare as if you’d
-taken sand-paper to it. They used to say that the water went down to
-hell, but I’m not saying that I believe it; but deep it is, for no one’s
-ever touched the bottom. Many’s the stone I’ve dropped in there, and
-wakened in the night to wonder if it was still sinking; and many’s the
-time I’ve played truant, and gone there fishing for the great pike that
-they said was in it. Hundreds of years old he is by the tales, and once
-I could swear I saw him, only maybe it was only a cloud that was passing
-overhead. What I saw was just a grey shadow, and all at once it come
-over me that I should be getting back to my work. I was black
-frightened, that’s the truth, but I couldn’t tell you why.”
-
-Jane looked at Mr. Molloy, and experienced some very strange sensations.
-He might sell her to Ember next moment, but for this moment he was
-utterly sincere and as simple as a child. His sentiments were not
-hypocrisy. They represented real feeling and emotion; but feeling,
-emotion, and sentiment had been trained to take the wall obediently at
-the bidding of what Mr. Molloy would call business. For all her youth,
-Jane felt a rush of pity for anything so played upon from without, so
-ungoverned from within as this big handsome man who stood there talking
-earnestly of his boyhood’s home.
-
-“Why don’t you go back and see it all again?” she said.
-
-“Well, I’d like to,” said Mr. Molloy, “but what good’ll my house in
-Galway do me if I waken up some fine night with a knife in me heart or a
-bomb gone off under me bed?”
-
-It seemed a difficult question to answer.
-
-Molloy began to pace the room.
-
-“I must think,” he said.
-
-All the time that Jane had been talking, part of her mind had been
-continually occupied with the question of the lists, those lists of
-towns and the agents in each who were to be entrusted with the work of
-destruction. It might not be so difficult to get hold of them, but to
-get hold of them without their being missed by Ember ... that was the
-difficulty. She had only to drop her right hand to the bench on which
-she sat and it touched the flimsy sheets.
-
-Whilst Molloy was discoursing of his birthplace, she considered more
-than one plan. She must not precipitate Ember’s suspicions until she
-could place this evidence in Henry’s hands. If she took the lists and
-Ember missed them, he would suspect and accuse Molloy, and Molloy would
-most certainly exonerate himself at her expense. On the other hand, if
-she let the lists slip when they were under her hand, who was to say
-whether the opportunity would recur. Ember would return. He already
-distrusted Molloy, and what would be more likely than that he would
-remove such incriminating papers from Molloy’s care?
-
-Then, quite suddenly, Jane knew what she must do. She didn’t want to do
-it, but she knew she must. She must get the papers now, she must copy
-them, and she must put them back before daybreak whilst the Anarchist
-Uncle was asleep. Jane had never contemplated anything which frightened
-her half so much as the idea of putting those papers back in that
-discouraging hour before the dawn, but she knew that it must be done.
-
-As Mr. Molloy walked up and down frowning intently, there were moments
-when his back was turned towards Jane. The first time this happened
-Jane’s hand took hold of the thin papers and doubled them in half. The
-next time that it happened she doubled them again. She went on doubling
-them until the large thin sheaf had become a small fat wad. Then whilst
-Molloy’s back was turned she lifted her skirt and pushed the wad down
-inside her stocking top. When Molloy faced her again her hands were
-folded on her lap.
-
-“I really must be going,” she said.
-
-He threw her an odd, sidelong glance. It made Jane feel a little cold.
-
-“Since you heard so much just now, I don’t doubt you heard Ember tell me
-just how convenient this place would be for putting some one that wasn’t
-wanted out of the way?”
-
-“Yes, I heard what he said,” said Jane, “but I’m afraid Mr. Ember
-doesn’t know everything. As far as I remember, he described these
-passages as a place no one knew anything about.”
-
-“He did,” said Molloy, staring.
-
-Jane gave a little laugh, and felt pleased with herself because it
-sounded steady.
-
-“Well, to my certain knowledge, three other people know the way in
-here,” she said.
-
-Molloy showed signs of uneasiness.
-
-“Meaning you and me and ... since you heard the rest, I’m supposing you
-heard me name Number One.”
-
-“Oh, I didn’t mean you and me at all,” said Jane. “I was thinking of two
-quite different people, and as to Number One, I could answer that better
-if I were sure who Number One was. The third person I’m thinking of may
-be Number One, or may not. I’m not sure.”
-
-“I’m thinking,” said Molloy—“I’m thinking you know too much. I’m
-thinking you know a deal too much.”
-
-Jane met his eyes full. Her own were steady, his were not.
-
-“Are you going to tell Mr. Ember, and let him ‘eliminate’ me?”
-
-Molloy gave a violent start.
-
-“Where did you hear that?” he said.
-
-“It wasn’t I who heard that, it was Renata. It was one of the things
-that made her so anxious to change places with me.”
-
-“And what made you willing to change with her?” Molloy’s voice was harsh
-with suspicion.
-
-“I hadn’t a job, or any relations to go to. I had exactly
-one-and-sixpence in the world. I didn’t know where I was going to sleep
-that night—that’s pretty awful for a girl, you know; and then ... Renata
-was so frightened.”
-
-“She would be,” was Molloy’s comment. “And weren’t you frightened now?”
-
-“I suppose I was,” said Jane.
-
-“You had need to be.” The something that had made Jane feel cold before
-was in Molloy’s look and voice. “You had need to be more afraid than
-you’ve ever been in your life. Renata would have stayed quiet, but
-nothing would serve you but you must push, and poke, and pry. What were
-you doing here at all now, will you tell me that? Who showed you how to
-get down here? You say there are others who know the secret—who are
-they? Tell me that, will you ... who are they?” Molloy’s sudden passion
-took Jane by surprise. Her heart began to beat, and she had difficulty
-in controlling her voice.
-
-“Which question am I to answer first?” she said. “Shall I begin at the
-beginning? I found the passages by accident....” Molloy gave an
-impatient snort. “Yes, I did really, on my word of honour. I couldn’t
-sleep and came down to get a book. I was standing in the shadow and I
-saw some one come out of the panelling. Next night I thought I’d try and
-find the place. The same person came downstairs and went through the
-door in the wall. I followed.”
-
-“Was it Ember?”
-
-“No, it wasn’t Mr. Ember.”
-
-“Who was it?”
-
-“I believe you know,” said Jane, speaking slowly.
-
-“Was it a woman?” said Molloy. He dropped his voice to a whisper and
-looked over his shoulder.
-
-Jane nodded.
-
-“Glory be to God!” said Molloy. “Did you see her face?” Jane nodded
-again. Molloy came quite close, bent down, and whispered:
-
-“Was it the old man’s daughter? Was it”—his voice dropped to the very
-edge of inaudibility—“was it Lady Heritage?”
-
-Jane nodded for the third time.
-
-Molloy spun round, went straight to the steel door, and, opening it,
-looked up the passage. After a moment he came back.
-
-“You saw her face? Will you swear that you saw her face?”
-
-“Yes, of course.”
-
-“Then you’ve seen more than I have. Do you know, I’ve never been sure.
-I’ve never really been sure. Ember’s talk, and—it was her face you saw,
-not that mask thing they wear in the laboratory, for that’s all I’ve
-seen? You saw her face?”
-
-“Yes, I saw her face quite plainly,” said Jane. In her own mind
-something seemed to say with cold finality, “Then Lady Heritage is
-Number One.”
-
-“Well.... Well.... Well.... Well....” said Mr. Molloy.
-
-There was a long pause. He seemed lost in thought, but suddenly he
-turned on Jane with the question which she hoped he had forgotten:
-
-“You were saying that there were two others who knew the secret—you saw
-them down here?—down here in the passages?”
-
-“Yes,” said Jane, without hesitation, “I did. They were men. One of them
-had a beard. I couldn’t tell you their names or describe them any more
-than that.”
-
-Molloy looked desperately puzzled.
-
-“Ember may know,” he muttered.
-
-“He may,” said Jane. “I should ask him.”
-
-Molloy gave a grunt and began to walk up and down again. The simile of
-the rat in the drain which he had made use of in conversing with Ember
-came back upon him with unpleasant force. His thoughts were confused by
-an access of unreasoning fear. Every time the question of what to do
-with Jane presented itself, he shied away from it. Jane knew too much.
-There was no doubt about that. She knew too much.
-
-In the circles frequented by Mr. Molloy self-preservation dictated a
-certain course with regard to the person who knew too much. After thirty
-years Molloy still disliked the contemplation of that course of action.
-He was of those who pass by upon the other side. He had a
-well-cultivated faculty for looking the other way. It occurred to him
-that, after all, Jane was Ember’s affair. Let her go back to the house,
-she was Ember’s affair, not his. He became instantly very anxious to see
-the last of Jane.
-
-Just as she was wondering how long this rather horrid silence was going
-to last, he walked up to her in a purposeful manner, put his hand on her
-arm, and pulled her to her feet.
-
-“You’d best be getting back,” he said shortly.
-
-Jane felt as if some one had lifted a heavy weight off the top of her
-head. The weight must have been fear, and yet she did not know that she
-had been afraid.
-
-At the gate Molloy turned to her.
-
-“Can you get into the hall?” he said. “Without being seen, I mean.”
-
-“I’m not sure, it’s awfully risky. But I could walk home from the
-headland, that would be much safer, and if I’ve been missed, it would
-account for my absence.”
-
-Molloy bent a sulky look on her.
-
-“The headland—you know that too?” he said. Then, with an impatient jerk
-he switched off the light, turned on his torch, and walked ahead of Jane
-in silence.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-Never in all her life had Jane seen anything so beautiful as the clear
-rain-washed sky, the grey rain-stilled sea. The little thud of the stone
-closing between her and Mr. Molloy was one of the most delightful sounds
-that she had ever heard. She felt as if she had never really appreciated
-the daylight before. There were nice woolly clouds on the horizon. The
-damp air was fresh, not like the air in those abominable passages. There
-was a gorse bush with about two and a half yellow flowers on it, rather
-sodden with the rain. Jane regarded them with intense affection.
-
-She walked down the gravel path, drawing long breaths and ready to sing
-with pure relief—“Ease after toyle, port after stormie seas.” She
-frowned, remembering the next line. After all, they were not out of the
-wood yet. An unpleasant proverb succeeded Spenser’s line—“He laughs
-longest who laughs last.”
-
-“Rubbish,” said Jane out loud, and she began to run.
-
-She came in with such a glowing colour that Mr. Ember, who met her in
-the hall, was moved to remark upon it.
-
-“You seem to have enjoyed your walk. Where have you been?”
-
-“Round by the headland,” said Jane.
-
-The roll of typed paper pricked her knee beneath her stocking top. In
-her arms she carried a sheaf of yellow tulips. She made haste to her
-room and set the flowers in a jar on the broad window ledge where they
-could be plainly seen from the terrace. With all her heart she prayed
-that George Patterson, who was Anthony Luttrell, would see them. She did
-not know that George Patterson had ceased to exist, and that Anthony
-Luttrell, having taken the law into his own impatient hands, was on his
-way to London.
-
-There had been an encounter with Raymond in the laboratory—her hand for
-a moment on his arm, his muscles rigid under her touch; not a word
-spoken on either side, not a word needed. The scene carried Anthony to
-his breaking-point. At the next roll-call George Patterson was missing.
-Meanwhile Raymond was behind a locked door, and Jane set yellow tulips
-on her window-sill.
-
-Having made her signal, Jane turned her mind to the lists. She was
-afraid to keep them on her, and she was afraid to hide them anywhere
-else. If Molloy missed them, and had any means of communicating with
-Ember, she would be searched, and her room would be searched. Whatever
-happened to her, they must not recover the lists until she had copied
-them.
-
-She remembered the trap-door in the cupboard, but it was just possible
-that Ember knew about it, not likely but possible. After five minutes’
-profound thought, she went to a drawer into which she had emptied a
-quantity of odds and ends.
-
-Renata, it appeared, had a mild taste for drawing. There were pencils,
-indiarubber, a roll of cartridge paper, and some drawing-pins. Jane took
-out the cartridge paper and the drawing-pins. She extracted the lists
-from her stocking top and smoothed them out flat. Then she opened the
-cupboard door, mounted on a chair drawn as close to the cupboard as
-possible, and pinned the lists on to the cupboard ceiling with a sheet
-of cartridge paper covering them. They just fitted in between two rows
-of hooks. Jane got down with a sigh of relief and unlocked her bedroom
-door.
-
-The evening passed like a dream. Lady Heritage did not appear at all,
-and Jane found a strange unreality in the situation which kept her
-talking to Mr. Ember in set schoolgirl phrases whilst he condescended to
-her with more than a hint of sarcasm. She was glad when she could take a
-book and read.
-
-It was eleven o’clock before she dared begin her night’s work, but she
-came up to her room with her plan all ready. First she took off her
-dress and put on a dressing-gown, just in case any one should come to
-the door. Then, having turned the key and switched off the light, she
-took a candle into the cupboard, set it on a shoe box, and took down the
-lists. She put a cushion on the floor, fetched Renata’s fountain pen and
-some sheets of foolscap which she had taken from the library, and began
-her work of copying. With the cupboard door shut there was no chance
-that any one would see her candle.
-
-She wrote steadily, town after town, name after name. More towns, more
-names. As she finished each sheet, she checked it very carefully by its
-original. It was weary, monotonous work; but the weariness and the
-monotony were like a grey curtain which hung between her and something
-which she dreaded inexpressibly.
-
-The idea of descending into the passage again, of creeping up to the
-laboratory in order to put back the lists before they were missed,
-filled her with shuddering repugnance. To allow her mind to dwell upon
-this idea was to become incapable of carrying it out. She therefore held
-her attention firmly to the endless names, and drove an industrious pen.
-She had to get up twice for more ink. Each time, as she stretched
-herself and walked the few paces to the table and back, the thought came
-to her like a cold breath, “It’s coming nearer.”
-
-At last, in the dead stillness of the sleeping hours, the lists were
-finished. She pinned the copies on to the cupboard ceiling in the same
-way that she had pinned the originals, carefully covered with a piece of
-cartridge paper. Then she took the originals in her hand and faced the
-necessity for action. Her feet and hands were very cold. She felt as if
-it were days since she had had anything to eat. She wanted most
-dreadfully to go to bed and sleep. She wanted to have a good cry. What
-she had to do was to go down into slug- and possibly rat-haunted
-passages and risk waking an Anarchist Uncle out of his beauty sleep.
-Jane gave herself a mental shake.
-
-“Don’t be a rabbit, Jane Smith,” she said. “It’s got to be done. You
-know that just as well as I do. If it’s got to be done, you can do it.
-Get going at once.”
-
-She got going. First she put the lists back in her stocking top. Then
-she put on the old serge dress. Her fancy played hopefully with the
-thought that some day she would give herself the pleasure of burning
-that abominable garment. She extracted the maroon felt slippers from the
-paper parcel to which she had consigned them. They were still sopping.
-She put them on. They felt limp, damp, and discouraging, but they had
-the merit of making no noise. Then she took a good length of candle and
-a box of matches and opened her door.
-
-“Well, here goes,” said Jane, and stepped into pitch darkness. This time
-she shut the door behind her. As she took her hand off the handle she
-felt as if she were letting go of her last hold on safety, an idiotic
-thought, as she instantly told herself. She knew by now just how many
-paces took one to the place where the light should have been burning,
-and just how many more to the stairhead. The rose window showed like a
-pattern painted on the dark. It gave no light, but it marked the
-position of the door.
-
-Jane felt the soles of her feet stick and cling to the damp slippers as
-she crawled down the stairs. They just didn’t squelch and that was all;
-they only felt like it.
-
-She hated moving the big chair in the dark, but it had to be done.
-Suppose she dropped it with a crash, suppose she pulled Willoughby
-Luttrell’s picture down when she was feeling for the catch; suppose a
-mouse ran over her foot—there is no end to the cheerful suppositions
-which will throng one’s brain in circumstances like these.
-
-Jane did not drop the chair with a crash, neither did Willoughby
-Luttrell’s picture fall down, nor did a mouse run over her foot. She
-passed through the panelled door, shut it behind her, groped her way to
-the foot of the steps, and lighted the candle. It was then that the
-cheering thought that she might perhaps encounter Henry came to her,
-only to fade as she remembered how long past midnight it now was.
-However, if she had not Henry she had at least a light. It is much
-harder to be brave in the pitch dark even when, as in the present case,
-the darkness is really a protection.
-
-Jane walked quite blithely up the second passage on the left until she
-came to the point where she knew that she must put the light out again.
-Molloy might be awake. She blew out her candle and began to feel her way
-forward. She came to the corner, and passed it. Moving very slowly and
-cautiously, she crept up to the steel gate and stood with her fingertips
-on it, listening, and thinking hard. She could feel that the door was
-ajar. That struck her as strange, very strange. If there ever was a man
-badly scared, Molloy was that man when she had said that the secret of
-the passages was not confined to himself and Ember. Yet he had gone to
-sleep leaving the gate ajar. Had he? Jane’s mind gave her a clear and
-definite answer. He hadn’t, he wouldn’t. She had been so sure that the
-gate would be shut, so ready with her plan. She was going to unfold the
-papers, push them between the bars, and jerk them as far across the room
-as possible. Molloy might think they had fallen from the bench, or, if
-he had his doubts, might well wish to avoid letting Ember know that Jane
-had been in the laboratory. All this she had so present in her thought,
-that to feel the gate give to her hand staggered her and set her
-shaking. She quieted herself and listened intently. Not a sound.
-
-She did not somehow fancy that Molloy would be a quiet sleeper. She had
-anticipated snores of a certain rich bass quality. Here was silence in
-which one might have heard an infant draw its breath, a silence
-undisturbed, inviolate.
-
-It was not only the silence which spoke to Jane. That odd, dim, only
-half-understood sense which some people possess, clamoured to her that
-the place was empty. As she stood there, and the seconds dragged into
-minutes, this sense became so insistent that she found herself resolving
-to act in obedience to its dictates.
-
-She pushed the gate and heard the alarm ring. With all her ears she
-listened for the sound of a man stirring, waking, and starting up. At
-the first movement she would have been away, and Molloy, new roused from
-sleep, would never have caught sight of her. There was no movement. The
-bell went on ringing, a little continuous trickle of metallic sound, not
-loud but as confusing as the buzzing of a mosquito.
-
-Jane switched on the light, slipped round the gate, and closed it. The
-bell stopped ringing. The jarred silence settled slowly, as dust settles
-when it has been stirred. There was no one there. The unshaded light
-showed every corner of the chamber. Molloy’s bag was gone. Like a flick
-in the face came certainty. “He’s gone. Molloy’s gone too.”
-
-Slowly, almost mechanically, Jane extracted the rolled-up lists from her
-stocking. She was still holding the unlighted candle in her left hand.
-The lists bothered her. She moved towards the bench to put them down,
-but first she laid the candle carefully on its side so as not to stub
-the wick, and, sitting down, began to smooth the papers out upon her
-knee. It was whilst she was doing this that she saw the note.
-
-It lay on the end of the bench propped up against a book. It was
-addressed to Jeffrey Ember, Esquire. The capital E’s were magnificent
-flourishes; an underlining like an ornamental scroll supported the
-superscription. Jane, like other well-brought-up people, was not in the
-habit of opening letters not addressed to herself. It may be said,
-however, that no solitary scruple so much as raised its head on this
-occasion. She tore open the tough linen envelope, and unfolded a lordly
-sheet. Molloy wrote a good, bold hand and legible withal. Every word
-stood clear.
-
- “My dear Ember,—I’m off. The place is getting altogether too crowded.
- I’ve seen Renata, and she tells me that there are two men use the
- passages. One has a beard, but she couldn’t tell me their names or
- describe them further. She knows all about the passages herself. She
- confessed to having found them through following Number One. She has
- also seen you come in and go out. I don’t think this place is very
- healthy, so I’m making my get-away whilst I can. Drop the whole thing
- and get out quick is what I advise. I’m staunch, as you’ll find. Why
- did you take the lists after saying you’d leave them for me to look
- through? I’ll not work with a man that doesn’t trust me. You can write
- me at the old place.”
-
-The letter was signed with a large Roman three. It appeared that Mr.
-Molloy was more careful over his own identity than over that of Mr.
-Jeffrey Ember.
-
-Jane sat looking at the letter. It made her feel rather sick. If she had
-not come down, if she had shirked putting the papers back, if the letter
-addressed to Jeffrey Ember, Esquire, had reached Jeffrey Ember’s
-hands—well, it was a good enough death-warrant, and Molloy must have
-known that very well when he wrote it.
-
-“It’s exactly like a Moral Tract,” said Jane. “I hated coming back, and
-I did it from a Sense of Duty, and this is the Reward of Virtue.”
-
-She put the Reward of Virtue down rather gingerly on the bench beside
-her. She felt about touching it rather as she had felt when she touched
-the slug. She wanted to wash her hands. An odd creature Molloy. He had
-given her away exactly and completely, yet he had left her any small
-shred of protection which she might be supposed to derive from passing
-as his daughter.
-
-Jane turned her thoughts from Molloy to the more pressing consideration
-of her own immediate course of action. Ember would come in the morning,
-and would find Molloy gone, and no word to say where he had gone, or
-why. The idea of following in Molloy’s footsteps presented itself
-vividly before Jane’s imagination. Why should she stay any longer at
-Luttrell Marches? The idea of getting away set her heart dancing. And
-what was there to stay for? She had all the evidence necessary to
-procure Ember’s arrest and the smashing of the conspiracy. The sooner
-she was out of Luttrell Marches and with her precious papers in a place
-of security the better. For a moment she contemplated taking the
-originals of the lists; Ember would naturally conclude that it was
-Molloy who had gone off with them. But on second thoughts she decided
-that it would be in the highest degree unwise to put Ember on his guard.
-His distrust of Molloy might be so great as to induce flight. She
-decided to leave the originals and to take the copies—but she had left
-the copies in her room pinned to the cupboard ceiling. Go back for them
-she could not. Even if she could have forced herself to the effort, the
-risk was too great. They must stay where they were, whilst she found
-Henry. The sooner she got off the better. She had no watch, but the
-night must be very far spent, and if Ember were to take it into his head
-to come back——
-
-The bare idea brought Jane to her feet. She picked up her candle, lit
-it, and with feelings of extreme satisfaction set fire to Molloy’s
-letter, making a little pent roof of it like the beginning of a card
-house on the stone floor. She had often admired the way in which masses
-of compromising documents are consumed in an instant by the hero or
-heroine of the adventure novel. She used four matches before she
-considered that this particular letter was really harmless. The envelope
-took two more. Then she collected the ash very carefully, crumbled it up
-well, and scattered it amongst the rubble in the broken-down passage
-where Molloy had found her. Then, having taken a good look round to make
-sure that nothing compromising remained, she picked up her candle and
-passed through the gate, leaving the laboratory in darkness behind her.
-When she came to the turn she hesitated, and finally went straight on,
-following the passage which she had not yet explored, down which Molloy
-and Ember had come the day before. She was almost sure that it would
-lead back into the main corridor just short of the headland exit; but
-she had not gone more than a yard or two along it when she heard
-something that brought her heart into her mouth.
-
-Almost as the sound reached her she had blown her candle out and was
-pinching the glow from the wick. For a moment the darkness was full of
-phantom tongue-shaped flames; then she stopped seeing them and saw
-instead a faint glow coming from the direction in which she herself had
-come on her way to the laboratory. Somebody was coming along the
-passage. If she had gone back by the same way that she had come, she
-would have met this somebody. As it was, she might escape notice. If the
-person were going to the laboratory, he would have to take a sharp turn
-to the left, a right-angled turn. The passage in which she was ran off
-at an acute angle, and the person approaching would have his back to her
-as he passed.
-
-The glow became a beam. Next moment Ember passed without turning his
-head. Jane saw the back of his shoulder dark against the light from his
-torch, and caught a fleeting glimpse of his profile, just enough for
-recognition and no more. Indeed, it was the fur coat that she recognised
-as much as the man. She stood quite still whilst he switched on the
-electric light and passed into the laboratory, then she turned and
-walked away as quickly as she dared, feeling her way by the wall till a
-turn in the passage gave her enough courage to light her candle. She put
-the spent match in her pocket, looked ahead, and drew a sharp, almost
-agonised, breath.
-
-About two feet from where she stood, and exactly in her path, was the
-black mouth of an uncovered well. Jane looked at it, and quite suddenly,
-she had no idea how, found herself sitting on the floor with hot wax
-running down her hand from the guttering candle. It seemed to be quite a
-little time before she could make sure of walking steadily enough to
-skirt the well. She went by it at last with averted head and fingers
-that, regardless of slime, clung to the wall.
-
-As she had expected, the passage ran suddenly into the main corridor.
-She passed the headland exit, and once more was on unknown ground. The
-passage swung round to the right and began to slope downhill. Jane held
-her candle high and looked at every step; but there were no more traps.
-She quickened her pace almost to a run as the dreadful thought came to
-her that Ember might follow Molloy. The passage sloped more and more.
-Finally there were steps, smooth, worn, and damp, that went down, and
-down, and down. At the bottom of the steps a yard or two of peculiarly
-slimy passage, and then a blank stone wall. Obviously Jane had arrived.
-
-She looked at the stone wall, and the stone wall presented a front of
-uncompromising blankness. She looked up and she looked down, she looked
-to the left and she looked to the right, she gazed at the ceiling and
-she gazed at the floor. Nowhere was there any sign of a catch, a knob, a
-spring, or a lever. There must be one, but where was it? She tapped the
-wall and stamped on the floor, but with no result. The door in the
-panelling opened from inside with an ordinary handle. She had not been
-close enough to Lady Heritage to see what she did to pivot the stone
-behind the bench on the headland. In any case, this exit might have been
-quite differently planned.
-
-A most dreadful sense of discouragement came over her. To have got so
-far, to have been, as it were, halfway to safety and Henry, and to have
-to turn back again! Then for the first time it occurred to her that,
-even if she had got out and got away, she had no money and no hat. She
-looked down at the maroon slippers, and pictured herself descending
-ticketless upon a London platform in bedroom slippers whose original
-colour was almost obscured by green slime.
-
-Jane wanted to laugh, and she wanted to cry. She did not know which she
-wanted most, but presently she found that the tears were running down
-her face. She kept winking them away, because it is not at all easy to
-climb slippery stone steps by the light of a guttering candle if your
-eyes keep filling with tears. The tears magnified the candle flame, and
-sometimes made it look like two or three little flames, which was
-dreadfully confusing. Jane stood still, wiped her eyes with determined
-energy, and then climbed up more steps and back along the way that she
-had come.
-
-At the headland exit she stood still, taking breath and thought. Nothing
-would induce her to pass that well again. She would keep to the main
-passage, and, horrid thought, she would have to put out her light in
-case Ember should suddenly emerge from the side passage.
-
-“Thinking about things makes them worse, not better,” said Jane to
-herself. “It’s perfectly beastly; but then it’s all perfectly beastly.”
-
-She blew out the candle and moved slowly forward.
-
-It seemed ages before she came past the opening where she had run into
-Henry to the foot of the steps. She went up three steps, raised her foot
-to take the fourth, and felt a hardly perceptible check. Instantly she
-drew back a shade, set her foot down beside the other, and put out a
-tentative, groping hand. There was a thread of cotton stretched from
-wall to wall at the level of her waist. If her movements had been less
-gentle she would have brushed through it without noticing. Then, as she
-stood there thinking, the thread between her fingers, something else
-came to her. The last yard of passage just at the stair foot had felt
-different—dry, gritty.
-
-Jane descended the three steps backwards, and, crouching on the bottom
-one, put down her hand and felt the floor of the passage. There was sand
-on it, dry sand which had not been there when she came down, and in the
-dry sand her footprints would be clearly marked. Obviously Mr. Ember had
-his suspicions and his methods of verifying them: “Though what on earth
-he’d make of cork soles I don’t know,” said Jane. She decided not to
-worry him with this problem.
-
-It was horribly dangerous, but she must have a light. She set her candle
-end on the step above her and struck a match. It made a noise like a
-squib and went out. She struck another and got the candle lighted.
-
-The sand was yellow sand off the beach, but nice and dry. Two and a half
-of her footprints showed plainly on its smooth surface. Jane leaned
-forward and smoothed them out. Then she blew out her candle and felt
-safer. Feeling for the thread of cotton, she crawled beneath it, then
-very, very slowly up the rest of the steps, her hand before her all the
-way till she came to the door in the panelling. She opened it and
-slipped through into the hall.
-
-The grey, uncertain light was filtering into it. Everything looked
-strange and cold. Jane closed the door, and never knew that a loose
-strand of cotton had fallen as she passed. Neither did she know that at
-that very moment Jeffrey Ember was standing by the open well mouth, the
-ray from his powerful electric torch focused upon a little patch of
-candle grease.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-Anthony Luttrell caught a slow local train at Withstead—the sort of
-train that serves little country places all over England. It dawdled
-slowly from station to station, sometimes taking what appeared to be an
-unnecessary rest at a signal box as well. It finally reached Maxton ten
-minutes late, thereby missing the London express and leaving Anthony
-Luttrell with a two hours’ wait.
-
-Waiting just at present was about as congenial an occupation as being
-racked. He walked up and down with a dragging, restless step, and tried
-unsuccessfully to shut off his torturing thoughts behind a safety
-curtain. The time dragged intolerably. Presently he left the platform
-and went up on to the bridge which ran from one side of the station to
-the other. Here he began his pacing again, stopping every now and then
-to watch a train come in or a train go out. From the bridge one could
-see all the platforms.
-
-When an express rushed through, the whole structure shook and clouds of
-white steam blotted out everything. It was when the steam was clearing
-away, and the roar of the receding train was dying down, that Anthony
-noticed another local running in to the Withstead platform. He bent over
-the rail and watched the passengers get out—just a handful. There was a
-young woman with two children, two farmers, three or four nondescript
-women, and a big man with a suit-case. Anthony looked at the big man and
-went on looking at him. Something about him seemed vaguely familiar. The
-man came along the platform and began to mount the steps that led up to
-the bridge. Half-way up he put down his suit-case, took off his hat for
-a moment as if to cool himself, and stood there looking up. Then he
-replaced his hat, shifted the suit-case to the other hand, and came up
-the rest of the steps. He seemed hot.
-
-He passed Anthony and went down the steps on to the London platform.
-Anthony followed him.
-
-When the big man stood still and looked up, eight years were suddenly
-wiped out. Memory is a queer thing, and plays queer tricks. What
-Anthony’s memory did was to set him down in the year 1912, in the
-gallery of a hall in Chicago. There was a packed and rather vociferous
-audience. There was a big man on the platform, a big man who seemed hot.
-His speech was, in fact, of a sufficiently inflammatory nature to make
-any one feel hot. It breathed fire and fury. Its rolling eloquence must
-have involved a good deal of physical exertion. Suddenly, after a
-period, the speaker stopped and looked up at the gallery for applause.
-It came like a veritable cyclone. The meeting was subsequently broken up
-by the police.
-
-Anthony remembered that the speaker’s name was Molloy. If Mr. Molloy had
-come from Withstead, it occurred to Anthony that his destination would
-probably be of interest.
-
-The London train was due in ten minutes. When it came in, Molloy got
-into a third-class carriage, and Anthony followed his example.
-
-It was at seven-thirty on Sunday morning that Mrs. March’s cook, who was
-sweeping the hall, was given what she afterwards described as a turn by
-the arrival of an odd-looking man who would give no name and insisted on
-seeing her master.
-
-“Awful he looked with that ’orrid scar and his ’air that wild, and not
-giving me a chance to shut the door in his face, for he pushes in the
-moment I got it open—that’s what give me the worst turn of all—and walks
-into the dining-room as bold as brass, and says, ‘I want to see Captain
-March—and be quick, please.’”
-
-When Henry came into the dining-room he shut the door behind him very
-quickly and looked as if he also had had a turn.
-
-“Good Lord, Tony, what’s happened?” he said.
-
-“Nothing,” said Anthony, with nonchalance.
-
-“Then in Heaven’s name, why are you here?”
-
-“I’m through, that’s all. You can’t say I didn’t give notice.”
-
-“It’s not a question of what I say, it’s what Piggy’ll say.”
-
-“Oh, I’ve got a sop for Piggy. I’ve been doing the faithful sleuth. I’ve
-trailed a man from Withstead to a highly genteel boarding-house in South
-Kensington; and as I last saw the gentleman addressing an I. W. W.
-meeting in Chicago, I imagine Piggy might be interested.”
-
-“Who was it?” said Henry quickly.
-
-“Molloy.”
-
-“You’re sure?”
-
-“Absolutely.”
-
-“Good man. You’re in luck. Molloy, under the interesting _alias_ of
-Bernier, has just been selling the Government Formula ‘A.’ He was
-trailed over here with the swag and then lost sight of. For a dead cert
-he’s been to Luttrell Marches by the back way and seen Ember.”
-
-Anthony turned away.
-
-“There’s the devil to pay down there,” he said.... “No, no, the girl’s
-all right.... This is something I ought to have told you when you were
-down. I ought to have told you the whole thing. I couldn’t bring myself
-to.”
-
-“Sit down, Tony. What is it?”
-
-“No, I can’t sit.” He walked to the window and stood there, looking out.
-His hands made restless movements. He spoke, keeping his back to Henry:
-
-“You didn’t go through all the passages?”
-
-“No, I was going to to-night.”
-
-“I ought to have told you. The big place under the terrace, you
-know—they’ve turned it into a laboratory. Molloy may have been working
-there, for all I know; he had the name of an expert chemist.”
-
-“Yes, go on.”
-
-“You’d have found it yourself to-night, but I couldn’t let you go
-blundering in unwarned. Ember might be there—any one might be there.
-It’s damnable, Henry, but I believe she’s up to her neck in it.”
-
-Henry was silent. There seemed to be nothing to say. He also believed
-that Raymond Heritage was up to her neck in whatever secret enterprise
-was being developed at Luttrell Marches. He remembered the passion in
-her voice when she said, “I should like to smash it all,” and he
-remembered how she had sung, “Would we not shatter it to bits, and then
-re-mould it nearer to the heart’s desire?” Whatever the thing was, he
-believed she was in it up to her neck. So he was silent, and Anthony was
-grateful for his silence.
-
-The silence was broken by a tapping, and a rustling, and the turning of
-a handle. The door opened very abruptly, and Mrs. de Luttrelle March
-made a precipitous entrance. She wore a pink silk _négligé_ and a
-boudoir cap embroidered in forget-me-nots, also an expression of extreme
-terror—the cook’s description of their early visitor having prepared her
-to find Henry’s corpse stretched upon the hearth-rug. When a living and
-annoyed Henry confronted her, she clung to his arm and gazed round-eyed
-at the long, thin man who had swung round at her entrance. Uncertainty
-succeeded fear. Henry was saying, “Do go back to your room, Mother,” but
-it is doubtful whether she heard him.
-
-Gradually her grasp of his arm relaxed. She walked slowly across the
-room, and stared with horrified amazement at Anthony.
-
-He looked over her head at Henry, shrugged his shoulders just
-perceptibly, and made as if to turn back to the window again. Either
-that shrug, or the faintly sarcastic lift of the eyebrows that
-accompanied it, brought a sort of broken gasp to Mrs. March’s lips. She
-put out her hand, touched his coat sleeve with her finger-tips, and
-said:
-
-“Anthony—it’s Anthony—oh, Henry, it’s Anthony!”
-
-She backed a little at each repetition of the name, looked wildly round,
-and sinking on to the nearest chair, burst into tears.
-
-“Henry—oh, please somebody speak,” she sobbed.
-
-“It’s all right, Aunt Rosa. I’m not a ghost,” said Anthony in his driest
-voice.
-
-Henry experienced a cold dread of what his mother would say next. She
-had talked so much and thought so incessantly of Luttrell Marches.
-Latterly she had been so sure of Henry’s ownership, and so proud of it.
-What would she say now—as she dropped her hands from her face and gazed
-with streaming eyes at Anthony, who regarded her quizzically?
-
-“Tony, you’re so dreadfully changed. That fearful scar—oh, my dear,
-where have you been all this time? We thought you were dead. I don’t
-know how I recognised you. And you were _such_ a pretty little boy, my
-dear. I used to be jealous because you had longer eyelashes than Henry,
-but you haven’t now.”
-
-“Haven’t I?” said Anthony, with perfect gravity. He took his aunt’s
-plump white hand and gave it a squeeze and a pat. “It’s very nice of you
-to welcome me, Aunt Rosa. The scar isn’t as bad as it looks, and Henry’s
-going to lend me a razor and some clothes.”
-
-It was later, when Anthony could be heard splashing in the bathroom,
-that Mrs. March beckoned Henry into her room, flung her arms round his
-neck, and burst into tears all over again.
-
-“My poor boy,” she sobbed, “it’s so hard on you—about Luttrell Marches,
-I mean—do you mind dreadfully?”
-
-“Not an atom. Besides, I knew Tony was alive; I always told you he would
-turn up.”
-
-“I couldn’t think of any one but him at first,” said Mrs. March,
-sniffing gently. “Then afterwards it came over me Henry won’t have the
-place—and I couldn’t help crying because, of course, one does get to
-count on a thing, with every one saying to me as they did, ‘_Of course_
-your son comes into Luttrell Marches, such a beautiful place,’—and so it
-is, and I did think it was yours, and what I felt about it was, if I
-feel badly about it, what must Henry feel? You see, don’t you?”
-
-Henry endeavoured to disengage himself.
-
-“Yes, Mother, but you needn’t worry—you really needn’t. Look here, you
-dress and don’t cry any more. I’ve got to telephone.”
-
-Mrs. March clasped her hands about his arm.
-
-“Henry, wait, just a minute,” she said. “That Miss Smith—you’re not
-still thinking about her, are you?”
-
-Henry laughed.
-
-“I am,” he said.
-
-“Well——” said Mrs. March. She fidgeted with Henry’s coat sleeve, bridled
-a little, and looked down at her mauve satin slippers. “Well—you know,
-my dear boy, I didn’t want to be _unkind_, but I simply couldn’t picture
-her at Luttrell Marches—as its mistress, I mean—and I’m sure you did
-think me unkind about it; but now that it’s all different—Tony coming
-back like this does make a difference, of course, and what I was going
-to say about it is this. If you really do care for her and it would make
-up to you for the disappointment, I wouldn’t hold out about it, not if
-you really wanted it, my dear, and really cared for her, only of course
-you’d have to be quite sure, because once you’re married you’re married,
-and there’s no way out of it except divorce, and, whether it’s the
-fashion now or not, I always have said and always will say, that it’s
-not respectable, it really isn’t, and it’s not a thing we’ve ever had in
-our family—not on either side,” added Mrs. March thoughtfully, after a
-slight pause for breath.
-
-“I really do care for her, and I really am sure,” said Henry. He kissed
-his mother affectionately, and once more attempted to detach himself
-from her hold.
-
-Mrs. March let go with one hand in order to dab her eyes with a scrap of
-pink-and-white chiffon. Then she looked up at her son fondly.
-
-“Your eyelashes are _much_ the longest,” she said.
-
-Henry made an abrupt departure.
-
-“Piggy’ll see you as soon as you can get there,” he told Anthony five
-minutes later—“at his house. I’m off to Luttrell Marches. I was going
-down anyhow to-night, but, things being as they are, I think I’ll get a
-move on. Piggy’s sending some one to the address you gave, to keep an
-eye on Molloy. He doesn’t want him arrested yet, as he’s in hopes that
-Belcovitch will roll up—that’s the other man concerned in the actual
-sale of the formula. He went to Vienna, but was in Paris yesterday. Good
-Lord, Tony, I’m glad you’ve got rid of that beastly beard!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-Sir Julian Le Mesurier’s study was an extremely pleasant room, friendly
-with books, and comforted by admirable chairs.
-
-A Sabbath peace reigned outside in the deserted street. Within there was
-no peace at all. A crocodile hunt was in progress. Piggy, as a large and
-very fierce crocodile, was performing a feat described by himself as
-“trailing his sinuous length” across the floor, his objective a Persian
-carpet island upon which a small fat girl of three in a fluffy Sunday
-dress was lifting first one plump foot and then the other, whilst at
-regular intervals she uttered small but piercing screams. Upon the
-crocodile’s back sat a thin, determined little boy of six who battered
-continuously upon the crocodile’s ribs with the heels of a new pair of
-boots, whilst he shouted his defiance at the foe. At the far end of the
-room sat Lady Le Mesurier with a book. At intervals she looked up from
-it to say helplessly, “Piggy, it’s Sunday”—or “Baby’s got a new frock
-on, and I expect nurse will give notice if you tear it.”
-
-“Not tear,” said the fat little girl, patting her skirts. Then she
-shrieked, for the crocodile made a sudden snap at the nearest ankle.
-
-Upon this scene the door opened.
-
-“Mr. Luttrell,” said an expressionless voice, and Anthony entered.
-
-Lady Le Mesurier gathered her baby and her book, the crocodile unseated
-the small boy and arose, dusting its trousers. A well-trained family
-vanished, and Sir Julian shook hands and waved his visitor to a chair.
-
-“Come up to report?” said Piggy.
-
-“Not primarily,” began Anthony, but was cut short.
-
-“You followed Molloy. Yes, I think I prefer to have it that way, if you
-don’t mind. You followed Molloy to this South Kensington address. How do
-you know he’s stopping there?”
-
-“I asked the servant who was cleaning the knocker whether they had a
-room, and she said, ‘No’—that the gentleman who had just come in made
-them quite full up.”
-
-“Well, I’ve sent a man to watch the place. Now, what have you to report
-from Luttrell Marches?”
-
-Anthony looked straight over Sir Julian’s shoulder with a hard, level
-gaze, and spoke in a hard, forced voice:
-
-“There are a number of secret passages and chambers under the house at
-Luttrell Marches. One of the passages has an exit outside the grounds on
-the seashore about a mile and a half from Withstead. The secret has been
-very carefully preserved until now. Each successive owner told his heir.
-No one else was supposed to know. My father told me. When he thought
-that I was dead, he also told my cousin, Henry March. Until I went to
-Luttrell Marches the other day I had no idea that any one else had
-discovered the secret. I have to report that the passages have not only
-been discovered, but made use of in a way which points to something of
-an illegal nature. One of the chambers is a fair-sized one: it has been
-turned into a laboratory——”
-
-“Any sign that it has been used as such?”
-
-“Every sign. Power has been diverted from the dynamos which were
-installed for the Government experiments and the passages have been
-wired, and some of the chambers fitted with electric light. The whole
-thing has been going on under Sir William’s very nose.”
-
-“M’, I’ve had him here to see me—terribly gone to pieces, quite past his
-job, also very much annoyed with me for having sent Henry down. Now the
-question is, who’s been wiring the passages and using the laboratory?”
-
-“Oh, Ember; there’s no doubt about that, I think.”
-
-“And the sale of the formula? Ember?”
-
-“I’m sure of it.”
-
-“Must have proof. No earthly good my being sure, or your being sure, or
-Henry’s being sure. We’ve got to have something so solid that, after Sir
-Dash Blank, K.C., has done his best to tear it into shreds, what’s left
-of it will convince a jury. Now who else is in it besides Ember and
-Molloy? In the household, I mean, down there at Luttrell Marches? Any
-one else?”
-
-Anthony continued to look over Sir Julian’s shoulder. He remained
-silent. Piggy got up and walked to his writing-table. When he reached it
-he swung round, and asked again sharply:
-
-“Any one else, Luttrell?”
-
-There was still silence. Then Piggy said dryly:
-
-“I take it that there is somebody else involved. I don’t wish to
-cross-examine you, but I must know one thing. Is it suspicion, moral
-certainty, or proof?”
-
-“Moral certainty,” said Anthony Luttrell. He passed his tongue across
-his dry lips. Piggy did not look at him.
-
-“Now, look here,” he said, “it seems to me that Luttrell Marches is
-about to be the centre of some unpleasant happenings. I think, I rather
-think, it would be advisable to induce any ladies who may be there to
-leave the place. Lady Heritage is there, is she not, and er, er,
-Miss...?”
-
-“Miss Molloy.”
-
-“Exactly. Miss—er, Molloy. Now I consider that these two ladies should
-leave at once. When I say at once I mean to-day. I should like you to go
-down—by car, of course, there won’t be any Sunday trains—and er, fetch
-them away, using such inducements and persuasions as you may think
-expedient. Only they must leave. You understand, they must leave
-to-day.”
-
-Anthony rose stiffly.
-
-“I’m afraid, sir,” he said, “that I must decline the responsibility. The
-reasons which made me leave Luttrell Marches make it impossible for me
-to return there.”
-
-“I see,” said Piggy. He picked up a piece of indiarubber, and occupied
-himself for about a minute and a half in endeavouring to balance it upon
-the edge of a handsome brass inkstand with an inscription on it. When
-the indiarubber fell into the ink with a splash he fished it out, using
-a pen with a sharp nib as a gaff, dried it carefully on a new sheet of
-white blotting-paper, and turned again to Anthony.
-
-“I’d like just to put a hypothetical case to you,” he said. “Government
-puts a certain very important and confidential piece of work into the
-hands of an eminent man, a man of European reputation and unblemished
-probity. Evidence comes to hand of things entirely incompatible with the
-secrecy and other conditions which were an honourable obligation. Worse
-suspicions of illegality and conspiracy. Cumulative evidence. Arrests. A
-public trial. Now, my dear Luttrell, can you tell me what would happen
-to the Government which had displayed such incompetence as, first, to
-commit a vital undertaking to a person capable of betraying it; and
-second, of permitting the consequent scandal to become public property
-in such a manner as to make this country a laughing-stock in the eyes of
-the world? It’s not a question that requires a great deal of answering,
-is it?”
-
-“Sir William is not involved,” said Anthony harshly.
-
-“My dear Luttrell, I was putting a hypothetical case. But if you wish to
-talk without camouflage I will do so—for five minutes. I will do so
-because I consider that the situation is one of the most serious which I
-have ever had to deal with. Sir William is not involved, but Sir William
-has become incompetent to control his household and incapable of
-perceiving that a dangerous conspiracy is being carried on under his
-roof. It’s not only the matter of the stolen formula. Your report of a
-hidden laboratory certainly tends to corroborate the very grave
-allegations made by Miss Molloy. A situation so entirely serious
-justifies me in demanding the sacrifice of your personal feelings and
-inclinations. I repeat, Lady Heritage and Miss Molloy must leave
-Luttrell Marches to-day. I don’t care what inducements you use. They
-must leave. I believe you can get them to leave. I don’t believe any one
-else can. I am detaining Sir William in town—it was not difficult to do
-so. What more natural than that his daughter should join him. My wife is
-expecting Miss Smith to pay us a visit. There must be no delay of any
-kind. You understand, Luttrell?”
-
-There was a short tense pause.
-
-Anthony stood as he had been standing during all the time that Sir
-Julian talked. He looked moodily out of the window. Now and then his
-face twitched, now and then he moved his hands with a sort of jerk. At
-last he said in a constrained voice:
-
-“I—understand.”
-
-“Very well,” said Piggy briskly. “Then you’d better be off. From the
-fact that you have shaved and returned to civilised raiment, I imagine
-that George Patterson is now obsolete, and that Mr. Luttrell has ceased
-to be a corpse in some unknown grave?”
-
-“Yes, I’ve come back.” A pause—then, “Sir Julian—this—this duty is
-particularly unwelcome. If I undertake it, will you send me abroad again
-as soon as possible? England is distasteful, impossible—but, of course,
-I realise that I couldn’t go on being dead—there are too many legal
-complications, and it wasn’t fair on Henry.”
-
-“Henry,” observed Piggy, “was becoming the object of most particular
-attentions from matchmaking mammas. My wife informs me that his stock
-has been very high for some months past. Gilt-edged, in fact. I’m afraid
-there will be a slump as soon as your resurrection is established.
-Henry, I think, will bear up. Well now, about sending you abroad—I can’t
-say for certain, but I rather think it could be managed, if you still
-wish it, you know. I wouldn’t be in a hurry, if I were you, Luttrell,
-about going abroad, but as to the matter in hand—well, hurry is the
-word. You’ll find a car outside with Inspector Davison. Take him along.
-I hope he won’t be needed, but—well—take him along.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
-
-Mr. Ember was spending a busy Sunday. As he stood in the empty
-laboratory, realising Molloy’s defection and all that it involved, there
-was no change in his impassive face. The web of his plan was broken.
-Like some accurate machine his brain picked up the loose ravelled
-threads and wove them into a new combination.
-
-Molloy himself was no loss. His place could be filled a dozen times
-over. As to any harm that he could do, unless he had gone straight to
-the police, he could be reached—reached and silenced. And Ember knew his
-Molloy. He would not go straight to the police. If he meant to sell
-them, he would set about it with a certain regard for appearances. There
-would be _pourparlers_, some dexterous method of approach which would
-save his face and leave him an emergency exit. Ember checked over in his
-mind the four or five places to which Molloy might have retreated. Then
-there was the money. That they must have; but Molloy, once found, could
-be scared into giving it up.
-
-Ember let his eyes travel around the laboratory. The lists lay upon the
-bench where Jane had put them not five minutes before. He frowned and
-picked them up, stared at them, and frowned more deeply still. They had
-been folded and refolded, doubled into a small package since he had last
-handled them. Who had done it? The sheets had been smooth from the
-typewriter when he gave them to Molloy. They had been handled and
-creased, with the creases that come from tight folding. Had Molloy meant
-to take them with him, and then at the last moment been afraid? It
-looked like it. He turned over the pages, counting them. Suddenly his
-eyes fixed, his fingers tightened their hold. There was a fresh smudge
-of ink on the top of the fifth page—a smudge so fresh that the blue ink
-had not yet turned black. That meant two things: Molloy had copied the
-lists before he left, and he had only been gone an hour or two—that at
-the outside, probably less.
-
-In the moment that passed before Ember laid the papers down, Mr. Molloy
-received his death sentence as duly and irrevocably as if it had been
-pronounced by an Assize Judge in scarlet and ermine, white wig and black
-cap.
-
-Ember gave just a little nod, opened a safe that stood in the corner,
-pushed the papers into it, and pocketed the key.
-
-It was a little later that he found the first spot of candle grease. It
-was half-way up one of the side passages, on the spot where Jane had
-been standing when he and Molloy entered the laboratory the evening
-before. He looked at it for a long time very thoughtfully before he took
-his torch and proceeded to a systematic search of the passages.
-
-He found no living person, but came upon dropped wax in three more
-places, at the edge of the well, by the headland exit, and half-way down
-the steps to the beach. He came slowly back along the main passage, and
-stood for some time with his light focused on the sand which he had
-spread at the foot of the stair. There was no footmark upon it, but he
-was prepared to swear that it was not as he had left it. He had
-scattered the sand loosely, and it was pressed down and too smooth. He
-thought that it had been smoothed by a hand passing over it. He mounted
-the first two steps. The thread of cotton which he had fastened across
-the stairway was still there. He bent beneath it, came to the top, and
-threw his light full upon the back of the panelled door. The second
-piece of cotton was gone.
-
-He flashed the ray upon the floor once—twice. The third time he found
-what he was looking for, a fine black thread lying across the threshold.
-It ran out of sight under the door. Some one had gone out that way since
-Mr. Ember had come in. Who? Not Molloy—impossible that it could have
-been Molloy.
-
-Ember passed through the panel, closed it behind him, and walked slowly
-and meditatively along the corridor to the library, still pursuing his
-train of thought. Molloy would have blundered through that first piece
-of cotton without ever feeling it at all, just as Molloy’s foot in its
-heavy boot would have been unaware of the sand. If it was a woman who
-had passed—now who would have used a candle in the passages? Not
-Raymond. She had more than one electric torch which she used constantly
-for night work. But Renata, the little soft-spoken stupid mouse of a
-thing, if she had a fancy to go spying, she’d take a candle; yes, and
-let it gutter too.
-
-Mr. Ember’s instinct for danger had always reacted to this question of
-Renata Molloy. Over and over again there had been the tremor, the
-response, the warning prick. An extreme regret that he had not arranged
-for a convenient accident to overtake Renata possessed Jeffrey Ember.
-The omission, he decided, should be rectified with as little delay as
-possible. He locked the library door and went to the telephone.
-
-It took him half an hour to get the number that he wanted, but he
-betrayed no impatience. When at last a man’s voice came to him, along
-the wire, he inquired in the Bavarian dialect, “Is that you, Number
-Five?” The voice said, “Yes,” whereupon Ember gave a password and waited
-until he had received the countersign. He then began to issue orders,
-using an unhurried voice. Every now and then he shivered a little in the
-early morning cold, and shrugged his coat higher about his ears.
-
-“You are promoted. You go up to Four and come on to the Council. I will
-notify you of the next meeting. Number Three is a traitor. He left here
-last night with copies of lists containing names of all agents. It is
-believed that it is his design to sell us. He has secreted a large sum
-of money, the property of the Council. Before he is eliminated he must
-be made to hand this over. Take down the following addresses; he may be
-at any one of them. Put Six and Seven on to finding and dealing with him
-immediately.” He read out the addresses, and paused whilst they were
-repeated. He then continued speaking:
-
-“I shall require the motor-boat off Withstead Cove at nightfall. Yes,
-to-night, and without fail. A change of base is imperative. Proceed
-first to ...”—he gave another address—“and communicate also with Ten. If
-Belcovitch has arrived tell him that he is promoted to Three, and bring
-him with you. The Council can then meet, as Number One is here.”
-
-A very slight gleam of something hard to define broke for a moment the
-dull impassivity of Ember’s voice as he pronounced the last words. Then
-he added:
-
-“Repeat my instructions.”
-
-He listened attentively whilst the voice reproduced his own words. Then
-he said:
-
-“That is all. We shall meet to-night,” and rang off.
-
-He had breakfast alone with Jane, and ate it with a good appetite. He
-talked very pleasantly too. Jane wondered why every succeeding moment
-left her more afraid. She had been up all night, of course. It must be
-that, yes, of course, it must be that. She faltered in the middle of
-some inane sentence and stopped. Ember’s eyes were fixed on her with an
-entire lack of expression, yet behind those blank windows she felt that
-there were strange guests. It was like looking at the windows of a
-haunted house, quite blank and empty, and yet at any moment out of them
-might look some unimaginable horror.
-
-“You seem a little tired this morning, Miss Renata,” said Ember gently.
-“Why didn’t you follow Lady Heritage’s example and have your breakfast
-upstairs? You don’t look to me as if you had had much sleep. You haven’t
-been walking in your sleep again by any chance, have you?”
-
-Jane clenched her foot in Renata’s baggy shoe.
-
-“Oh, I hope I haven’t,” she said. “I don’t always know when I’ve been
-doing it. What made you think of it?”
-
-“It just crossed my mind,” said Ember. “It’s a very dangerous habit,
-Miss Renata.”
-
-Jane pushed her chair back and rose.
-
-“I’m going into the garden,” she said; “this room is too hot for
-anything. It’s like....” A little devil suddenly commandeered her
-tongue. She reached the door, opened it, and flung over her shoulder:
-
-“It’s like the snake house at the Zoo, Mr. Ember.”
-
-She ran straight out into the garden after that, and stayed there. She
-had the feeling that it was safer to be in the open. She wanted to keep
-away from walls, and doors, and passages. She saw no one all the
-morning, and came back to lunch with her nerve steadier. As soon as
-lunch was over, she went out again. The hour in the house had brought
-her fears back with reinforcements. She began to count the hours before
-Henry could arrive. It was only half-past two, and perhaps he would not
-come till midnight.
-
-The thought of the dark hours after sunset was like a black cloud coming
-nearer and nearer. If she could hide, if she could only get away and
-hide until Henry came. She felt as if it was quite beyond her to go back
-into the house and sit for hour after hour, perhaps alone with Jeffrey
-Ember, his blank eyes watching her, or to endure Raymond Heritage’s
-presence, and, looking at her, remember the line in Molloy’s letter:
-“Renata followed Number One.” It was Raymond she had followed. She had
-told Molloy that she had followed Raymond. Then Raymond, beyond doubt or
-cavil, was the Number One of that horrible Council. She could not bear
-it. She thought of Raymond’s voice breaking when she said “Anthony,” and
-she could not bear it. If she could only get away and hide until Henry
-came.
-
-She went into the walled garden and walked up and down. Perhaps Anthony
-Luttrell would come to her as he had come once before. Presently she
-came to the tool-shed, stopped for a moment hesitating on the threshold,
-and then went in. There was a way into the passages from here; she was
-quite sure of it. If she could find the spring, she believed that she
-would be able to reach the cross-passage where she had run into Henry.
-She did not believe that Ember used it. Why should he, since it would be
-of no use to his schemes? If she could get into the passage and hide
-there, she need not go back to the house. She could wait there for Henry
-and catch him as he passed. She would be able to warn him too, and it
-came to her with startling suddenness that he stood very much in need of
-warning; so much had come to light in the forty-eight hours since he
-left.
-
-It took Jane an hour to find the spring. She might not have found it
-then, but for the chance that made her slip and throw all her weight
-upon one place just under the wide potting-shelf. There was a creak, and
-one of the boards gave a little. She found a trap-door and steps beneath
-it.
-
-There were some old sacks in the shed. Jane took one of them, climbed
-down the steps, and shut the trap-door again. She felt her way down to
-the level, spread the sack on the second step, and sat down. She felt
-utterly forlorn and weary.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
-
-Mr. Ember, having completed all his arrangements, went in search of Lady
-Heritage. She had sat silently through lunch and disappeared directly
-afterwards. Having failed to find her downstairs, Ember was about to
-pass along the upper corridor to the steel gate which shut off the north
-wing, when he noticed that the door of the small Oak Room on his left
-was standing ajar. He thought he heard a movement within, and, after
-pausing for a moment to listen, he pushed the door wide and looked in.
-As far as his knowledge went, Lady Heritage had never entered this room
-during the time that they had been in the house. He accepted the fact
-and could have stated the reasons for it. It had been the playroom, and
-the walls were covered with Anthony Luttrell’s school groups. The book
-shelves held his books, the cabinets his collections. In a very intimate
-sense it was his room.
-
-Raymond Heritage stood at the far end of it now. She wore a dress of
-soft white wool bound with a plaited girdle from the ends of which heavy
-tassels swung. She had taken one of the groups from the wall and was
-looking at it with an intensity which closed her thought to all other
-impressions. She stood half turned from the door. Ember looked at her
-and, looking, experienced some strange sensations. This was Raymond
-Carr-Magnus, a younger, softer, lovelier woman than Raymond Heritage.
-The curious cold something, like transparent glass or very thin ice,
-which seemed to wall her from her fellows, was gone. It was as if the
-ice had dissolved leaving the air misty and tremulous.
-
-The little flame which always burned in him took on brightness and
-intensity, and a second flame sprang up beside it, a flame that burned
-to a still white heat of anger because this change, this softening, was
-for Anthony Luttrell and not for Jeffrey Ember.
-
-There was no sign of emotion, however, in face or expression as he moved
-slightly and said:
-
-“Are you busy? May I speak to you for a few minutes?”
-
-It was characteristic of Raymond that she did not appear in the least
-startled. She turned quite slowly, laid the photograph on the open front
-of the bureau by which she stood, and said:
-
-“Now? Do you want me now?” A softness was in her voice as she spoke, and
-a dream in her eyes.
-
-Her beauty struck Ember as a thing seen for the first time. He had to
-use great force to keep his answer on a note of indifference.
-
-“If you can spare the time,” he said.
-
-Raymond looked round her. There was a caressing quality in her glance.
-
-“Yes; I’ll come downstairs,” she said.
-
-This was Anthony’s room. She would not talk to another man in Anthony’s
-room. The thought may have been in her mind. The breath of it beat on
-Ember’s flames and fanned them higher still. He led the way downstairs
-and into Sir William’s study.
-
-Raymond Heritage had passed from the despairing mood of her first
-interview with Anthony. Then to know him alive and to feel him
-unforgiving had stabbed her to the quick. But that phase had passed.
-During the many hours that she had spent alone the one amazing radiant
-thought that he was alive had come to dominate everything. The cold
-finality of death had been lifted. Instead of a blank wall, there opened
-before her an infinite number of ways, any one of which might lead her
-back to her lost happiness. She began to live in the past, to go over
-the old times, to make a dream her companion.
-
-She came into the study with Ember and waited to hear what he wanted,
-giving him just that surface attention which he recognised and resented.
-His first words were meant to startle her.
-
-“Lady Heritage,” he said, “you know, of course, that there are certain
-passages and rooms under this house?”
-
-She did start a little, he thought. Certainly her attention deepened.
-
-“Who told you that, Jeffrey?” she said, and hardly heard her own voice
-because Anthony’s rang in her ears insisting, “I _know_ that you told
-Ember.”
-
-“Mr. Luttrell told me,” said Ember.
-
-She exclaimed incredulously. At least her thoughts were not wandering
-now. Ember felt a certain triumph as he realised it. He went on speaking
-quite quietly:
-
-“It was when Sir William and I were down here the year before Mr.
-Luttrell died. He, Mr. Luttrell, was taken very ill and I sat up with
-him. In the night he was delirious. It was obvious that he had something
-on his mind. He began to talk about the passages and to say that the
-secret must not be lost. He took me for his nephew Henry March, and
-nothing would serve him but he must show me the entrance in the hall. He
-got out of bed, and was so much excited that I thought it best to give
-way. When he had shown me the spring he calmed down and went quietly
-back to bed. In the morning he had forgotten all about it.”
-
-Raymond listened, frowning.
-
-“Why do you tell me this?” she said. “I knew Mr. Luttrell had told
-Henry.”
-
-“Henry March knows?” said Ember.
-
-“Yes, I think so. Yes, I’m sure he does. Why, Jeffrey?”
-
-Ember was too busy with his thoughts to speak for a moment. What an
-appalling risk they had run. If Henry March knew of the passages, then
-they had been on the very brink of the abyss all along. He spoke at
-last, very seriously:
-
-“I want you to come down with me into the passages if you will. There’s
-something I want to show you—something which I think you ought to know.”
-
-“Something wrong?”
-
-“I think you ought to see for yourself. I’d rather not say any more if
-you don’t mind. I’ll show you what I mean. I really think you ought to
-come and see for yourself. This is a good time, as the servants are
-safely out of the way and Miss Molloy seems to have taken herself off.”
-
-“Very well, I’ll come. I must get a cloak though, or I shall get into
-such a mess. Those passages simply cover one with slime.”
-
-Ember stood still with his hand on the half-opened door.
-
-“You’ve been down there?”
-
-“Why, yes, once or twice.”
-
-“Lately?” His voice was rather low.
-
-“Yes, quite lately.”
-
-Ember gripped the door.
-
-“And how did you know—oh, I beg your pardon.”
-
-“Yes, I don’t think we need go into that.” She spoke gently but from a
-distance. As she spoke she passed him and went through the hall and up
-the stairs. The heavy tassels of her girdle knocked softly against each
-shallow step.
-
-Ember went on gripping the door until she came down again wrapped in a
-long black cloak. When he dropped his hand there was a red incised line
-across the palm. He saw that the cloak was smeared with green. How near
-to the edge they had been, how horribly near!
-
-He opened the door and lighted her down the steps in silence, and in
-silence walked as far as the laboratory turning. When he turned to the
-left and flashed his light ahead of them, Raymond spoke:
-
-“I’ve never been along that passage,” she said. “I know there are holes
-in some of them, and I’ve never liked the look of these side tunnels.”
-
-“This one’s quite safe,” said Ember, and led the way.
-
-Jane heard the murmur of their voices, and for a moment saw the faint
-glow of the light. Then the glow and the voices died again. It was dark,
-she was alone, she was cold, she wanted Henry, oh, how she wanted Henry.
-
-At that moment Jane’s idea of Paradise was to be able to put her head
-down on Henry’s shoulder and cry. It was not, perhaps, a very exalted
-idea, but it was very insistent.
-
-When Ember switched on the light, swung open the steel gate, and stood
-aside for her to pass, Lady Heritage uttered a sharp exclamation.
-
-“Jeffrey, what’s this?” she said.
-
-“That is what I wanted you to see,” replied Ember.
-
-She crossed the threshold, walked a pace or two into the room, and
-looked around her with eyes from which all dreaminess had vanished.
-Bewilderment took its place.
-
-“Who did this? What does it mean?” she asked.
-
-Ember did not answer her until he too was within the chamber. He pushed
-the steel gate with his hand and it fell to with a clang.
-
-“It is, as you see, a well-equipped laboratory,” he said—“worth coming
-to see, I think.”
-
-“Yes, but, Jeffrey——”
-
-“You are interested? I thought you would be; won’t you sit down?”
-
-She looked about her with puzzled eyes.
-
-“Do sit,” said Ember in his quiet, friendly way. “You will find this
-chair more comfortable than the benches.”
-
-He brought it forward as he spoke—a high-backed chair with arms. It
-struck her then as a curious piece of furniture to find in a laboratory.
-
-“Brought here on purpose for you,” said Ember.
-
-But Raymond did not sit. Instead she rested her hands lightly on the
-back of the chair, and, looking across it, said:
-
-“Jeffrey, what does all this mean?”
-
-“I’m going to tell you,” said Ember seriously. “I have brought you here
-to tell you, only I wish you would sit down.”
-
-“No, thank you. Jeffrey, what is this place?”
-
-“A laboratory,” said Ember. “As you see, a laboratory, and the scene of
-some extremely interesting experiments.”
-
-“Carried out by you?”
-
-“Carried out by me ... and some others.”
-
-“You have brought other people in here? Jeffrey, I think that was
-inexcusable.”
-
-“I have not yet attempted to excuse myself.”
-
-For a moment his eyes met hers. She saw something, a spark, a flash,
-from the flames within. It was her first hint that there was, or could
-be, a flame there at all. It startled her in just the same degree that
-an actual spark touching her flesh would have startled her—not more.
-
-He spoke again at once.
-
-“Just now I called this place a laboratory. If I were a poet”—he laughed
-easily—“I might have used another word. I might have said, ‘This is the
-crucible out of which has come the new Philosopher’s Stone.’”
-
-Raymond lifted her eyebrows.
-
-“You’ve not been touched by that mediæval dream?” she said. “This is the
-twentieth century, Jeffrey.”
-
-“Yes,” said Ember slowly. “Yes, the twentieth century, and I said ... ‘a
-_new_ Philosopher’s Stone.’ The mediæval alchemists dreamed of something
-that would turn all it touched to gold, that would transmute the baser
-metals. I have found something which will touch this base civilisation,
-this rotten fabric with which we have surrounded ourselves, and dissolve
-it. And when it is in solution there will be gold and to spare.”
-
-“What do you mean?” said Lady Heritage.
-
-Ember met her frown with a smile.
-
-“Was it a week ago that I heard you say, ‘If I could smash it all’? And
-didn’t you sing:
-
- “‘Ah Love, could you and I with Fate conspire
- To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,
- Would we not shatter it to bits, and then
- Re-mould it nearer to the Heart’s Desire?’
-
-You sang that as if you meant it, Raymond. You sang it with all your
-heart in your beautiful voice. Well, Fate has conspired for you and
-given this sorry scheme of things into your hands to shatter—to shatter
-and re-mould.”
-
-Raymond had been leaning a little forward over the back of the chair,
-touching it lightly. She straightened herself when Ember used her name,
-and looked at him with a sort of grave displeasure. He laughed a little.
-
-“Do you begin to understand?” he said.
-
-“I don’t think, Jeffrey, that I want to understand,” said Lady Heritage.
-
-“How like a woman,” said Mr. Ember. “Here is what you cried out for.
-Here is opportunity, power, the greatest adventure that ever has been or
-ever will be, and you are afraid to face it. I offer you the throne of
-the world—and you don’t wish to understand.”
-
-The extreme quiet of his voice was in sharp contradiction to the
-flamboyant words. Raymond looked at him in some anxiety.
-
-“You’re not well,” she began, and then stopped before the sarcasm of his
-glance.
-
-“I’m not mad,” he said. “This is a business proposition. You’ve had
-poetry, but I can give you prose if you prefer it. I have discovered
-something—I won’t at this moment go into details—which enables me to
-smash up civilisation as you’d smash a rotten egg. Every city, every
-town of the so-called civilised world is accounted for, divided amongst
-my agents. They only await my signal. Those alone whom we mark for
-survival will survive, the rest are eliminated. Remains a world at our
-disposal to recreate. In that world I am supreme—and you. Is that plain
-enough?”
-
-Her face showed deep distress and concern.
-
-“Jeffrey, indeed you’re not well,” she repeated.
-
-“Am I not?”
-
-He came a step towards her and saw her draw back, as it were,
-involuntarily. “Have I not made you understand yet? Perhaps a little
-documentary evidence will assist you?” He took a quick step towards her,
-looked at her full, and said in a different voice, “Raymond, I’m in dead
-earnest—dead sober earnest.” Then with a sudden movement he turned away
-and went across to the safe in the far corner of the chamber. With his
-back to Raymond he unlocked it, and occupied himself for a minute or two
-with the picking out of some papers. When he turned she was at the gate
-with her hand on it. He spoke at once in his most ordinary voice:
-
-“That’s a safety-catch. It won’t open without the key.”
-
-“Will you open it, please?”
-
-He said, “No, Raymond,” in a tone of cool finality, and she lost colour
-a little.
-
-“Jeffrey,” she began, then paused and bit her lip.
-
-“Raymond.”
-
-A scarlet patch of anger came suddenly to her cheek and she was silent
-until it had died again. Long years of self-control do not go for
-nothing. When she spoke at last there was only sadness in her voice:
-
-“Jeffrey, I have valued our friendship—very much.”
-
-“I hope,” he said, “that you will value my love even more.”
-
-Her hand dropped from the door. She did not answer. The hope of moving
-him died. She drew her cloak about her, crossed the floor slowly, and
-seated herself in the chair. She did not look at Ember.
-
-When the last faint murmur of voices ceased, and the dark silence closed
-about her, Jane sat quite still for a while. It is very difficult indeed
-to keep one’s eyes open in the dark. Jane found that her lids dropped,
-or else that the blackness became full of odd traceries that worried and
-disturbed her. She felt as if she had been there for hours and hours;
-and she knew that it really might be hours before Henry came.
-
-She got up and walked slowly to where the passage came out into the main
-corridor. She stood under the arch and looked towards the laboratory
-turning. She had only to feel her way as far as that, turn up it, and
-she would come within sight of the lighted chamber where Ember and Lady
-Heritage were talking. The laboratory drew her, and the light drew her.
-She began to move cautiously along the corridor. She had on light
-house-shoes which made no sound.
-
-The little glow which presently relieved the blackness cheered her
-unreasonably. It was a danger signal and she knew it, but it cheered
-her.
-
-“One would rather be doing something dangerous than just mouldering in
-the pitch dark,” she told herself, and edged slowly nearer and nearer to
-the light.
-
-She was now at the corner, and could look round it and through the steel
-bars into part of the laboratory. The disadvantage of her position was
-that she might be taken in the rear by any one who came along either the
-passage that she herself had come up or the slanting passage with the
-well in it which ran into the other at an acute angle, about six feet
-from where she was standing.
-
-Jane, however, knew of no one who was at all likely to arrive except
-Henry. She therefore did not trouble about her rear, but looked with all
-her eyes into the laboratory. She saw Lady Heritage sitting in a tall
-chair, a little turned away. Her right elbow rested on one arm, and her
-chin was in her hand. Her eyes were downcast. She was speaking in a
-cold, gentle voice:
-
-“I have not many friends—I thought you were my friend. Was it all lies,
-Jeffrey?”
-
-Mr. Ember came into view for a moment. He must have been at the far end
-of the room. He came down it now, walked past Lady Heritage, and turned
-to face her. Jane saw his profile. He was smiling faintly.
-
-“I am not fond of lies,” he said; “they are very entangling—so hard to
-keep one’s head and remember what one has said. Now the truth is so
-simple and easy; besides, you may believe it or not, I really do dislike
-lying to you. I have always told you the truth where it was humanly
-possible to do so. Even in the matter of Miss Molloy——”
-
-Lady Heritage exclaimed suddenly and sharply, lifting her chin from her
-hand and throwing her head back:
-
-“Renata Molloy! She’s in this wretched conspiracy of yours, I suppose?”
-
-Ember laughed.
-
-“No,” he said.
-
-“Then what is she?”
-
-“I wish I knew,” said Ember, speaking soberly enough.
-
-“But what you told me wasn’t true?”
-
-“Some of it was. I was really rather pleased with my neat dovetailing.
-I’ll run over it, and you’ll see that I told the truth whenever I could.
-All that about my having known Molloy in Chicago—solid fact. Then I
-think I said that I ran across him again in London, and found he had
-taken Government service with Scotland Yard—that was fiction, and so was
-the yarn about his warning me that foreign agents were on the track of
-the Government formula. But it’s perfectly true that he has a daughter,
-and that she sometimes walks in her sleep. When I told you that she had
-come in—sleep walking—during an important conversation about the
-Government formula, and that neither Molloy nor I was sure how much she
-had heard, I was mingling fact and fiction. Renata Molloy happened in on
-a meeting of The Great Council—that is the Council of the managing
-agents from all the countries within the scope of our operations, and no
-one knew what she had heard, or what she understood. When I told you
-that I thought she would be safer down here under my own eye, and that I
-was not sure whether she had been got at, I was speaking very serious
-fact indeed. They’d have killed her then and there if corpses were just
-a little easier to dispose of in London. I now very much regret that we
-didn’t chance it.”
-
-A trembling bewilderment had descended upon Jane. She saw Raymond stare
-for a moment at Ember with a curious horrified look and then drop her
-chin upon her hand again. Ember came a step nearer.
-
-“Having disposed of that,” he said, “I should be glad if you would just
-look at these papers. Documentary evidence, as I said just now, is
-convincing. This is a short summary of our plans which has been issued
-to all managing agents. This is a list of those agents. They form The
-Great Council. These four names”—he paused—“I should have told you that
-there was an Inner Council. It is the Inner Council which really runs
-everything. There are four members. I come Second, Molloy was Third, and
-Belcovitch, who will be here presently, is Number Four.”
-
-Jane’s heart beat faster and faster. She heard that Belcovitch would be
-there presently, but she could not tear herself away. She saw Raymond
-Heritage put out her left hand for the papers and glance at them
-indifferently, saw her brow contract as she read, saw her drop the first
-two papers upon her lap and lift the third. There was a dead silence
-whilst she read it. It was the list which gave the names of the Inner
-Council. She let it drop from her hand and an extraordinary rush of
-colour transformed her.
-
-“What is my name doing there?” she said. Her voice was not loud, but it
-rang.
-
-Ember turned upon her a face from which all blankness and coldness had
-vanished.
-
-“Your name?” he said. “Why, the whole thing has been built up round your
-name. The head of the Council, the inspiration of the movement, the
-driving force—you, you, Raymond, you. You are as indissolubly knit with
-the plan as if you had conceived it. The whole Council, The Great
-Council, knows you as Number One of The Four who are the Inner Council.
-The work has been done here under your auspices.” His air of excitement
-vanished suddenly, his voice dropped to an ordinary note. “I told you it
-was a business proposition. I assure you that it has been most
-adequately worked out. In the painful and improbable event of criminal
-proceedings, you would be cast for the chief rôle. A wealth of
-corroborative detail has been provided. In business, as you know, one
-has to think of everything. I’m showing you the penalty of failure, but
-we shan’t fail. I’m showing what success will mean. Think of it—the
-absolute power to say, ‘This shall be done.’ The absolute power to
-impose your will! The absolute power to blot out of existence whatever
-crosses it!” A gleam came into his eyes like nothing that Jane had ever
-seen before. “Raymond, I’m not a visionary or a madman. The thing is
-within my grasp. I’m offering it to you. It’s yours for the taking.”
-
-Raymond did not speak. She only lifted her eyes and looked at him. It
-was a long look. Whilst it lasted Jane held her breath. Raymond looked
-down again; there was silence.
-
-Into the silence came a distant sound—a faint dragging sound.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
-
-Henry left his car at The Three Farmers on the Withstead road, and
-proceeded with energy towards the beach. He was glad enough to walk
-after the long drive.
-
-The day was chilly, the air full of moisture, and a thin, cold mist was
-rising off the marshes. What breeze there was came from the land and
-took the mist only a few hundred yards out to sea. The motor-boat
-telephoned for by Mr. Ember earlier in the day ran into it as she came
-into Withstead Cove to land a passenger. The passenger, who was Mr.
-Belcovitch, was very glad indeed to be landed. He had no nautical
-tendencies, and would have preferred danger on dry land to safety at
-sea. He made his way up the beach and, confused by the mist, went into
-the wrong cave. As he turned to come out of it, having discovered his
-mistake, he heard footsteps, and promptly sheltered himself behind a
-convenient buttress.
-
-Henry walked briskly past and, as Mr. Belcovitch stared after him,
-disappeared into the next cave. He disappeared and he did not return.
-Belcovitch heard a familiar sound, the sound made by the pivoting stone
-as it swung back into its place. He recognised it, and became a prey to
-some rather violent emotions, of which fear, hatred, and a desire to
-annihilate Henry were the chief. Henry was unknown to him, therefore
-Henry was not one of them. His walk, his carriage, his whole appearance
-marked him out as belonging to that class which Mr. Belcovitch made a
-profession of detesting. He possessed the secret of the passages, and
-was therefore in the highest degree dangerous.
-
-Belcovitch followed him as rapidly and as silently as a man can follow
-whose very existence has for many years depended on his proficiency in
-these respects. He closed the stone behind him with a good deal more
-care than Henry had taken, and, having done so, went up the steps at a
-surprising rate and in a moment had his quarry in view. Henry had
-switched on a torch and was proceeding at a moderate rate down the main
-passage. Belcovitch, moving after him like a cat, did some rapid
-thinking. It would be very easy to shoot, but it would make a noise. He
-fingered a length of lead piping in one of his pockets and thought with
-impassioned earnestness of the back of Henry’s neck. Yet, supposing that
-Ember knew of Henry’s visit—he did not want any unpleasantness with
-Ember. It would probably be better not to kill Henry in case it should
-prove that Ember would rather have him alive. It was always better to be
-on good terms with Ember. Molloy had fallen out with him, and it
-appeared that at this very moment two comrades were on their way to
-eliminate Molloy. All this very rapidly.
-
-He decided not to kill Henry. It was a pity, because there was a most
-convenient well into which he could have dropped him. He decreased the
-distance between them and unfastened the black silk muffler which he
-wore instead of collar and tie.
-
-Henry pursued his unconscious path, his mind occupied with Jane, and
-plans, and Jane, and Ember, and Anthony, and Raymond, and Jane again. It
-is to be regretted that he did not look behind him. The villain ought
-not to be able to steal upon the hero in the dark without being heard,
-but Henry had not had Mr. Belcovitch’s advantages. The latter had all
-the tricks of the half-world at his command, and Henry had not.
-
-Just before the laboratory turning Belcovitch came up with a quick run,
-and that was the first that Henry heard of him. The next instant he felt
-himself tripped, struggling desperately to keep his footing, slipped in
-the slime, and came down choking, with a black silk muffler tightly
-knotted about his throat. Belcovitch was a very neat operator. First the
-trip, then the twist, and then the chloroform bottle. He had never made
-a crisper job of it. He took Henry by the heels and proceeded to drag
-him along the passage towards the laboratory, Henry being mercifully
-oblivious of what was happening.
-
-When Jane heard that faint dragging sound, she had just about half a
-minute to decide which passage it came from, and to get away down the
-other one. It really took her less than thirty seconds to realise that
-some one was coming by the way that she herself had come, and to dart
-into the slanting passage which held the well. A yard or two down she
-turned and stood where she had stood to see Ember pass the day before.
-Whoever was coming had no light. Of course they could see the light from
-the laboratory and were steering by it. It was a man coming; she could
-tell by the tread. He was dragging something—something heavy. What? Or
-who? Jane sickened.
-
-A dark figure passed between her and the glow that came from the
-laboratory. She took three light steps, and saw that what he dragged
-behind him was a senseless man—senseless or dead.
-
-She heard Ember call out, “Belcovitch, is that you?” And a voice with a
-strong foreign accent answered.
-
-Then a great many things seemed to happen at once: the steel gate
-opened; the helpless man was dragged in; and, as the gate fell to, there
-came Raymond Heritage’s scream.
-
-Jane shook from head to foot. The scream cut like a knife. Why did she
-scream like that? Who was it? Who was it? Who _was_ it? She got her
-answer in Raymond’s gasp of “Henry!”
-
-An inner blackness, much, much worse than that intolerable dark which
-had oppressed her, swept between Jane and everything in the world. When
-Raymond said, “Henry!” the light went out of her world and left it
-black. She heard Ember say, “Is he dead?” but she could not see
-Belcovitch’s shrug and shake of the head. She leaned against the wall
-and could not move. I suppose that in that moment she knew that she
-really loved Henry. It hurt—dreadfully.
-
-Then she heard Raymond’s voice again:
-
-“What have you done to him? Devils, devils!” And Ember:
-
-“My dear Raymond, calm yourself. He’s not dead, nothing so crude. Mr.
-Belcovitch is an artist, and Captain March will come round in a minute
-or two and be none the worse. I’m sorry you had a shock.”
-
-Light, dazzling light flooded Jane’s consciousness. Henry wasn’t dead.
-The dark was only a dream, and she was awake again. She was very much
-awake, and her whole waking thought was bent upon the necessity of
-getting help for Henry before that dream came true.
-
-Ember and Belcovitch would murder him if they had time. Raymond would
-make what time she could, but in the end they would murder him unless
-Jane could get help.
-
-She turned, holding to the wall, and moved along the passage. When she
-had taken a step or two something happened which she could never think
-of without self-abasement. Her nerve went suddenly, and she began to
-run. It was only for a dozen steps; then her self-control came into
-play. She pulled up panting, and, after listening for a moment, crept
-the rest of the way, reached the steps, and came out into the empty
-hall, dirty, wet, and as white as a sheet.
-
-As soon as she had the panel shut she ran across the hall and down the
-corridor to the library. She shut the library door with a sharp push,
-and was across the room and taking down the telephone receiver before
-the sound of the bang had died away.
-
-“Exchange!” she said, “Exchange!” and clenched her hand as she waited
-for the reply. It came with a dreamy accent, the voice of a girl
-disturbed in the middle of Sunday afternoon. Nobody should be
-telephoning in the middle of Sunday afternoon.
-
-“Can you look up a London number for me? Sir Julian Le Mesurier”—she
-spelt it. “Please be very quick; _please_, it’s important.”
-
-“Righto,” said the dreamy voice incongruously.
-
-Silence fell. Jane held on to the telephone, and tried to control her
-breathing, which came in gasps. The room seemed full of mist; she shut
-her eyes.
-
-When Jane started to run down the laboratory passage Jeffrey Ember was
-superintending the removal of the black silk muffler from Henry’s neck.
-When they rolled Henry over on to his face he groaned, and when they
-tied his hands behind his back with the muffler he tried to kick,
-whereupon Ember produced a piece of rope and they tied his ankles too.
-
-The sound of Jane’s running feet had come very faintly upon Ember’s ear.
-Henry was groaning and kicking, and Belcovitch was cursing in a steady
-undertone. It was not until he rose to get the piece of rope that his
-mind took hold of that faint sound and began to analyse it. There had
-been a sound in the passage outside—some one moving—some one running.
-Yes, that was it, some one running, light foot and very fast.
-
-Ember finished tying Henry up and got to his feet.
-
-“There was some one in the passage just now,” he said. “I must go and
-see. There was something; I heard something. It was like some one
-running.” He spoke as if to himself, and then turned to Raymond.
-
-“You will stay where you are in that chair—otherwise....” He swung round
-to Belcovitch.
-
-“If she moves, shoot Captain March at once,” he said, and was gone,
-leaving the gate ajar behind him.
-
-In the library Jane waited for her call. It came with startling
-loudness—a bell that seemed to ring inside her head—and then the dreamy
-voice drawling, “Here y’are.”
-
-In Piggy’s study Isobel Le Mesurier said, “Hullo!”
-
-“Is that Lady Le Mesurier?” said Jane.
-
-“Yes, speaking.”
-
-“Please tell your husband——”
-
-And Isobel’s charming, friendly voice, “He’s here. Won’t you speak to
-him yourself?”
-
-Jane’s hearing, always acute, was strung to an extraordinary pitch. She
-could hear the girl at the exchange speaking to some one; she could hear
-Isobel saying, “Piggy, you’re wanted”; and behind these sounds, on the
-extreme edge of what was perceptible, she heard the click of the panel
-and Ember’s footsteps as he crossed the polished floor. She knew that
-they were Ember’s footsteps, and she heard them coming nearer.
-
-Sir Julian was speaking:
-
-“Who is it?”
-
-Jane heard her own voice, and it sounded small and far away.
-
-“Jane Smith, speaking from Luttrell Marches. They’ve got Henry in the
-passages. He’s hurt. They’ve got a motor-boat in Withstead Cove. Help as
-quickly as you can. Some one’s coming.”
-
-Ember was half-way down the corridor. Piggy was speaking:
-
-“Anthony Luttrell’s on his way—should be with you any minute.”
-
-Ember turned the handle. Jane called out:
-
-“Oh, can’t you get me that number—oh, can’t you get it quickly?...” And,
-as the door opened sharply, she dropped the receiver and turned.
-
-Ember came in—a new Ember. There was something terrifying in his look,
-and he said harshly:
-
-“What are you doing?”
-
-“Trying to telephone,” said Jane. “They take such ages.”
-
-Mr. Ember’s look was terrifying, but Jane was not terrified. As she
-dropped the receiver something happened to her which she did not
-understand. Within the last half-hour she had felt an extremity of fear
-and sudden anguish, violent relief, and again intensest fear and
-suspense. From this moment none of these things came near her. She moved
-among them, but they did not touch her at all. The thing was like a play
-in which she had her part duly written and rehearsed. There was no sense
-of responsibility, only a stage upon which she must play her part; and
-she knew her part very well. She did not have to think, or plan, or
-contrive. She knew what to do, and how and when to do it. From the
-moment that she dropped the receiver at the telephone she never faltered
-for an instant.
-
-Ember looked at her with eyes which saw every tell-tale stain upon her
-dress and hands. The something in his gaze which should have been
-frightening became intensified.
-
-“Lady Heritage wants you in the study,” he said.
-
-Jane knew very well that he said the study because the study was next to
-the door in the panelling. If she refused to go, he would stun her or
-shoot her here. She did not refuse, and walked down the corridor by his
-side in silence. They crossed the hall, and Ember kept between her and
-the stairs. Jane walked meekly beside him with downcast eyes until he
-passed ahead of her to open the study door. In that moment she turned on
-her heel, sprang for the stairs and raced up them, running as she had
-never run in her life.
-
-Ember would not risk shooting her in the hall—she felt sure of that—but
-he was after her like a flash, and she had very little start. She
-reached for the newel at the top and jumped the last three steps, with
-Ember about two yards behind. Then down the corridor with a rush and
-into her room, and the door banged and locked as he reached it.
-
-Jane wasted no time. She thought that Ember would hesitate to break down
-the door until he had at least tried promises and threats, but she was
-taking no chances. She heard him speaking as she opened the cupboard
-door and locked herself inside it. His voice was only a murmur as she
-heaved up the trap-door in the floor and climbed carefully down the
-ladder upon which Henry had stood that night which seemed like weeks and
-weeks ago. The catch in the wall at the bottom was a simple handle like
-the one behind the panelling. She emerged into the garden room, opened
-the window, dropped out of it, and ran quickly and lightly along the
-terrace, keeping close to the wall of the house.
-
-Ember talked through the door for five minutes. His remarks ranged from
-persuasive promises to threats, which lost nothing from being delivered
-in a chilly whisper. At the end of the five minutes he put his shoulder
-against the lock and broke it. He found an empty room and a locked
-cupboard. When he had broken the cupboard door and discovered nothing
-more exciting than Renata’s schoolgirl wardrobe, he went to the open
-window and stared incredulously at the drop to the terrace. Jane had
-turned the corner of the house and was out of sight.
-
-Ember came downstairs with the knowledge that he must complete his
-business quickly if he meant to bring it to any conclusion other than
-disaster.
-
-He went straight to the library and rang up the Withstead exchange.
-
-“The young lady who was telephoning just now, did she get the number she
-wanted? She did? Would you kindly tell me which number it was?”
-
-There was a pause, and then the information came: Sir Julian Le
-Mesurier! There was certainly no time to be lost. Molloy and his
-daughter both traitors, both spies, both in Government pay! Molloy
-should be reckoned with by now, and some day without fail he would
-reckon with Renata.
-
-He came into the hall, and released the spring of the hidden door. As
-the panel turned under his hand, he heard the purr of a motor coming
-nearer. It drew up. The bell clanged. Mr. Ember stepped into the
-darkness and closed the panel behind him.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-
-Anthony Luttrell’s distaste for his errand had certainly not lessened
-during the long drive from town. He stood now on his own doorstep facing
-a strange butler, and heard a formal “Not at home,” in response to his
-inquiry for Lady Heritage.
-
-“And Miss Molloy?” he asked.
-
-“Not at home,” repeated Blotson.
-
-If this was a reprieve it was an unwelcome one. Anthony would very much
-have preferred to get the thing over.
-
-“I will wait,” he said briefly, and walked past Blotson into the hall.
-“I am Mr. Luttrell,” he explained, and Blotson’s resentment diminished
-very slightly. After a moment’s hesitation he threw open the study door
-and ushered Anthony into the room.
-
-“If Lady Heritage is in the house she will see me,” said Anthony. “If
-she is out I should like to see Miss Molloy or, failing her, Mr. Ember.”
-He walked to the window and stood there looking out until Blotson
-returned.
-
-“Lady Heritage is out, sir, and Miss Molloy is out. Mr. Ember was in
-just now, but he must have stepped out again.”
-
-“I will wait,” said Anthony for the second time.
-
-When Blotson had gone, he stood quite still, following out a somewhat
-uneasy train of thought. As the minutes passed, uneasiness merged into
-anxiety.
-
-Jane ran the whole way to the walled garden. Once inside its door she
-made herself walk in order to get her breath. When she came into the
-potting-shed she knew just what she was going to do, and set about doing
-it in a quiet, businesslike way. From a stack of pots she took about
-half a dozen, broke all but two of them, and gathered the sherds into
-the lap of her dress. She put the two unbroken pots on the top of the
-sherds. Then she took a sharp pruning-knife from the shelf, opened the
-trap-door, and went down the steps.
-
-As soon as she came into the main corridor she began to put down the
-broken sherds, taking care to make no noise. She laid a trail of them up
-to the laboratory turning, and then all along the turning itself,
-disposing them in the middle of the fairway in such a manner as to
-ensure that they should not fail to be seen by any one flashing a light
-along the passage. She put the last two or three sherds in a little pile
-about a yard short of the arch leading to the slanting passage with the
-well in it. As she bent down there she heard Belcovitch maintaining an
-impassioned Slavonic monologue within the laboratory.
-
-She stood in the archway, threw her two unbroken pots against the
-opposite wall with all her might, and then ran back down the well
-passage until it turned.
-
-Everything happened just as she knew that it would happen.
-
-Belcovitch stopped talking and swore. It was a polysyllabic curse, very
-effective. Then the steel gate was flung open, and in three languages
-Mr. Belcovitch demanded of the silence an account of what was happening.
-His voice ran away into a hollow echo, and died miserably.
-
-Jane heard him stamp back into the chamber, cursing, and return. This
-time he flashed a light before him. Flattened against the wall, Jane saw
-its glow reflected from the side of the passage in which she was.
-Belcovitch had seen the sherds and was exclaiming and muttering. She
-heard him pass the arch.
-
-Jane stole to the mouth of the slanting passage. Belcovitch was two
-yards away on her left, flashing his light down the tunnel, seeing more
-broken pots, and more and more, and swearing all the time, not loudly
-but with considerable earnestness. Jane slipped like a shadow across
-behind him and round the corner. The steel gate was wide open. She ran
-through it and into the lighted laboratory.
-
-Henry lay on the stone floor in front of her, bound hand and foot. He
-had rolled over on to his side and was staring at the gate. Raymond had
-risen to her feet, and was taking a half-step towards Henry as Jane came
-running in.
-
-“Shut the gate,” said Henry in a sharp whisper.
-
-“There’s another way out, and I don’t think they know it. Quick, Jane,
-quick!”
-
-Jane slammed the gate. She had the pruning-knife in her hand, and she
-was down on her knees and at work on the black silk muffler before the
-sound of the slam reached Mr. Belcovitch. When it did reach him he spun
-round and came back at a run with a revolver in his hand and murderous
-fury in his heart.
-
-Jane cut through the last shred of silk, and because Belcovitch’s hand
-was shaking with rage his first bullet missed her and Henry handsomely.
-
-“Get up against the wall, quick!” Henry commanded.
-
-As he spoke he was himself half rolling, half scrambling towards the
-wall. His ankles were still tied, but his arms were free. The second
-bullet just missed his head. Jane cried out, and then they were both out
-of the line of fire. Henry was breathing hard.
-
-“Give me the knife,” he panted, and began to saw at some of the toughest
-rope he had ever come across.
-
-Raymond had remained standing. She had retreated almost to the end of
-the room and wore a look of extreme surprise.
-
-“Why do you call her Jane?” she asked. Her deep voice came through the
-racket with strange irrelevance.
-
-Belcovitch continued to make the maximum amount of noise in which it is
-possible for a man and a revolver to collaborate. He banged the steel
-gate in the intervals of firing, and he cursed voluminously.
-
-The rope gave, and Henry was half-way on to his feet when there was a
-sudden cessation of all the sounds. Raymond gave a warning cry, and
-Henry caught at Jane’s shoulder and straightened himself. The steel gate
-was opening.
-
-Jane said, “Henry—oh, Henry darling!” and there came in Mr. Jeffrey
-Ember, very cool and deadly, with his little automatic pistol levelled.
-Just behind him came Belcovitch, a silent Belcovitch, at his master’s
-heel.
-
-“Touching scene,” said Ember. “Captain March, if you don’t put your
-hands up at once I shall shoot Miss Molloy. From her last exclamation, I
-should imagine that you’d rather I didn’t. Miss Molloy, go across to the
-opposite wall and stand there. Belcovitch, kindly keep your revolver
-against that young lady’s temple, but don’t let it off till I give you
-leave. Raymond, I should be glad if you would resume your chair. A brief
-conversation is, I think, necessary, and I should prefer you to be
-seated.”
-
-He stood not far from the entrance, dominating the room. The gate had
-been closed by Belcovitch. Ember waited till his instructions had been
-carried out; then he came a little nearer to Lady Heritage and said:
-
-“Time presses, Raymond. I must go. I wish that there were more time, for
-indeed I would rather not have hurried you.”
-
-Jane, with the muzzle of Belcovitch’s revolver cold against her temple,
-found her attention caught by Ember’s words. Time ... yes, that’s what
-they wanted—time. Piggy had said that Anthony might arrive at any
-moment. When he did arrive and found that they were all mysteriously
-absent, surely his first thought would be to search the passages. She
-raised her voice and said insistently:
-
-“Mr. Ember.”
-
-Ember threw her a dangerous look.
-
-“Be quiet,” he said shortly.
-
-“There was something I wanted to tell you,” said Jane.
-
-“Out with it then, and be quick.”
-
-“You called me Miss Molloy just now....”
-
-“No, Jane, _no_!” said Henry violently.
-
-Mr. Ember echoed the remark made by Lady Heritage.
-
-“Why do you call her Jane?” he inquired.
-
-“That is what I was going to tell you,” said Jane.
-
-“You called me Miss Molloy, and I just thought I would like you to know
-that I’m not Renata Molloy. It would make an untidy sort of finish if
-you went away thinking that I was, and I hate things untidy.”
-
-“You’re a little devil,” said Ember ... “a little devil.”
-
-Jane stuck her chin in the air.
-
-“Well, I’m not Renata Molloy anyhow,” she said. “No one would ever have
-called her a devil. She was a white rabbit—a nice, quiet, tame white
-rabbit.”
-
-Jane’s voice failed suddenly on the last word. Yet Mr. Ember had not
-looked at her again. His eyes went past her to Belcovitch, and it was to
-Belcovitch that he spoke.
-
-“No, not yet,” he said, “but if she speaks again you can shoot.”
-
-A long, slow shudder swept Jane. She leaned against the wall and was
-silent, and she shut her eyes because she could not bear to see Henry’s
-face. Ember turned back to Raymond.
-
-“I’m sorry to hurry you.” His voice was low and confidential. “What I
-have to offer, you know. It is yours for the taking. Please don’t make
-any mistake. I have to change my base, it is true—I have even to change
-it with some haste—but neither that nor anything else can now affect my
-purpose and its achievement. What I offered is, without any shadow of
-uncertainty, mine to offer and yours to take, if you will ... if you
-will, Raymond?”
-
-Raymond’s sombre gaze dwelt on him as he spoke. The whole scene affected
-her as one is affected by something which is taking place at a great
-distance. She did not seem able to adjust her mental focus to it. Her
-mind seemed to be divided into two parts. One of them was entirely and
-unreasonably preoccupied with the relationship between Jane and Henry,
-and the reason why Henry should have addressed Renata Molloy as Jane.
-These thoughts seemed to circle as continuously, and with as little aim,
-as goldfish in a glass bowl. The other part of her mind was bruised and
-sick because Jeffrey Ember had been her friend. When he said, “Will you,
-Raymond?” she did not speak. She looked at him in silence, and presently
-made a slow gesture of refusal.
-
-Ember came a step nearer.
-
-“I told you,” he said, “that I was in dead earnest. Perhaps you don’t
-realise just what I mean by that. I’ve played for a high stake, and I
-mean to have what I’ve played for or nothing. I’ve played for you, and
-if....” He broke off. “Let me put it this way. Either we make the future
-together or there’s no future for either of us. I’m speaking quite
-soberly when I tell you this. Think well before you answer, but don’t be
-too long. If there is to be no future our present will end here and now.
-This place is mined, and if I press that unobtrusive knob, which you may
-notice above the safe, the end will be quite a dramatic one. I have
-always had some such contingency in view, and this makes as good a
-stepping-off place as any other. Think before you refuse, Raymond.”
-
-She shook her head again. Her eyes never left his face. Ember made an
-impatient gesture.
-
-“Are your friends going to thank you?” he said. “You are taking the
-heroic pose, and forgive me if I say that it’s a little unworthy of you.
-I expected something less obvious. Take my offer, and I guarantee to
-leave Captain March and Miss Molloy here unharmed. Can any woman resist
-sacrificing herself? Come, will you save them, Raymond?”
-
-Lady Heritage spoke for the first time:
-
-“I suppose that I must be a fool because I trusted you.... I did trust
-you, Jeffrey ... but I don’t know what you have ever seen in me to make
-you suppose that I am such a fool as to trust you again ... now.”
-
-Her words and her voice caused a change in Ember, a change as difficult
-to define as to describe. It is best realised by its effect upon those
-present. Some impression of shock was received in varying degree by them
-all. Henry March had, perhaps, the most vivid sense of it. In Belcovitch
-it bred panic.
-
-Whilst Ember was speaking the hand that held the revolver to Jane’s
-temple had become more and more unsteady. The muzzle knocked cold
-against her cheek bone and jabbed against her ear. Jane wondered when
-the thing would go off. So, it is to be imagined, did Henry, for he was
-grey about the mouth and his forehead was wet.
-
-Ember did not speak for a moment. Then he said:
-
-“Touché!” in a queer, bitter voice.
-
-Belcovitch began to mutter in an undertone that gradually became louder.
-His hand shook more and more.
-
-“Sure, Raymond?” said Jeffrey Ember. “Quite, quite sure?”
-
-He came up quite close, and laid his right hand lightly on her shoulder.
-It was the first time that he had touched her.
-
-She said just the one word, “Yes.” For a moment his hand closed hard
-upon her. Then he sprang back with a laugh.
-
-“All right, then we go up together.” And, as he spoke, he made for the
-corner where a little vulcanite knob showed above the steel safe.
-
-With a sort of howl Belcovitch whirled to meet him. They crashed
-together and grappled, Ember silent, Belcovitch torrential in
-imprecation and fighting as a man frenzied with terror does fight. His
-revolver dropped from his hand, and Ember stumbled over it.
-
-Like a flash Henry had Raymond by the arm, whilst his eyes commanded
-Jane and he pointed to the passage that led out of the laboratory on the
-extreme right. It was the one that Jane had explored first, and as she
-ran into it she remembered that it ended in a small chamber full of
-packing-cases. In a panting whisper she said:
-
-“It’s full of boxes.”
-
-“Then we must shift them,” said Henry, and, groping in the almost dark,
-he began to pull the cases away from the right-hand wall.
-
-“A light—he can’t find the spring without a light.”
-
-Raymond heard her own voice saying this, and then she ran back down the
-passage and into the laboratory.
-
-Belcovitch had put his torch down on the bench from which Jane had taken
-the lists. Its exact position was, as it were, photographed on Raymond’s
-consciousness. She reached, snatched it, and was back again in the least
-possible space of time. As she came, she saw Ember and Belcovitch
-swaying, struggling—horribly near the corner. And as she went she had an
-impression of Belcovitch falling and, as he fell, dragging Ember down
-with desperate, clawing hands. Then she was trying to steady her hand
-and throw the light upon the wall space which Henry had cleared; but the
-beam wavered and shook, shook and wavered; and Jane took the torch out
-of her hand, setting it on one of the packing-cases.
-
-“It should be here. It should be just here”—Henry spoke in a muttering
-whisper; then with sharp irritation, “Nearer with that light, Jane.”
-
-Jane held it closely to the wall. Henry’s hands slid up and down,
-feeling ... pressing. Once they heard Belcovitch shout, and all the time
-the sound of the struggle filled their straining ears. Some one fired a
-shot—and Henry found the spring. A slab of stone swung outwards,
-pivoting as the other doors had done.
-
-Henry pushed Jane through the opening, flung his arm round Raymond,
-dragged her through and slammed the stone into place. They were in the
-narrow alley-way between the row of veronica bushes and the terrace
-wall, on the spot where Mr. George Patterson had stood listening to
-Raymond’s voice. The air, the daylight, the mist, seemed wonderful
-beyond words. Jane never again beheld a mist without remembering that
-joyful lift of the heart which came to her when the stone shut and she
-drew her first long, free breath. Henry gave her no time to savour the
-joys of freedom.
-
-“Run, run like blazes!” he shouted.
-
-Jane ran. Once she started she felt as if nothing would ever stop her.
-She heard Henry just behind her; she heard him urging Raymond on, and
-they came out of the alley-way round the end of the terrace, round the
-side of the house.
-
-Then it came.
-
-The ground shook; there was a muffled thud and a long, heavy rumble that
-died slowly. Then with a terrific crash two of the stone urns along the
-terrace wall fell and broke. As the noise ebbed there came the tinkling
-sound of splintered glass falling upon stone.
-
-Jane stopped running as if she had been shot, and reeled up against
-Henry, who put his arms round her and held her tight. Up to that very
-moment the feeling of unreality, of playing a part in a play for which
-she had no responsibility whilst her real self looked on remotely—this
-feeling had dominated her. Now it was as if the curtain fell and she,
-Jane, was left groping amongst events that terrified her. She trembled
-very much, and clung to Henry, who was at that moment the one really
-safe and solid thing within reach.
-
-Raymond did not pause or turn her head, but walked straight on towards
-the house.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
-
-
-The last rumble of the explosion had hardly died away before Anthony
-Luttrell had flung open the study door, and was making his way at a run
-towards the Yellow Drawing-Room.
-
-At the glass door which led on to the terrace he halted, opened it wide,
-and stood on the step looking out. Some glass was still falling from the
-broken windows on this side of the house. All the terrace on the right
-of where he stood was like a drawing in which the perspective has gone
-wrong. There was a great bulge in one place, and some of the
-paving-stones were tilted aslant, whilst others had fallen in, leaving a
-gaping hole over which a cloud of dust was settling.
-
-Anthony turned his back upon all this and came back with great strides
-into the hall. Without so much as a look behind him to see whether he
-was observed, he loosened the spring, pushed open the door in the
-panelling and there halted, suddenly remembering the need of a light. He
-went back for a torch, and then passed down the steps without waiting to
-close the door.
-
-That something appalling had happened was obvious. With the self-control
-without which it is impossible to meet an emergency Anthony kept his
-thought focused upon what he was doing. At the bottom of the steps the
-way was still clear. He saw Jane’s broken pots and wondered what on
-earth they were doing there. Then he turned into the laboratory passage,
-flashing the light ahead of him. Half-way along the passage the roof had
-fallen in.
-
-Anthony turned, came back into the main corridor, ran along it until he
-came to the place where the well passage joined it. Here he turned off,
-made his way cautiously past the well, and again found a mass of stone
-and rubble blocking his path. A cold horror came over him, and all those
-thoughts to which he had barred his mind came insistently nearer,
-pressing past those barriers and taking his consciousness by storm. He
-came back into the hall and shut the door in the panelling.
-
-The hall was quite empty, but the voice of Blotson could be heard at no
-great distance. It was raised in exhortation and rebuke. Obviously he
-rallied a staff which inclined to hysteria, for one could hear a woman’s
-sobs and a subdued chorus of perturbation and nervous inquiry.
-
-Anthony went to the front door and flung it open. His car stood at a
-little distance, the inspector and the chauffeur in close conversation.
-Anthony did not see them. He only saw Raymond Heritage, who was coming
-slowly up the steps. She was bareheaded, and her face was very pale. She
-wore a white dress with a black cloak over it. She stumbled twice as she
-climbed the steps and, if Anthony was only conscious of seeing her, she
-did not appear to be conscious of seeing any one at all.
-
-It was only when the hand which she put out in front of her actually
-touched Anthony that she lifted her eyes and looked at him. Then she
-said in an odd, piteous sort of voice:
-
-“Tony.”
-
-“What is it? What has happened, Raymond? Are you all right?”
-
-“I must speak to you—I must,” she said, catching at his arm and drawing
-him towards the study. They went in, and when the door was shut she
-turned to him with the tears running down her face.
-
-“Tony, you heard? I think he’s dead. That place downstairs was mined,
-and he tried to kill us all, only we got away, Henry, the girl, and I.
-But Jeffrey’s dead—yes, I think he must be dead, and I know now what you
-thought. I didn’t know what you meant before, but I know now. You were
-wrong, Tony. Oh, Tony, won’t you believe me? I didn’t tell him about the
-passages, and I didn’t know anything until to-day. They can tell you I
-was speaking the truth—Henry and Miss Molloy; but, oh, Tony, can’t you
-believe me, just me?”
-
-Anthony looked at her, and looked. His face was twitching. As her voice
-broke on the last two words he dropped to his knees, flung his arms
-about her, and hid his face in the folds of her cloak.
-
-By the time that Jane and Henry came into the house Blotson had set all
-his machinery running once more. He himself presented a magnificent
-front to two of the most dishevelled people whom he had ever been called
-upon to receive. It was not until afterwards when it came home to Henry
-how much green slime there was in his wildly ruffled hair, and how
-little the original colour of his collar could be discerned, that he
-realised how marvellous had been the unflinching calm of Blotson. He
-referred neither to the explosion nor to Henry’s appearance. In point of
-fact, what were emergencies and accidents that Blotson should notice
-them? The hour being five o’clock, it was his business to announce tea.
-He announced it.
-
-“Tea is served in the library,” he said, and passed upon his way.
-
-But in the library the tea cooled while Henry, very much relieved to
-find that the wires had not been cut, galvanised the Withstead exchange
-and got on to a distinctly relieved Sir Julian.
-
-They arranged, speaking in Italian, that an explosion had occurred in
-the course of an important experiment in Sir William’s laboratory. It
-was agreed to notify Sir William and the press. The loss of two lives
-was greatly to be deplored. When this was finished Piggy became less
-official.
-
-“That girl of yours is a brick; you can tell her so from me. She’s all
-right, I hope?”
-
-Henry said “Yes,” that Jane was quite all right. He sounded a trifle
-puzzled.
-
-Piggy laughed.
-
-“Didn’t you know she had rung me up to say you’d been nobbled? Most
-businesslike communication I’ve ever had from a lady in all my life.
-Told me they’d got a motor-boat in Withstead Cove. And, thanks to her,
-we ought to have gathered it in. I got through to the coastguard station
-at once. Now look here, what’s the likelihood of laying hands on Ember’s
-papers?”
-
-“Ember’s papers?” repeated Henry. “Well, there was a safe down there,
-and that’s where he’d be most likely to keep them; but I expect they’re
-all gone to blazes, as the door was open.”
-
-At this point Jane’s voice came in breathlessly:
-
-“Henry, wait, keep him on the line!” she said, and was gone.
-
-“It’s Jane, sir,” said Henry. “I think she’s gone to get something.”
-
-In the middle of Piggy’s subsequent instructions Jane came back. She
-held a bundle of closely written sheets. She spread them before Henry’s
-eyes, holding them fan-wise like a hand at cards.
-
-“I’d forgotten them till you said that about the papers—I’d actually
-forgotten them. It’s lists of his agents in all the big towns
-everywhere. I sat up all night copying them because I didn’t dare keep
-the originals. I keep forgetting you don’t know what’s been happening.
-But tell him, Henry, tell him we’ve got the lists.”
-
-Henry told him.
-
-Jane heard Sir Julian answer, and then Henry hung up the receiver and
-hugged her.
-
-“What did he say? Henry, you’re breaking my ribs! What did he say?”
-
-“Jane, you’re a brick, and a wonder, and a darling, and he said—he said,
-‘Bless you, my children!’”
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
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- HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)
-
---Generated cover and spine images based on elements in the book.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith, by
-Patricia Wentworth
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith
-
-Author: Patricia Wentworth
-
-Release Date: August 18, 2020 [EBook #62963]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASTONISHING ADVENTURE OF JANE SMITH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by D A Alexander, Stephen Hutcheson, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
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-
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-</pre>
-
-<div class="img">
-<img class="cover" id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith" width="762" height="1201" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>THE ASTONISHING ADVENTURE OF
-<br />JANE&nbsp;SMITH</h1>
-<p class="center"><span class="smallest">BY</span>
-<br />PATRICIA WENTWORTH</p>
-<p class="center">Author of
-<br />&ldquo;A Marriage Under the Terror,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p1.jpg" alt="Publisher logo" width="217" height="300" />
-</div>
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">BOSTON</span>
-<br />SMALL, MAYNARD &amp; COMPANY
-<br /><span class="smaller">PUBLISHERS</span></p>
-</div>
-<p class="center smallest"><span class="sc">Copyright</span>, 1923
-<br />By SMALL, MAYNARD &amp; COMPANY
-<br />(Incorporated)</p>
-<p class="center smaller">Printed in the United States of America</p>
-<p class="center smallest">THE MURRAY PRINTING COMPANY
-<br />CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
-<br />THE BOSTON BOOKBINDING COMPANY
-<br />CAMBRIDGE, MASS.</p>
-<h1 title=""><span class="small">THE ASTONISHING ADVENTURE OF JANE&nbsp;SMITH</span></h1>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER I</span></h2>
-<p>The dining-room of Molloy&rsquo;s flat had not been built
-to receive twenty-five guests, but the Delegates
-of twenty-five affiliated Organisations had been
-crowded into it. The unshaded electric light glared
-down upon men of many types and nationalities.
-It did not flatter them.</p>
-<p>The air was heavy with the smoke of bad tobacco
-and the fumes of a very indifferent gas fire. There
-was a table in the middle of the room, and some dozen
-of the men were seated at it. The rest stood in groups,
-or leaned against the walls.</p>
-<p>Of the four who formed the Inner Council three
-were present. Most of the Delegates had expected
-that the head of The Council, the head of the Federated
-Organisations, that mysterious Number One
-whom they all knew by reputation and yet had
-never seen in the flesh, would be present in person
-to take the chair. But the Delegates who had entertained
-this expectation were doomed to disappointment.
-Once again Number One&rsquo;s authority had been
-delegated to the other three members of The Council.
-Of these, Number Three was Molloy, the big, handsome
-Irishman who rented the flat. He sat facing the
-door, a fine figure of a man in the late forties. Number
-Two leaned forward over the fire, warming his hands,
-his pale, intellectual face expressionless, his eyes
-veiled. Belcovitch, who was Number Four, was on
-his feet speaking. They were large, bony feet, in boots
-which had most noticeably not been made for him.
-He spoke fluently, but with a heavy foreign accent.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_2">2</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Propaganda,&rdquo; he said, and laughed; really he
-had a very unpleasant laugh&mdash;&ldquo;propaganda is what
-you call rot, rubbish, damn nonsense. What else
-have we been about for years&mdash;no, generations&mdash;and
-where are we to-day?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Number Two drew his chair closer to the fire with
-an impatient jerk. Number Four&rsquo;s oratory bored him
-stiff. The room was cold. This gas fire was like all
-gas fires. He pulled his fur coat together and spoke
-sharply:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Molloy, this room&rsquo;s most infernally cold, and
-where in the world does the draught come from?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Propaganda is dead,&rdquo; said Number Four. He
-looked over his shoulder with dislike at Number Two,
-and mopped his brow with a dirty handkerchief.
-Molloy, just opposite him, turned a little and laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You bring the cold with you, Number Two,&rdquo; he
-said. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s Number Four as hot as his own speeches.
-You&rsquo;ve got all the fire, and the door&rsquo;s shut, and a
-screen in front of it, so what more do you want?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Propaganda is dead,&rdquo; repeated Number Four. He
-stood with his back to the door. Only the top panel
-of it showed above the black screen which had been
-drawn across it. The screen had four leaves. On
-each leaf a golden stork on one leg contemplated a
-golden water-lily. The light shone on the golden
-birds and the golden flowers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_3">3</div>
-<p>Number Four thrust his handkerchief back into his
-pocket, and rapped sharply on the table. It was
-covered with a red cloth which had seen better days.
-Number Fourteen had upset the ink only a few
-moments before, and a greenish-purple patch was still
-spreading amidst the crimson.</p>
-<p>Belcovitch leaned forward, both his hands on the
-table, his raucous voice brought to a dead level.
-&ldquo;Instead of propaganda, what?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Instead
-of building here, teaching there, what? That is what
-I&rsquo;m here to-night to tell you. To-morrow you all go
-to your own places, each to his post; but before you
-go, I am authorised to prepare you for what is to come.
-It will not be to-day, but it may be to-morrow, or
-it may not be for many to-morrows yet. One final
-stage is lacking, but in essentials The Process is complete.
-Propaganda is dead, because we no longer
-need propaganda. Comrades&rdquo;&mdash;his voice sank a
-little&mdash;&ldquo;there are enough of us. Every city in the
-world has its quota. What The Process will effect&rdquo;&mdash;he
-paused, looked round, caught Number Two&rsquo;s
-slightly sardonic expression, and struck the table
-with his open hand&mdash;&ldquo;what The Process will effect
-is this,&rdquo; he cried&mdash;&ldquo;in one word, Annihilation of the
-whole human race! Only our organisation will be
-left.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now what I am instructed to tell you is this,&rdquo;&mdash;he
-spoke evenly, swiftly, statement following statement&mdash;never
-had the attention of an audience been so
-fully his; and then suddenly the thread was broken.
-With a loud grating sound, Number Fifteen, sitting
-next to Molloy, pushed his chair back, and sprang to
-his feet.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The door!&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;The door!&rdquo; Every
-man in the room looked where Fifteen was looking.
-Above the water-lilies and the storks, where the top
-panel of the door had shown, there was a dark, empty
-space. The door was open.</p>
-<p>Number Four whipped out a revolver and dragged
-the screen away. The door was open, and in the
-doorway stood a girl in her nightdress. Her hands
-were stretched out, as if she were feeling her way.
-Her eyes, of a greenish hazel in colour, were widely
-opened, and had a dazed expression. Her brown hair
-hung in two neat plaits. Her feet were bare. Molloy
-pushed forward quickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, there, if that wasn&rsquo;t the start of our lives,&rdquo;
-he said, &ldquo;and no reason for it when all&rsquo;s said and done.
-It&rsquo;s my daughter, Renata, comrades, and she&rsquo;s walking
-in her sleep. Now I&rsquo;ll just take her back to her room
-and be with you again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A minute, I think, Molloy,&rdquo; said Number Two.
-He got up slowly out of his chair, and came across to
-where the girl stood motionless, blinking at the light.
-&ldquo;I <i>said</i> there was a most infernal draught. Will
-you come in, Miss Molloy?&rdquo; he added politely, and
-took the girl by the hand. She yielded to his touch, and
-came into the room, shivering a little. Some one shut
-the door. Molloy, shrugging his shoulders, pulled
-the crimson cloth from the table and wrapped it about
-his daughter. The ink-soaked patch came upon her
-bare shoulder, and she cried out, cast a wild look at
-the strange and terrifying faces about her, and burst
-into a flood of tears.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<p>Molloy, standing behind her, looked around as she
-had looked, and his face darkened. Number Four
-had his back against the door, and his revolver in his
-hand. There was only one face in the whole circle
-that was not stamped with suspicion and fear, and
-behind the fear and the suspicion there was something
-icy, something ruthless. Number Two, with a slightly
-bored expression, was feeling in his waistcoat pocket.
-He produced a small glass bottle, extracted from it
-a tiny pellet, and proceeded to dissolve it in the glass of
-water which had stood neglected at Number Four&rsquo;s
-right hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, Miss Molloy,&rdquo; he said, but Molloy caught
-him by the wrist.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What the devil&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he stammered, and Number
-Two laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear Molloy,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;how crude! You
-might know me better than that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He held the glass to Renata&rsquo;s lips, and she took it
-and drank. When she had set down the glass, she
-felt her way to a chair and leaned back with closed
-eyes. The room seemed to whirl about her. A confusion
-of sound was in her ears, loud, angry, with
-sentences that came and went. &ldquo;If she heard,&rdquo;&mdash;then
-another&mdash;&ldquo;How long was she there? Some one must
-have seen the door open.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who did, then?&rdquo; Then in the harshest voice
-of all, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care if she&rsquo;s Molloy&rsquo;s daughter fifty
-times over, if she heard what Four said about The
-Process, she must go.&rdquo; Go where?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<p>There was something cold and wet touching her
-shoulder. The cold seemed to spread all over her.
-Now her father was speaking. She had never heard
-his voice quite like that before. And now the man in
-the fur coat, the one who had given her the glass of
-water:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, certainly, elimination if it is necessary.
-We&rsquo;re all agreed about that. But let us make sure.&rdquo;
-His voice had quite a gentle sound, but Renata&rsquo;s heart
-began to beat with great thuds.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Molloy,&rdquo;&mdash;he was speaking to her now, and
-she opened her eyes and looked at him. His face was
-of a clear, even pallor. His eyes, light blue and
-without noticeable lashes, looked straight into hers.
-The veil was gone from them. They held a terrifying
-intelligence.</p>
-<p>Renata sat up. The crowd of men had cleared
-away. She, and her father, and the man in the fur
-coat were in an angle formed by the table and the
-black screen, which had been drawn close around
-them. Her father sat between her and the fire. His
-head was turned away, and he drummed incessantly
-on the table with the fingers of his right hand.
-Beyond the screen Renata could hear movements,
-and it came to her that the other men were there,
-waiting. The man in the fur coat spoke to her
-again. His voice was pleasant and cultivated, his
-manner reassuring.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are better now? Please don&rsquo;t be frightened.
-I am a doctor; your father will tell you that. Being
-wakened suddenly like that gave you a shock, but you
-are better now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Renata. She wished that her heart
-would stop beating so hard, and she wished that the
-man in the fur coat would stop looking at her.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, Miss Renata, I am your doctor, you know,
-and I want you to answer just a few questions. You
-have walked in your sleep before?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Renata&mdash;&ldquo;oh yes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Often?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What was the first time?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think&mdash;I think I was five years old. They
-found me in the garden.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Molloy let out a great breath of relief. If she had
-forgotten, if her account had differed from his&mdash;well,
-well, their luck was in.</p>
-<p>There was a whispering from behind the screen.
-Number Two frowned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And the last time?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was at school. I walked into another dormitory
-and frightened the girls.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man in the fur coat nodded. &ldquo;So your father
-said.&rdquo; And for a moment Molloy stared over his
-shoulder at him. &ldquo;And to-night? Do you dream on
-these occasions?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Renata was reassured. Every moment it was more
-like an ordinary visit to a doctor. She had been asked
-all these questions so often. Her voice no longer
-trembled as she answered. &ldquo;Yes, I dream. I walk
-in my sleep because of the dream; now to-night....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, to-night?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I dreamt I was back at school, and I thought I
-heard talking in the next dormitory. You know we
-are not allowed to talk, and I am&mdash;I mean I was a
-prefect. So I got up, and went to see what was the
-matter, and some one pulled the screen away, and
-there was such a light, and such a noise.&rdquo; She put out
-a shaking hand, and Number Two patted it kindly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Very startling for you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;So you opened
-the door and came in and heard us all talking. Can
-you tell me what was being said?&rdquo; His hand was
-on Renata&rsquo;s wrist, and he felt the pulses leap. She
-spoke a shade too quickly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I can help you. Your father, you know,
-travels for a firm of chemists, a firm in which I and my
-friends are also interested. We were discussing a new
-aniline dye which, we hope, will capture the markets of
-the world. Now did you hear that word&mdash;aniline&mdash;or
-anything like it? You see I want to find out just
-what woke you. What tiresome questions we doctors
-ask, don&rsquo;t we?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He smiled, and Renata tried to collect her thoughts.
-They were in great confusion.</p>
-<p>Aniline&mdash;annihilate&mdash;the two words kept coming and
-going. If her head had been clearer she would almost
-certainly have fallen into the trap which had been laid
-for her. Molloy stopped drumming on the table and
-clenched his hand. With all his strength he was praying
-to the saints in whom he no longer believed. Behind
-the screen twenty-three men waited in a dead silence.
-Renata was not frightened any more, but she was tired&mdash;oh,
-so dreadfully tired. Annihilate&mdash;aniline&mdash;the
-words and their similarity of sound teased her. She
-turned from them with a little burst of petulance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t hear anything like that. Oh, do let me go
-to bed! I only heard some one call out....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; said Number Two.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said, &lsquo;The door, the door!&rsquo; and then there were
-all those lights.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER II</span></h2>
-<p>Jane Smith sat on a bench in Kensington
-Gardens. Her entire worldly fortune lay in her
-lap. It consisted of two shillings and eleven pence.
-She had already counted the pennies four times,
-because there really should have been three shillings.
-She was now engaged in making a list in parallel columns
-of (<i>a</i>) those persons from whom she might seek
-financial assistance, and (<i>b</i>) the excellent reasons
-which prevented her from approaching them.</p>
-<p>Jane had a passion for making lists. Years and
-years and years ago Mr. Carruthers had said to her,
-&ldquo;My dear, you must learn to be businesslike. I have
-never been businesslike myself, and it has always
-been a great trouble to me.&rdquo; And then and there he
-and Jane had, in collaboration, embarked upon the
-First List. It was a thrilling list, a list of toys for
-Jane&rsquo;s very first Christmas tree. Since then she had
-made lists of her books, lists of her clothes, shopping
-lists, and an annual list of good resolutions.</p>
-<p>Jane stopped writing, and began to think about all
-those other lists. She had always showed them to
-Mr. Carruthers, and he had always gazed at them with
-the same vague benignness, and said how businesslike
-she was getting.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<p>Dear Cousin James&mdash;Jane was rich instead of poor
-when she thought about him. She looked across at
-the trees in their new mist of green, and then suddenly
-the thin April sunshine dazzled in her eyes and the
-green swam into a blur. Cousin James was gone, and
-Jane was alone in Kensington Gardens with two-and-elevenpence
-and a list.</p>
-<p>She opened and shut her eyes very quickly once or
-twice, and fixed her attention upon (<i>a</i>) and (<i>b</i>) in their
-parallel columns. At the top of the list Jane had
-written &ldquo;Cousin Louisa,&rdquo; and the reason against
-asking Cousin Louisa&rsquo;s assistance was set down as,
-&ldquo;Because she was a perfect beast to my darling Jimmy,
-and a worse beast to me, and anyhow, she wouldn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In moments of irreverence the late Mr. Carruthers&mdash;<i>the</i>
-Mr. Carruthers, author of five monumental volumes
-on Ethnographical Differentiation&mdash;had been addressed
-by his young ward and cousin as &ldquo;darling Jimmy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Professor Philpot came next. &ldquo;A darling, but he is
-sitting somewhere in Central Africa in a cage learning
-to talk gorilla. I do hope they haven&rsquo;t eaten him, or
-whatever they do do to people when they catch them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It will be observed that Miss Smith&rsquo;s association
-with the world of science had not succeeded in chastening
-her grammar.</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s pencil travelled down the list.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Bruce Murray. In Thibet studying Llamas.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry&rdquo;&mdash;Jane shook her head and solemnly put
-two thick black lines through Henry&rsquo;s name. One
-cannot ask for financial assistance from a young man
-whose hand one has refused in marriage&mdash;&ldquo;even if it
-was three years ago, and he&rsquo;s probably been in love
-with at least fifteen girls since then.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry&rsquo;s mamma&mdash;well, the only time she ever
-loved me in her life was when I refused Henry, so I
-should think she was an Absolute Wash Out&mdash;and
-that&rsquo;s the lot.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane folded up the list and put it into her handbag.
-Two silver shillings and eleven copper pennies, and
-then the workhouse!</p>
-<p>It was at this moment that a stout lady with a ginger-coloured
-pug sat heavily down upon the far end of
-Jane&rsquo;s bench. The ginger-coloured pug was on a
-scarlet leather lead, and after seating herself the stout
-lady bent forward creaking, and lifted him to a place
-beside her.</p>
-<p>Jane wondered vaguely why a red face and a tightly
-curled fringe should go with a passion for bugled
-bonnets and pugs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was &rsquo;ums hungry?&rdquo; said the stout lady.</p>
-<p>The pug breathed stertorously, after the manner of
-pugs, and his mistress at once produced two paper
-bags from a beaded reticule. From one of them she
-took a macaroon, and from the other a sponge finger.
-The pug chose the macaroon.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Precious,&rdquo; cooed the stout lady, and all at once
-Jane felt entirely capable of theft and murder&mdash;theft
-from the stout lady, and murder upon the person of
-the ginger pug. For at the sight of food she realised
-how very, very hungry she was. Bread and margarine
-for breakfast six hours before, and the April air was
-keen, and Jane was young.</p>
-<p>The pug spat out the last mouthful of macaroon,
-ignored the sponge finger, and snorted loudly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, naughty, naughty,&rdquo; said the stout lady. She
-half turned towards Jane.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You really wouldn&rsquo;t believe how clever he is,&rdquo; she
-observed conversationally; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s a cream bun he&rsquo;s
-asking for as plain as plain, and yesterday when I
-bought them for him, he teased and teased until I
-went back for macaroons; though, of course, a nice
-plain sponge finger is really better for him than either.
-I don&rsquo;t need the vet. to tell me that. Come along, a
-naughty, tiresome precious then.&rdquo; She lifted the pug
-down from the seat, put the paper bags tidily back
-into her reticule, rose ponderously to her feet, and
-walked away, trailing the scarlet lead and cooing to
-the ginger pug.</p>
-<p>Jane watched her go.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t I laugh?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Why doesn&rsquo;t
-she amuse me? One needn&rsquo;t lose one&rsquo;s sense of humour
-even if one is down and out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was at this unpropitious moment that the tall
-young man who had sat down unseen upon Jane&rsquo;s
-other side, laid his hand upon hers and observed in
-stirring accents:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Darling.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane whisked round in an icy temper. Her greenish-hazel
-eyes looked through the young man in the direction
-of the north pole. He ought to have stiffened
-to an icicle then and there, instead of which he murmured,
-&ldquo;Darling,&rdquo; again, and then added&mdash;&ldquo;but
-what&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; Jane stopped looking at him
-or through him. He had simply ceased to exist. She
-picked up her two shillings and her eleven pence, put
-them into her purse, and consigned her purse to her
-handbag. She then closed the handbag with a snap,
-and rose to her feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Renata!&rdquo; exclaimed the young man in tones of
-consternation.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<p>Jane paused and allowed herself to observe him for
-the first time. She saw a young man with an intellectual
-forehead and studious brown eyes. He appeared
-to be hurt and surprised. She decided that this was
-not a would-be Lothario.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think you have made a mistake,&rdquo; she said, and
-was about to pass on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But, Renata, Renata, darling!&rdquo; stammered the
-young man even more desperately. Jane assumed
-what Cousin Louisa had once described as &ldquo;that
-absurdly grand manner.&rdquo; It was quite kind, but it
-induced the young man to believe that Jane was
-conversing with him from about the distance of the
-planet Saturn.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that you must be taking me
-for my cousin, Renata Molloy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;m engaged to her&mdash;no, I mean to you&mdash;oh,
-hang it all, Renata, what&rsquo;s the sense of a silly joke like
-this?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane looked at him keenly. &ldquo;What is my cousin&rsquo;s
-middle name?&rdquo; she inquired.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane. I hate it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;My name is Jane
-Renata Smith, and I am Renata Jane Molloy&rsquo;s
-first cousin. Our mothers were twin sisters, and
-I have always understood that we were very much
-alike.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Alike!&rdquo; gasped the young man. Words seemed
-to fail him.</p>
-<p>Jane bowed slightly and began to walk away, but,
-before she had gone a dozen paces, he was beside her
-again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you&rsquo;re really Renata&rsquo;s cousin, I want to talk to
-you&mdash;I must talk to you. Will you let me?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
-<p>Jane walked as far as the next seat, and sat down
-with resignation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t even know your name.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Todhunter&mdash;Arnold Todhunter.&rdquo; He seemed
-a trifle breathless. &ldquo;My sister Daphne was at school
-with Renata, and she came to stay with us once in the
-holidays. I said we were engaged, didn&rsquo;t I? Only,
-nobody knows it. You won&rsquo;t tell Mr. Molloy, will
-you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve never spoken to Mr. Molloy in my life,&rdquo;
-said Jane. &ldquo;There was a most awful row when
-my aunt married him, and none of us have ever met
-each other since. My aunt died years and years
-ago. I think Mr. Molloy is an Anarchist of some
-sort, isn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Todhunter, with violence.
-He banged the back of the iron seat with his hand.
-Jane reflected that he must be very much in love if
-he failed to notice how hard it was.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, he is,&rdquo; repeated Mr. Todhunter, &ldquo;and
-worse; and Renata is in the most dreadful position.
-I must talk to somebody, or I shall go mad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you can talk to me,&rdquo; said Jane soothingly.
-&ldquo;I have always wanted to meet Renata, and I should
-love to hear all about her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Todhunter hesitated.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Smith&mdash;you did say Smith, didn&rsquo;t you?&mdash;it&rsquo;s
-so difficult to begin. You&rsquo;ll probably think I&rsquo;m
-mad, or trying it on, but it&rsquo;s like this: I&rsquo;ve just
-qualified as an engineer, and I&rsquo;ve got a job in South
-America. Naturally I wanted to see Mr. Molloy.
-Renata wouldn&rsquo;t let me. She hardly knows her
-father, and she&rsquo;s most awfully scared of him. We
-used to meet in the Park. Then one day she didn&rsquo;t
-come. She went on not coming, and I nearly went
-mad. At last I went to Molloy&rsquo;s flat and asked to see
-her. They said she had left town, but it was a lie.
-Just before the door shut, I heard her voice.&rdquo; Mr.
-Todhunter paused. &ldquo;Look here, you won&rsquo;t give any
-of this away, will you? You know, it&rsquo;s awfully confusing
-for me, your being so like Renata. It makes
-my head go round.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, the bit I don&rsquo;t want you to tell any one is
-this&mdash;I mean to say, it&rsquo;s confidential, absolutely
-confidential: when I was at the Engineering School,
-I knew a chap who had got mixed up with Molloy&rsquo;s
-lot. He didn&rsquo;t get deep in, you&rsquo;ll understand. They
-scared him, and he backed out. Well, I remembered
-a yarn he had told me. He was in Molloy&rsquo;s flat one
-night, and it was raided. And I remembered that he
-said a lot of them got away down the fire-escape into
-a yard, and then out through some mews at the back.
-Well, I went and nosed about until I found that fire-escape,
-and I got up it, and I found Renata&rsquo;s room
-and talked to her through the window. It&rsquo;s not so
-dangerous as it sounds, because they lock her in the
-flat at night, and go out. And she&rsquo;s in a frightful
-position&mdash;oh, Miss Smith, you simply have no idea of
-what a frightful position she&rsquo;s in!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I might have, if you would tell me what it is,&rdquo; said
-Jane dryly. She found Mr. Todhunter diffuse.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, she&rsquo;s a prisoner, to start with. They keep
-her locked in her room.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s they?&rdquo; interrupted Jane.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<p>Mr. Todhunter rumpled his hair. &ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t
-even know their names,&rdquo; he said distractedly. His
-voice dropped to a whisper. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the most appalling
-criminal organisation, Miss Smith. Molloy&rsquo;s one of
-them, but they won&rsquo;t even let Molloy see her alone
-now. You see, they think she overheard something.
-They don&rsquo;t know whether she did or not. If they were
-sure that she did, they would kill her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, did she?&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Mr. Todhunter gloomily.
-&ldquo;She cried such a lot, and we were both rather confused,
-and she&rsquo;s most awfully frightened, you know.&rdquo;
-He glared at Jane as if she had something to do with
-Renata being frightened. &ldquo;If I&rsquo;m to take up this
-job of mine, I have to sail in three days&rsquo; time. I
-want her to marry me and come too; but she says
-that, if she runs away, they&rsquo;ll make sure she heard
-something, and, if it&rsquo;s the farthest ends of the earth,
-they&rsquo;ll find her and kill her. It seems Molloy told her
-that. And if she stays here and they bully her again,
-she doesn&rsquo;t know what she may give away. It&rsquo;s a
-frightful position, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you go to the police?&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought of that, but they&rsquo;d laugh at me. I
-haven&rsquo;t heard anything, and I don&rsquo;t know anything.
-Molloy would only say that Renata was under age,
-and that he had locked her in to prevent her running
-away with me. Then they&rsquo;d kill her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Jane. Then&mdash;&ldquo;What do you want
-me to do?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<p>All the time that Mr. Todhunter had been glooming
-and groaning, running his fingers through his hair
-and depicting Renata&rsquo;s appalling position, the Great
-Idea had been slowly forming itself in his mind. Every
-time that he looked at Jane, her likeness to Renata
-made him feel quite giddy. The Great Idea intoxicated
-him. He began to decant it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Smith, if you would&mdash;you see, if we could
-only get a clear start&mdash;what I mean to say is, South
-America&rsquo;s a long way off&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Quite a distance,&rdquo; Jane agreed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And if they thought that you were Renata, they
-wouldn&rsquo;t look for her&mdash;and once we were clear
-away&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My <i>dear</i> Mr. Todhunter!&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I could take you up the fire-escape,&rdquo; said Mr.
-Todhunter, in low, thrilling accents. &ldquo;It would be
-quite easy. They would never know that Renata
-was not there. You do see what I mean, don&rsquo;t
-you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; said Jane in rather an odd voice.
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve made it beautifully clear. Renata is in a
-position of deadly peril&mdash;I think that&rsquo;s what you
-called it&mdash;and the simple way out is for Renata to
-elope with you to South America, and for me to be in
-the position of deadly peril instead. It&rsquo;s a beautiful
-plan.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you&rsquo;ll do it?&rdquo; exclaimed the oblivious Mr.
-Todhunter.</p>
-<p>Jane looked away. Immediately in front of her
-was a strip of gravelled path. Beyond that there was
-green grass, and a bed of pale blue hyacinths, and
-budding daffodils. Two-and-elevenpence, and then
-the workhouse&mdash;the ascent of a fire-escape in the
-April darkness, and at the top of the fire-escape a
-position of deadly peril.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Jane, speaking to herself in her
-own mind. &ldquo;I might try to be a housemaid, but one
-has to have a character, and I don&rsquo;t believe Cousin
-Louisa would give me one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She turned back to the chafing Mr. Todhunter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s talk,&rdquo; she said briefly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER III</span></h2>
-<p>Jane took down the telephone directory, opened it,
-and began to run her finger along the column of
-&ldquo;M&rsquo;s.&rdquo; As she did so, she wondered why the light
-in public call offices is so arranged as to strike the top
-of the occupant&rsquo;s head, and never by any chance to
-illumine the directory.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Marbot&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Marbottle&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;March, The Rev.
-Aloysius&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;March, George William Adolphus&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;March,
-Mrs. de Luttrelle.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane made a mark opposite the number.</p>
-<p>When Rosa Mortimer married Henry Luttrell
-March, she thought, and often said, how much nicer
-the Luttrell would look if it were written de Luttrelle.
-If her husband had died six months earlier than he
-actually did, the name in this improved form would
-most certainly have been inflicted upon an infant
-Henry. As it was, the child was baptized and registered
-as Henry Luttrell, and ten years later took up the
-struggle over the name where his father had left it.
-Eventually, a compromise was effected, Mrs. March
-flaunting her de Luttrelle, and Henry tending to suppress
-his Luttrell under an initial. His mother never
-ceased to bemoan his stubbornness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Any one would think that Henry was not proud
-of his family, and he may say what he likes, but there
-were de Luttrelles for hundreds of years before any one
-ever heard of a Luttrell. And Luttrell Marches is
-bound to come to him, or practically bound to, because,
-whatever Henry may say, I am quite sure that Tony
-will never turn up again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The very sound of the aggrieved voice was in Jane&rsquo;s
-ears as she unhung the receiver and gave the number.
-She supposed that Henry still lived with his mother,
-and that Mrs. March would still keep an indignant
-bridge table waiting whilst she discoursed upon Henry&mdash;his
-faults, his foibles, his ailments, and his prospects
-of inheriting Luttrell Marches.</p>
-<p>At that moment Henry, appropriately enough, was
-gazing at a photograph of Jane. It must not be
-imagined that this was a habit of his. Three years ago
-was three years ago, and Jane had receded into the
-distance with a great many other pleasant things.
-But to-night he had been looking through some old
-snapshots, and all of a sudden there was that three-years-old
-Cornish holiday, and Jane. Henry sat frowning
-at the photograph.</p>
-<p>Jane&mdash;why was one fond of Jane? He wondered
-where she was. It was only last week that some one had
-mentioned old Carruthers, and had seemed surprised
-that Henry did not know how long he had been dead.</p>
-<p>The telephone bell rang, and Henry jumped up with
-relief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; said a voice&mdash;and &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is that Captain March?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Speaking,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Jane Smith,&rdquo; said the voice, and Henry very
-nearly dropped the receiver. There was a pause, and
-then Jane said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I want to come and see you on business. Can you
-spare the time?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Er&mdash;my mother&rsquo;s out,&rdquo; said Henry, and he heard
-her say, &ldquo;Thank goodness,&rdquo; with much sincerity.
-The next moment she was apologising.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I say, Henry, that sounded awfully rude, but
-I really do want to see you about something very
-important. No, you can&rsquo;t come and see me. I&rsquo;m one
-of the great unemployed, and I&rsquo;m not living anywhere
-at present. No, I won&rsquo;t meet you at a restaurant
-either. Just tell me your nearest Tube Station, and I&rsquo;ll
-come along. All right then; I won&rsquo;t be more than ten
-minutes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry turned away, feeling a little dazed. Being a
-methodical young man, he proceeded to put away the
-photographs with which the table was littered. A
-little snapshot of Jane he kept to the last, and ended
-by not putting it away at all. After he had looked at
-it for some time, he put it on the mantelpiece behind
-the clock. The hands pointed to nine o&rsquo;clock precisely.
-Then he looked at himself in the glass that
-was over the mantel, and straightened his tie.</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s mother naturally considered him the most
-beautiful of created beings. Without going quite as
-far as this, Henry certainly approved of his own looks.
-Having approved of himself, he proceeded to move the
-clock back half an inch, and to alter the position of the
-twisted candlesticks on either side of it. Then he
-poked the fire. Then he began to walk up and down
-the room. And then the bell rang.</p>
-<p>Henry went out into the hall and opened the door
-of the flat, and there on the threshold stood Jane in a
-shabby blue serge coat and skirt, with an old black felt
-hat. Not pretty, not smart&mdash;just Jane. She walked
-in and gave him her hand.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hullo, Henry!&rdquo; she said. Then she laughed.
-&ldquo;Or, do I call you Captain March?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You call me Henry,&rdquo; said Henry, and he shut the
-door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I expect you&rsquo;d like to come into the drawing-room&rdquo;&mdash;this
-came hurriedly after a moment&rsquo;s pause.
-He moved across the hall, switched on the light, and
-stood aside for her to pass. Jane looked in and saw
-more pink cushions and pink lamp-shades than she
-would have believed it possible to get into one small
-room. There were also a great many pink roses, and
-the air was heavy with scent.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure that&rsquo;s not where you see people on
-business,&rdquo; said Jane, and Henry led the way into the
-dining-room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is my room,&rdquo; he said, and Jane sat down on
-a straight, high-backed chair and leaned her elbows
-on the table.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, Henry,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come here to tell
-you a story, and I want you to sit down and listen to
-it; and please forget that you are you, and that I am
-I. Just listen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry sat down obediently. It was so good to see
-Jane again that, if she liked to sit there and talk till
-midnight, he had no objection.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now attend,&rdquo; said Jane, and she began her story.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Once upon a time there were twin sisters, and
-they were called Renata and Jane Carruthers. They
-had a cousin James&mdash;you remember him&mdash;my darling
-Jimmy? Jimmy wanted to marry Renata, but she
-refused him and married John Smith, my father, and
-when I was five years old she and my father both died,
-and Jimmy adopted me. Now we come to the other
-twin. Her name was Jane, and she ran away to
-America with a sort of anarchist Irishman named
-Molloy. She died young, and she left one daughter,
-whom she called Renata Jane. I, by the bye, am Jane
-Renata. The twin sisters were so much alike that no
-one ever knew them apart. Jimmy had photographs
-of them, and even he could never tell me which was
-my mother and which was my Aunt Jane. Now, Henry,
-listen to this. My Cousin Renata is in London, and
-it seems that she and I are just as much alike as our
-mothers were. In fact, it&rsquo;s because Renata&rsquo;s young
-man took me for Renata this afternoon that I am here,
-asking your advice, at the present moment.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry smiled a somewhat puzzled smile. &ldquo;Have
-you asked my advice?&rdquo; he said; but Jane did not
-smile. Instead, she leaned forward a little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you still at Scotland Yard, Henry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Criminal Investigation Department?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He nodded again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then listen. Renata is in what her young man
-calls &lsquo;a position of deadly peril.&rsquo; In more ordinary
-language, she&rsquo;s in a nasty hole. Do you know anything
-about Cornelius Molloy? That&rsquo;s the Anarchist Uncle,
-Renata&rsquo;s father, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There aren&rsquo;t any anarchists nowadays,&rdquo; said
-Henry meditatively.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was brought up on anarchists, and I don&rsquo;t see
-that it matters what you call them,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;&lsquo;A&rsquo;
-for Anarchist, &lsquo;B&rsquo; for Bolshevik, and so on. The
-point is, do you know anything about Molloy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard of him,&rdquo; Henry admitted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing good?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t hear much that&rsquo;s good about people&mdash;officially,
-you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Arnold Todhunter says that Renata is
-supposed to have overheard something&mdash;something
-that her father&rsquo;s associates think so important that
-they&rsquo;re keeping her under lock and key, and seriously
-contemplating putting her out of the way altogether.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did she overhear anything?&rdquo; asked Henry, just
-as Jane had done.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No one knows except Renata, and she won&rsquo;t tell.
-Molloy goes back to the States to-morrow. They
-won&rsquo;t let him take Renata with him, and Arnold
-Todhunter wants to marry her and carry her off to
-Bolivia, where he&rsquo;s got an engineering job.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That appears to be a good scheme,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, but you see they&rsquo;ll never let her go so long
-as they are not sure how much she knows. Arnold
-says she was walking in her sleep, and blundered in
-on about twenty-five of them, all talking the most
-deadly secrets. And they don&rsquo;t know when she woke
-or what she heard. And&rdquo;&mdash;Jane&rsquo;s eyes began
-to dance a little&mdash;&ldquo;Arnold has a perfectly splendid
-idea. He takes Renata to Bolivia, and I take Renata&rsquo;s
-place. Nobody knows she has gone, so nobody looks
-for her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What nonsense,&rdquo; said Henry; then&mdash;&ldquo;What&rsquo;s
-this Todhunter like?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A mug,&rdquo; said Jane briefly. She paused, and then
-went on in a different voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry, who is at Luttrell Marches now? Did
-your Cousin Tony ever turn up?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry stared at her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you ask that?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; said Jane, with perfect simplicity,
-&ldquo;Renata is to be sent down to Luttrell Marches to-morrow,
-and somebody there&mdash;somebody, Henry&mdash;will
-decide whether she is to be eliminated or
-not.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry sat perfectly silent. He stared at Jane, and
-she stared at him. It seemed as if the silence in the
-room were growing heavier and heavier, like water
-that gathers behind some unseen dam. All of a
-sudden Henry sprang to his feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is this a hoax?&rdquo; he asked, in tones of such anger
-that Jane hardly recognised them.</p>
-<p>Jane got up too. The hand that she rested upon
-the table was not quite steady.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry, how dare you?&rdquo; and her voice shook a
-little too.</p>
-<p>Henry swung round.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, no&mdash;I beg your pardon, Jane, for the Lord&rsquo;s
-sake don&rsquo;t look at me like that. It&rsquo;s, it&rsquo;s&mdash;well, it&rsquo;s
-pretty staggering to have you come here and say....&rdquo;
-He paused. &ldquo;What was it you wanted to know?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I asked you who is living at Luttrell Marches.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<p>Henry was silent. He walked to the end of the
-room and back. Jane&rsquo;s eyes followed him. Where
-had this sudden wave of emotion come from? It
-seemed to be eddying about them, filling the confined
-space. Jane made herself look away from Henry,
-forced herself to notice the room, the furniture, the
-pictures&mdash;anything that was commonplace and
-ordinary. This was decidedly Henry&rsquo;s room and not
-his mother&rsquo;s, from the worn leather chairs and plain
-oak table to the neutral coloured walls with their half-dozen
-Meissonier engravings. Not a flower, not a
-trifle of any sort, and one wall all books from ceiling
-to floor. Exactly opposite to Jane there was a fine
-print of &ldquo;The Generals in the Snow.&rdquo; The lowering,
-thunderous sky, heavy with snow and black with the
-omens of Napoleon&rsquo;s fall, dominated the picture, the
-room. Jane looked at it, and looked away with a
-shiver, and as she did so, Henry was speaking:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane, I don&rsquo;t want to answer that question for a
-minute or two. I want to think. I want a little time
-to turn things over in my mind. Look here, come
-round to the fire and sit down comfortably. Let&rsquo;s
-talk about something else for a bit. I want all your
-news, for one thing. Tell me what you&rsquo;ve been doing
-with yourself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane came slowly to the fireside. After all, it was
-pleasant just to put everything on one side, and be
-comfortable. Henry&rsquo;s chair was very comfortable, and
-the day seemed to have lasted for weeks, and weeks,
-and weeks. She put out her hands to the fire, and
-then, because she noticed that they were still trembling
-a little, she folded them in her lap. Henry leaned
-against the mantelpiece and looked down at her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where have you been?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, that summer at Upwater&mdash;you know we were
-lodging with the woman who had the post office&mdash;Jimmy
-and I stayed on after all the other visitors were
-gone. I expect it was rather irregular, but I used to
-help her. You see her son didn&rsquo;t get back until
-eighteen months after the armistice, and she wasn&rsquo;t
-really up to the work. In the end, you may say I ran
-that post office. I did it very well, too. It was something
-to do, especially after Jimmy died.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I heard. I wondered where you were.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_27">27</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I stayed on until the son came home, and then I
-couldn&rsquo;t. He was awful, and she thought him quite
-perfect, poor old soul. I came to London and got a
-job in an office, and a month ago I lost it. The firm
-was cutting down expenses, like everybody else. And
-then&mdash;well, I looked for another job, and couldn&rsquo;t find
-one, and this morning my landlady locked the door in
-my face and kept my box. And that, Henry, is why I
-am thinking seriously of changing places with my
-Cousin Renata, who, at least, has a roof over her head
-and enough to eat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane,&rdquo; said Henry furiously, &ldquo;you don&rsquo;t mean
-to say&mdash;so that&rsquo;s why you&rsquo;re looking such a white
-rag!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane was horrified to find that her eyes had filled
-with tears. She laughed, but the laugh was not a very
-convincing one.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I did have a cup of coffee and two penny buns,&rdquo;
-she began; and then Henry was fetching sandwiches
-from the sideboard and pressing a cup of hot chocolate
-into her not unwilling hands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They leave this awful stuff over a spirit lamp for
-my mother, and she always has sandwiches when she
-comes in. It&rsquo;s better than nothing,&rdquo; he added in
-tones of wrath.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not awful,&rdquo; protested Jane; but Henry was
-not mollified.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why are you so
-hard up? Didn&rsquo;t Mr. Carruthers provide for you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s colour rose.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He hadn&rsquo;t much, and what he had was an annuity.
-You know what Jimmy was, and how he forgot things.
-I am really quite sure that he had forgotten about
-its being an annuity, and that he thought that I should
-be quite comfortable.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry swallowed his opinion of Mr. Carruthers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was he your only relation?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Jane, who was beginning to feel better,
-&ldquo;you can&rsquo;t really count Cousin Louisa; she was only
-Jimmy&rsquo;s half-sister, and that makes her a sort of third
-half-cousin of my mother&rsquo;s. Besides, she always
-simply loathed me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you&rsquo;ve no other relations at all?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Only the Anarchist Uncle,&rdquo; said Jane brightly.
-She gave him her cup and plate. &ldquo;Your mother has
-simply lovely sandwiches, Henry. Thank you ever so
-much for them, but what will she do when she comes
-home and finds I have eaten them all?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know, I&rsquo;m sure.&rdquo; Henry&rsquo;s tone was very
-short. &ldquo;Look here, Jane, you must let&mdash;er, er, I
-mean, won&rsquo;t you let....&rdquo; He stuck, and Jane looked
-at him very kindly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing doing, Henry,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but it&rsquo;s frightfully
-nice of you, all the same.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was a silence. When Jane thought it had
-lasted long enough, she said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So, you see, it all comes back again to Renata.
-Have you done your thinking, Henry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Henry. He drew a chair to the table
-and sat down half turned to the fire&mdash;half turned to
-Jane. Sometimes he looked at her, but oftener his gaze
-dwelt intently on the rise and fall of the flames.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What makes you think that your cousin is to be
-taken to Luttrell Marches? Did these people tell her
-so?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jane&mdash;&ldquo;of course not. As far as I can
-make out from Arnold Todhunter, Renata is locked in
-her room, but there&rsquo;s another key and she can get in
-and out. She can move about inside the flat, but she
-can&rsquo;t get out of it. Well, one night she crept out and
-listened, though you would have thought she had had
-enough of listening, and she heard them say that, as
-soon as her father was out of the way, they would send
-her to Luttrell Marches and let &lsquo;Number One&rsquo; decide
-whether she was to be &lsquo;eliminated.&rsquo; Since then she&rsquo;s
-been nearly off her head with terror, poor kid. Now,
-Henry, it&rsquo;s your turn. What about Luttrell Marches?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s face seemed to have grown rigid. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-impossible,&rdquo; he said in a low voice.</p>
-<p>The clock above them struck ten, and he waited till
-the last stroke had died away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know quite what to say to you, but whatever
-I say is confidential. You&rsquo;ve heard my mother
-talk of the Luttrells, and you may or may not know
-that my uncle died a year ago. You have also probably
-heard that his son, my Cousin Anthony, disappeared
-into the blue in 1915.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then Luttrell Marches belongs to you?&rdquo; For
-the life of her, Jane could not keep a little consternation
-out of her voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No. If Tony had been missing for seven years, I
-could apply for leave to presume his death, but there&rsquo;s
-another year to run. My mother&mdash;every one&mdash;supposes
-that I am only waiting until the time is up.
-As a matter of fact&mdash;Jane, I&rsquo;m telling you what I
-haven&rsquo;t told my mother&mdash;Anthony Luttrell is alive.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t tell you. And you must please forget what
-I have told you&mdash;unless&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Unless?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Unless you have to remember it,&rdquo; said Henry in an
-odd voice. &ldquo;For the rest, Luttrell Marches was let
-during my uncle&rsquo;s lifetime to Sir William Carr-Magnus.
-You know who I mean?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>The</i> Sir William Carr-Magnus?&rdquo; said Jane, and
-Henry nodded.</p>
-<p>Jane felt absolutely dazed. Sir William Carr-Magnus,
-the great chemist, great philanthropist, and
-Government expert!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He is engaged,&rdquo; said Henry, &ldquo;on a series of most
-important investigations and experiments which he is
-conducting on behalf of the Government. The extreme
-seclusion of Luttrell Marches, and the lonely country
-all round are, of course, exactly what is required under
-the circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Quite suddenly Jane began to laugh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all mad,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ve quite made up
-my mind. Renata shall elope, and I will go to Luttrell
-Marches. It will be better than the workhouse anyhow.
-You know, Henry, seriously, I have a lot of
-qualifications for being a sleuth. Jimmy taught me
-simply heaps of languages, I&rsquo;ve got eyes like gimlets,
-and I can do lip-reading.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I can. Jimmy had a perfectly deaf housekeeper,
-and it worried him to hear us shouting at each
-other, so I had her taught, and learned myself for
-fun.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry crossed to the bookcase and came back with a
-photograph album in his hand. Taking a loose card
-from between the pages, he put it down in front of
-Jane, saying:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There you may as well make your host&rsquo;s acquaintance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane looked long at the face which was sufficiently
-well known to the public. The massive head, the
-great brow with eyes set very deep beneath shaggy
-tufts of hair, the rather hard mouth&mdash;all these were
-already familiar to her, and yet she looked long. After
-a few moments&rsquo; hesitation, Henry put a second photograph
-upon the top of the first, and this time Jane
-caught her breath. It was the picture of a woman in
-evening dress. The neck and shoulders were like
-those of a statue, beautiful and, as it were, rigid. But
-it was the beauty of the face that took Jane&rsquo;s breath
-away&mdash;that and a certain look in the eyes. The word
-hungry came into her mind and stayed there. A
-woman with proud lips and hungry eyes, and the most
-beautiful face in the world.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who is it?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Raymond Carr-Magnus. She is Lady Heritage,
-and a widow now&mdash;Sir William&rsquo;s only child. He
-gave her a boy&rsquo;s name and a boy&rsquo;s education&mdash;brought
-her up to take his place, and found himself with a
-lovely woman on his hands. This was done from
-Amory&rsquo;s portrait of her in 1915&mdash;the year of her
-marriage. She was at one time engaged to my
-Cousin Anthony. If you do go to Luttrell Marches,
-you will see her, for she makes her home with
-Sir William.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s voice was perfectly expressionless. The
-short sentences followed one another with a little
-pause after each. Jane looked sideways, and said very
-quick and low:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Were you very fond of her, Henry?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
-<p>And when she had said it, her heart beat and her
-hands gripped one another.</p>
-<p>Henry took the photograph from her lap.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I said she was engaged to Tony.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Henry, but were you fond of her?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Confound you, Jane. Yes, I was.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t wonder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane rose to her feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I must be going,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I have an assignation
-with Arnold Todhunter, who is going to take me
-up a fire-escape and substitute me for Renata.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry took out a pocket-book.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will you give me Molloy&rsquo;s address, please?&rdquo; And
-when she had given it: &ldquo;You know, my good girl,
-there&rsquo;s nothing on earth to prevent my having that
-flat raided and your cousin&rsquo;s deposition taken.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, of course not,&rdquo; said Jane&mdash;&ldquo;only then nobody
-will go down to Luttrell Marches and find out what&rsquo;s
-going on there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She looked straight at Henry as she spoke.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going, whatever you say, and whatever you
-do, and I only came to you because&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it seemed so sort of lonesome going off into
-situations of deadly peril with no one taking the very
-slightest interest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s voice shook absurdly on the last word. And
-in an instant Henry had his arm round her and was
-saying, &ldquo;Jane&mdash;Jane&mdash;you shan&rsquo;t go, you shan&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane stepped back. Her eyes blazed. &ldquo;And why?&rdquo;
-she said.</p>
-<p>She tried to say it icily, but she could not steady her
-voice. Henry&rsquo;s arm felt solid and comfortable.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Because I&rsquo;m damned if I&rsquo;ll let you,&rdquo; said Henry
-very loud, and upon that the door opened and there
-entered Mrs. de Luttrelle March, larger, pinker, and
-more horrified than Jane had ever seen her. She, for
-her part, beheld Henry, his arms about a shabby
-girl, and her horror reached its climax when she
-recognised the girl as &ldquo;that dreadfully designing
-Jane Smith.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry,&rdquo; she gasped&mdash;&ldquo;oh, Henry!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane released herself with a jerk, and Mrs. de Luttrelle
-March sat down in the nearest chair and burst
-into a flood of tears. Her purple satin opera cloak fell
-away, disclosing a peach-coloured garment that clung
-to her plump contours and seemed calculated rather for
-purposes of revelation than concealment. Large tears
-rolled down her powdered cheeks, and she sought in
-vain for a handkerchief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry&mdash;I didn&rsquo;t think it of you&mdash;at least not here,
-not under my very roof. And if you were going to
-break my heart like your father, it would have been
-kinder to do it ten years ago, because then I should
-have known what to expect, and anyhow, I should
-probably have been dead by now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She sniffed and made a desperate gesture.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Henry, I can&rsquo;t find it! Haven&rsquo;t you got one,
-or don&rsquo;t you care whether my heart&rsquo;s broken? And I
-haven&rsquo;t even got a handkerchief to cry with.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry produced a handkerchief and gave it to her
-without attempting to speak. Years of experience
-had taught him that to stay his mother&rsquo;s first flood of
-words was an impossibility.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_34">34</div>
-<p>Jane felt rather sick. Mrs. March was so very large
-and pink, and the whole affair so very undignified, that
-her one overmastering desire was to get away. She
-heard Henry&rsquo;s &ldquo;This is Miss Smith, Mother. She
-came to see me on business&rdquo;; and then Mrs. March&rsquo;s
-wail, &ldquo;Your father always called it business too, and
-I didn&rsquo;t think&mdash;no, I didn&rsquo;t think you&rsquo;d bring a girl
-in here when my back was turned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane stood up very straight, but Henry had taken
-her hand again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I beg your pardon,&rdquo; he said, in a very low voice.
-&ldquo;She&mdash;she had a rotten time when she was young&rdquo;;
-then, in a tone that cut through Mrs. March&rsquo;s sobs
-as an east wind cuts the rain, he said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear mother, you are making some extra-ordinary
-mistake. The last time that I saw Miss Smith
-was three years ago. I then asked her to marry me,
-and she refused. I would go on asking her every day
-from now to kingdom come if I thought that it was the
-slightest good. As it isn&rsquo;t, I am only anxious to be of
-use to her in any possible way. She came here to-night
-to ask my advice on an official matter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mrs. March fixed her very large blue eyes upon her
-son. They were swimming with tears, but behind the
-tears there was something which suddenly went to
-Jane&rsquo;s heart&mdash;something bewildered and hurt, and
-rather ungrown-up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You always were a good boy, Henry,&rdquo; said Mrs.
-March, and Henry&rsquo;s instant rigid embarrassment had
-the effect of cheering Jane. She came forward and
-took the limp white hand that still clutched a borrowed
-handkerchief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure he&rsquo;ll always be a good son to you, and I
-wouldn&rsquo;t take him away from you for the world. He&rsquo;s
-just a very kind friend. Good-night, Mrs. March.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
-<p>She went out without looking back, but Henry followed
-her into the hall.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not really going to plunge into this foolish
-affair?&rdquo; he said as they stood for a moment by the
-door. It was Jane who opened it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I am, Henry. You can&rsquo;t stop me, and you
-know it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s eyes looked straight into his, and Henry did
-know.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very well, then. Read the agony column in <i>The
-Times</i>. If I want you to have a message, it will be
-there, signed with the day of the week on which it
-appears. You understand? If the message is in
-<i>The Times</i> of Wednesday, it will be signed, &lsquo;Wednesday.&rsquo;
-And if there are directions in the message, you
-will obey them implicitly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How <i>thrilling</i>,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry looked very tired.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know if I&rsquo;ve done right, but I can&rsquo;t tell
-you any more just now. By the way, Molloy&rsquo;s flat will
-be watched, and I shall know whether you go to
-Luttrell Marches or not. Good-bye, Jane.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good-bye, Henry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry watched the lift disappear.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER IV</span></h2>
-<p>&ldquo;This,&rdquo; said Arnold Todhunter, &ldquo;is the fire-escape.&rdquo;
-His tone was that of one who says,
-&ldquo;This is our Rembrandt.&rdquo; Proud proprietorship pervaded
-his entire atmosphere.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ssh!&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>They stood together in a small back-yard. It seemed
-to be quite full of things like barrows, paving-stones,
-old tin cans, and broken crockery. Jane had already
-tripped over a meat tin and collided with two chicken
-coops and a dog kennel. She reflected that this
-was just the sort of back-yard Arnold would
-find.</p>
-<p>Everything was very dark. The blackest shadow
-of all marked the wall that they were to climb. Here
-and there a lighted window showed, and Jane could
-see that these windows had rounded parapets jutting
-out on a level with the sill.</p>
-<p>Arnold, meanwhile, was tugging at something which
-seemed to be a short plank.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What on earth?&rdquo; she whispered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We shall need it. I&rsquo;d better go first.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And forthwith he began to climb, clutching the
-plank with one hand and the iron ladder with the
-other.</p>
-<p>Jane let him get a good start, and followed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<p>The ladder was quite easy to climb; it was only
-when one thought of how immensely far away the
-skyline had looked, that it seemed as if it would be
-very uncomfortable to look down instead of up, and to
-see that horrid little yard equally far below.</p>
-<p>Jane did look down once, and everything was black
-and blurred and shadowy. It was odd to be clinging to
-the side of a house, with the dark all round one, and
-the steady roar of the London traffic dulled almost to
-nothingness.</p>
-<p>The night was very still, and a little cold. Somewhere
-below amongst the tin cans a cat said,
-&ldquo;Grrrwoosh,&rdquo; not loud, but on a softly inquiring note.
-The inquiry was instantly answered by a long, piercing
-wail which travelled rapidly over four octaves, and
-then dwelt with soulful intensity upon an agonising
-top note.</p>
-<p>With a muttered exclamation, Arnold Todhunter
-dropped his plank. It grazed Jane&rsquo;s shoulder, and
-fell among the cats and crockery with a most appalling
-clatter.</p>
-<p>Jane shut her eyes, gripped the ladder desperately,
-and wondered whether she would fall first and be
-arrested afterwards, or the other way about. Nothing
-happened. Apparently the neighbourhood was inured
-to the bombardment of cats.</p>
-<p>After a moment Jane became aware of Arnold&rsquo;s
-boots in close proximity to her head. A wave of fury
-swept away her giddiness, and she began to descend
-with a rapidity which surprised herself.</p>
-<p>Once more they stood in the yard.</p>
-<p>Once more Arnold groped for his plank.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going up first,&rdquo; said Jane, in a low tone of
-rage. &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t be guillotined on a public fire-escape.
-Which floor is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The top,&rdquo; said Arnold sulkily, and without more
-ado Jane went up the ladder.</p>
-<p>It was exactly like a rather horrid dream. The
-ladder was very cold and very gritty, and you climbed,
-and climbed, and went on climbing without arriving
-anywhere.</p>
-<p>Pictures of the Eiffel Tower and New York skyscrapers
-flitted through Jane&rsquo;s mind. She also remembered
-interesting paragraphs about how many million
-pennies placed on end would reach to the moon. And
-at long, long last the escape ended at a window-sill
-with a parapet-enclosed space beneath it.</p>
-<p>Jane sat down on the window-sill and shut her eyes
-tight. She had a horrid feeling that the building was
-rocking a little. After a moment Arnold crawled
-over the edge of the coping, dragging his plank. He
-was panting.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This,&rdquo; he said, with his mouth close to Jane&rsquo;s
-ear&mdash;&ldquo;this window only leads to the landing where the
-lift shaft ends. We&rsquo;ve got to get across to the next
-one, which is inside Molloy&rsquo;s flat. That&rsquo;s what the
-plank is for.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re blowing down my neck,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>Arnold Todhunter felt that he had never met a
-girl whom he disliked so much. Extraordinary
-that she should look so like Renata and be so
-different.</p>
-<p>He knelt just inside the parapet, and pushed the
-board slowly out into the dark until it rested on the
-parapet of the next window.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will you go first, or shall I?&rdquo; he whispered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<p>Jane felt sure that, if she had to watch Arnold
-balancing on that plank miles above the ground, she
-would never be able to cross it herself.</p>
-<p>The reflection that it was Renata, and not she, who
-would have to make the descent fortified her considerably.
-Even so, she never quite knew how she
-crossed to the other window. It was an affair of
-clenched teeth and a mind that shut out resolutely
-everything except the next groping clutch of the
-hand&mdash;the next carefully taken step.</p>
-<p>She sank against the window-sill and heard Arnold
-follow her. Just at the end he slipped; he seemed to
-change his feet, and then with a heavy thud pitched
-down on the top of Jane.</p>
-<p>She thought he said &ldquo;Damn!&rdquo; and she was quite
-sure that she said &ldquo;Idiot!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was an awful moment while they listened for
-the fall of the plank, but it held to the coping by a
-bare half-inch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank goodness I&rsquo;m not Renata!&rdquo; said Jane, with
-heartfelt sincerity. And&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank goodness, you&rsquo;re not!&rdquo; returned Mr. Todhunter,
-with equal fervour, and at that moment the
-window opened.</p>
-<p>There was a little sobbing gasp, and a girl was clinging
-to Arnold Todhunter and whispering:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Darling&mdash;darling, I thought you&rsquo;d never come.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Arnold crawled through the open window, and from
-the pitch-black hall there came the sounds of demonstrative
-affection.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good gracious me, there&rsquo;s no accounting for
-tastes!&rdquo; said Jane, under her breath. And she too
-climbed down into the darkness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_40">40</div>
-<p>Arnold appeared to be trying to explain Jane to
-Renata, whilst Renata alternated between sobs and
-kisses.</p>
-<p>Jane lost her temper, suddenly and completely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For goodness&rsquo; sake, you two, come where there&rsquo;s a
-light, and where we can talk sense. Every minute you
-waste is just asking for trouble. What&rsquo;s that room
-with the light?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It is difficult to be impressive in a low whisper, but
-Renata did stop kissing Arnold.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My bedroom,&rdquo; she said&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;m supposed to be
-locked in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane groped in the dark and got Renata by the arm.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come along in there and talk to me. We&rsquo;ve got to
-talk. Arnold can wait outside the window. I don&rsquo;t
-want him in the least. You&rsquo;re going to spend the rest
-of your life with him in Bolivia, so you needn&rsquo;t worry.
-I simply won&rsquo;t have him whilst we are talking.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Arnold loathed Jane a little more, but Renata
-allowed herself to be detached from him with a sob.</p>
-<p>Inside the lighted bedroom the two girls looked at
-one another in an amazed silence.</p>
-<p>In height and contour, feature and colouring, the
-likeness was without a flaw.</p>
-<p>Facing them was a small wardrobe of painted wood.
-A narrow panel of looking-glass formed the door. The
-two figures were reflected in it, and Jane, tossing her
-hat on to the bed, studied them there with a long, careful
-scrutiny.</p>
-<p>The same brown hair, growing in the same odd peak
-upon the forehead, the same arch to the brow, the same
-greenish-hazel eyes. Renata&rsquo;s face was tear-stained,
-her eyelids red and swollen&mdash;&ldquo;but that&rsquo;s exactly how I
-look when I cry,&rdquo; said Jane. She set her hand by
-Renata&rsquo;s hand, her foot by Renata&rsquo;s foot. The same
-to a shade.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p>The other girl watched her with bewildered eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Speak&mdash;say something,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What shall I say?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anything&mdash;the multiplication table, the days of
-the week&mdash;I want to hear your voice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Jane, what an odd girl you are!&rdquo; said Renata&mdash;&ldquo;and
-don&rsquo;t you think Arnold had better come in?
-It must be awfully cold out there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Presently,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s very hard to tell,
-but I believe that our voices are as much alike as the
-rest of us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She opened her bag, and took out The List and a pencil.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, write something&mdash;I don&rsquo;t care what.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Renata wrote her own name, and then, after a
-pause, &ldquo;It is a fine day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Quite like,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;but nearly all girls do
-write the same hand now. I can manage that. Now,
-tell me, where were you at school?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Bazing&rsquo;s, Ilfracombe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When did you leave?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Two months ago.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Have you been in America?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not since I was five.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anywhere else out of England?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What languages do you know?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;French&mdash;I&rsquo;m not good at it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s that. Now, Arnold tells me you heard
-them say you were to go to Luttrell Marches?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Renata looked terrified.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, I did.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not supposed to know? They haven&rsquo;t told
-you officially?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;no, they haven&rsquo;t told me anything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your father goes away to-morrow. Have they
-told you that?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t remember,&rdquo; said Renata, bursting into
-tears. &ldquo;Oh, Jane, you don&rsquo;t know what it&rsquo;s like!&mdash;to
-be locked in here&mdash;to have them come and ask questions
-until I don&rsquo;t know what I&rsquo;m saying&mdash;and to know,
-to know all the time that if I make one slip I&rsquo;m lost.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, but it&rsquo;s going to be all right,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t sleep,&rdquo; sobbed Renata, &ldquo;and I can&rsquo;t eat.&rdquo;
-She held up her wrist and looked at it with interest.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got ever so much thinner.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane could have slapped her. She reflected with
-thankfulness that Bolivia was a good long way off.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, look here,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you talk about
-&lsquo;they&rsquo;&mdash;who are &lsquo;they&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a man in a fur coat,&rdquo; faltered Renata&mdash;&ldquo;that
-is to say, he generally has on a fur coat; he
-always seems to be cold. He&rsquo;s the worst; I don&rsquo;t
-know his name, but they call him Number Two.
-He&rsquo;s English. Then there&rsquo;s Number Four. He&rsquo;s a
-foreigner of some sort, and he&rsquo;s dreadful&mdash;dreadful.
-I think&mdash;I think&rdquo;&mdash;her voice dropped to a whisper&mdash;&ldquo;my
-father is Number Three.&rdquo; Then almost inaudibly,
-&ldquo;Number One is at Luttrell Marches. It&rsquo;s Number
-One who will decide about me&mdash;about me. Oh, Jane,
-I&rsquo;m so dreadfully frightened!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Renata&rsquo;s eyes, wide and terrified, stared past Jane
-into vacancy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t be in the least frightened; you&rsquo;re
-going to Bolivia,&rdquo; said Jane briskly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I must tell some one,&rdquo; said Renata, still in that
-whispering voice&mdash;still staring. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t tell them,
-I wouldn&rsquo;t tell them, but I must tell some one. Jane,
-I must tell you what I heard.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Quick as lightning Jane put her hand over the other
-girl&rsquo;s mouth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; she said, and in the pause that followed
-two things stood out in her mind clear and sharp. If
-Renata told her secret, Jane&rsquo;s danger would be doubled.
-If Renata did not tell it, the crime these men were
-planning might ripen undisturbed. Jane had a high
-courage, but she hesitated.</p>
-<p>Her hand dropped slowly to her side. She saw
-Renata&rsquo;s mouth open protestingly, and there came on
-her a wild impulse to stave things off, to have time,
-just a little time before she let that secret in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got to change clothes,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Quick,
-give me that skirt and take mine. Yes, put on the
-coat, and I&rsquo;ll give you my shoes, too. My hat&rsquo;s on the
-bed; you&rsquo;d better put it on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Renata obeyed. A resentful feeling of being hustled,
-ordered about, treated like a child, was upon her; but
-Jane moved and spoke so quickly, and seemed so sure
-of herself, that there seemed no opening for protest.
-She thought Jane&rsquo;s blue serge shabby and old fashioned&mdash;not
-nearly as nice as her own&mdash;and Jane&rsquo;s shoes
-were terribly worn and needed mending.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, listen,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If Arnold likes to go to my rooms and pay up two
-weeks&rsquo; rent, he can get my box and all my other
-clothes for you. There&rsquo;s not very much, but it&rsquo;ll be
-better than nothing. I&rsquo;ll write a line for him to take,
-and put the address on it. And will you please remember
-now and from henceforth that you are Jane Renata
-Smith, and not Renata Jane Molloy?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_44">44</div>
-<p>Jane was scribbling a couple of lines as she spoke,
-and as she turned and gave the paper into Renata&rsquo;s
-hand, she knew that she must decide now. The
-moment of grace was up, and whether she bade Renata
-speak or be silent, there could be no drawing back.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What were you going to tell me?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>Renata stood silent for a long minute. She was
-twisting and turning the slip of paper which Jane
-had given her. She looked down at her twisting
-fingers; her breath began to come more quickly. Then
-with great suddenness she pushed the note into her
-pocket, and caught at Jane with both hands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I must tell you&mdash;I must. It will be coming
-nearer all the time, and I must tell some one, or I shall
-go mad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me, then,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;You were walking
-in your sleep, and you opened the door and heard&mdash;what
-did you hear?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s eyes were bright and steady, her face set.
-She had taken her decision, and her courage rose to
-meet an unknown shock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was walking in my sleep,&rdquo; repeated Renata, in
-a low, faltering voice, &ldquo;and I opened the door, and I
-heard&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you hear?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was a screen in front of me, and just beyond
-the screen a man talking. I heard&mdash;oh, Jane, I heard
-every single word he said! I can&rsquo;t forget one of them&mdash;if
-I could, if I only could!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you hear?&rdquo; said Jane firmly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
-<p>Renata&rsquo;s grip became desperate. She leant forward
-until her lips touched Jane&rsquo;s ear. In a voice that was
-only a breath, she gave word for word, sentence by
-sentence, the speech in which Number Four had proclaimed
-the death sentence of the civilised world. It was
-just a bald transcript like the whisper of a phonograph
-record, as if the words and sentences had been stamped
-on an inanimate plate by some recording machinery, to
-be released again with utter regularity and correctness.</p>
-<p>Every vestige of colour left Jane&rsquo;s face as she
-listened. Only her eyes remained bright and steady.
-Something seemed to knock at her heart. Renata&rsquo;s
-last mechanical repetition died away, and with a sob
-of relief she flung her arms round Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Jane, I do hope they won&rsquo;t kill you! Oh, I
-do hope they won&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So do I,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>She detached herself from Renata, and as she did
-so, both girls heard the same thing&mdash;from beyond the
-two closed doors the groan and grind of the lift
-machinery in motion.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve come back,&rdquo; said Renata, in a whisper
-of terror.</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s hand was on the electric-light switch before
-the words had left Renata&rsquo;s lips.</p>
-<p>As darkness sprang upon the room she had the door
-open. Her grip was on Renata&rsquo;s wrist, her arm about
-Renata&rsquo;s waist, and they were in the hall. It seemed
-pitch black at first, with a gloom that pressed upon
-their eyes and confused the sense of direction.</p>
-<p>The lift rose with a steady rumble.</p>
-<p>Then, as Jane stared before her, the oblong of the
-window sprang into view. She took a step forward
-and felt Renata&rsquo;s head against her shoulder.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to faint,&rdquo; came in a gasp.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you&rsquo;ll never see Arnold again. Do you want
-to be caught like this?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane, I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane dragged her on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Renata, you rabbit!&mdash;if they don&rsquo;t kill you, I will.
-Faint in Bolivia as much as you like, but I forbid you
-to do it here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Jane!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s arm felt the weight of a limp, sagging figure,
-but they had reached the window. From the sill
-Arnold bent, listening anxiously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Quick!&rdquo; gasped Jane.</p>
-<p>And, as his arm relieved the strain, she pinched
-Renata with all her might. There was a sob&mdash;a gasp&mdash;Arnold
-lifted, Jane pushed, and somehow the thing was
-done. Arnold and Renata were outside, crouched down
-between the parapet and the window, whilst Jane
-leaned panting against the jamb.</p>
-<p>As the lift stopped with a jerk, her rigid fingers drew
-the window down and fastened it. Now, horribly loud,
-the clang of the iron gate. Steps outside&mdash;voices&mdash;the
-grate of a key in the lock.</p>
-<p>Jane knew now what Renata had felt. Easy, so easy
-to yield to this paralysis of terror, and to stand rooted
-there until they came! With all her might she pushed
-the temptation from her and roused to action.</p>
-<p>Thank Heaven, she had had no time to put on
-Renata&rsquo;s shoes!</p>
-<p>After the first movement strength and swiftness
-came to her. She was across the hall without a sound.
-The bedroom door closed upon her. As it did so, the
-door of the flat swung wide.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER V</span></h2>
-<p>Jane stood in the dark, her hand upon the door
-knob. Slowly, very slowly, she released it. As she
-leaned there, her head almost touching the panelling,
-she could hear two men talking in the hall beyond.
-They spoke in English, but only the outer sound of the
-words came to her.</p>
-<p>With an immense effort she straightened herself,
-and was about to move away when a thought struck
-her like a knife-blow&mdash;the key&mdash;the second tell-tale
-key&mdash;if she had forgotten it!</p>
-<p>Her hand slid back, touched the cold key, turned
-and withdrew it, moving with a steady firmness that
-surprised herself.</p>
-<p>Then she made a half-turn and tried to visualise the
-room as she had seen it in the light.</p>
-<p>Immediately opposite, the cupboard with the looking-glass
-panel. The window in the right-hand wall, and
-the bed between window and cupboard. At the foot
-of the bed a chair, and on the same side as the
-window a chest of drawers with a looking-glass upon it
-and Renata&rsquo;s plain schoolgirlish brush and comb.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_48">48</div>
-<p>When she had placed everything, Jane began to
-move forward in the direction of the window. Her
-left hand touched the rail of the bed-foot, her right,
-groping, brushed the counterpane and rested on something
-oddly familiar. Her heart gave a sudden jerk,
-for this was her own bag, which Renata should have
-taken. She opened it with quick, trembling fingers,
-took out her handkerchief, and then stuffed the bag
-right down inside the bed.</p>
-<p>A couple of steps brought her to the window, and she
-pressed closely to it, listening, and wished she dared to
-open it. There was no sound from outside. She
-leaned her forehead against the glass, and wondered
-how many years had passed since the morning. It
-seemed impossible for this day to come to an end.</p>
-<p>Then quite suddenly a key turned in the lock, and
-the door opened, not widely, but as one opens the door
-of a room where some one is asleep. A man&rsquo;s head was
-silhouetted against the hall light. Part of his shoulder
-showed in a dark overcoat.</p>
-<p>He spoke, and a hint of brogue beneath a good deal
-of American twang informed Jane that this was her
-official father.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you awake, Renata?&rdquo;&mdash;and, as he asked the
-question, a second man came up behind him and stood
-there listening.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Jane, muffling her voice with her handkerchief.</p>
-<p>He hesitated a moment, and then said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, good-night to you&rdquo;&mdash;and the other man,
-speaking over his shoulder, said in an easy, cultivated
-voice without any accent at all:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pleasant dreams, Miss Renata.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s &ldquo;Good-night&rdquo; was just audible and no more,
-but obviously it satisfied the two men, for the door was
-shut, the key turned and withdrawn, and presently the
-hall light went out, and the darkness was absolute and
-unrelieved, except where the midnight sky showed
-just less black than the interior of the room.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<p>After what seemed a long, long time, Jane undressed
-and got to bed. It was strange to grope for and find
-Renata&rsquo;s neatly folded nightdress.</p>
-<p>Presently she lay down, and presently she slept.
-Time ceased; the day was over.</p>
-<p>She woke suddenly a few hours later. It was still
-dark. She came broad awake at once, and sat up in
-bed as if some one had called to her. Her mind was
-full of one horrifying thought.</p>
-<p>The plank&mdash;what had Arnold done with the plank?</p>
-<p>Impossible that he should have helped Renata down
-the fire-escape and carried the plank as well, and somehow
-Jane did not see Arnold troubling to come back
-for it.</p>
-<p>One thing was certain; if Arnold had left the plank
-in its compromising position, it must be removed before
-daylight.</p>
-<p>Jane got out of bed, shivering. She went to the
-window, opened it, and leaned out. The yard, mews,
-wall, and parapet&mdash;all were veiled in the same thick
-dusk. She strained her eyes, but it was impossible to
-distinguish anything. There was nothing for it but to
-cross that horrid little hall again, open the window, and
-make sure.</p>
-<p>With the key in her hand, and mingled rage and
-terror in her heart, she felt her way to the door, opened
-it noiselessly, and crossed barefoot to the window.
-The hasp was stiff, it creaked, and the window stuck.</p>
-<p>Recklessness took possession of Jane. With a jerk
-she pushed it up; as it chanced, recklessness made less
-noise than caution would have done. She leaned
-right out, and there, sure enough, was the plank.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
-<p>Even Jane&rsquo;s anger could provide her with nothing
-more cutting than, &ldquo;How exactly like Arnold Todhunter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She stood quite still and considered.</p>
-<p>A bold course was the only one. Remembering the
-plank&rsquo;s previous fall and the perfect calm with which
-the neighbourhood had received it, she decided to take
-the same chance again&mdash;only, she must be quick and
-have it all planned in her head: first a shove to the
-plank, then down with the window and latch it, five
-steps&mdash;no, six&mdash;across the hall, and then her own door,
-and on no account must she forget the key.</p>
-<p>She drew a long breath, leaned out, and pushed. The
-board was heavier than she had supposed&mdash;harder to
-move. She had to pull it in, until the sudden weight
-and strain told her that it was clear of the coping upon
-which the farther end had rested. Then she pushed
-with all her might, and as it fell, her hands were on the
-window quick and steady. Next moment she was
-crouching in Renata&rsquo;s bed, the clothes clutched about
-her, the door key cold in her palm. She pushed it
-far down beneath the clothes, and sat breathless&mdash;listening.</p>
-<p>The crash with which the plank had landed seemed
-to have deafened her, but as the vibrations died away,
-she heard, sharp and unmistakable, the click of a latch
-and hurrying footsteps.</p>
-<p>The next moment her door was opened and her light
-switched on. Quick as thought her hand was over
-her eyes and the sheet up to her chin.</p>
-<p>Molloy stood in the doorway, and beyond him the
-other.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s doing? Did you hear it?&rdquo; he stammered,
-and then the other man pushed him aside.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_51">51</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like a look from your window if you&rsquo;ll excuse
-me, Miss Renata,&rdquo; he said, and crossed the room.</p>
-<p>As he leaned out, Jane watched him from beneath
-her hand, and recalled Renata&rsquo;s words, &ldquo;He generally
-wears a fur coat; they call him Number Two.&rdquo; This
-man wore a fur coat over pale blue silk pyjamas.
-When he turned, saying, &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t see a thing,&rdquo; she was
-ready with her stammered, &ldquo;What was it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You heard it, then?&rdquo; said Molloy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Such a fearful crash! It&mdash;it frightened me most
-dreadfully,&rdquo;&mdash;and here Jane spoke the literal truth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo; It was Molloy who answered
-again, but the other man&rsquo;s eyes travelled round the
-room, and a feeling of terror came over Jane.</p>
-<p>If she had forgotten anything, if there were one
-shred of incriminating evidence, those eyes would miss
-nothing! She felt as if they must pierce the bedclothes
-and see her bag and the hidden key, but he
-merely nodded to Molloy, and they left the room,
-switching out the light and locking the door.</p>
-<p>Jane drew a long breath of relief, turned upon her
-side, and in five minutes was asleep again.</p>
-<p>The day came in with a thick mist. Jane opened her
-eyes upon it sleepily.</p>
-<p>She began to think what a strange dream she had
-had, and then, as sleep ebbed from her, she remembered
-that it was not a dream at all. She was Renata
-Molloy under lock and key, and in front of her
-stretched a day that might be even more crowded with
-adventure than yesterday.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
-<p>She jumped out of bed, and as she dressed her eyes
-brightened and her courage rose. With Renata&rsquo;s
-scissors she unpicked the initials which marked her
-underclothes. This was a game at which one must not
-make a single slip. Her bag worried her a little, but
-it was just such a plain leather bag as any one might
-possess. She ransacked it carefully, and frowned over
-an envelope addressed to Miss Jane Smith. What in
-the world was she to do with it?</p>
-<p>There were no matches, so it could not be burned.
-After some thought she soaked it in water, scratched
-the name to shreds with a hairpin, and crumpling the
-wet paper into a ball, tossed it out of the window.</p>
-<p>By the time her door was unlocked, she was very
-hungry. This time, it appeared, she was being summoned
-to bid the departing Mr. Molloy a fond farewell.</p>
-<p>His luggage was already being carried out to the lift,
-and two or three men were coming and going. The
-man in the fur coat stood with his back to the window,
-smoking a cigarette. Obviously Molloy&rsquo;s farewell was
-not to be said in private.</p>
-<p>Jane looked at him with some curiosity&mdash;a tall man,
-strongly built, with a bold air and a florid complexion.</p>
-<p>It was he who had opened the door, and he stood still
-holding the handle and looking, not at Jane, but over
-her shoulder. For this she felt grateful.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, well then, I&rsquo;m off,&rdquo; said Molloy. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
-be a good girl and do as you&rsquo;re bid, and I&rsquo;ll be having
-you out to keep house for me in less than no time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From what she had seen of Renata, Jane fancied that
-a sob would meet the occasion. She therefore sobbed,
-and pressed her handkerchief to her eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There, there,&rdquo; said Molloy hastily.</p>
-<p>He bent and deposited an awkward kiss upon the top
-of her head. Then he took his hand from the door
-and was gone.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<p>The lift gate clanged, and Jane realised that the real
-adventure had begun.</p>
-<p>The man by the window threw the end of his
-cigarette into the fireplace and came towards her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Parental devotion is a beautiful thing, isn&rsquo;t it,
-Miss Renata? Suppose we have some breakfast.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A meal, a proper meal, enough to eat! As she
-passed into the dining-room and beheld a ham, coffee,
-and boiled eggs, Jane felt as if she could confront
-any one or anything. Besides, the first trick was
-hers.</p>
-<p>In the full light of day, and under those cold, pale
-eyes, she had passed as Renata.</p>
-<p>She allowed herself to sigh and dab her eyes, and
-then&mdash;oh, how good was the rather stale bread, the
-London egg, and the indifferent ham.</p>
-<p>The man watched her quizzically.</p>
-<p>As she finished her second cup of coffee, he remarked
-that she had a good appetite, and there was something
-in his tone that cast a chill upon the proceedings.</p>
-<p>Jane pushed back her chair.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve finished,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;I think we must talk.
-Yes, sit down again, please. I won&rsquo;t keep you very
-long.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane did as she was told.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Molloy&rsquo;s gone,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You know what
-that means? He&rsquo;s washed his hands of you. Just
-in case&mdash;just in case, you&rsquo;ve been relying on Molloy,
-I would like to point out to you that his own position
-is none too secure. The firm he works for has not been
-entirely satisfied with him for some time. It is, therefore,
-quite out of the question that he should influence
-any decision that may be come to with regard to yourself.
-His going off like this shows that he realises
-the position and accepts it. Self-preservation is
-Molloy&rsquo;s trump suit, first, last, and all the time. I
-shouldn&rsquo;t advise you to count upon trifles like parental
-devotion, or anything of that sort. In a word&mdash;he
-can&rsquo;t help you, <i>but I can</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man leaned forward as he spoke, and a sudden
-smile changed his features.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just be frank,&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;Tell me what you
-really heard, and I&rsquo;ll see you through.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane let her eyes meet his. That smile had puzzled
-her; it was so spontaneous and charming, but it did
-not reach his eyes.</p>
-<p>She looked and found them cold and opaque, and as
-she looked, she saw the pupils narrow, expand, and
-then narrow again.</p>
-<p>He got up from his chair, walked to the mantelpiece,
-stopped for a light to his cigarette, and came back
-again with a thin blue haze of smoke about him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I haven&rsquo;t been altogether frank with you,&rdquo;
-he said. &ldquo;That little romance of mine about a firm of
-chemists who employ your father&mdash;you didn&rsquo;t really
-believe it? No, I thought not. The fact is, that first
-night I took you for just a schoolgirl, and one can&rsquo;t
-tell schoolgirls everything. But now, now I&rsquo;m talking
-to you as a woman. I can&rsquo;t tell you everything,
-even so, but I can tell you this. It&rsquo;s a Government
-matter, a most important one, and it is vital that I
-should know just what you overheard.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane looked down.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_55">55</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; she said in a low voice. &ldquo;I
-was dreaming and I waked up suddenly. There was a
-screen in front of me, and some one on the other side
-of the screen called out very loud, &lsquo;The door, the
-door!&rsquo; That&rsquo;s what I heard.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She felt the pale eyes upon her face. Then with an
-abrupt movement the man came over to her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stand up,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>Jane stood up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look at me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane looked at him.</p>
-<p>After what seemed like a very long time, he threw
-out his hand with an impatient gesture. It struck the
-table edge with a sharp rap, the spring that held his
-wrist watch gave, and the watch on its gold curb flew
-off and fell on the floor behind Jane.</p>
-<p>She turned, glad of an excuse to turn, and bent to
-pick it up. The back of the watch was open; her
-fingers caught and closed it instantly, but not for
-nothing had she told Henry that she had gimlet eyes.
-The back of the watch contained a photograph, and
-Jane had seen the photograph before. Henry&rsquo;s voice
-sounded in her ears. &ldquo;It was done from Amory&rsquo;s portrait
-of her, in 1915&mdash;the year of her marriage.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Number Two, the man in the fur coat, Renata&rsquo;s
-&ldquo;worst of them all,&rdquo; had in the back of his watch a
-photograph of Lady Heritage!</p>
-<p>Jane laid the watch on the table without giving it
-a second glance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER VI</span></h2>
-<p>As the watch slid back into its place beneath his
-shirt cuff, the man spoke with an entire change
-of manner.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Miss Renata, that was all very stiff and
-businesslike. You mustn&rsquo;t hold it up against me,
-because I hope we&rsquo;re going to be friends. Don&rsquo;t you
-want to know your plans?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane looked at him with a little frown.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My plans?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is going to happen to you. Oh, please,
-don&rsquo;t look so grave! It&rsquo;s nothing very dreadful.
-You have heard of Sir William Carr-Magnus?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, of course,&rdquo; said Jane. She hoped that she
-looked innocent and surprised.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the man in the fur coat, &ldquo;I happen to
-be his secretary, and that reminds me, I don&rsquo;t believe
-you know my name. Your father and his friends use
-a ridiculous nickname which sticks to me like a
-burr ... but let me introduce myself&mdash;Jeffrey Ember,
-and your friend, if you will have me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The charming smile just touched his face, and then
-he said in a quiet, serious way:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_57">57</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Sir William&rsquo;s daughter, Lady Heritage, has
-commissioned me to find her an amanuensis&mdash;companion&mdash;no,
-that&rsquo;s not quite right either. She doesn&rsquo;t
-want a trained stenographer, or a young person with
-a business training, but she wants a girl in the house&mdash;some
-one who&rsquo;ll do what she&rsquo;s told, write notes,
-arrange the flowers.... I dare say you can guess
-the sort of thing. She is willing to give you a trial,
-and your father has agreed. As a matter of fact,
-I&rsquo;m taking you down there to-day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Jane, because she seemed expected to
-say something, and for the life of her she could not
-think of anything else to say.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid you&rsquo;ll have to submit to certain restrictions
-at Luttrell Marches. You see, Sir William is
-engaged upon some very important experiments for
-the Government, and all the members of his household
-have to conform to certain regulations. Their
-letters must be censored, and they must not leave the
-grounds, which are, however, extremely delightful and
-extensive. It isn&rsquo;t much of a hardship, really.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh no,&rdquo; said Jane in her best schoolgirl manner.</p>
-<p>And there the interview ended.</p>
-<p>They made the journey to Luttrell Marches by car,
-but, after the manner of Mrs. Gilpin&rsquo;s post-chaise,
-it did not pick them up at the door. An ordinary
-taxi conveyed them to Victoria Station, and it was in
-the station yard that they and their luggage were
-picked up by the Rolls-Royce with the Carr-Magnus
-crest upon the door.</p>
-<p>The mist was thinner, and as they came clear of
-London, the sun came out. The day warmed into
-beauty, and the green growth of the countryside
-seemed to be expanding before their eyes. So many
-long hedges running into a blur, so many miles of road
-all slipping past. Jane fell fast asleep, and did not
-know how long she slept.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
-<p>It was in the late afternoon that they came into the
-Marsh country&mdash;great flat stretches of it, set with
-boggy tussocks and intersected by straight lanes of
-water. Purple-brown and green it stretched for miles.
-To the right a humped line of upland, but to the left,
-and as far as the eye could see in front, nothing but
-marsh. Then the road rose a little; the ground was
-firmer and carried a black pine or two.</p>
-<p>They came to a three-cross way and turned sharply
-to the right. The ground rose more and more. They
-climbed a steep hill, zigzagging between banked-up
-hedges to make the rise, and came out upon a bare
-upland. Ahead of them one saw a high stone wall
-pierced by iron gates. The car stopped. Mr. Ember
-leaned out, and after a pause the gates swung inwards.</p>
-<p>For a mile the drive lay through a flat waste of
-springing bracken, with here and there a group of
-wind-driven trees, then a second gate through a high
-fencing topped with wire. An avenue of trees led
-up to the house, a huge grey pile set against a sky full
-of little racing clouds.</p>
-<p>Jane felt stiff and bewildered with the long drive.
-She followed Mr. Ember up a flight of granite steps
-and came into the great hall of Luttrell Marches
-with its panelled walls and dark old portraits of
-half-forgotten Luttrells.</p>
-<p>Exactly opposite the entrance rose the stairway
-which was the pride of the house. Its beautiful
-proportions, the grapes and vine leaves of its famous
-carvings, were lighted from beneath by the red glow
-of a huge open fire, and from above by the last word
-in electric lighting.</p>
-<p>Ember walked straight across the hall and up the
-stair, and Jane followed him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_59">59</div>
-<p>She thought she knew exactly how a puppy must
-feel when, blinking from the warmth and straw of his
-basket, he comes for the first time into the ordered
-solemnity of his new master&rsquo;s house.</p>
-<p>And then she looked up and saw The Portrait.</p>
-<p>It hung on the panelling at the top of the stair
-where the long corridors ran off to right and left, and
-it took Jane&rsquo;s breath away&mdash;the portrait of Lady
-Heritage.</p>
-<p>Amory had painted more than a beautiful woman
-standing on a marble terrace: he had painted a woman
-Mercury. The hands held an ivory rod&mdash;diamond
-wings rose from the cloudy hair. Under the bright
-wings the eyes looked out, looked far&mdash;dark, splendid,
-hungry eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The earth belongs to her, and she despises it,&rdquo;
-was Jane&rsquo;s thought.</p>
-<p>She stood staring at the portrait. Nineteen-fifteen,
-Henry had said&mdash;the year when other women posed
-with folded linen hiding their hair and the red cross
-worn like a blazon. She could think of several famous
-beauties who had been painted thus. But this woman
-wore her diamond wings, though, even as she wore
-them, Fate had done its worst to her, for Anthony
-Luttrell was a name with other names in a list of
-missing, and no man knew his grave.</p>
-<p>A sharp clang of metal upon metal startled Jane.
-She looked quickly to her right, and saw that a steel
-gate completely barred the entrance to the corridor on
-that side. It had just closed behind a curious white-draped
-figure.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Jeffrey,&rdquo; said a voice&mdash;a deep, rather husky
-voice&mdash;and the figure came forward.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<p>Jane saw that it was a woman wearing a long white
-linen overall, and a curious linen head-dress, which she
-was undoing and pushing back as she walked. She
-pulled it off as she came up to them, saying, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s so
-hot in there I can hardly breathe, but too fascinating
-to leave. You&rsquo;re early. Is this Miss Molloy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She put out her hand to Jane, and Jane, with her
-mind full of the portrait, looked open-eyed at its
-original.</p>
-<p>Afterwards she tried to formulate her sensations,
-but, at the time, she received just that emotional
-shock which most people experienced when they first
-met Raymond Heritage.</p>
-<p>Beautiful&mdash;but there are so many beautiful women.
-Charming? No, there was rather something that
-repelled, antagonised. In her presence Jane felt untidy,
-shabby, gauche.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage unbuttoned her overall and slipped it
-off. She wore a plain white knitted skirt and jersey.
-Her fingers were bare even of the wedding ring which
-Jane looked for and missed. Her black hair was a
-little ruffled, and above the temples, where Amory
-had painted diamond wings, there were streaks of
-grey.</p>
-<p>Bewilderment came down on Jane like a thick mist,
-which clung about her during the brief interchange of
-sentences which followed, and went with her to her
-room.</p>
-<p>It was a queer room with a rounded wall set with
-three windows and to right and left irregular of line,
-with a jutting corner here and a blunted angle there.
-It faced west, for the sun shone level in her eyes.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<p>Crossing to the window, as most people do when they
-come into a strange room, she looked out and caught
-her breath with amazement.</p>
-<p>The sea&mdash;why, it seemed to lie just beneath the
-windows!</p>
-<p>They had driven up from the landward side, and this
-was her first hint that the sea was so near.</p>
-<p>There was a wide gravel terrace, a stone wall set with
-formal urns full of blue hyacinths, the sharp fall of the
-cliff, and then the sea.</p>
-<p>The tide was in, the sun low, and a wide golden path
-seemed to stretch almost from Jane&rsquo;s feet to the far
-horizon. Overhead the little racing clouds that told of
-a wind high up were golden too.</p>
-<p>The humped ridge of upland, which Jane had seen as
-they drove, ran out to sea on the right hand. It ended
-in low, broken cliff, and a line of jagged rocks of which
-only the points stood clear.</p>
-<p>Jane turned from all the beauty outside to the
-ordered comfort within. Hot water in a brass can that
-she could see her face in, a towel of such fine linen that
-it was a joy to touch it, this pretty white-panelled
-room, the chintzes where bright butterflies hovered over
-roses and sweet-peas&mdash;she stood and looked at it all,
-and she heard Renata&rsquo;s words, &ldquo;At Luttrell Marches
-they will decide whether I am to be eliminated.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This curious dual sense remained with her during the
-days that followed. Life at Luttrell Marches was
-simple and regular. She wrote letters, gathered flowers,
-unpacked the library books, and kept out of Sir
-William&rsquo;s way.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<p>Sir William, she decided, was exactly like his photograph,
-only a good deal more so; his eyebrows more
-tufted, his chin more jutting, and his eyes harder.
-For a philanthropist he had a singularly bad temper,
-and for so eminent a scientist a very frivolous taste in
-literature. One of Jane&rsquo;s duties was to provide him
-with novels. She ransacked library lists and trembled
-over the results of her labours.</p>
-<p>Sir William did not always join the ladies after dinner,
-but when he did so he would read a novel at a
-sitting and ask for more.</p>
-<p>Mr. Ember was never absent, and when Lady
-Heritage talked, it was to him that her words were
-addressed. Sometimes she would disappear inside the
-steel gate for hours.</p>
-<p>Jane soon learnt that the whole of the north wing
-was given up to Sir William&rsquo;s experiments. On each
-floor a steel gate shut it off from the rest of the house.
-All the windows were barred from top to bottom.</p>
-<p>She also discovered that the high paling where the
-avenue began had, on its inner side, an apron of barbed
-wire, and it was the upper strand of this apron which
-she had seen as they approached from outside.</p>
-<p>Sir William&rsquo;s experiments employed a considerable
-number of men. These, she learned, were lodged in the
-stables, and neither they nor any of the domestic staff
-were permitted to pass beyond the inner paling.</p>
-<p>On the coast side there was a high wire entanglement&mdash;electrified.</p>
-<p>There were moments when Jane was cold with fear,
-and moments when she told herself that Renata was a
-little fool who had had nightmare.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER VII</span></h2>
-<p>When Jane stood at her window and looked
-across the sea, she saw what might have been
-a picture of life at Luttrell Marches during those first
-few days. Such a smooth stretch of water, pleasant to
-the eye, where blue and green, amethyst, grey and
-silver came and went, and under the play of colour and
-the shifting light and shade of day and evening, the
-unchanging black of rocks which showed for an instant
-and then left one guessing whether anything had really
-broken the beauty and the peace.</p>
-<p>Over the surface all was pleasant enough, but incidents,
-some of them almost negligible in themselves,
-kept recurring to remind Jane that there were rocks
-beneath the sea.</p>
-<p>The first incident came up suddenly whilst she
-was writing Lady Heritage&rsquo;s letters on the second
-day.</p>
-<p>She had beside her a little pile of correspondence,
-mostly about trifles. Upon each letter there was
-scrawled, &ldquo;Yes&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;No&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Tell them I&rsquo;ll think it
-over,&rdquo; or some such direction.</p>
-<p>Presently Jane arrived at a letter in French, upon
-which Lady Heritage had written, &ldquo;Make an English
-translation and enclose to Mrs. Blunt.&rdquo; Mrs. Blunt&rsquo;s
-own letter lay immediately underneath. It contained
-inquiries about some conditions of factory labour
-amongst women in France.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
-<p>The French letter was an excellent exposition of the
-said conditions.</p>
-<p>Jane sat looking at it, and wondering whether Renata
-could have translated a single line of it, and how much
-ignorance it would behove her to display.</p>
-<p>After a moment&rsquo;s thought she turned round and said
-timidly, &ldquo;May I have a dictionary, please?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage looked up from the papers before her.
-She frowned and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A dictionary?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, for the French letter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know French, then?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane met the half-sarcastic look with protest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, I <i>do</i>. But, if I might have a
-dictionary&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage pointed to the bookcase and went
-back to her papers.</p>
-<p>An imp of mischief entered into Jane.</p>
-<p>She took the dictionary and spent the next half-hour
-in producing a translation with just the right amount
-of faults in it. She put it down in front of her employer
-with a feeling of triumph.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Please, will this do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage looked, frowned, and tore the paper
-across.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought you said you knew French?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane fidgeted with her pen:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I know I&rsquo;m not <i>really</i> good at it, but I
-looked out all the words I didn&rsquo;t know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There must have been a good many,&rdquo; was Lady
-Heritage&rsquo;s comment, and the imp made Jane raise
-innocent eyes and say:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, there <i>were</i>!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_65">65</div>
-<p>She went back to her table, and Lady Heritage spoke
-over her shoulder to Mr. Ember, who appeared to be
-searching for a book at the far end of the room. She
-spoke in French&mdash;the low, rapid French of the woman
-to whom one language is the same as another.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do they teach at English schools, can you
-tell me, Jeffrey? This girl says she knows French, and
-if she can follow one word I am saying now&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She
-broke off and shrugged. &ldquo;Yet I dare say she went to
-an expensive school. Now, I had a Bavarian maid,
-educated in the ordinary village school, and she spoke
-English with ease, and French better than any English
-schoolgirl I&rsquo;ve come across. Wait whilst I try her in
-something else.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She turned back to Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just send the original to Mrs. Blunt&mdash;I haven&rsquo;t
-time to bother with it&mdash;and make a note for me. I want
-it inserted after para three on the second page of that
-typewritten article that came back this morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane supposed she might be allowed to know what
-a &ldquo;para&rdquo; was. She turned over the leaves of the
-typescript and waited for the dictation. The last
-sentence read, &ldquo;Woman through all the ages is at the
-disposal and under the autocratic rule of man, but it is
-not of her own volition.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She wondered what was to come next, and waited,
-keenly on the alert.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage began to speak:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Write it in as neatly as possible, please; it&rsquo;s only
-one sentence: &lsquo;It is Man who has forced &ldquo;das ewig
-Weibliche&rdquo; upon us.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane wrote, &ldquo;It is man&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; and then stopped.
-She repeated the words aloud and looked expectant.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_66">66</div>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Das ewig Weibliche&rsquo;&rdquo;&mdash;there was a slight grimness
-in Lady Heritage&rsquo;s tone.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid&mdash;&rdquo; faltered Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never heard the quotation?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m so sorry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know any German, then?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m <i>so</i> sorry,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear girl, what did they teach you at that
-school of yours? By the way, where was it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At Ilfracombe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;English education is a disgrace,&rdquo; said Lady Heritage,
-and went back to her papers.</p>
-<p>It was next day that she turned suddenly to Jane:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;By the way, you were at school at Ilfracombe&mdash;can
-you give me the name of a china shop there? I
-want some of that blue Devonshire pottery for a girls&rsquo;
-club I&rsquo;m interested in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane had a moment of panic. Renata&rsquo;s shoes had
-fitted her too easily. She had felt secure, and then to
-have her security shattered by a trifle like this!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A china shop?&rdquo; she said meditatively; then, after
-a pause, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s awfully stupid of me&mdash;I&rsquo;m afraid I&rsquo;ve
-forgotten the name.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage stared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A shop that you must have passed hundreds of
-times?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s very stupid of me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage smiled with a sudden brilliance.
-&ldquo;Well, it is rather,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>It was on the fourth day that Jane really caught her
-first glimpse of the black rocks.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_67">67</div>
-<p>She was writing in the library, dealing with an
-apparently endless stream of begging letters, requests
-for interviews, invitations to speak at meetings or to
-join committees.</p>
-<p>In four days Jane had discovered that Lady Heritage
-was up to her eyes in a dozen movements relating to
-feminist activities, women&rsquo;s labour, and social reform.</p>
-<p>Newspapers, pamphlets, and reports littered a table
-which ran the whole length of the room. Jane was
-required to open all these as they came, and separate
-those which dealt with social reform and the innumerable
-scientific treatises and reviews. These latter
-arrived in every European language.</p>
-<p>Jane sat writing. The day was clear and lovely,
-the air sun-warmed and yet fresh as if it had passed
-over snow. April has days like this, and they fill
-every healthy person with a longing to be out, to stop
-working, and take holiday.</p>
-<p>The windows of the library looked out upon the
-gravel terrace above the sea. The sun was on the blue
-water.</p>
-<p>Jane put down her pen and looked at the hyacinths
-in the grey stone urns. They were blue too. A yellow
-butterfly played round them. She sat up and went
-to the window.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage and Mr. Ember were walking up and
-down the terrace, Lady Heritage bareheaded, all in
-white with not even a scarf, and Jeffrey Ember with
-a muffler round his neck, and the inevitable fur coat.
-They were coming towards her, and Jane stood back
-so that the curtains made a screen. She watched
-Raymond Heritage as she had watched the sea and
-the flowers, for sheer joy in her beauty.</p>
-<p>Raymond&rsquo;s face was towards her, and she was
-speaking.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<p>Not a word reached Jane&rsquo;s ears, but as she looked
-at those beautiful lips, their movements spelt words
-to her&mdash;words and sentences. She would have drawn
-back or looked away, but the first sentence that she
-read riveted her attention too closely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you satisfied about her Jeffrey?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember <i>must</i> have spoken, but his head was turned
-away. Then Raymond spoke again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nor am I&mdash;not entirely. She seems intelligent
-and unintelligent by turns, unbelievably stupid in one
-direction and quick in another.&rdquo; They passed level
-with the window, and so on to the end of the terrace.
-Jane went round the table to the other side of the
-window and waited for them to come back.</p>
-<p>Ember&rsquo;s face was towards her when they turned,
-too far away for her to see anything. But, as they came
-nearer, she saw that he was speaking. Not easy to
-read from, however, with those straight, thin lips that
-moved so little. There was only one word she was
-sure of&mdash;&ldquo;overheard.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was too tantalising. If she had to wait until
-they reached the far end of the terrace and turned
-again, what might she not miss?</p>
-<p>As the thought passed through her mind Lady
-Heritage stopped, walked slowly to the grey stone wall,
-and sat down on it, motioning to Ember to do the
-same.</p>
-<p>Jane could see both faces now, and Raymond was
-saying, &ldquo;If she overheard anything, would she have
-the intelligence to be dangerous?&mdash;that is what I ask
-myself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember&rsquo;s lips just moved, but the movements made
-no sense.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_69">69</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; said Lady Heritage;
-&ldquo;despise not thine enemy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She changed her position, leaned forward, displaying
-a statuesque profile, and appeared to be speaking fast
-and earnestly. Then Jane saw her lips again, and
-they were saying, &ldquo;Anything but Formula &lsquo;A.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane gripped the curtain which she held until the
-gold galon which bordered it marked her hand with
-its acorn pattern.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo;!&rdquo; everything swam round her while
-she heard Renata&rsquo;s gasping voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said &lsquo;With Formula &ldquo;A&rdquo; you have the key.
-When Formula &ldquo;B&rdquo; is also complete, you will have
-the lock for that key to fit; then the treasures of the
-world are yours.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The mist cleared from her eyes; she looked again.</p>
-<p>Raymond Heritage had risen to her feet. Ember
-and she looked out to sea for a moment, then crossed
-the gravel towards the house. They were talking of
-the sunshine and the spring air.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My bulbs have done well,&rdquo; Lady Heritage said.</p>
-<p>They passed out of sight.</p>
-<p>Two days later Jane, coming down the corridor to
-the library, was aware of voices in conversation. She
-opened the door and saw Jeffrey Ember with his back
-to her. He had pulled a deep leather chair close to
-the fire, and was bending forward to warm his hands.
-Lady Heritage stood a yard or two away. She had a
-large bunch of violets in one hand; with the other she
-leaned against the black marble mantel.</p>
-<p>She and Ember were talking in German. Both
-glanced round, and Raymond asked:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_70">70</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The letters for the post,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>They went on talking whilst she sorted and stamped
-the letters.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which of us is the better judge of character, it
-comes to that.&rdquo; Speaking German, Lady Heritage&rsquo;s
-deep voice sounded deeper than ever.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do we take different sides then?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. I thought your verdict was inclined
-to be &lsquo;Guilty, but recommended to mercy,&rsquo; whereas
-mine&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She hesitated&mdash;stopped rather&mdash;for there
-was no hesitation in her manner.</p>
-<p>Ember made a gesture with the hand that held his
-cigarette.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Expound.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I doubt the guilt. But if I did not doubt, I should
-have no mercy at all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane went out with the letters, and when she was in
-the corridor again she put out her hand and leaned
-against the wall. It would be horrible enough, she
-thought, to be tried in an open court upon some capital
-count, but how far less horrible than a secret judgment
-where whispered words made unknown charges, where
-the trial went on beneath the surface of one&rsquo;s pleasant
-daily life, and every word, every look, a turn of the
-head, an unguarded sigh, a word too little, or a glance
-too much might tip the scale and send the balance
-swinging down to&mdash;what?</p>
-<p>Next day Lady Heritage was deep in her correspondence,
-when she suddenly flashed into anger. Pushing
-back her chair, she got up and began to pace the room.
-There was a letter in her hand, and as she walked she
-tore it across and across, flung the fragments into the fire,
-and pushed a blazing log down upon them with her foot.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_71">71</div>
-<p>Jane and Ember watched her&mdash;the former with
-some surprise and a good deal of admiration, the latter
-with that odd something which her presence always
-called out. She swung round, met his eyes, and burst
-into speech.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Alington&mdash;to think that I ever called that man
-my friend! I wonder if there&rsquo;s a single man on this
-earth who would translate professions of devotion to
-one woman, into bare decent justice to all women.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What has Lord Alington done?&rdquo; asked Mr. Ember,
-with a slight drawl.</p>
-<p>Jane, with a thrill, identified the President of the
-Board of Trade.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing that I might not have expected. It is
-only women that are different, Jeffrey. Men are all
-the same.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And still I don&rsquo;t know what he has done,&rdquo; said
-Jeffrey Ember.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s a long story! I&rsquo;ve been pressing for women
-inspectors in various directions. It seems inconceivable
-that any one should cavil at a woman inspector
-wherever women are employed. You have no idea of
-what some of the conditions are. Stewardesses, for
-instance; I&rsquo;ve a letter there from a woman who has
-been working on one of the largest liners&mdash;not a tramp
-steamer, mind you, but one of the biggest liners
-afloat. All the passengers&rsquo; trays, all the cabin meals
-had to be carried up a perpendicular iron stair like a
-fire-escape&mdash;not a permanent stair, you understand,
-but a ladder that is let up and down. Those wretched
-women had to go up and down it all day with heavy
-trays. They said they couldn&rsquo;t do it, and were told
-they had to. And that&rsquo;s a little thing compared to
-some of the other conditions. I want an inspector for
-them.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_72">72</div>
-<p>&ldquo;And Alington?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage came to a halt by the long, piled-up
-table. She struck it with her open hand. &ldquo;Lord
-Alington is just a man,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He stands for
-what men have always stood for, the sacred right of the
-vested interest. What man ever wants to alter anything?
-And why should he when the existing order
-gives him all he wants? It doesn&rsquo;t matter where you
-turn, what you do, how hard you try, the vested interest
-blocks the way; you are up against the Established
-Order of what has always been. My God, how I&rsquo;d like
-to smash it all, the whole thing, the whole smug sham
-which we call civilisation!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane stared at her open-eyed. She had never
-dreamed that the statue could wake into such vivid
-life as this. The colour burned in Raymond&rsquo;s cheeks,
-the sombre eyes were sombre still, but they held sparks
-as if from inward fire.</p>
-<p>Ember touched the hand that was clenched at the
-table&rsquo;s edge. A sort of tremor passed over her from
-head to foot. The colour died, the fire was gone.
-With a complete change of manner she said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Alington was hardly worth all that, was he?&rdquo;
-Then without a change of key, but in German:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you, Jeffrey, the child&rsquo;s eyes were nearly
-falling out of her head. It was stupid of me; I forgot.
-These things carry me away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The door opened on her last words, and Sir William
-came in. He was frowning, and appeared to be in a
-great hurry.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Ridiculous business, ridiculous waste of time.
-These damned departments appear to think I&rsquo;ve
-nothing to do with my time except to answer their
-infernal inquiries, and entertain any interfering jackanapes
-that they choose to let loose on me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it Father?&rdquo; said Lady Heritage&mdash;&ldquo;Government
-inspection?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nonsense,&rdquo; said Sir William slowly. &ldquo;Henry
-March wants to come down for the night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane bent forward over her papers. No one was
-looking at her, no one was thinking of her, but she had
-felt her cheeks grow hot, and was glad of an excuse to
-hide them.</p>
-<p>She did not know whether she was very much afraid
-or very glad. A feeling unfamiliar but overwhelming
-seemed to shake her to the depths. She was quite
-unconscious of what was passing behind her.</p>
-<p>At Henry&rsquo;s name, Raymond Heritage uttered a
-sharp, &ldquo;Oh no!&rdquo; She came quickly forward as she
-spoke and caught the letter from Sir William&rsquo;s hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t come&mdash;I can&rsquo;t have him here&mdash;put him
-off, Father; you can make some excuse!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; said Sir William again. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a
-nuisance, of course&mdash;it&rsquo;s an infernal nuisance&mdash;but
-he&rsquo;ll have to come, confound him!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then, as she made a half-articulate protest, he
-went on with increasing loss of temper:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good heavens! I can&rsquo;t very well tell the man I
-won&rsquo;t have him in what is practically his own
-house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was Ember, not her father, who saw how frightfully
-pale Raymond became. In a very low voice she
-said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I suppose not.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_74">74</div>
-<p>Sir William was fidgeting. He looked at Jane&rsquo;s
-back.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course, he&rsquo;s coming down on business.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then he broke off and stared at Jane again.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Molloy,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You can take half an
-hour off.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_75">75</div>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER VIII</span></h2>
-<p>Henry arrived on the following day and was
-shown straight into Sir William&rsquo;s study.</p>
-<p>Half an hour later Sir William rang the bell and sent
-for Lady Heritage. He hardly gave her time to shake
-hands before he burst out:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I said you must be told. I take all responsibility
-for your being told. After all, if I am conducting
-these experiments, something is due to me,
-though the Government appear to think otherwise.
-But I take all responsibility; I insist on your being
-told.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He sat at his littered table, and all the time that he
-was speaking his hands were lifting and shuffling the
-papers on it. At his elbow stood a tray with tantalus
-and glasses and a syphon. Only one glass had been
-used.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; said Raymond.</p>
-<p>Her eyes went from her father to Henry.</p>
-<p>Sir William&rsquo;s hand was shaking. Henry wore a
-look of grave concern.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; she repeated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo;&rdquo;&mdash;Sir William&rsquo;s voice was just
-a deep growl. &ldquo;He comes here, and he tells me that
-Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo; has been stolen. I&rsquo;ve told him to his
-face, and I tell him again, that it&rsquo;s a damned
-impossibility.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<p>The shaking hand fell heavily upon the table and
-made the glasses ring.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo;?&rdquo; said Raymond&mdash;&ldquo;stolen? Henry,
-you can&rsquo;t mean it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I do,&rdquo; said Henry, at his quietest.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid there&rsquo;s no doubt about it. We have the
-most indisputable evidence that Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo; has
-been offered to&mdash;well, to a foreign power.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The flush upon Sir William&rsquo;s face deepened alarmingly.
-Under the bristling grey brows his eyes were
-hard with anger. He began to speak, broke off, swept
-his papers to one side, and, taking up the tantalus
-and the used glass, poured out a third of a glass of
-whisky. He let a small quantity of soda into it with
-a vicious jerk, and then sat with the glass between his
-hands, alternately sipping from it and interjecting
-sounds of angry protest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The information is, I&rsquo;m afraid, correct.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s tone, though studiously moderate, was
-extremely firm. &ldquo;There is undoubtedly a leak, and,
-in view of Formula &lsquo;B,&rsquo; it is vital that the leak should
-be found and stopped.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He addressed himself to Lady Heritage:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sir William tells me that all employ&eacute;s correspond
-with the list in my possession, that none of them leave
-the enclosure, and that all letters are censored. By
-the way, who censors them?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ember,&rdquo; growled Sir William.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage elaborated the remark.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Ember&mdash;Father&rsquo;s secretary.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She and Henry were both standing, with the corner
-of the writing-table between them. She saw inquiry
-in Henry&rsquo;s face. He said:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_77">77</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Who does leave the premises?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Father, once in a blue moon, I when I have any
-shopping to do, and, of course, Mr. Ember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And when you go you drive, of course? What I
-mean is&mdash;a chauffeur goes too?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sir William made a sound between a snort and a
-laugh; Lady Heritage smiled. Both had the air of
-being pleased to catch Henry out.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The chauffeur is Lewis, who was your uncle&rsquo;s
-coachman here for twenty-five years. Are you going
-to suggest that he has been selling Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo; to a
-foreign power? I&rsquo;m afraid you must think again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who is Mr. Ember?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sir William exploded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ember&rsquo;s my secretary. He&rsquo;s been my right hand
-for ten years, and if you&rsquo;re going to make insinuations
-about him, you can leave my house and make them
-elsewhere. Why, damn it all, March!&mdash;why not accuse
-Raymond, or me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t accuse any one, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was a pause, whilst the two men looked at one
-another. It was Sir William who looked away at last.
-He drained his glass and got up, pushing his chair so
-hard that it overturned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You want to see all the men to check &rsquo;em by that
-infernal list of yours, do you? The sooner the better
-then; let&rsquo;s get it over.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
-<p>Later, as the men answered to their names in the long,
-bare room which had once been the Blue Parlour, Henry
-was struck with the strangeness of the scene. Here
-his aunt had loved to sit doing an interminable embroidery
-of fruits and flowers upon canvas. Here he
-and Anthony had lain prone before the fire, each
-with his head in a book and his heels waving aloft.
-Memories of Fenimore Cooper and Henty filled the
-place when for a moment he closed his eyes. Then, as
-they opened, there was the room all bare, the windows
-barred and uncurtained, the long stretcher tables with
-their paraphernalia of glass retorts, queer, twisted
-apparatus, powerful electric appliances, and this row of
-men answering to their names whilst he checked each
-from his list.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;James Mallaby.&rdquo; He called the name and glanced
-from the man who answered it to the paper in his hand.
-A small photograph was followed by a description: &ldquo;5
-feet 7 inches, grey eyes, mole on chin, fair complexion,
-sandy hair.&rdquo; All correct. He passed to the next.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jacob Moss&mdash;5 feet 5 inches, dark complexion,
-black hair and eyes, no marks....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;George Patterson&mdash;5 feet 10 inches, sallow complexion,
-brown hair and beard, grey on temples, grey
-eyes, scar....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man who answered to the name of George
-Patterson stepped forward. He had the air of being
-taller than his scheduled height. His beard and hair
-were unkempt, and the scar set down against him
-was a red seam that ran from the left temple to the
-chin, where it lost itself in grizzled hair. He stooped,
-and walked with a dragging step.</p>
-<p>Henry, who for the moment was speaking to Sir
-William, looked at him casually enough. He opened
-his list, and in turning the page, the papers slipped
-from his hand and fell. George Patterson picked them
-up. Henry went on to the next name.</p>
-<p>Jane had keyed herself up to meeting him at teatime,
-but neither Henry nor Sir William appeared.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_79">79</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Captain March is an extremely conscientious
-person,&rdquo; said Lady Heritage. It was not a trait which
-appeared to commend itself to her. &ldquo;I should think
-he must have interviewed the very black-beetles by
-now. Have you been passed, Jeffrey?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Mr. Ember, &ldquo;but it hasn&rsquo;t
-taken away my appetite for tea.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In fact it had not. It was Raymond who ate
-nothing.</p>
-<p>Jane and Henry did not meet until dinner-time. As
-she dressed, Jane kept looking at herself in the glass.
-She was pale, and she must not look pale. She took a
-towel and rubbed her cheeks&mdash;that was better. Then
-a little later, when she looked again, her eyes were far
-too bright, her face unnaturally flushed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;As if any one was going to look at you at all&mdash;idiot!&rdquo;
-she said.</p>
-<p>After this she kept her back to the mirror.</p>
-<p>In all the books that she had ever read the secretary
-or companion invariably wore a dinner dress of black
-silk made, preferably, out of one which had belonged to
-a grandmother or some even more remote relative.
-In this garb she outshone all the other women and
-annexed the affections of at least two of the most
-eligible men.</p>
-<p>Renata did not possess a black silk gown.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank goodness, for I should look perfectly awful
-in it,&rdquo; was Jane&rsquo;s thought.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_80">80</div>
-<p>With almost equal distaste she viewed the white
-muslin sacred to prize-givings and school concerts.
-Attired in this garment Renata had played the
-&ldquo;Sonata Path&eacute;tique&rdquo; amidst the applause of boarders
-and parents. With this pale blue sash about her
-waist she had recited &ldquo;How they brought the Good
-News from Ghent to Aix.&rdquo; Jane tied it in a vicious
-knot. Her only comfort as she went downstairs was
-that it was impossible to look more like a schoolgirl
-and less like a conspirator.</p>
-<p>Sir William and Henry were in the hall&mdash;Mr. Ember
-too, close to the fire as usual.</p>
-<p>Sir William jerked his head in Jane&rsquo;s direction and
-grunted, &ldquo;Miss Molloy, my daughter&rsquo;s secretary.&rdquo;
-Henry bowed. Jane inclined her head.</p>
-<p>Next moment they all turned to watch Raymond
-Heritage come down the stair.</p>
-<p>She wore black velvet. Her neck and arms were
-bare. A long rope of pearls fell to her knee.</p>
-<p>Jane wondered whether the world held another
-woman so beautiful, then looked quickly at Henry,
-and the same thought was visible upon Henry&rsquo;s
-face.</p>
-<p>Dinner was not a cheerful meal. Lady Heritage
-hardly opened her lips. Sir William sat hunched forward
-over the table; when addressed, the remark
-had to be repeated before he answered; he drank a
-good deal.</p>
-<p>Jane considered that a modest silence became her,
-and the conversation was sustained with some effect
-of strain by Captain March and Mr. Ember. They
-talked fitfully of politics, musical comedy, the weather,
-and the American Exchange.</p>
-<p>It was a relief, to Jane at least, when she and Lady
-Heritage found their way to the drawing-room.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_81">81</div>
-<p>Henry wondered at their using this large, formal
-room for so small a party. His aunt, he remembered,
-had kept it shut up for the most part. The sense of
-space was, however, grateful to Jane. The small
-circle of candlelight in the dining-room had seemed
-to shut them in, forcing an intimacy for which no one
-of them was prepared.</p>
-<p>The Yellow Drawing-Room was a very stately apartment.
-The walls were hung with a Chinese damask
-which a hundred years had not robbed of its imperial
-colour. Beneath their pagoda-patterned blue linen
-covers Jane knew that the chairs and sofas wore a
-stiff yellow satin like a secret pride. Electric candles
-in elaborate sconces threw a cold, steady light upon
-the scene.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage sat by the fire, the <i>Revue des Deux
-Mondes</i> in her hand. Her eyes were on the page and
-never left it, but she was not reading. In fifteen
-minutes her glance had not shifted, and the page remained
-unturned.</p>
-<p>Then the door opened, and the two younger men
-came in. Lady Heritage looked up for a moment,
-and then went back to her <i>Revue</i>. She made no
-attempt to entertain Captain March, who, for his part,
-showed some desire to be entertained.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are using the big rooms, I see. Aunt Mary
-always said they were too cold. You remember she
-always sat in the Blue Parlour, or the little oak room
-at the head of the stair.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Raymond&rsquo;s lip lifted slightly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid the Blue Parlour would not be very
-comfortable now,&rdquo; she said without looking up.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
-<p>Henry possessed a persevering nature. He produced,
-in rapid succession, a remark about the weather,
-an inquiry as to the productiveness of the kitchen
-garden, and a comment upon the pleasant warmth of
-the log fire. The first and last of these efforts elicited
-no reply at all. To the question about the garden
-produce Lady Heritage answered that she had no
-idea.</p>
-<p>Mr. Ember&rsquo;s habitual expression of cynicism became
-a trifle more marked.</p>
-<p>Jane had the feeling that the pressure in the atmosphere
-was steadily on the increase.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you sing something, Raymond,&rdquo; said Henry.
-His pleasant ease of manner appeared quite impervious
-to snubs.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage closed the <i>Revue des Deux Mondes</i>
-and, for the first time, looked full at Captain March.
-If he was startled by the furious resentment of that
-gaze he did not show it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And what do you expect me to sing, Henry?&rdquo;
-she said&mdash;&ldquo;the latest out of the <i>Jazz Girls</i>?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mind; whatever you like, but do sing,
-won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Raymond got up with an abrupt movement. Walking
-to one of the long windows which opened upon the
-terrace, she drew the heavy yellow brocade curtain
-back with a jerk. Beyond the glass the terrace lay in
-deepest shadow, but moonlight touched the sea. She
-bent, drew the bolt, and opened half the door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The room is stifling,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Jeffrey, it&rsquo;s
-your fault they pile the fire up so. I wish you&rsquo;d sometimes
-look at a calendar and realise that this is April,
-not January.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then, turning, she crossed to the piano.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If I sing, it will be to please myself, and I shall
-probably not please any one else.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_83">83</div>
-<p>Ember came forward and opened the piano. He
-bent as he did so, and said a few words very low. She
-answered him.</p>
-<p>Henry, left by the fireside with Jane, leaned forward
-conversationally, the last <i>Punch</i> in his hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is a good cartoon,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Have you seen
-it, Miss Molloy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And as she bent to look at the page, he added
-in that low, effaced tone which does not carry a
-yard:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which room have they given you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I like the line,&rdquo; said Jane in her clear voice, &ldquo;and
-that very black shadow.&rdquo; Then, in an almost soundless
-breath&mdash;&ldquo;The end room, south wing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t go to bed,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;Wonderful
-how they keep it up, week after week. I mean to
-say, it must put you off your stroke like anything,
-knowing you&rsquo;ve got to come right up to time like
-that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your department doesn&rsquo;t work by the calendar,
-then? You don&rsquo;t have to bother about results?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember strolled back to his favourite place by the
-fire as he spoke, and Lady Heritage broke into a resounding
-chord. She played what Henry afterwards
-described as &ldquo;an infernal pandemonium of a thing.&rdquo;
-It appeared to be in several keys at once, and marched
-from one riot of discord to another until it ended with
-a strident crash which set up a humming jangle of
-vibrations.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Like that, Henry?&rdquo; said Lady Heritage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Henry, monosyllabic in his turn.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_84">84</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No one ever likes to hear the truth,&rdquo; said Raymond.
-&ldquo;You all want something pleasant, something smooth,
-something like this&rdquo;&mdash;her fingers slipped into the
-&ldquo;Blue Danube&rdquo; waltz. She played it exquisitely,
-with a melting delicacy of touch and a beautiful sense
-of rhythm. After a dozen bars or so she stopped
-suddenly, leaned her elbow on the keyboard, and
-through the little clang of the impact said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s topping,&rdquo; said Henry. He looked across at
-her admiringly&mdash;the long sweep of the ebony piano,
-the white keyboard with the black notes standing
-clear, Raymond in her velvet and pearls, and behind
-her the imperial yellow of China.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Soothing syrup,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re not up to
-date, Henry, I&rsquo;m afraid. The moderns show us things
-as they are, and we don&rsquo;t like it, but the soothing
-syrups lose their power to soothe once you find out
-that they are just ... dope.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish you&rsquo;d sing,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>She looked across him at Ember, and an expression
-difficult to define hardened her face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This isn&rsquo;t modern, but will you like it?&rdquo; she
-said, and preluded. Then she began to sing in a
-deep mezzo:</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&ldquo;The Worldly Hope Men set their Hearts upon</p>
-<p class="t0">Turns Ashes&mdash;or it prospers; and anon,</p>
-<p class="t">Like Snow upon the Desert&rsquo;s dusty Face</p>
-<p class="t0">Lighting its little Hour or two&mdash;is gone.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">Here in this battered Caravanserai,</p>
-<p class="t0">Whose Portals are alternate Night and Day,</p>
-<p class="t">How Sultan after Sultan with his Pomp</p>
-<p class="t0">Abode his destined Hour, and went his Way.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_85">85</div>
-<p>The notes came heavy and tragic. In her voice
-there seemed to be gathered all the tragedy, all the
-emotion of human life. The sound fell almost to a
-whisper:</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&ldquo;The Worldly Hope Men set their Hearts upon</p>
-<p class="t0">Turns Ashes&mdash;or it prospers; and anon,</p>
-<p class="t">Like Snow upon the Desert&rsquo;s dusty Face</p>
-<p class="t0">Lighting its little Hour or two&mdash;is gone.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p>Suddenly the voice rose ringing like a trumpet, a
-great chord crashed out:</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&ldquo;Waste not your Hour!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p>The deep octaves followed. Then she passed into
-modulating phrases and began to sing again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Her voice is nearly as beautiful as she is,&rdquo; thought
-Jane, &ldquo;but somehow&mdash;she shakes one.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&ldquo;Ah Love, could you and I with Fate conspire</p>
-<p class="t0">To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,</p>
-<p class="t">Would we not shatter it to bits, and then</p>
-<p class="t0">Re-mould it nearer to the Heart&rsquo;s Desire?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p>With the last word she rose, turned from the piano
-and the room, and went out to the terrace.</p>
-<p>Henry got up, strolled casually across the room, and
-followed her. She was standing by the low parapet
-looking over the sea. The night was still, the scent of
-hyacinths was heavy on the air, but every now and then
-a breath&mdash;something not to be called a wind&mdash;came up
-from across the water and brought with it cold, and a
-tang of salt.</p>
-<p>The moon was still behind the house, but near to clearing
-it, and though they stood in the dusk, Henry could
-see Lady Heritage&rsquo;s features as though through a veil.</p>
-<p>Her icy mood was broken; the tears were rolling down
-her cheeks. She turned on him with a flame of anger.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_86">86</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why did you come? Why did you come? Do
-you know what Father said to me yesterday? I said
-I wouldn&rsquo;t have you here, and he said&mdash;he said, &lsquo;Good
-heaven! how can I keep the man away from what is
-practically his own house?&rsquo; Is it yours now?&mdash;have
-you come to see your property?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry looked at her gravely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, it is not mine yet,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I came for a
-very different reason, as I think you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you expected me to welcome you ... as if
-it wasn&rsquo;t enough to be here, to live here&mdash;without&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
-She broke off, gripping the rough stone of the parapet
-with both hands. &ldquo;You ask me why I don&rsquo;t use the
-Oak Room&mdash;do you forget how you and I and Tony
-used to roast chestnuts there, and tell ghost stories&mdash;till
-we were afraid to go to bed? If there were no worse
-ghosts than those.... Do you know, every time you
-come into the room I expect to see Anthony behind
-you, and when you speak I catch myself listening for
-his voice?... Do you still wonder why I don&rsquo;t use
-the Oak Room? What are men made of?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;Did I hurt you,
-Raymond? I&rsquo;m sorry if I did, but it wasn&rsquo;t meant.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She sank down upon the parapet. All the vehemence
-went out of her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; she said in a whispering voice&mdash;&ldquo;you
-see, I can&rsquo;t forget. God knows how hard I&rsquo;ve tried.
-Every one else has forgotten, but I can&rsquo;t forget. If I
-could, I should sleep&mdash;but I can&rsquo;t. Henry, have you
-ever tried very hard to forget anything?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will you tell me what it was?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_87">87</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh well, it doesn&rsquo;t matter, and if you really understand,
-you know that the more one tries the more
-vivid it all becomes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Tony?&rdquo; asked Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s Tony,&rdquo; said Raymond, in an odd voice&mdash;&ldquo;but
-it&rsquo;s not because he&rsquo;s dead&mdash;I don&rsquo;t want you to
-think that. I could have borne that; I could have
-borne anything if I could have seen him once again, or
-if he had known that I cared, but he went away in
-anger and he never knew.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Henry&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage looked away across the sea. The
-moonlight showed where the jagged line of rocks cut
-sharp through the sleeping water.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a verse in the Bible&mdash;do you ever read the
-Bible, Henry? I don&rsquo;t, but I remember this verse; one
-was taught it as a child. &lsquo;Let not the sun go down
-upon your wrath.&rsquo; I let the moon rise and go down
-on mine.&rdquo; She spoke very, very quietly. &ldquo;Anthony
-stood there, just by that urn. He said, &lsquo;You&rsquo;ll have
-all the rest of your life to be sorry in....&rsquo; That was
-the last thing he said to me. He never forgave, and he
-never wrote. I didn&rsquo;t think any man would let me go
-so easily, so I married John Heritage to show that I
-didn&rsquo;t care. And, whilst we were on our honeymoon,
-I saw Anthony&rsquo;s name in the list of missing. Now,
-do you wonder that I hate you for coming here, and
-for being alive, and taking Tony&rsquo;s place? And do you
-wonder that there are times when I hate everything so
-much that I&rsquo;d like well enough to see this whole sorry
-scheme shattered to bits&mdash;if it could be done?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_88">88</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not so keen on this shattering business,
-Raymond,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think there&rsquo;s
-been about enough of it? There are a lot of rotten
-things, and a lot of good things, and they&rsquo;re all mixed
-up. If you start shattering, the odds are you bring
-down everything together.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; said Raymond, just one word, cold and still.</p>
-<p>There was a little pause. Then she laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is Henry also among the preachers?&rdquo; she said
-mockingly. &ldquo;You should take Orders; a surplice
-would be becoming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry was annoyed to feel that he was flushing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shall I go on preaching?&rdquo; he said, and as he
-spoke, Mr. Ember came through the open glass door
-with a cloak over his arm.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am a relief expedition,&rdquo; he announced. &ldquo;You
-must be frozen. Never trust a moonlight night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He put the wrap about Raymond&rsquo;s shoulders, but
-she did not fasten it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m coming in,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>She and Ember passed into the lighted room.
-Henry stood still for a minute, listened acutely; then
-he followed them.</p>
-<p>There was a hedge of stiffly growing veronica bushes
-at the foot of the terrace wall. After Henry had gone
-in, the man called George Patterson came out from
-behind the bushes at the far end of the terrace. He
-walked slowly with a dragging step, keeping in the
-shadow of the house, and he made his way to the far
-end of the north wing.</p>
-<p>Inside the Yellow Drawing-Room Henry was bidding
-his hostess good-night, and announcing his intention
-of taking a moonlight stroll.</p>
-<p>Presently he emerged upon the terrace, descended
-the steps on the right, and made his way in the direction
-taken by George Patterson.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_89">89</div>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER IX</span></h2>
-<p>When Jane reached her own room, she stood
-a long time in front of the glass frowning
-at herself. It might be safe to look so exactly like
-a schoolgirl, but it was very, very humiliating. Henry
-had never glanced at her once. That, of course, was
-all in the line of safety too. Also, why should Henry
-look at her? Why should she wish him to do so?
-She was not in love with him; she had, in fact, refused
-him&mdash;could it be that there was a little balm in this
-thought? What did it matter to her how long he
-looked at Raymond Heritage?</p>
-<p>She took off the white muslin dress and put it
-away.</p>
-<p>The worst part of being Renata was, not the risk,
-but having to wear Renata&rsquo;s clothes. All the things
-were good, horribly good, and they were all quite
-extraordinarily dull. &ldquo;If your shoes want mending,
-and your things are threadbare, every one knows it&rsquo;s
-because you&rsquo;re poor, and not because you like being
-down at heel and out at elbows. But Renata&rsquo;s things
-must have cost quite a lot, and, of course, every one
-thinks they are my choice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>By some deflected line of reasoning &ldquo;every one&rdquo;
-meant Henry.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_90">90</div>
-<p>Jane folded up the pale blue sash and shut it sharply
-into a drawer. Then she put on Renata&rsquo;s dressing-gown.
-It was made of crimson flannel, very thick and
-soft, with scalloped edges to the collar and cuffs&mdash;&ldquo;exactly
-like one&rsquo;s grandmother&rsquo;s petticoat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She rumpled the bedclothes and disarranged the
-pillows. Then she put out the light, sat down on the
-window-seat, and waited.</p>
-<p>The blind was up; she had slipped behind the chintz
-curtains. The terrace lay beneath her, only half in
-shadow now. There was no sound in the house, no
-sound from the sea. The line of shadow moved backwards
-inch by inch.</p>
-<p>When Jane sat down to wait, she told herself that
-she would not listen and strain; she would just sit
-there quite peacefully, and if anything was going to
-happen&mdash;well, let it happen. But as she sat there, she
-became afraid against her will, aware once more of
-that sense of pressure which had come upon her in
-the drawing-room. It was as if something was
-steadily approaching not her alone, but all of them&mdash;as
-if their thoughts and actions were being, at one and
-the same time, dictated by an outside force and
-scrutinised&mdash;watched&mdash;spied upon.</p>
-<p>With all her might she resisted this sensation and
-the fear that it suggested. But, as the night passed to
-midnight and beyond, a strange feeling of being one
-watcher in a slumbering household detached itself
-from the general confusion, and she began to long with
-great intensity for something&mdash;anything&mdash;to happen.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_91">91</div>
-<p>Once something moved in the foot-wide strip of
-shadow against the house. Jane caught her breath
-and then saw that it was only a cat, a half-grown
-kitten rather, beloved of the cook. It came out
-into the moonlight and walked solemnly the entire
-length of the terrace with delicately taken steps and
-a high waving tail. It was as soundless and black as
-the shadow out of which it had come, and presently
-it was gone again, and second by second, minute by
-minute, slow, interminable, the night dropped away.
-In the hall a clock struck the quarters. The silence,
-shattered for a moment, closed again.</p>
-<p>When the rapping came, it brought the oddest sense
-of interruption. Jane sprang to her feet, stood for a
-moment catching at her self-control, and then went
-noiselessly to the door. She listened before opening
-it, and could hear nothing; and, as she listened, the
-knocking came again, but from behind her.</p>
-<p>Bewildered, she edged the door open and looked
-out. A shaded light burned far away to the left.
-The long, dim corridor was empty. She shut the door.</p>
-<p>Some one was knocking&mdash;somewhere&mdash;but where?</p>
-<p>She turned and stood facing the windows. Up in
-the far corner a large cupboard filled the angle and
-blunted it. Jane had hung her serge dress there hours
-and hours ago. The knocking seemed to come from
-the cupboard, just where the room was at its darkest
-because next the lighted window.</p>
-<p>Jane crossed the floor very slowly, put both hands
-on the cupboard doors, and flung them wide. For a
-moment everything was quite black, then, with a most
-unpleasant suddenness, a narrow white ray cut the
-dark, and Henry&rsquo;s voice said, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s only me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s hand went to her lips, pressing them firmly.
-She would not have admitted that this action alone
-saved her from screaming. After a moment she gave
-a little gasp, and located Henry, or rather Henry&rsquo;s
-head, which was almost under her feet.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_92">92</div>
-<p>In the cupboard floor there was a square black hole,
-and, just above floor-level, Henry&rsquo;s face looked up at
-her, tilted at an odd angle, whilst his one visible hand
-manipulated a small electric torch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait,&rdquo; said Jane, in a whisper.</p>
-<p>She went quickly to the door, locked it, removed the
-key, and put it in one of the dressing-table drawers.
-She did not know quite what made her do this, only
-suddenly when her eyes saw Henry, her mind had a
-vivid impression of that long corridor with its one
-faintly glimmering light.</p>
-<p>Then she sat down on the cupboard floor, close to
-Henry&rsquo;s head, and breathed out:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry!&mdash;how on earth?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry, who appeared to be standing upon a ladder
-or something equally vertical, came up a few steps, sat
-down on the edge of the hole, and switched off his torch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had to see you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;This was my room in
-the old days, and Tony and I found this passage. It
-leads down to another cupboard in the garden room
-where they keep the tennis and croquet gear. How
-are you?&mdash;all right?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, quite all right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s good. Now which of us is going to talk
-first?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think I had better,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;You see, I
-saw Renata, and she told me things, and I think, if you
-don&rsquo;t mind, Henry, that I had better tell you everything
-that she told me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, please.&rdquo; He hesitated. &ldquo;One minute, Jane,
-I just wanted to say, you don&rsquo;t mind talking to me like
-this, do you? I wouldn&rsquo;t have asked you to if there
-had been any other way&mdash;what I mean to say is....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_93">93</div>
-<p>Jane gave a very small laugh, which was instantly
-repressed. She reflected that it was pleasanter to
-suppress a laugh than a scream.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What you mean to say is, there aren&rsquo;t any
-chaperons in this scene. You needn&rsquo;t apologise,
-Henry. Sleuths never have chaperons&mdash;it&rsquo;s simply not
-done; and, anyhow, I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;d make a beautiful
-one. Shall I go on?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It may be doubted whether Henry really cared about
-being described as a chaperon. His tone was rather
-dry as he said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go on, please.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As for Jane, who had prodded him on purpose just
-to see if anything would happen, she certainly felt a
-slight disappointment accompanied by a sense of
-increased respect.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You saw Renata. What did she tell you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She told me what she overheard,&rdquo; said Jane,
-speaking slowly. &ldquo;Henry, if I tell you what it was,
-will you promise me not to let any one guess that you
-know? If they were certain that I knew, I shouldn&rsquo;t
-be alive to-morrow; and if they thought you knew the
-secret, you&rsquo;d never get back to London alive.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who is &lsquo;they,&rsquo; Jane?&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I want to tell you about Renata first. She really
-did walk in her sleep, you know. She must have waked
-when she opened the door. She said the first thing she
-knew was the cold feel of the hall linoleum under her
-feet. The door was open, and she was standing just on
-the threshold. There was a screen in front of her, and
-beyond the screen a man talking. She heard every
-word he said, and I am sure that what she repeated to
-me was just exactly what she heard. The first words
-that she caught were &lsquo;Formula &ldquo;A.&rdquo;&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_94">94</div>
-<p>Henry gave a violent start.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good Lord!&rdquo; he said under his breath. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
-sure?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Quite. Then he went on, and this is what he said:
-&lsquo;You all have Formula &ldquo;A.&rdquo; You will go to your
-posts and from your directions you will prepare what
-is needful according to that formula, carrying out to
-the last detail the cipher instructions which each of
-you has received. As soon as the experiments relating
-to Formula &ldquo;B&rdquo; are completed, you will receive a
-summons in code. You will then assemble at the
-rendezvous given, and Formula &ldquo;B,&rdquo; with all instructions
-for its employment, will be entrusted to you.
-With Formula &ldquo;A&rdquo; you have the key. When
-Formula &ldquo;B&rdquo; is also complete you will have the lock
-for that key to fit; then the treasures of the world are
-yours. The annihilation of civilisation and of the
-human race is within our grasp. When the key has
-turned in the lock we only shall be left, and....&rsquo;
-Just then, Renata said, some one else cried out, &lsquo;The
-door! The door!&rsquo; They pushed the screen away
-and pulled her in. She nearly fainted. When she
-revived a little, her father and Mr. Ember were trying
-to find out what she had heard. Fortunately for herself,
-she told me, at first it was all confusion. The only
-thing that stood out clearly was that shout at the end,
-but afterwards, when she was alone, it all came back.
-She said it was like a photographic plate developing,
-hazy at first, and then everything getting clearer and
-sharper until each detail came out. She repeated the
-whole thing as if it were a lesson.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;My head&rsquo;s going round. I
-want to sort things out.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_95">95</div>
-<p>Jane waited. She had been prepared for Henry to
-be impressed or incredulous. What took her by surprise
-was the puzzled note in his voice. &ldquo;Lord, what
-a mix-up!&rdquo; she heard him say.</p>
-<p>Then he addressed her again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you ever play &lsquo;Russian Scandal,&rsquo; Jane?&rdquo;
-he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, of course. But if you had heard Renata&mdash;the
-sort of queer mechanical way she spoke, exactly
-like a gramophone record&mdash;why, the words weren&rsquo;t
-words she&rsquo;d have used, and all that about Formula
-&lsquo;A&rsquo;&mdash;do you think that&rsquo;s the sort of thing that a
-schoolgirl makes up?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Henry unexpectedly. &ldquo;I think it is
-quite possible that she overheard something about
-Formula &lsquo;A,&rsquo; and I&rsquo;d give a good deal to know just
-what she did hear.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve told you what she heard,&rdquo; said Jane.
-&ldquo;Jimmy always said I had a photographic memory,
-and I said the whole thing over to myself until I
-had it by heart. You see, I didn&rsquo;t dare to write it
-down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can you say it again?&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to
-get it down in black and white, and have a look at it.
-At present it makes me feel giddy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t write it down,&rdquo; said Jane breathlessly.
-&ldquo;Oh, you mustn&rsquo;t, Henry! It&rsquo;s not safe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry turned on his torch, propped it against the
-wall, and produced a notebook and a pencil. The
-cold, narrow beam of light showed his knee, the white
-paper, a pencil with a silver ring, and Henry&rsquo;s large,
-brown hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He has a <i>horribly</i> determined hand,&rdquo; thought Jane.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_96">96</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Henry, &ldquo;will you start at the beginning
-and say it all over again, please?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane did so meekly, but her inward feelings were not
-meek. Once more she repeated, word for word, and
-sentence for sentence, the somewhat flamboyant speech
-of Number Four.</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s hand travelled backwards and forwards in
-the little lane of light, and, word for word, and sentence
-by sentence, he wrote it down. When he had
-finished, he read over what he had written. If he had
-not a photographic memory, he was, at any rate,
-aware that Jane in her repetition had not varied so
-much as a syllable from her first statement.</p>
-<p>He went on looking at what he had written. At
-last he said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane, I think I must tell you something in confidence.
-Sir William, as you know, is conducting
-important experiments for the Government. How
-important you may perhaps have gathered from the
-extraordinary precautions which are taken to prevent
-any leakage of information. These experiments have
-resulted in two valuable discoveries represented, for
-purposes of official correspondence, by the terms
-Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo; and Formula &lsquo;B.&rsquo; Within the last
-week we have had indisputable proof that Formula
-&lsquo;A&rsquo; has been offered to a foreign power. That is the
-reason for my presence here. Now these are facts.
-Let them sink into your mind, then read over what I
-have just taken down, and tell me how you square
-those facts with Renata&rsquo;s statement.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane picked up the notebook, stared at the written
-words, set Henry&rsquo;s facts in the forefront of her mind,
-and remarked candidly:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_97">97</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It does make your head go round rather, doesn&rsquo;t
-it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry assented. They both sat silent. Then Jane
-put down the notebook.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never mind about our heads going round,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;Let me go on and tell you the rest of it. It isn&rsquo;t only
-what Renata heard; it&rsquo;s the things that keep happening&mdash;little
-things in a way, but oh, Henry, sometimes I
-think they are more frightening just because they are
-little things. I mean, supposing you know you&rsquo;re
-going to be executed, you brace yourself up, and it&rsquo;s
-all in the day&rsquo;s work, but if you are out at a dinner-party
-and you suddenly find poison in the soup, or a
-bomb in the middle of the table decorations, it&rsquo;s ...
-well, it&rsquo;s unexpected&mdash;and, and <i>perfectly beastly</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s voice broke just for an instant.</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s hand came quickly through the torchlight,
-and rested on both hers. It was a satisfactorily large
-and heavy hand.</p>
-<p>She told him about her interview with Ember at the
-flat, and one by one she marshalled all the small happenings
-which had startled and alarmed her.</p>
-<p>Henry waited until she had quite finished. Then he
-said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This lip-reading&mdash;you know, my dear girl, it&rsquo;s a
-chancy sort of thing; it seems to me that there are
-unlimited possibilities of mistake.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Some people are much easier to read from than
-others. Lady Heritage is very easy. I&rsquo;m sure I was not
-mistaken; she was saying, &lsquo;If she overheard anything,
-would she have the intelligence to be dangerous?
-That is what I ask myself,&rsquo; and she said, &lsquo;Despise not
-thine enemy,&rsquo; and &lsquo;Anything but Formula &ldquo;A.&rdquo;&rsquo;
-Now Mr. Ember is very difficult. I can&rsquo;t really make
-him out at all. His lips don&rsquo;t move. It&rsquo;s no use
-not believing me, Henry. Look here, I&rsquo;ll show
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She caught up the little torch, and turned the light
-upon his face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say something,&rdquo; she commanded.</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s lips formed the words, &ldquo;Jane, I love you
-very much indeed&rdquo;&mdash;and Jane switched off the light.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry, you&rsquo;re a perfect beast! Play fair,&rdquo; she
-said, in a low, furious whisper.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sorry. Wasn&rsquo;t it all right? Try again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane allowed the ray to light up Henry&rsquo;s mouth and
-chin. The hand that held the torch was not quite
-steady. This may have been the result of anger&mdash;or
-of some other emotion. As a result the light wavered
-a good deal.</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s lips moved, and Jane read aloud, &ldquo;A sleuth
-should never lose its temper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s hand caught the little shaking one that held
-the torch, and gave it a great squeeze.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How frightfully clever you are, and&mdash;oh, Jane,
-what a goose!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But don&rsquo;t you see that, with Renata&rsquo;s story in
-your mind, you would be looking out for things?
-You couldn&rsquo;t help it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you think, then, of Lady Heritage saying
-that Mr. Ember&rsquo;s verdict was inclined to be &lsquo;Guilty,
-but recommended to mercy,&rsquo; whereas she said that she
-herself doubted the guilt, but that if she did not, she
-would have no mercy at all? Do you know, that
-frightened me almost more than anything. I don&rsquo;t
-know why. That wasn&rsquo;t lip-reading; I heard the
-words with my own ears.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_99">99</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;don&rsquo;t you see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He paused. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s get
-back to facts: Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo; has been stolen and
-offered for sale. Renata, undoubtedly, overheard
-something relating to Formula &lsquo;A.&rsquo; Now, supposing
-Mr. Molloy or one of his friends to be the person who
-is doing the deal, don&rsquo;t you see that the possibility
-of Renata having overheard something compromising
-would be sufficient to account for a good deal of
-alarm?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If Molloy and his friends had stolen Formula
-&lsquo;A&rsquo; and were trying to dispose of it, it would naturally
-be of the highest importance to them to find out how
-much Renata knew, and to take steps which would
-ensure her silence. They would almost certainly try
-and frighten her&mdash;that&rsquo;s how it seems to me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then where does Mr. Ember come in?&rdquo; said Jane.
-&ldquo;He was there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you sure?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Renata described him,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;She said he
-was the worst of them all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She knew him by name?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No. But ... but&rdquo;&mdash;a little chill breath of
-doubt played on Jane&rsquo;s certainty&mdash;&ldquo;she called him the
-man in the fur coat. The others spoke of him as
-Number Two.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you don&rsquo;t know that it was Ember?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>For a moment Jane felt that she was sure of nothing;
-then, with a swift revulsion, her old fears, suspicions,
-certainties, received vigorous reinforcement.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_100">100</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;listen. You&rsquo;re on the wrong
-scent&mdash;I know you are. I can&rsquo;t tell you how I know it,
-but I&rsquo;m quite, quite sure. If you were an anarchist,
-and wanted to produce some horrible thing that would
-smash civilisation into atoms, how would you set
-about it?&mdash;where would you go? Don&rsquo;t you see that
-the very safest place would be somewhere like this,
-somewhere where you could carry on your experiments
-under the cover of real experiments? It&rsquo;s like
-the caterpillars that pretend to be sticks&mdash;what do
-you call it?&mdash;protective mimicry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane!&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure that&rsquo;s what they have done. I&rsquo;m sure
-that there is something dreadful going on in this
-house. And if you can&rsquo;t square what Renata heard
-with what you know of Formula &lsquo;A,&rsquo; why, then I
-believe that there must be more than one Formula
-&lsquo;A.&rsquo; Don&rsquo;t you see how cunning it would be for them
-to take the name of a real Government invention to
-cover up whatever horrible thing it is that they are
-working at?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was a dead silence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Another Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo;?&rdquo; said Henry slowly. Then,
-with an abrupt change of manner:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Leave it&mdash;all of it&mdash;and tell me some things I want
-to know. Sir William, for instance&mdash;he was put out
-at my coming down, I know&mdash;but what is he like as a
-rule? He does not always drink as much as he did
-to-night, does he?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_101">101</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I think he does. Henry, I think he takes too
-much&mdash;I do, really; and he&rsquo;s frightfully irritable. But
-that&rsquo;s not what strikes me most. The thing I notice
-is that he doesn&rsquo;t seem to do any work. Mr. Ember
-is supposed to be his secretary, but he really does all
-his work with Lady Heritage. She goes on all the
-time. She spends hours in the laboratories. I believe
-she works there till ever so late, but Sir William just
-sticks in his study and broods. I thought how strange
-it was from the very first day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And Lady Heritage? Put all this mysterious
-business on one side and tell me what you make of
-her?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane hesitated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s&mdash;she&rsquo;s disturbing. I think she has too
-much of everything, and it seems to upset the balance
-of everything she touches. She&rsquo;s too beautiful for
-one thing, and she has too much intellect, and too
-much, far too much, emotion. I think she is dreadfully
-unhappy too, with the sort of unhappiness that makes
-you want to hurt somebody else. You know what
-she sang this evening. I think she really feels like
-that, and would like to smash&mdash;everything. That&rsquo;s
-why....&rdquo; Jane broke off suddenly; her voice dropped
-to the least possible thread, &ldquo;Oh, what&rsquo;s that&mdash;what&rsquo;s
-that?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As she spoke, her hand met Henry&rsquo;s on the switch of
-the torch. The light went out. Jane clung to one
-of the hard, strong fingers as she listened with all her
-ears. She heard a footstep, light and unmistakable,
-and it stopped upon the threshold.</p>
-<p>There were about twenty seconds of really terrifying
-silence, and then the handle of the door turned slowly.
-Jane heard the creak of the hinge, the minute rattle
-of the latch. Then the handle was released, but slowly
-and with the least possible noise. There was another
-silence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_102">102</div>
-<p>Jane pinched Henry as hard as she could, and though
-this, of course, relieved the strain she felt dreadfully
-afraid that she would scream unless something broke
-through this dreadful quiet.</p>
-<p>Something did break through it next moment, for
-there came a low knocking on the door, and with the
-first sound of that knocking Jane recovered herself.
-With an extraordinary quickness and lightness she was
-on her feet and out of the cupboard, the cupboard was
-shut, and Jane, her shoes noiselessly discarded, was
-sitting on the side of a rumpled bed, a fold of the sheet
-across her mouth, inquiring in sleepy, muffled accents:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it? Who&rsquo;s there?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The knocking had gone on steadily. Now it stopped,
-and a voice said, &ldquo;It is I, Lady Heritage. Open the
-door.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane threw back the bedclothes so as to cover the
-chair at the bed-foot&mdash;a chair upon which there should
-have been a neatly folded pile of clothes&mdash;pulled off
-her stockings, and took the key out of the dressing-table
-drawer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, what is it?&rdquo; she said, and fumbled at the lock.</p>
-<p>Next moment the door was open, and she saw Lady
-Heritage in her white linen overall and head-dress,
-the latter pushed back and showing her hair.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage saw a startled girl in a red flannel
-dressing-gown. Between the moonlight and the light
-from the passage there was a sort of dusk. Lady
-Heritage put her hand on the switch, but did not pull
-it down. Instead, she said quickly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I saw a light under the door. Are you ill?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane rubbed her eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A light?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>Raymond crossed the room quickly and felt each of
-the electric bulbs.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_103">103</div>
-<p>&ldquo;A light?&rdquo; said Jane again.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage went back to the door and turned
-all the lights on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you always lock yourself in?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;And
-why did you take the key out of the door?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was it wrong? They say that if you lock your
-door and put the key away, even if you walk in your
-sleep, you don&rsquo;t go out of the room. I shouldn&rsquo;t like
-to walk in my sleep in a big house like this, and perhaps
-wake up in a cellar or out on the terrace.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage did an odd thing. Something flashed
-across her face as Jane was speaking, and she put both
-hands on the girl&rsquo;s shoulders and pulled her round so
-that she faced the light.</p>
-<p>Jane met, for a moment, a most extraordinary look.
-It did not seem to go through her as Mr. Ember&rsquo;s
-scrutiny had done, but it shook her more. She looked
-down and said shakily:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it? Oh, please tell me if I have vexed
-you&mdash;oh, please....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage took her hands away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had forgotten you walked in your sleep,&rdquo; she
-said. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like locked doors as a rule, but I suppose
-you had better keep yours fastened. I shouldn&rsquo;t
-like you to walk into the sea and get drowned, or break
-your neck falling off the terrace. Get back to your
-bed. I&rsquo;m just going to mine. I&rsquo;ve been working late.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She went out, and it was a long, long time before
-Jane, who had heard the soft footfalls die away in the
-distance, dared open the door and take a hasty look
-along the corridor. It was quite empty.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_104">104</div>
-<p>After another pause she went to the cupboard door
-and opened it. The flooring stretched unbroken;
-there was no square hole, and no Henry. She sat down
-on the floor, hesitated, and then knocked lightly.</p>
-<p>Under her very hand a board rose with a little
-jerk&mdash;a line of light showed, and Henry&rsquo;s voice said
-softly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All clear?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, be quick, I daren&rsquo;t wait.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who was it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lady Heritage.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did she want?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. She said she saw a light. Henry,
-she frightens me, she really does.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The board rose a little higher.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A sleuth who gets frightened is no earthly&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
-said Henry firmly. &ldquo;Now look here, Jane, I can get
-you out of this quite easily if you want to come. You
-are the only person in the house whom I haven&rsquo;t interviewed.
-Mr. Ember said that of course I shouldn&rsquo;t
-want to see you, as you did not get here until after the
-leakage must have taken place. I made no comment
-at the time, but it is perfectly open to me to insist on
-seeing you, to say that I am not satisfied with the
-interview, and to take you back to London for further
-interrogation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry had opened the trap door about a foot. His
-face, lighted from below, looked very odd with the
-chin almost resting on a board at Jane&rsquo;s feet and the
-trap held up by one hand and only just clearing his
-hair. Jane would have wanted to laugh if his last
-suggestion had appalled her less.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_105">105</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, you mustn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;If you do that, it&rsquo;s
-all up. Mr. Ember would never, never, never, allow
-you to interview me. He&rsquo;d be afraid of what I might
-say, and he&rsquo;d find some awful way of keeping me quiet.
-As to letting me go off to London with you, well, if
-we started we&rsquo;d certainly never get there. And oh,
-Henry, please, please go away. I&rsquo;m sure they suspect
-something, and if she comes again, or if he comes&mdash;oh,
-Henry, do go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;Now, Jane, look here.
-I&rsquo;m off before breakfast, but I can make an excuse to
-come down at any time if you want me. If anything
-is going wrong, or you get frightened, or if you want
-to get out of it write for patterns of jumper wool to
-the Misses Kent, Hermione Street, South Kensington.
-It&rsquo;s a real wool shop and they&rsquo;ll send you real patterns,
-but Miss Kent will ring me up the minute she gets
-your letter. I&rsquo;ll come down straight away, and you
-look out for me here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you mean you&rsquo;ll come and stay? Won&rsquo;t they
-suspect something?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They won&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t ask me
-why, but send for me if you want me, and be very sure
-that I shall come. Got that address all right?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;ll be off.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, please go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As a preliminary to going, Henry came up a step
-higher, set the torch on the floor, and took Jane by
-the hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t get frightened, Jane,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I hate
-you to be frightened.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not, not really.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry came up another step; the trap now rested on
-his shoulders.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Henry, <i>please</i>....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_106">106</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going,&rdquo; said Henry. He continued to hold
-Jane&rsquo;s hand and appeared immovable. Jane could
-of course have taken her hand away and left the cupboard,
-but this did not occur to her till afterwards.</p>
-<p>Quite suddenly Henry kissed her wrist, and a piece
-of the red flannel cuff. The next minute he was really
-gone. Perhaps it had occurred to him that he was a
-chaperon.</p>
-<p>Jane lay awake for a long time.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_107">107</div>
-<h2 id="c10"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER X</span></h2>
-<p>Henry went away by an early train, and Jane
-came down to what, as a child, she had once
-described as a crumpled kind of day. She remembered
-&ldquo;darling Jimmy&rdquo; looking at her in a vague
-way, and saying in his gentle, cultivated voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Crumpled, my dear Jane? What do you mean
-by crumpled?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And Jane, frowning and direct:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I mean a thing that&rsquo;s got crumps in it, Jimmy
-darling,&rdquo; and when Mr. Carruthers did not appear to
-find this a sufficient explanation, she had burst into
-emphatic elucidation:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was cross, and Nurse was cross, and you were
-cross. Yes, you were, and I had only just opened
-the study door ever so little; and I didn&rsquo;t mean to
-upset the milk or to break the soap-dish; and oh,
-Jimmy, you must know what a crump is, and this
-day has been just chock-full of them. That&rsquo;s why I
-said it was crumpled.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The day of Henry&rsquo;s departure was undoubtedly a
-crumpled day. To start with, a letter from Mr.
-Molloy awaited Jane at the breakfast table. It
-began, &ldquo;My dear Renata,&rdquo; and was signed, &ldquo;Your
-affectionate father, Cornelius R. Molloy.&rdquo; Mr. Ember
-remarked at once upon the unusual circumstance of
-there being a letter for Miss Molloy, and Jane, acting
-on an impulse which she afterwards regretted, replied:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_108">108</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s from my father. Do you want to see what he
-says?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Jeffrey Ember. He glanced
-casually at the bald sentences in which Mr. Molloy
-hoped that his daughter was well, and expressed
-dislike of the climatic conditions which he had encountered
-on the voyage. His eyes rested for a moment
-upon the signature, and quite suddenly he cast a
-bombshell at Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What does the &lsquo;R&rsquo; stand for?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>Jane had the worst moment of panic with which
-her adventure had yet provided her. She was about
-to say that she did not know, and take the consequences,
-when Mr. Ember saved her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is it Renatus?&rdquo; he asked. Jane broke into
-voluble speech.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh no,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;my name has nothing to do
-with his. I was called Renata after an aunt, my
-mother&rsquo;s twin sister. They were exactly alike and
-devoted to each other, and I was called after my
-Aunt Renata, and her only daughter was called after
-my mother.&rdquo; Here Jane bit the tip of her tongue
-and stopped, but she had not stopped in time. Mr.
-Ember&rsquo;s eyes had left Molloy&rsquo;s signature and were
-fixed upon her face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And your mother&rsquo;s name?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane,&rdquo; faltered Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And are you and your cousin as much alike as
-your mothers were?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane stared at her plate. She stared so hard that
-the gilt rim seemed to detach itself and float like a
-nimbus above a half-finished slice of buttered toast.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_109">109</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t remember
-my mother, and I never saw my aunt.&rdquo;
-Once again she bit her tongue, and this time very hard
-indeed. She had been within an ace of saying, &ldquo;My
-Aunt Jane&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you have seen your cousin; by the way, what
-is her surname?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Smith&mdash;Jane Smith.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You have seen your cousin, Jane Smith? Are you
-alike?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have only seen her once.&rdquo; Jane grasped her
-courage, and looked straight at Mr. Ember. He either
-knew something, or this was just idle teasing. In
-either case being afraid would not serve her. A spice
-of humour might.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re frightfully interested in my aunts and
-cousins,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Do you want to find another
-secretary just like me for some one? But I&rsquo;m afraid
-my Cousin Jane isn&rsquo;t available. She&rsquo;s married to a
-man in Bolivia.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At this point Lady Heritage looked over the edge of
-<i>The Times</i> with a frown, and the conversation dropped.
-Jane finished her buttered toast, and admired herself
-because her hand did not shake.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_110">110</div>
-<p>Lady Heritage seemed to be in a frowning mood.
-This, it appeared, was not one of the days when she disappeared
-behind the steel grating with Ember, leaving
-Jane to pursue her appointed tasks in the library.
-Instead, there was a general sorting of correspondence
-and checking of work already done, with the result that
-Jane found herself being played upon, as it were, by a
-jet or spray of hot water. The temperature varied,
-but the spray was continuous. A letter to which Lady
-Heritage particularly wished to refer was not to be
-found, a package of papers wrongly addressed had
-come back through the Dead Letter Office, and an unanswered
-invitation was discovered in the &ldquo;Answered&rdquo;
-file. By three o&rsquo;clock that afternoon Jane had been
-made to feel that it was possible that the world might
-contain a person duller, more inept, and less competent
-than herself&mdash;possible, but not probable.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think you had better go for a walk, Miss
-Molloy,&rdquo; said Lady Heritage; &ldquo;perhaps some fresh
-air....&rdquo; She did not finish the sentence, and Jane, only
-too thankful to escape, made haste from the presence.</p>
-<p>Ember had been right when he said that the grounds
-were extensive.</p>
-<p>Jane skirted the house and made her way through a
-space of rather formally kept garden to where a gravel
-path followed the edge of the cliff. For a time it was
-bordered by veronica and fuchsia bushes, but after a
-while these ceased and left the bare down with its
-rather coarse grass, tiny growing plants, tangled
-brambles, and bright yellow clumps of gorse. The path
-went up and down. Sometimes it almost overhung the
-sea. Always a tall hedge of barbed wire straggled
-across the view and spoilt it.</p>
-<p>The fact that a powerful electric current ran through
-the wire and made it dangerous to touch added to the
-dislike with which she regarded it.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_111">111</div>
-<p>It was a grey afternoon with a whipping wind from
-the north-west that beat up little crests of foam on the
-lead-coloured waves and made Jane clutch at her hat
-every now and then. She thought it cold when she
-started, but by and by she began to enjoy the sense of
-motion, the wind&rsquo;s buffets, and the wide, clear outlook.
-At the farthest point of the headland she stopped,
-warm and glowing. The path ran out to the edge of
-the cliff. On the landward side the rock rose sharply,
-naked of grass, and heaped with rough boulders. A
-small cave or hollow ran inwards for perhaps four feet.
-In front of it, in fact almost within it, stood a stone
-bench pleasantly sheltered by the overhanging rock
-and curving sides of the hollow. Jane felt no need of
-shelter. Instead of sitting down, she climbed upon
-the back of the bench and, steadying herself against
-a rock, looked out over the wire and saw how the cliff
-fell away, sheer at first, and then in a series of jagged,
-tumbled steps until the rocks went down into the sea.</p>
-<p>After a time Jane scrambled down and was hesitating
-as to whether she would turn or not when a sound
-attracted her attention.</p>
-<p>The path ended by the stone bench, but there seemed
-to be quite a practicable grassy track beyond.</p>
-<p>The sound which Jane had heard was the sound
-made by a stone which has become displaced on a hillside.
-It must have been a very heavy stone. It fell
-with a muffled crash. Then came another sound
-which she could not place. She looked all round and
-could see nothing.</p>
-<p>Something frightened her.</p>
-<p>All at once she realised that she was a long way from
-the house and quite out of sight. Turning quickly, she
-began to walk back along the way that she had come,
-but she had not gone a dozen paces before she heard
-scrambling footsteps behind her. Looking over her
-shoulder, she saw the man George Patterson standing
-beside the stone seat which she had just left. He made
-some sort of beckoning sign with his hand and called
-out, but a puff of wind took away the words, and only a
-hoarse, and as she thought, threatening sound reached
-her ears.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
-<p>Without waiting to hear or see any more she began
-to run, and with the first flying step that she took there
-came upon her a blind, driving panic which sent her
-racing down the path as one races in a nightmare.</p>
-<p>George Patterson started in pursuit. He called
-again twice, and the sound of his voice was a whip to
-Jane&rsquo;s terror. After at the most a minute he gave up
-the chase, and Jane flew on, pursued by nothing worse
-than her own fear.</p>
-<p>Just by the first fuchsia bush she ran, blind and
-panting, into the very arms of Mr. Ember. The impact
-nearly knocked him down, and it may be considered as
-certain that he was very much taken aback.</p>
-<p>Jane came back to a knowledge of her whereabouts
-to find herself gripping Mr. Ember&rsquo;s arm and stammering
-out that something had frightened her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; inquired Ember.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;don&rsquo;t&mdash;know,&rdquo; said Jane, half sobbing, but
-already conscious that she did not desire to confide in
-Jeffrey Ember.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you <i>must</i> know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With a little gasp Jane let go, and wished ardently
-that her knees would stop shaking. Ember looked at
-her very curiously.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_113">113</div>
-<p>Jane had often wondered what his queer cold eyes
-reminded her of. Curiously enough, it was now, in
-the midst of her fright, that she knew. They were
-like pebbles&mdash;the greeny-grey ones which lie by the
-thousand on the seashore. As a rule they were dull
-and hard, just as the pebbles are dull and hard when
-they are dry. But sometimes when he was angry,
-when he cross-questioned you, or when he looked at
-Lady Heritage the dullness vanished and they looked
-as the pebbles look when some sudden wave has
-touched them. Jane did not know when she disliked
-them most.</p>
-<p>They brightened slowly now as they fixed themselves
-upon her, and Ember said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you know, I was hoping I might meet you.
-We haven&rsquo;t had a real talk since you came.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>Her manner conveyed no ardent desire for conversation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shall we walk a little?&rdquo; pursued her companion;
-&ldquo;the wind&rsquo;s cold for standing. I really do want to
-talk to you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane said nothing at all. If Ember wished to talk,
-let him talk. She was still shaky, and not at all in
-the mood for fencing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, how do you like being here? How do we
-strike you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember spoke quite casually, and Jane thought it
-was strange that he and Henry should both have asked
-her the same question. Her reply, however, differed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you? My dear Miss Renata, what a really
-extraordinary number of things you&mdash;don&rsquo;t know!
-You don&rsquo;t know what frightened you, and you don&rsquo;t
-know whether you like us or not.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s temper carried her away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, I do,&rdquo; she said viciously, and looked full
-at the bright pebble eyes.</p>
-<p>Ember laughed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you think of Lady Heritage? Wonderful,
-isn&rsquo;t she?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s the most beautiful
-person I&rsquo;ve ever seen. Too beautiful, don&rsquo;t you
-think?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>If she desired to interest Jeffrey Ember, it appeared
-that she had succeeded. His attention was certainly
-arrested.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why too beautiful?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane had an impulse towards frankness.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think she&rsquo;s too ... everything. She has so
-many gifts, it does not seem as if there could be scope
-for them all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember looked at Jane for a moment. Then he looked
-away. In that moment Jane saw something&mdash;she could
-not really tell what. The nearest that she could get to
-it was &ldquo;triumph.&rdquo; Yes, that was it, triumph.</p>
-<p>As he looked away he said, very low, &ldquo;She will have
-scope enough,&rdquo; and there was a little tingling silence.</p>
-<p>He broke it in an utterly unforeseen manner. With
-an abrupt change of voice he asked:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ever learn chemistry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jane, and then wondered whether she
-was telling the truth about Renata.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;M&mdash;know what a formula is?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane put a dash of ignorant conviction into her voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I think so&mdash;oh yes, of course.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, what is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She looked puzzled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s difficult to explain things, isn&rsquo;t it? Of course
-I know &lsquo;formulate,&rsquo; and er&mdash;&lsquo;formal.&rsquo; But it&rsquo;s&mdash;it&rsquo;s
-something learned, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_115">115</div>
-<p>Ember&rsquo;s sarcastic smile showed for a moment. With
-a horrid inward qualm Jane wondered whether she
-had overdone Renata&rsquo;s ignorance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A formula is a prescription,&rdquo; said Ember slowly.
-&ldquo;If you remember that, I think you&rsquo;ll find it all quite
-simple. So that Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo; is simply a prescription
-for making something up, labelled &lsquo;A&rsquo; for convenience&rsquo;
-sake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane let her eyes become quite round.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is it?&rdquo; she said in the blankest tone at her command.
-&ldquo;But ... but what is Formula &lsquo;A,&rsquo; Mr.
-Ember?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That, my dear Miss Renata, is what a good many
-people would like to know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Would they? Why?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They would. In fact, some of them&mdash;person or
-persons unknown&mdash;wanted to know so much that
-they have gone to the length of stealing Formula
-&lsquo;A.&rsquo; That, at least, is Captain March&rsquo;s opinion, and
-the reason for his visit here. So I should be careful,
-very careful indeed, about betraying any knowledge of
-Formula &lsquo;A.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane whisked round, stared blankly, and said in
-largest capitals:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;ME?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then, after a pause, she burst out laughing. &ldquo;What
-do you mean?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You either know, or you don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Jeffrey
-Ember. &ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t know, I&rsquo;m not going to tell
-you. If you do, I have just given you a warning. A
-very valuable Government secret has been stolen, and
-if Captain March were to suspect that you were in any
-way involved&mdash;well, I suppose ... I need not tell you
-that the consequences would be serious beyond words.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_116">116</div>
-<p>Jane gazed at him in a breathless delight which she
-hoped was not apparent. The day had been singularly
-lacking in pleasantness, but it was undoubtedly pleasing
-to receive a solemn warning of the dreadful fate
-that might overtake her if Henry should suspect that
-she knew anything about Formula &ldquo;A.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I haven&rsquo;t the slightest idea what Formula
-&lsquo;A&rsquo; can be,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It sounds frightfully exciting.
-Do tell me some more. Was it stolen? And how
-could anything be stolen here?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who frightened you?&rdquo; he said suddenly.</p>
-<p>Jane caught her breath.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was a stone,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know why
-it frightened me so. It fell over the edge of the cliff
-and gave me a horrid nightmare-ish sort of feeling. I
-started running and then I couldn&rsquo;t stop. It was
-frightfully stupid of me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They walked on a few paces. Then Ember said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Captain March will probably come down here
-again. I managed to save you from an interview
-with him this time, but if he comes again, and if he
-sees you, remember there is only one safe way for
-you&mdash;you know nothing, you never have known
-anything, as far as you are concerned there is nothing
-to know. You shouldn&rsquo;t find that difficult. You
-have quite a talent for not knowing things. Improve
-it.&rdquo; He paused, smiled slightly, and went on, &ldquo;You
-said just now that it was frightfully stupid of you
-to be frightened. Sometimes, Miss Renata, it is a
-great deal more stupid not to be frightened. Believe
-me, this is one of those times.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They walked home in silence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_117">117</div>
-<h2 id="c11"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XI</span></h2>
-<p>Whilst Jane was running away from fear,
-down the gravel path of the cliff&rsquo;s edge, Captain
-March was about midway through an interview
-with his chief.</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s chief was a large man who strongly resembled
-a clean and highly intelligent pig. A very little
-hair appeared to grow reluctantly on his head; his face
-was pink and clean-shaven. He had inherited the
-patronymic of Le Mesurier, his parents in his baptism
-had given him the romantic name of Julian, and a
-grateful Government had conferred upon him the honour
-of knighthood. It is, perhaps, unnecessary to add
-that, from the moment that he emerged from the
-nursery and set foot within the precincts of his first
-preparatory school, he had been known exclusively as
-&ldquo;Piggy.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_118">118</div>
-<p>There is a story of a d&eacute;butante who, at a large and
-formal dinner-party, was discovered during a sudden
-silence to be addressing him as Sir Piggott. The dinner-party
-waited breathlessly. Piggy smiled his benign
-smile and explained that it had not been his good fortune
-to be called after his aunt, Miss Piggott.... &ldquo;I
-expect you have heard of her? She left all her money
-to a home for cats, whereas, if my parents had done
-their duty and invited her to be my godmother, I
-should be paying at least twice as much income tax as
-I do now. Never undervalue your relations, my dear
-Miss Browne.&rdquo; The aunt was, of course, apocryphal;
-and after dinner each of the older ladies in turn took
-the d&eacute;butante aside, and told her so&mdash;as a kindness.
-To each of them she made the same reply, which was
-to the effect that &ldquo;Piggy&rdquo; was a darling. She married
-him two years later. But all this has nothing to do
-with Henry&rsquo;s interview with his chief.</p>
-<p>Sir Julian was speaking:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s very unsatisfactory. You say they have been
-complying with all the suggestions in the original
-Government instructions?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sir Julian frowned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s very unsatisfactory,&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;Sir
-William ... well, it&rsquo;s six months since I saw him, and
-he looked all right then.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He looks all right now,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;He is all
-right except on his own particular subject. He&rsquo;d
-discuss politics, unemployment, foreign affairs, or
-anything else, and you wouldn&rsquo;t notice anything, but
-the minute he comes to his own subject everything
-worries and irritates him. He&rsquo;s lost grip. As far as
-I can make out, he leaves everything to his daughter
-and the secretary. They are competent enough,
-but....&rdquo; Henry did not finish his sentence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah yes, the secretary,&rdquo; said Sir Julian. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s
-his name? Yes, Ember, Jeffrey Ember....&rdquo; He
-turned an indicator under his hand, and spoke rapidly
-into the telephone beside him. &ldquo;As soon as possible,&rdquo;
-he concluded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This girl now,&rdquo; he said, looking at Henry. &ldquo;I
-don&rsquo;t see how this statement of hers can be squared
-with any of the facts as we know them.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_119">119</div>
-<p>As he spoke he picked up the notes which Henry had
-taken in the dark cupboard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She made a suggestion herself,&rdquo; said Henry. He
-paused, and looked with a good deal of diffidence at
-Sir Julian.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is just within the bounds of possibility that the
-Government experiments are being used as a blind.
-That was her suggestion, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sir Julian was busily engaged in drawing on his
-blotting-paper. He drew in rapid succession cats with
-arched backs and bottle-brush tails, always beginning
-with the tail and finishing with the whiskers, three on
-each side. Henry rightly interpreted this as a sign that
-he was to continue.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The conversation which was overheard at Molloy&rsquo;s
-flat referred to a Formula &lsquo;A,&rsquo; which cannot possibly
-be the Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo; which we know. There may
-be a Formula &lsquo;A&rsquo; of which we know nothing, and it
-may constitute a grave danger. Ember&rdquo;&mdash;Henry
-paused&mdash;&ldquo;Ember is not only in a position of great
-responsibility with regard to our&mdash;the official Formula
-&lsquo;A,&rsquo; but he also appears to be mixed up with this other
-unofficial and possibly dangerous Formula &lsquo;A.&rsquo; The
-question, to my mind, is, &lsquo;What about Ember?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sir Julian continued to draw cats. Suddenly he
-looked up, and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How long has Patterson been there?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A fortnight,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;We recalled Jamieson,
-you remember, and sent him down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then, if there were unofficial experiments, they
-would be before his time?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_120">120</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Would it be possible&mdash;no, I&rsquo;ll put it another way.
-Officially Luttrell Marches is impregnable, but unofficially&mdash;come
-March, the place practically belongs
-to you&mdash;is there any way in which there might be
-coming and going that would defy detection? You
-see, your hypothesis demands either wholesale corruption
-of Government workmen, or the introduction of
-other experiments.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was a pause. Then Henry said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In confidence, sir, there <i>is</i> a way, but, to the best
-of my knowledge, it is known only to myself and one
-other person.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It might be discovered.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think so. It never has been.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I would suggest your ascertaining, in conjunction
-with the other person, whether there is any
-evidence to show that the secret has been discovered
-and the way made use of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The telephone bell rang. Sir Julian lifted the
-receiver and listened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said&mdash;&ldquo;yes.&rdquo; Then he began to take
-notes. &ldquo;Spell the name, please&mdash;yes. Nineteen
-hundred and five? Is that all? Thank you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He hung up the receiver, and turned to Henry.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_121">121</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Ember&rsquo;s dossier,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Not much in it at
-first sight. &lsquo;Born 1880. Son of Charles Ember,
-partner in Jarvis &amp; Ember&mdash;manufacturing chemists;
-firm liquidated in 1896. Education till then at
-Harrow, and subsequently at Heidelberg, where he
-took degrees in medicine and science. From 1905
-to 1912 at Chicago, U. S. A., as personal assistant to
-Eugene K. Blumfield of Nitrates Ltd. Engaged as
-secretary by Sir William Carr-Magnus during his
-American tour in autumn of 1912. Total exemption
-during War on Sir William&rsquo;s representations.&rsquo; &rsquo;M&mdash;blameless
-as a blancmange&mdash;at first sight. We
-wouldn&rsquo;t have him here at all if we hadn&rsquo;t been told
-to get the record of every one employed at Luttrell
-Marches. Well, March?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry looked up with his candid, diffident air.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Heidelberg&mdash;Chicago&mdash;nitrates,&rdquo; he said, with a
-little pause after each word. Then&mdash;&ldquo;I wonder if it
-was in Chicago that he met Molloy. Molloy was a
-leading light of the I. W. W. there in 1911.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Piggy looked up for a moment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;M, yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Did you get on to the subject
-of Molloy at all?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had to be very careful,&rdquo; said Henry, with a
-worried air. &ldquo;I was introduced to Miss Molloy, so I
-felt that it would look odd if I asked no questions. On
-the other hand, I was afraid of asking too many. You
-see, sir, if there&rsquo;s really some infernal, underground
-plot going on, with the general smash-up of civilisation
-as its object, that girl is in a most awfully dangerous
-position. I wish to Heaven she was out of it, but I&rsquo;m
-not at all sure that she isn&rsquo;t right when she says that
-the most dangerous thing of all would be for her to
-give the show away by bolting.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;M, yes,&rdquo; said Piggy. &ldquo;Your concern for the
-young lady&rsquo;s safety does you credit&mdash;attractive
-damsel in distress, eh? Nice, pretty young thing,
-and all that?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry blushed furiously, and said with some stiffness,
-&ldquo;As I told you, sir, we are old friends, and I
-think, it&rsquo;s natural&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_122">122</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Entirely, entirely.&rdquo; Piggy waved a large, fat
-hand with a pencil in it. &ldquo;But to get back to Ember&mdash;what
-did you ask him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I said I had known one or two Molloys, and
-asked whether Miss Molloy was the cricketer&rsquo;s daughter.
-Ember was quite forthcoming, rather too forthcoming,
-I thought. Said he&rsquo;d met Molloy in the States, and
-that he was a queer card, but good company. Explained
-how surprised he was when he ran into him at Victoria
-Station after not seeing him for years. Then, quite
-casually and naturally, gave me to understand that
-Molloy had put him up for a couple of nights. He
-really did it very well. Said the daughter was a nice
-little thing just from school, that he thought she would
-suit Lady Heritage, and how grateful Molloy was,
-as he was just off to the States, and didn&rsquo;t know what
-to do with the girl. The impression I got was that he
-was taking no chances&mdash;not leaving anything for me to
-find out afterwards.&rdquo; Henry hesitated for a moment,
-and then said, &ldquo;The thing that struck me most was
-this. I didn&rsquo;t ask to interview Miss Molloy because I
-didn&rsquo;t want to make her position more dangerous than
-it already is. That is to say, I assumed that there
-<i>was</i> danger, which really means assuming a criminal
-conspiracy. Now, if there were no danger and no
-criminal conspiracy, why on earth did every one make
-it so easy for me not to interview Miss Molloy? It
-seems a little thing, but it struck me&mdash;it struck me
-awfully, sir. You see, I took a roll-call of the employ&eacute;s
-first, and checked them by the official list. Then I
-went down to the stables with Sir William, and we
-went through all the outdoor servants. And I finished
-up in Sir William&rsquo;s study, where I saw the domestic
-staff&mdash;and Mr. Ember. From first to last, no one
-suggested that I should see Miss Molloy. In the end,
-I thought it would be too marked not to bring her in
-at all, so I said to Lady Heritage, &lsquo;What about your
-secretary?&rsquo; and she said, &lsquo;Why, she&rsquo;s only just come
-... you don&rsquo;t need to see her.&rsquo; I got nervous and
-left it at that. I think now that I ought to have seen
-her, with Lady Heritage and Ember in the room; then
-they couldn&rsquo;t have suspected her of telling me anything.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_123">123</div>
-<p>Piggy looked up from his cats, and looked down
-again. Very carefully he gave each cat a fourth
-whisker on the left-hand side. Then he fixed his
-small, light eyes on Henry and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>They?</i>&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="center"><span class="gs">* * * * * * * *</span></p>
-<p>At 9.30 that evening Sir Julian marked a place in
-his book with a massive thumb, glanced across the
-domestic hearth at his wife, and observed:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;M&rsquo; dear.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Le Mesurier raised her charming blue eyes
-from the child&rsquo;s frock which she was embroidering.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have news to break to you&mdash;news concerning the
-lad Henry. Prepare for a shock. He is another&rsquo;s.
-You have lost him, my poor Isobel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I never had him,&rdquo; said Isobel placidly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;His mamma thought you had. She did her very
-best to warn me. I rather think she considered that
-your young affections were also entangled. I said to
-her solemnly, &lsquo;My dear Mrs. March&mdash;I beg your
-pardon&mdash;my dear Mrs. <i>de Luttrelle</i> March&mdash;of course
-he is in love with Isobel. I expect young men to be in
-love with her. I am in love with her myself.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Piggy, you didn&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No, m&rsquo; dear, but I should have liked to. She is so
-very large and pink that the temptation to say it, and
-to watch the pink turn puce, was almost more than I
-could resist. But you have interrupted me. I was
-about to break to you a portentous fact. Our Henry
-is in love.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Piggy!&rdquo; said Isobel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; continued Henry&rsquo;s chief&mdash;&ldquo;Henry is undoubtedly
-for it. Another lost soul. It&rsquo;s always these
-promising lads that are snatched by the predatory sex.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Piggy&mdash;we&rsquo;re not&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;M&rsquo; dear, you <i>are</i>. It&rsquo;s axiomatic, beyond cavil or
-argument. Like the python in the natural history
-books, you fascinate us first, and then engulf us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Isobel allowed a fleeting smile to lift the corners of
-her very pretty mouth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Piggy, what a mouthful you would be!&rdquo; she
-murmured.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry,&rdquo; pursued Sir Julian&mdash;&ldquo;Henry is in the
-fascinated stage. He blushed one of the most modestly
-revealing blushes I have ever beheld. The whole
-story is of the most thrillingly romantic and intriguing
-nature, and I regret to say, m&rsquo; dear, that I cannot tell
-you a single word of it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Le Mesurier took up a blue silk thread.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Piggy!&rdquo; she said reproachfully.</p>
-<p>Sir Julian beamed upon her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My official duty forbids,&rdquo; he said, with great enjoyment.
-&ldquo;Dismiss the indecent curiosity which I see
-stamped upon your every feature. Upon Henry&rsquo;s
-affair my lips are sealed. I am a tomb. I merely wish
-to have a small bet with you as to whether Henry&rsquo;s
-mamma will queer his pitch or not.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_125">125</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But, Piggy darling, how can I lay odds if I don&rsquo;t
-know anything? Tell me, is she pretty?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Isobel, is that the spirit in which to approach this
-solemn subject? As an old married woman, you
-should ask, Is she virtuous? Is she thrifty? Is she
-worthy of Henry? And to all these questions I should
-make the same reply&mdash;I do not know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Isobel leaned forward, and still with that faint,
-delightful smile she pricked the back of Sir Julian&rsquo;s
-hand sharply with the point of her embroidery needle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The serpent&rsquo;s tooth!&rdquo; he said, and opened his
-book. &ldquo;Isobel, you interrupt my studies. I merely
-wish to commend three aspects of the case to your
-feminine intuition. First&mdash;Henry is in love; second&mdash;he
-has yet to reckon with his mamma; third&mdash;I may
-at any time ring you up and instruct you to prepare the
-guest chamber for Henry&rsquo;s girl.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Le Mesurier began to work a blue ribbon bow
-round the stalks of some pink and white daisies.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re rather a lamb, Piggy,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_126">126</div>
-<h2 id="c12"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XII</span></h2>
-<p>It was next morning, whilst Jane was sorting and
-arranging the papers for the library table, that she
-caught sight of Henry&rsquo;s first message. She very nearly
-missed it, for the fold of the paper cut right across
-the agony column, and what caught her eye was the
-one word that passed as a signature, &ldquo;Thursday.&rdquo; It
-startled her so much that she dropped the paper, and,
-in snatching at it, knocked over a pile of magazines.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage looked over her shoulder with a
-frown, tapped with her foot, and then went on with
-her writing in a silence that uttered more reproof
-than words could have done.</p>
-<p>Jane picked everything up as silently as possible.
-As she put the papers on the table, she laid <i>The Times</i>
-out flat, and, bending over it, read the message:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You will receive a letter from me. Trust the
-bearer. Thursday.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She put all the papers neatly in their places, and went
-to her writing-table with an intense longing to be alone,
-to be able to think what this might mean, and to wonder
-who&mdash;who would be the bearer of Henry&rsquo;s letter.
-She hoped ardently that Lady Heritage would have
-business in the laboratories, and whilst these thoughts,
-and hopes, and wonderings filled her mind, she had to
-write neat and legible replies to the apparently inexhaustible
-number of persons who desired Lady Heritage
-to open bazaars, speak at public meetings, subscribe to
-an indefinite number of charities, or contribute to the
-writer&rsquo;s support.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_127">127</div>
-<p>When, at last, she was alone in her own room, she
-was tingling with excitement. At any moment some
-one, some unknown friend and ally, might present
-himself. It was exciting, but, she thought, rather
-risky.</p>
-<p>For instance, supposing Henry&rsquo;s letter came, by any
-mischance, into the wrong hands&mdash;and letters were
-mislaid and stolen sometimes&mdash;what a perfectly dreadful
-chapter of misfortunes might ensue. She frowned,
-and decided that Henry had been rash.</p>
-<p>It was with a pleasant feeling of superiority that she
-put on her hat and went out into the garden to pick
-tulips.</p>
-<p>The weather had changed in the night, and it was
-hot and sunny, with the sudden dazzling heat of mid-April.
-In the walled garden the south border was full
-of violet-scented yellow tulips, each looking at this
-new hot sun with a jet-black eye. A sheet of forget-me-nots
-repeated the sheer blue of the sky.</p>
-<p>Jane picked an armful of tulips and a sheaf of
-leopard&rsquo;s bane. Strictly speaking, she should then have
-gone in to put the flowers in water for the adornment
-of the Yellow Drawing-Room. Instead, she made her
-way to the farthest corner of the garden and basked.</p>
-<p>At first she looked at the flowers, but after a while
-her eyelids fell.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_128">128</div>
-<p>Jane has never admitted that she went to sleep, but,
-if she was thinking with her eyes shut, her thoughts
-must have been of an extremely engrossing nature, for
-it is certain that she heard neither the opening nor the
-shutting of a door in the wall beside her. She did feel
-a shadow pass between herself and the sun, and opening
-her eyes quickly she saw standing beside her the
-very man from whom she had fled in terror yesterday.</p>
-<p>The sunlight fell from upon him, showing the shabby
-clothes, the tall, stooping figure, the grizzled beard,
-and that disfiguring scar.</p>
-<p>With a great start Jane attempted to rise, only to
-discover that a wheelbarrow may make a very comfortable
-chair, but that it is uncommonly difficult to get
-out of in a hurry. To her horror the man, George
-Patterson, took her firmly by the wrist and pulled her
-to her feet. She shrank intensely from his touch,
-received an impression of unusual strength, and then,
-to her overwhelming surprise, she heard him say in a
-low, well-bred voice, &ldquo;I have a letter for you, Miss
-Smith.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, hush!&rdquo; said Jane&mdash;&ldquo;oh, please, hush!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right, I won&rsquo;t do it again. Look here, I want
-to say a few words to you, but we had better not be
-seen together. Here&rsquo;s your letter. Stay where you
-are for five minutes, and then come down to the
-potting-shed. Don&rsquo;t come in; stay by the door and
-tie your shoe-lace.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He went off with his dragging step, and left Jane
-dumb. There was a folded note in her hand, and in
-her mind so intense a shock of surprise as to rob her
-very thoughts of expression.</p>
-<p>After what seemed like a long paralysed month, she
-opened the note which bore no address, and read,
-pencilled in Henry&rsquo;s clear and very ornamental hand,
-&ldquo;The bearer is trustworthy.&mdash;H. L. M.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_129">129</div>
-<p>When she had looked so long at Henry&rsquo;s initials
-that they had blurred and cleared again, not once but
-many times, she walked mechanically down the path
-until she came to the shed. Beside it was a barrel
-full of rain-water. Into this she dipped Henry&rsquo;s note,
-made sure that the words were totally illegible, poked
-a hole in the border, and covered the sodden paper
-with earth. Then at the potting-shed door she knelt
-and became occupied with her shoe-lace.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry saw me after he saw you,&rdquo; said George
-Patterson&rsquo;s voice. &ldquo;He thought it might be a comfort
-to you to know there is a friend on the spot; but
-I&rsquo;m afraid I gave you a fright yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You did,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t know why. I was
-a perfect fool, and I ran right into Mr. Ember&rsquo;s arms.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you tell him what frightened you?&rdquo; said
-Patterson quickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I wasn&rsquo;t quite such a fool as that. Please,
-who are you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My name here is George Patterson. I&rsquo;m a friend
-of Henry&rsquo;s. If you want me, I&rsquo;m here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If I want you,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;how am I to get at
-you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Patterson considered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a wide sill inside your window.&rdquo; (And
-how on earth do you know that? thought Jane.)
-&ldquo;If you put a big jar of, say, those yellow tulips there,
-I&rsquo;ll know you want to speak to me, and I&rsquo;ll come here
-to this potting-shed as soon as I can. You know
-they keep us pretty busy with roll-calls and things of
-that sort. I only got back yesterday by the skin of
-my teeth&mdash;I had to bolt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you&mdash;you didn&rsquo;t pass me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I didn&rsquo;t pass you.&rdquo; There was just a trace
-of amusement in Mr. Patterson&rsquo;s voice.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_130">130</div>
-<p>Jane pulled her shoe-lace undone, and began to tie
-it all over again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; she said very quick and low. &ldquo;Some one
-is coming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Just where the path ended, not half a dozen yards
-away, the red-brick wall was pierced by a door. Two
-round, Scotch rose-bushes, all tiny green leaf and
-sharp brown prickle, grew like large pin-cushions on
-either side of the interrupted border. Bright pink
-nectarine buds shone against the brick like coral studs.
-The ash-coloured door, rough and sun-blistered, was
-opening slowly, and into the garden came Raymond
-Heritage, pushing the door with one hand and holding
-a basket of bulbs in the other. She was looking back
-over her shoulder, at something or someone beside
-her.</p>
-<p>From inside the potting-shed came Patterson&rsquo;s voice&mdash;just
-a breath:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lady Heritage.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane was up as she spoke and moving away. She
-reached the door just as Raymond closed it and,
-turning, saw her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Miss Molloy&mdash;I was really looking for you.
-Is Garstin anywhere about?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t seen him,&rdquo; murmured Jane, as if the
-absent gardener might be blooming unnoticed in one
-of the borders.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_131">131</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not in the potting-shed? I&rsquo;ll just look in
-and see. I want to stand over him and see that he
-puts these black irises where I want them to go.
-They come from Palestine, and the last lot failed
-entirely because he was so obstinate. I&rsquo;ll get a trowel
-and mark the place I think.&rdquo; She moved forward as
-she spoke, and Jane, horror-struck, stammered:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let <i>me</i> look. It&rsquo;s so dusty in there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She was back at the door of the shed, but Lady
-Heritage was beside her. &ldquo;I want a trowel, too,&rdquo;
-she said, and Jane felt herself gently pushed over the
-threshold.</p>
-<p>They were both just inside the door. It seemed
-dark after the strong light outside. There was a row
-of windows along one side, and a broad deal shelf
-under them. There were piles and piles of pots and
-boxes. There were hanks of bass and rows of tools,
-There were watering-cans. There was a length of
-rubber hose. But there was no George Patterson.</p>
-<p>Jane put her hand behind her, gripped the jamb of
-the door, and moved back a pace so that she could
-lean against it. The pots, the tools, the bass and the
-rubber hose danced before her bewildered eyes.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage put her basket of bulbs down on the
-wide shelf and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Garstin ought to be here. He&rsquo;s really very tiresome.
-That&rsquo;s the worst of old servants. When a
-gardener has been in a place for forty years as Garstin
-has, he owns it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shall I find him?&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, not now. I really want to talk to you. I&rsquo;ve
-just been speaking to Jeffrey Ember, and he tells me
-you had a fright yesterday. What frightened you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing&mdash;my own silliness.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane felt as if she must scream. George Patterson
-had disappeared as if by a conjuring trick. Where
-had he gone to? Where was he? It was just like
-being in a dream.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_132">132</div>
-<p>Raymond Heritage seemed to tower before her in
-her white dress. Her uncovered head almost touched
-the low beam above the door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jeffrey said you were blind with fright&mdash;that you
-ran right into him. He said you were as white as a
-sheet and shaking all over. I want to know what
-frightened you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A stone&mdash;it fell into the sea&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What made it fall? A man? What man?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane leaned against the door-post, her breath coming
-and going, her eyes held by those imperious eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A stone,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;it fell&mdash;I ran away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Molloy,&rdquo; said Lady Heritage, &ldquo;you walked
-to the end of the headland, out of sight of the house.
-Whilst you were there something gave you a serious
-fright. Something&mdash;or somebody. This is all nonsense
-about a stone. Whom did you see on the headland,
-for you certainly saw somebody? No, don&rsquo;t look
-away; I want you to look at me, please.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know why I was so frightened,&rdquo; said Jane.
-&ldquo;It just came over me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage looked at her very gravely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you saw any stranger on the headland, it is your
-absolute duty to tell me. Where secrets of such value
-are in question it is necessary to watch every avenue
-and to neglect no suspicious circumstance. If you are
-trying to screen any one, you are acting very foolishly&mdash;very
-foolishly indeed. I warn you, and I ask you
-again. What frightened you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Jane in a little whispering
-voice. &ldquo;Why, why do you think there was any one?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_133">133</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think,&rdquo; said Lady Heritage briefly. &ldquo;I
-know. Mr. Ember went up to the headland after he
-left you, and there were footmarks in the gravel. Some
-man had undoubtedly been there, and you must have
-seen him. Mr. Ember made the entire round and saw
-no one, but some one had been there. <i>Now</i> will you
-tell me what you saw?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Jane. Rather to her own astonishment
-she began to cry. &ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s why I was frightened
-then! The stone fell so suddenly, and I didn&rsquo;t know
-why&mdash;why&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The sobs choked her.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage stood looking at her for a moment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you just an arrant little fool,&rdquo; she said in a low
-voice, &ldquo;or....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m not!&rdquo; sobbed Jane. &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ve never been
-called such a thing before! I know I&rsquo;m not clever, but
-I don&rsquo;t think you ought to call me a f&mdash;f&mdash;fool.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage pressed her lips together, and walked
-past Jane and out into the sunshine. She stood there
-for a moment tapping with her foot. Then she called
-rather impatiently:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Molloy! Dry your eyes and come here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane came, squeezing a damp handkerchief into a
-ball.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bring your flowers in; I see you&rsquo;ve left them over
-there to die in the sun. I&rsquo;m driving into Withstead
-this afternoon and you can come with me. I have to
-see Mrs. Cottingham about some University extension
-lectures, and she telephoned just now to say would I
-bring you. She has a girl staying with her who thinks
-she must have been at school with you or one of your
-cousins. Her name is Daphne Todhunter.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_134">134</div>
-<p>Jane stood perfectly still. Daphne Todhunter?
-Arnold Todhunter&rsquo;s sister Daphne! Renata&rsquo;s friend!
-But Daphne must know that Arnold was married?
-The question was&mdash;whom <i>had</i> Arnold married. Had
-his family welcomed (by letter) Jane Smith or Renata
-Molloy to its bosom? If Renata Molloy, how in the
-world was a second Renata to be explained to Miss
-Daphne Todhunter?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Molloy, what&rsquo;s the matter with you?&rdquo; said
-Lady Heritage.</p>
-<p>Jane could not think quickly enough. Supposing
-Lady Heritage went to Mrs. Cottingham&rsquo;s without her;
-and supposing Daphne Todhunter were to say that her
-brother Arnold had married a girl called Renata
-Molloy?</p>
-<p>It was too much to hope that Arnold had carried
-discretion to the point of telling his own family that
-he had married an unknown Jane Smith.</p>
-<p>Jane suddenly threw up her chin and squared her
-shoulders. The colour came back into her cheeks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; she said, with a little caught breath.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry I was so silly, and for crying, and if I was
-rude to you. It&rsquo;s most awfully kind of you to take
-me into Withstead.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>If there were any music to be faced, Jane was going
-to face it. At least the tune should not be called
-behind her back.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_135">135</div>
-<h2 id="c13"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XIII</span></h2>
-<p>A feeling of exhilaration amounting to recklessness
-possessed Jane as she put on the white
-serge coat and skirt sacred to the Sabbath crocodile.
-Attired in it Renata, side by side with Daphne Todhunter,
-had, doubtless, walked many a time to church
-and back. In front of her two white serge backs, behind
-her more white serge, and more, and more, and
-more. Jane&rsquo;s head reeled. She detested this garment,
-but considered it appropriate to the occasion.</p>
-<p>They drove into Withstead across the marshes.
-The sun blazed, and all the tiny marsh plants seemed
-to be growing and stretching themselves.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Cottingham lived in a villa on the outskirts of
-the town, and was ashamed of it. She had married
-kind little Dr. Cottingham, but imagined that she had
-condescended in doing so. Her reasons for thinking
-this were not apparent.</p>
-<p>Jane followed Lady Heritage into the dark, rather
-stuffy drawing-room, and beheld a middle-aged woman
-with a rigidly controlled Victorian figure, a tightly
-netted grey fringe, and a brown satin dress with a good
-many little gold beads upon it. She had a breathless
-sense of the extraordinary way in which the room was
-overcrowded. Every inch of the walls was covered
-with photographs, fans, engravings, and china plates.
-Almost every inch of floor space was covered with small
-ornamental tables crowded with knick-knacks. There
-was a carved screen, and an ebonised overmantel with
-looking-glass panels. There was a Japanese umbrella
-in the fireplace.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_136">136</div>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s eyes looked hastily into every corner. There
-were more things than she had ever seen in one room
-before, but there was no Daphne Todhunter. Mrs.
-Cottingham was shaking hands with her. She had a
-fat hand and squeezed you.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And are you Daphne&rsquo;s Miss Molloy?&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;She was <i>wildly</i> excited at the prospect of meeting
-you, and I said at once, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll just ring up Luttrell
-Marches, and ask Lady Heritage to bring her here this
-afternoon.&rsquo; I thought I <i>might</i> do that. You see, I
-only happened to mention your name this morning,
-and Daphne was so <i>excited</i>, and she goes away tomorrow,
-so it was the only chance. So I thought I
-would just ring up and ask Lady Heritage to bring
-you. I said to Daphne at once, &lsquo;Lady Heritage is
-so kind, I&rsquo;m sure she will bring Miss Molloy.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane saw Lady Heritage&rsquo;s eyebrows rise very
-slightly. She moved a step, and instantly Mrs. Cottingham
-had turned from Jane:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why Lady Heritage, you&rsquo;re standing! Now I
-always say <i>this</i> is the most comfortable chair.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Her voice went flowing on, but Jane suddenly
-ceased to hear a word she said, for a door at the far
-end of the room was flung open. On the threshold
-appeared Miss Daphne Todhunter.</p>
-<p>In common with most other Daphnes, Cynthias and
-Ianthes, she was short and rather heavily built. Her
-brown hair was untidy. She wore the twin coat and
-skirt to that which was adorning Jane.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_137">137</div>
-<p>With an exclamation of rapture, she rushed across
-the room, dislodging a book from one little table and
-an ash-tray from another.</p>
-<p>(&ldquo;Her eyes are exactly like gooseberries which have
-been boiled until they are brown,&rdquo; thought Jane, &ldquo;and
-I <i>know</i> she&rsquo;s going to kiss me.&rdquo;)</p>
-<p>She not only kissed Jane, she hugged her. Two
-stout arms and a waft of white rose scent enveloped
-Jane&rsquo;s shrinking form.</p>
-<p>After a moment in which she wondered how long this
-embrace would last, Jane managed to detach herself.
-Mrs. Cottingham&rsquo;s voice fell gratefully upon her ears:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Daphne, Daphne, my dear, come and speak to
-Lady Heritage.&mdash;She&rsquo;s wildly excited, as I told you&mdash;the
-natural enthusiasms of youth, dear Lady Heritage,
-so beautiful, so quickly lost; I&rsquo;m sure you agree with
-me.&mdash;Daphne, Daphne, my dear.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Daphne came reluctantly and thrust a large hand
-at Lady Heritage without looking at her. Raymond
-looked at it for a moment, and, after a perceptible
-pause, just touched the finger-tips. Mrs. Cottingham
-never stopped talking.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So it <i>is</i> your friend, and you&rsquo;re just too excited
-for words. Take her away and have a good gossip.
-Lady Heritage and I have a great deal to talk about.&mdash;You
-were saying....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was saying,&rdquo; said Lady Heritage wearily, &ldquo;that
-you must write at once if you want Masterson to
-lecture for you next winter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Daphne dragged Jane to the far end of the room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Renata, how perfectly delicious! But how did
-you come here? And what are you doing, and where&rsquo;s
-Arnold, and why aren&rsquo;t you with him?&rdquo; She made a
-pounce at Jane&rsquo;s left hand, and felt the third finger.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_138">138</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, where&rsquo;s your ring?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>They reached a sofa and sank upon it. Immediately
-in front of them was an octagonal table of
-light-coloured wood profusely carved. Upon it,
-amongst lesser portraits, stood a tall photograph of
-Mrs. Cottingham in a train, and feathers, and a tiara.
-The sofa was low, and Jane felt that fate had been
-kinder than she deserved.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Renata, aren&rsquo;t you married?&rdquo; breathed
-Daphne.</p>
-<p>She breathed very hard, and Jane was reminded of
-Arnold on the fire-escape.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Renata, tell me! When she ... Mrs.
-Cottingham said, &lsquo;Miss Renata Molloy,&rsquo; I nearly died.
-I said, &lsquo;Miss Molloy?&rsquo; And she said, &lsquo;Yes, Miss
-Renata Molloy,&rsquo; and oh, I very nearly let the cat out
-of the bag.&rdquo; She grasped Jane&rsquo;s hand and pressed it
-violently. &ldquo;But I didn&rsquo;t. Arnold told me not to,
-and I didn&rsquo;t, but, of course, I&rsquo;m simply <i>dying</i> to know
-all about everything. Now, darling, tell me ...
-tell me everything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Never in her life had Jane felt so much aloof from
-any human creature. There was something so inexpressibly
-comic in the idea of pouring out her heart
-to Daphne Todhunter that she did not even feel
-nervous, only aloof&mdash;aloof, and cool. She looked
-earnestly at Daphne, and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did Arnold tell you?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_139">139</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It was the greatest shock,&rdquo; said Daphne, &ldquo;and
-such a surprise. One minute there he was, moving
-about at home, and not knowing when he would get
-a job, and perfectly distracted with hopelessness about
-you; and the next he rushed down to say good-bye
-because he was going to Bolivia, and his heart was
-broken because you wouldn&rsquo;t go too....&rdquo; She
-stopped for breath, and squeezed Jane&rsquo;s hand even
-harder than before. &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; she continued,
-&ldquo;you can imagine what a shock it was to get the
-letter-card.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;it must have been. What did
-it say?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Daphne opened her eyes and her mouth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t he show it to you? How perfectly extraordinary
-of him!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, he didn&rsquo;t&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;What did he
-say?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know it by heart,&rdquo; said Daphne ardently. &ldquo;I
-could repeat every word.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, for goodness&rsquo; sake do!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Renata! How odd you are, not a bit like yourself!&rdquo;
-Fear stabbed Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me what he said&mdash;tell me what he said,&rdquo; she
-repeated.</p>
-<p>With an effort she pressed the hand that was
-squeezing hers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What, Arnold, in the letter-card? But I think it
-was just too weird of him not to have shown it to you&mdash;too
-extraordinary.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane felt that she was becoming dazed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know it all by heart. I could say it in my sleep.
-He said, &lsquo;Just off; we sail together. We were married
-this morning, and I&rsquo;m the happiest man in the world.
-Don&rsquo;t tell any one at present. If you love me, not a
-word to a soul. Will write from Bolivia.&mdash;<span class="sc">Arnold.</span>
-<span class="pb" id="Page_140">140</span>
-P. S.&mdash;On no account tell Aunt Ethel.&rsquo; So you see why
-I nearly died when she said Miss Renata Molloy, for
-of course I thought you were in Bolivia with Arnold,
-and oh, Renata, where is he and what has happened?
-Tell me everything?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She flung her arms about Jane&rsquo;s neck as she spoke
-and gave her a long, clinging kiss. Jane endured it
-under pressure of that, &ldquo;You are not a bit like yourself.&rdquo;
-When she had borne it for as long as she could,
-she drew back.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me&mdash;tell me the worst&mdash;tell me everything.
-Where is Arnold?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Arnold is in Bolivia,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And why aren&rsquo;t you with him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane produced a pocket-handkerchief. It was a
-very little one, but it sufficed. In her own mind Jane
-described it as local colour.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We have parted,&rdquo; she said, and dabbed her eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Renata! But you&rsquo;re married to him!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jane, quite truthfully.</p>
-<p>An inward thankfulness that she was not married to
-Arnold supported her.</p>
-<p>Daphne stared at her with bulging eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not! But he said, &lsquo;We were married this
-morning.&rsquo; I read it with my own eyes, and I could
-repeat it in my sleep. I know it by heart....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane checked her with a look that held so much
-mysterious meaning that the flood of words was
-actually stemmed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t marry <i>me</i>,&rdquo; said Jane, in a tense whisper.
-She looked straight into the boiled gooseberry eyes,
-and then covered her own.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_141">141</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t marry you?&rdquo; repeated Daphne, gasping.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jane, from behind the handkerchief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But he&rsquo;s married?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Y&mdash;yes,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Renata!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Miss Todhunter cast herself upon Jane&rsquo;s neck and
-burst into tears. The impact was considerable and
-her weight no light one.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Daphne, please&mdash;please&mdash;Lady Heritage is looking
-at us. Do sit up. I can&rsquo;t tell you anything if you cry.
-There&rsquo;s really nothing to cry about.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Daphne sat up again. She also produced a handkerchief,
-a very large one with &ldquo;Daphne&rdquo; embroidered
-across the corner in coral pink. A terrific blast of
-white rose emerged with the handkerchief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But he was so much in love with you,&rdquo; she wailed.
-&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand it. How <i>could</i> he marry any one
-else and break your heart!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My heart is not broken,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then it was your fault, and you&rsquo;ve broken his,
-and he&rsquo;s got married just to show he doesn&rsquo;t care,
-like people do in books. I don&rsquo;t believe you love him
-a bit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane looked modestly at the carpet, which was of a
-lively shade of crimson.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she said, in a very small
-voice.</p>
-<p>An unbecoming flush mounted to Daphne&rsquo;s cheeks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how you&rsquo;ve got the face,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>Much to Jane&rsquo;s relief, she withdrew from her to the
-farthest corner of the sofa, and then glared.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_142">142</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor Arnold! Aunt Ethel always did say you
-were sly. She always said she wouldn&rsquo;t trust you a
-yard.&rdquo; She paused, sniffed, and then added, in what
-was meant for a tone of great dignity:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And please, whom <i>has</i> Arnold married?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Her&mdash;her name is Jane, I believe,&rdquo; said Jane, with
-a tremor.</p>
-<p>At this moment she became aware that Lady Heritage
-had risen to her feet. Mrs. Cottingham&rsquo;s voice
-clamoured for attention.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lady Heritage, not without your tea! It
-won&rsquo;t be a moment. Indeed, I couldn&rsquo;t dream of
-letting you go like this. Just a cup of tea, you know,
-so refreshing. Indeed, it would distress me to think of
-your facing that long drive without your tea.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Raymond stood perfectly still, her face weary and
-unresponsive.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am afraid my time is not my own,&rdquo; she said, and
-crossed the room to where the two girls were sitting.
-They both rose, Daphne with a jerk that dislodged a
-photograph frame.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am afraid I must interrupt your talk,&rdquo; said Lady
-Heritage. &ldquo;Were you living school triumphs over
-again? I suppose you swept off all the prizes between
-you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>If there was irony in the indifferent voice, Miss Todhunter
-was unaware of it. She laughed rather loudly,
-and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Renata never won a prize in her life.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Raymond, with a lift of the brows. &ldquo;I
-am surprised. I pictured her always at the head of
-her class, and winning everything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Daphne laughed again. She was still angry.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_143">143</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid she&rsquo;s been putting on side,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;Why, Miss Basing would have fainted with surprise
-if she had found Renata anywhere near the top of
-anything. Or me either,&rdquo; she added, with reluctant
-honesty.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Molloy,&rdquo; said Raymond, &ldquo;ask Mrs. Cottingham
-if she will let Lewis know that we are ready;&rdquo;
-and as Jane moved away, she continued, &ldquo;I should
-have thought her languages now....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Daphne&rsquo;s mouth fell open.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, my goodness,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;she <i>must</i> have been
-piling it on. Why, her languages were rotten, absolutely
-rotten. Why, Mademoiselle said that I was
-enough to break her heart, but when it came to Renata
-it was just, &lsquo;Mon dieu!&rsquo; the whole time; and then
-there were rows because Miss Basing thought it was
-profane. Only, somehow it seems different in French&mdash;don&rsquo;t
-you think?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage looked at Daphne as though she had
-some difficulty in thinking about her at all.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; she said gravely, and then Mrs. Cottingham
-bore down upon them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tea should have been ready if I had known,&rdquo; she
-said. Her colour had risen, and her voice shook a
-little. &ldquo;If I could persuade you ... I&rsquo;m sure it
-won&rsquo;t be more than a moment. But, of course, if you
-must ... but if I had only known. You see, I
-thought to myself we would have our talk first, and
-then enjoy our tea comfortably, and indeed it is <i>just</i>
-coming in&mdash;but, of course, if you are <i>obliged</i> to go....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you very much; I am obliged to go. Good-bye,
-Mrs. Cottingham. You&rsquo;ll write to Masterson
-and let me know what the answer is? I think I hear
-the car.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_144">144</div>
-<p>Miss Todhunter, who had embraced her friend so
-warmly half an hour before, parted from her with a
-tepid handshake; but if neither Daphne nor Mrs.
-Cottingham considered the visit a success, Lady Heritage
-seemed to derive some satisfaction from it, and
-Jane told herself that not only had a danger been
-averted, but a distinct advantage had been gained.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_145">145</div>
-<h2 id="c14"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XIV</span></h2>
-<p>Jane ran straight up to her room when they got
-back, but she was no sooner there than it came
-into her mind to wonder whether she had put away
-the files which she had been working on just before she
-went into the garden. Think as she would, she could
-not be sure.</p>
-<p>She ran down again and went quickly along the
-corridor to the library. The door was unlatched.
-She touched the handle, pushed it a little, and stood
-hesitating. Lady Heritage was speaking.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a satisfaction to know just where one is.
-Sometimes I&rsquo;ve been convinced she was a fool, and
-then again ... well, I&rsquo;ve wondered. I wondered this
-afternoon in the garden. That man on the headland
-gives one to think furiously. Who on earth could it
-have been?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I ... don&rsquo;t ... know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t believe she saw him. I don&rsquo;t believe
-she saw anything or knew why she was frightened.
-She just got a start ... a shock&mdash;began to run without
-knowing why, and ran herself into a blind panic.
-She looked quite idiotic when I was questioning her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; thought Jane. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s horrible to listen at
-doors, but what am I to do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>What she did was to go on listening. She heard
-Lady Heritage&rsquo;s rare laugh.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_146">146</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Then this afternoon&mdash;my dear Jeffrey, it would
-have convinced you or any one. The friend&mdash;this
-Daphne Todhunter&mdash;well, only a fool could have made
-a bosom friend of her, and, as I told you, even she
-had the lowest opinion of her adored Renata&rsquo;s
-brains.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Ember again. &ldquo;You say she&rsquo;s
-a fool, I say she&rsquo;s a fool, her friend says she&rsquo;s a fool,
-but something, some instinct in me protests.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Womanly intuition,&rdquo; said Lady Heritage, with a
-mocking note.</p>
-<p>There was silence; then:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;These girls&mdash;were they alone together?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No. They conducted what appeared to be a
-curiously emotional conversation at the other end of
-Mrs. Cottingham&rsquo;s dreadful drawing-room, which
-always reminds me of a parish jumble sale.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember&rsquo;s voice sounded suddenly much nearer, as if
-he had crossed the room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Emotional? What do you mean?&rdquo; he said quickly.
-Lady Heritage laughed again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mean?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Does that sort of thing mean
-anything?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What sort of thing? Please, it&rsquo;s important.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, hand-holding, and a tearful embrace or two.
-The usual accompaniments of schoolgirl <i>schw&auml;rmerei</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane could hear that Ember was moving restlessly.
-Her own heart was beating. She knew very well that
-in Ember&rsquo;s mind there was just one thought&mdash;&ldquo;Suppose
-she has told Daphne Todhunter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which of them cried?&rdquo; said Ember sharply.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think they both did&mdash;Miss Todhunter most.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you couldn&rsquo;t hear what they were saying?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not a word.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_147">147</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I must know. Will you send for her and find out?
-It&rsquo;s of the first importance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You think....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She may have told this girl what we&rsquo;ve been trying
-to get out of her. I must know. Look here, I&rsquo;ll take
-a book and sit down over there. She won&rsquo;t notice
-me. Send for her and begin about other things, then
-ask her why her friend was so distressed....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane heard Ember move again and knew that this
-time it was towards the bell. She turned and ran
-back along the way by which she had come. Five
-minutes later she was entering the library to find Lady
-Heritage at her table and Ember at the far end of
-the room buried in a book.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I want the unanswered-letter file.&rdquo; Lady Heritage&rsquo;s
-voice was very businesslike.</p>
-<p>Jane brought it over and waited whilst Raymond
-turned over the letters, frowning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see Lady Manning&rsquo;s letter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You answered it yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So I did. Miss Molloy&mdash;why did your friend cry
-this afternoon?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Daphne?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Daphne. Why did she cry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, she does, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I suppose not entirely without some cause.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She was angry with me,&rdquo; said Jane very low.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes? I noticed that she did not kiss you when
-you went away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, she&rsquo;s angry. You see&rdquo;&mdash;Jane hung her
-head&mdash;&ldquo;you see, she thinks&mdash;I&rsquo;m afraid she thinks
-that I didn&rsquo;t treat her brother very well.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Her brother?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_148">148</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. She wanted me to be engaged to him, but
-he&rsquo;s married some one else, so I think it&rsquo;s rather silly
-of her to be cross with me, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I really don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Out of the tail of her eye Jane saw Mr. Ember nod
-his head just perceptibly. Lady Heritage must have
-seen it too, for she pushed the letter file over to Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Put this away. No, I don&rsquo;t want anything more
-at present.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tea came in as she spoke.</p>
-<p>Afterwards in her own room Jane sat down on the
-broad window ledge with her hands in her lap, looking
-out over the sea. The lovely day was drawing slowly
-to a lovelier close, the sun-drenched air absolutely
-still, absolutely clear. The tide was low, the sea one
-sheet of unbroken blue, except where the black rocks,
-more visible than Jane had ever seen them, pierced
-the surface.</p>
-<p>Jane did not quite know what had happened to her.
-Her moment of exhilaration was gone. She was not
-afraid, but she felt a sense of horror which she had not
-known before. She had thought of this adventure
-as <i>her</i> adventure, her own risk. Somehow she had
-never really related it to other people. For the first
-time, she began to see Formula &ldquo;A,&rdquo; not as something
-which threatened her, but as something that menaced
-the world. It was ridiculous that it was Mrs. Cottingham
-and Daphne Todhunter who had caused this
-change.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_149">149</div>
-<p>It is one thing to think vaguely of civilisation being
-swept away, and <i>quite</i> another to visualise some concrete,
-humdrum Tom, Dick, or Harry being swept
-horribly out of existence. Jane&rsquo;s imagination suddenly
-showed her Formula &ldquo;A&rdquo;&mdash;The Process, whatever
-they chose to call the horrible thing&mdash;in operation;
-showed it annihilating fussy Mrs. Cottingham, with her
-overcrowded drawing-room and her overcrowded talk;
-showed it doing something horrible to fat, common
-Daphne Todhunter. The romance of adventure fell
-away, the glamour that sometimes surrounds catastrophe
-shrivelled and was gone. It was horrible, only
-horrible.</p>
-<p>Jane kept seeing Mrs. Cottingham&rsquo;s ugly room, and
-Raymond Heritage standing there, as she had seen her
-that afternoon, like a statue that had nothing to do
-with its surroundings. All at once she knew what
-it was that Lady Heritage reminded her of&mdash;not
-Mercury at all, but Medusa with the lovely, tortured
-face, stone and yet suffering.</p>
-<p>As she looked out over that calm sea she had before
-her all the time the vision of Medusa, and of hundreds
-and hundreds of quite ordinary, vulgar, commonplace
-Mrs. Cottinghams and Daphne Todhunters being
-turned to stone. A tremor began to shake her. It
-kept coming again and again. Then, all at once, the
-tears were running down her face. It was then it
-came to her that she could not bear to think of Daphne
-as she had seen her at the last, with that hurt, angry,
-puzzled look.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s a fat lump, but Arnold is her brother, and
-Renata is her friend, and she thinks they&rsquo;ve failed
-each other and been horrid to her. I can&rsquo;t bear it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At that moment Jane hated herself fiercely because
-Daphne&rsquo;s tears had amused her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got a brick instead of a heart, and, if you
-get eliminated, it&rsquo;ll serve you right.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_150">150</div>
-<p>She dabbed her eyes very hard, straightened her
-hair, and ran downstairs to the library again.</p>
-<p>Ember was the sole occupant, and Jane addressed
-him with diffidence:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Ember, do you think I might ... do you
-think Lady Heritage would mind ... I mean, may I
-use the telephone?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What for?&rdquo; said Ember, looking at her over the
-edge of his paper.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought perhaps I might,&rdquo; said Jane ... &ldquo;I
-mean, I wanted to say something to my friend, the
-one who is staying with Mrs. Cottingham.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah&mdash;yes, why not?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then I may?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, certainly. Do you want me to go?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane presented a picture of modest confusion. It
-was concern for Daphne Todhunter that had brought
-her downstairs, concern and the prickings of remorse,
-but at the sight of Ember, she experienced what she
-would have described as a brain-wave.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you wouldn&rsquo;t mind,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m so sorry
-to disturb you, but I did rather want to talk privately
-to her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, by all means.&rdquo; Ember&rsquo;s tone was most
-amiable, his departure most courteously prompt.</p>
-<p>Jane would have been prepared to bet the eighteen-pence
-which constituted her sole worldly fortune to a
-brass farthing that upon the other side of the door his
-attentive ear would miss no word of her conversation.</p>
-<p>She gave Mrs. Cottingham&rsquo;s number, and waited
-in some anxiety.</p>
-<p>The voice that said &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; was unmistakably
-Miss Todhunter&rsquo;s, and Jane began at once:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_151">151</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Daphne, is that you? I want to speak to
-you so badly. Are you alone? Good! I&rsquo;m so glad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At the other end of the line Daphne was saying
-grumpily:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what you mean. There are three
-people in the room. I keep telling you so.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good!&rdquo; said Jane, with a little more emphasis. &ldquo;I
-want to speak to you most particularly. I&rsquo;ve been
-awfully unhappy since this afternoon; I really have.
-And I wanted to say&mdash;&mdash; I mean to ask you not to be
-upset about Arnold. It&rsquo;s all for the best, really.
-Please, please, don&rsquo;t think badly of him. It&rsquo;s not his
-fault, and I know you&rsquo;ll like his wife very much indeed.
-He&rsquo;ll tell you all about it some day, and you&rsquo;ll think
-it ever so romantic. So you won&rsquo;t be unhappy about
-it, will you? I hate people to be unhappy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Without waiting for Miss Todhunter&rsquo;s reply, Jane
-hung up the receiver. After a decent interval she
-opened the door. Mr. Ember was at the far end of the
-passage, waiting patiently.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_152">152</div>
-<h2 id="c15"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XV</span></h2>
-<p>Jane waked that night, and did not know why she
-waked. After a moment it came to her that
-she had been dreaming. In her dream something
-unpleasant had happened, and she did not know what
-it was. She sat up in the darkness with her hands
-pressed over her eyes, trying to remember.</p>
-<p>The vague feeling of having passed through some
-horrifying experience oppressed her far more than
-definite recollection could have done.</p>
-<p>She got up, switched on the light, and began to pace
-up and down, but she could not shake off that feeling
-of having left something, she did not know what,
-just behind her, just out of sight. She looked round
-for the book she had been reading, but she remembered
-now that she had left it downstairs. She looked at
-her watch. It was three o&rsquo;clock. The house would
-be absolutely still and empty. It would not take her
-two minutes to fetch the book from the drawing-room.
-She slipped on Renata&rsquo;s dressing-gown, put out her
-light, and opened the door.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_153">153</div>
-<p>With a little shock of surprise she saw that the
-corridor was dark. Some one must have put out the
-light which always burned at the far end. Instead of
-the usual faintly rosy glow, there was darkness thinning
-to dusk, and just at the stairhead a vivid splash of
-moonlight. After a moment&rsquo;s hesitation Jane slipped
-out of her room, leaving the door ajar. Somehow she
-had not reckoned upon having to cross that brightly
-lighted space. She came slowly to the head of the
-stairs and looked down into the hall. It was like
-looking into the blackness and silence of a vast well.
-She could see nothing&mdash;nothing at all. The moon was
-shining in through the rose window above the great
-door. There was a shield in the window, a shield with
-the Luttrell arms, and the light came through the glass
-in a great beam shot with colour, and struck the
-portrait of Lady Heritage and the vine leaves and
-grapes on the newel just below. The window and the
-portrait were on the same level, and the ray seemed to
-make a brilliant cleavage between the silvery dusk
-above and the dense gloom below.</p>
-<p>Jane descended the stairs, walking carefully so as to
-make no noise. At the foot she turned sharply to the
-left and passed the study door, the fireplace, and the
-steel gate which shut off the north wing. The door of
-the Yellow Drawing-Room was straight in front of her.
-She opened it softly and went in.</p>
-<p>The book would be on the little table to the right
-of the fireplace, because she remembered putting it
-there when Lady Heritage made an unexpectedly
-early move. She stood for a moment visualising the
-arrangement of the chairs, and then walked straight
-to the right place. The book was where she had left
-it, put down open, a bad habit for which Jimmy had
-often rebuked her. She was back at the door with it,
-and just about to pass the threshold when she heard
-a sound. Instantly she stood still, listening. The
-sound came from the other end of the hall, where
-the shadows lay deepest round the massive oak
-door.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_154">154</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But there can&rsquo;t be any one at the door at this
-hour,&rdquo; said Jane&mdash;&ldquo;there can&rsquo;t, there can&rsquo;t possibly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The sound came again, something between a rustle
-and a creak, but so faint that no hearing less acute
-than Jane&rsquo;s would have caught it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s on the left of the door, underneath Willoughby
-Luttrell&rsquo;s picture....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane suddenly pressed her hand to her lips and made
-an involuntary movement backwards, for there was an
-unmistakable click, and then, slow and faint, a footfall.
-Jane stood rigid, staring into the darkness of the
-corner. She thought she heard a sigh, and then the
-footsteps crossed the hall, coming nearer. At the
-stair foot they paused, and then began to ascend.</p>
-<p>Jane gazed into the deeply shadowed space where
-the footfall sounded, but nothing&mdash;not the slightest
-glimpse of anything moving&mdash;came to her straining
-sight.</p>
-<p>She looked up and saw the level ray of moonlight
-overhead. Whoever climbed the stair must pass up
-into the light and be visible, but from where she stood
-she could only see the side of the stair like a black wall.
-But she must see&mdash;she must. If some one had come
-out of the darkness where there was no door she must
-know who it was. Her bare feet made no sound as she
-moved from the sheltering doorway. Step by step
-she kept pace with those slow mounting footsteps.
-She passed the steel gate, and, feeling her way along
-the wall, came to a standstill by the cold black hearth.
-Then, with her whole body tense, she turned and
-looked up. There was a darker shadow among the
-shadows, a shadow that moved upwards, towards the
-beam of moonlight. Jane watched, breathless, and
-from where The Portrait hung, the sombre eyes of
-Raymond Heritage seemed to watch too. Out of
-blackness into dusk a something emerged; one step
-more and the moonlight fell on a dark hood. Up into
-the light came a cloaked figure, draped from head to
-foot, shapeless.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_155">155</div>
-<p>On the top step it turned. Jane caught her breath.
-It was Lady Heritage. She stood there for a long
-minute, her left hand just resting on the newel post
-with its twining tendrils and massive overhanging
-grapes. The light shone full upon her, and her face
-was sharpened, blanched, and sorrowful. Her eyes
-seemed to look into unfathomable depths of gloom.
-The amber, the rose, and the violet of the stained glass
-fell in a hazy iridescence upon the black of her cloak.</p>
-<p>In front the cloak fell away and showed the straight
-white linen of an overall, and cloak and overall were
-deeply stained with dull wet smears. A piece of the
-stuff hung jagged from a tear.</p>
-<p>Jane looked, and could not take her eyes away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, she&rsquo;s so unhappy,&rdquo; she said to herself.</p>
-<p>With a quick movement Raymond Heritage pushed
-the hood back from her hair. Then she turned, faced
-her own portrait for a moment, and passed slowly
-out of sight. Jane heard a door close very softly.</p>
-<p>She stood quite still and waited, gathering her
-courage. She would have to mount the stair and pass
-through that light before she could reach the safely
-shadowed corridor. Just for a moment it seemed as
-if she could not do it. Her feet seemed to cleave to
-the ground. Five minutes passed, and another
-five.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_156">156</div>
-<p>Jane felt herself becoming rigid, and with a tremendous
-effort, she took one step forward, but only one,
-for as her foot touched a new cold patch of floor,
-some one moved overhead.</p>
-<p>For an instant a little pencil of electric light jabbed
-into the darkness and went out again. The next
-moment Mr. Ember stepped into the moonlight. He
-too wore a linen overall, and in his left hand he carried
-the mask-like head-dress which was in use in the laboratories.
-His right hand held a torch.</p>
-<p>He came down the stairs, walking with astonishing
-lightness. Half-way down the torch came into play
-again. He sent the little ray in a sort of dazzle-dance
-about the hall. With every leaping flash Jane&rsquo;s heart
-gave a jump, and she only stopped her teeth from
-chattering by biting hard upon the cuff of Renata&rsquo;s
-dressing-gown. She had covered her face instinctively,
-and peered, terror-stricken, between her fingers.</p>
-<p>The light skimmed right across her once, and but for
-the crimson flannel, she would certainly have screamed
-aloud. If Mr. Ember had been looking, he could have
-seen a semicircle of white forehead, two clutching
-hands, and a quivering chin. But his eyes were elsewhere,
-and the dancing flash passed on.</p>
-<p>Ember crossed the hall to the far corner out of which
-Lady Heritage had come. Suddenly the light went
-out.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_157">157</div>
-<p>Jane heard again the very, very small creaking noise
-which she had heard before. It was followed by a
-faint click, and then unmitigated silence. The seconds
-added themselves together and became minutes, and
-there was no further sound. The minutes passed, and
-the beam of moonlight slipped slowly downwards.
-Now The Portrait was in darkness, now the newels
-were just two black shadows. It was a long, long time
-before Jane moved. She climbed the staircase with
-terror in her heart. At the edge of the moonlight she
-waited so long that it moved to meet her. When the
-edge of it touched her bare, hesitating foot she gave a
-violent start, and ran the rest of the way.</p>
-<p>The dark corridor felt like a haven of refuge.</p>
-<p>She came panting to her own door, and suddenly
-there was no haven of refuge anywhere. The door
-was shut. She had left it ajar. It was shut.</p>
-<p>Jane stood with her outstretched hand flat on the
-panel of the door. She kept saying over and over to
-herself:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I left it open, but it&rsquo;s shut. I left it open, but
-it&rsquo;s shut.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Once she pushed the door as if it could not really
-be shut at all, but it did not yield; the latch had caught.
-It was shut. At last she turned the handle slowly
-and went in. A gust of wind met her full. Perhaps
-it was the wind that had shut the door. She left it
-ajar, moved to the middle of the room, and waited.
-For a moment there was a lull. Somewhere in the
-house a clock struck four. The sound came just
-over the edge of hearing, with its four tiny distant
-strokes. Then the wind rushed in again through the
-open window, and the door fell to with a click.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_158">158</div>
-<h2 id="c16"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XVI</span></h2>
-<p>By next morning the wind had brought rain
-with it. A south-west gale drove against the
-dripping window-panes, and covered the sea with
-crests of foam.</p>
-<p>Jane, rather pale, wrote a neat letter to the Misses
-Kent, Hermione Street, South Kensington, mentioning
-that she would be much obliged if they would send
-her patterns of jumper wool by return. She hesitated,
-and then underlined the last two words.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I always think big shops do you better,&rdquo; was Lady
-Heritage&rsquo;s comment, and Mr. Ember added, &ldquo;Do
-you knit, Miss Renata? I thought you were the only
-girl in England who didn&rsquo;t&rdquo;&mdash;to which Jane replied,
-&ldquo;I want to learn.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was after the letter had been posted that she
-found Henry&rsquo;s second message, &ldquo;Hope to see you
-to-day, Friday.&rdquo; She could have cried for pure
-joy.</p>
-<p>At intervals during the day, the thought occurred
-to her that Henry was a solid comfort. She wasn&rsquo;t
-in love with him, of course, but undoubtedly he was a
-comfort. She had plenty of time to think, for she
-spent the entire day by herself. Sir William had gone
-to town for three or four days. Lady Heritage disappeared
-into the north wing at eleven o&rsquo;clock, and
-very shortly after, Mr. Ember followed her. Neither
-of them appeared again until dinner-time. Jane went
-to sleep over a book and awoke refreshed, and with a
-strong desire for exploration.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_159">159</div>
-<p>If only last night&rsquo;s mysterious happenings had taken
-place anywhere but in the hall. The dark corner
-from which Raymond had emerged and into which
-Mr. Ember had vanished drew her like a magnet,
-but not until every one was in bed and asleep would
-she dare to search for the hidden door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If I were just sitting here and reading,&rdquo; she
-thought to herself, &ldquo;probably no one would come
-into the hall for hours; but if I were to look for a
-secret passage, all the servants would begin to drift
-in and out, and the entire neighbourhood would come
-and call.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When the lights had been turned on, she wandered
-round, looking at the Luttrell portraits. This, she
-thought, was safe enough, and if not the rose, it was
-at least near it. Willoughby Luttrell&rsquo;s picture hung
-perhaps five feet from the ground and about half-way
-between the hall door and the corner. Jane had
-always noticed it particularly because Henry undoubtedly
-resembled this eighteenth century uncle.</p>
-<p>Mr. Willoughby Luttrell had been painted in a
-Court suit of silver-grey satin. He wore Mechlin
-ruffles and diamond shoe-buckles. He had the air
-of being convinced that the Court of St. James could
-boast no brighter ornament, but his face was the face
-of Henry March, and Henry&rsquo;s grey eyes looked down
-at Jane from beneath a Ramillies wig.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_160">160</div>
-<p>After an interval Jane stopped looking at Mr.
-Luttrell&rsquo;s eyes, and reflected that the click which she
-had heard the night before came from a point nearer
-the corner. She did not dare go near enough to feel
-the wall, and no amount of staring at the panelling
-disclosed any clue to the secret.</p>
-<p>Jane went back to her book.</p>
-<p>By sunset the rain had ceased to fall, or, rather to
-be driven against the land. The wind, lightened of its
-burden of moisture, kept coming inland in great gusts,
-fresh and soft with the freshness and softness of the
-spring. The entire sky was thickly covered with
-clouds which moved continually across its face, swept
-on by the currents of the upper air, but these clouds
-were very high up. Any one coming out of an enclosed
-place into the windy night would have received
-an impression of extraordinary freedom, movement,
-and space.</p>
-<p>Henry March received such an impression as he
-turned a pivoting stone block and came out of the
-small sheltering cave behind the seat on the headland
-above Luttrell Marches. At the first buffet of the
-gale he took off his cap, and stuffed it down into the
-pocket of the light ulster which he wore, and stood
-bareheaded, looking out to sea. His eyes showed him
-blackness and confused motion, and his ears were
-filled with the strange singing sound of the wind and
-the endless crash and recoil of the waves against a
-shingly beach.</p>
-<p>He stood quite still for a time and then turned his
-wrist and glanced at the luminous dial of the watch
-upon it, after which he passed again behind the stone
-seat and was about to re-enter the blacker shadows
-when a tall figure emerged.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Have you been here long?&rdquo; said a voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I&rsquo;ve only just come. How are you, Tony?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_161">161</div>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. I didn&rsquo;t think you&rsquo;d be down here
-again so soon. It was touch and go whether I could
-get here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Piggy&rsquo;s orders,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;Look here, Tony,
-don&rsquo;t let&rsquo;s go inside. It&rsquo;s a topping night, and that
-passage I&rsquo;ve just come along smells like a triple extract
-of vaults&mdash;perfectly beastly. I don&rsquo;t suppose our
-friend Ember is addicted to being out late. He doesn&rsquo;t
-strike me as that sort of bird somehow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Anthony Luttrell. He sat down
-on the stone seat as he spoke, and Henry followed his
-example.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Piggy sent you down, did he? What for?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry was silent. It seemed like quite a long time
-before he said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony, who knows about the passages beside you
-and me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No one,&rdquo; said Anthony shortly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Uncle James told me when he thought the Boche
-had done you in. He said then that no one knew
-except he and I. He drew out a plan of all the
-passages and made me learn it by heart. When I
-could draw it with my eyes shut, we burnt every
-scrap of paper I had touched. I&rsquo;ve been into the
-passages exactly three times&mdash;once that same week
-to test my knowledge, again the other day, and
-to-night. I&rsquo;ll swear no one saw me go in or come out,
-and I&rsquo;ll swear I&rsquo;ve never breathed a word to a
-soul.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you rehearsing your autobiography?&rdquo; inquired
-Anthony Luttrell, with more than a hint of sarcasm.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I&rsquo;m not. I want to know who else knows
-about the passages.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_162">162</div>
-<p>&ldquo;And I have told you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony, it is no good. I had my suspicions the other
-night, but to-night I&rsquo;ve got proof. The passages have
-been made use of. Unfortunately there&rsquo;s no doubt
-about it at all. I want to know whether you have
-any idea&mdash;hang it all, Tony, you must see what I&rsquo;m
-driving at! Wait a minute; don&rsquo;t go through the
-roof until you&rsquo;ve heard what I&rsquo;ve got to say. You
-see, I know that Uncle James gave you the plan when
-you were only sixteen, because he thought he was
-dying then, and I&rsquo;ve come down here to ask you
-whether any one might have seen you coming and
-going as a boy, or whether ... Tony, <i>did</i> you ever
-tell any one?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought you said that it was Piggy&rsquo;s orders
-that brought you down here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, it was,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Am I to gather then that Piggy has suggested
-these damned impertinent questions?&rdquo; Mr. Luttrell&rsquo;s
-tone was easy to a degree.</p>
-<p>Henry, on the verge of losing his temper, rose
-abruptly to his feet, walked half a dozen paces with
-his hands shoved well down in his pockets, and then
-walked back again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony, what on earth&rsquo;s the good of quarrelling?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Anthony Luttrell was leaning back, his head against
-the back of the stone seat, his long legs stretched out in
-front of him. He appeared to be watching the race
-of clouds between the horizon and the zenith. He
-said something, and the wind took his words away.</p>
-<p>Henry sat down again.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_163">163</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Look here, Tony,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ve not answered
-my question. Did you ever tell any one?
-Damn it all, Tony, I wouldn&rsquo;t ask if I didn&rsquo;t have to!...
-Did you ever tell Raymond?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A great gust swept the headland, another and more
-violent one followed it, battered against the cliff, and
-then dropped suddenly into what, after the tumult,
-seemed like a silence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Piggy speaking, or you?&rdquo; said Anthony Luttrell
-quite lightly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Both,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You sound heated, Henry. Now I should have
-thought that that would have been my r&ocirc;le. Instead,
-I merely repeat to you, and you in your turn, of course,
-repeat to Piggy that I have told no one about the
-passages, and, after you have admired my moderation,
-perhaps we might change the subject.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid it can&rsquo;t be done,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;Tony,
-do you mind sitting up and looking at this?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As he spoke he placed &ldquo;this&rdquo; on the seat between
-them and turned a light upon it, holding the torch
-close down on to the seat so that the beam did not
-travel beyond its edge. Mr. Luttrell turned lazily
-and saw a small handkerchief of very fine linen with
-an embroidered &ldquo;R&rdquo; in the corner. He continued to
-look at it, and Henry continued to hold the torch so
-that the light fell upon the initial. Then quite suddenly
-Anthony Luttrell reached sideways and switched off
-the light. His hand dropped to the handkerchief and
-covered it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t want it,&rdquo; said Henry, &ldquo;but I thought
-you ought to know that I found it in the passage behind
-us, just where one stoops to shift the stone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s one I found and dropped,&rdquo; said Anthony,
-putting it into his pocket.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_164">164</div>
-<p>Henry said nothing at all.</p>
-<p>A somewhat prolonged silence was broken by
-Luttrell. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m chucking my job here,&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve written to Sir Julian. Here&rsquo;s the letter for you
-to give him.&rdquo; He pushed it along the seat as he
-spoke, and Henry picked it up reluctantly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-asked to be replaced with as little delay as possible.
-You might urge that point on him, if you don&rsquo;t mind.
-I want it made perfectly clear that under no circumstances
-will I stay on more than three days. I will,
-in fact, see the whole department damned first.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He spoke without the slightest heat, in the rather
-cold, drawling manner which Henry had known as a
-danger-signal from the days when he was a small boy,
-and Anthony a big one and his idol.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you giving any reason?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, there&rsquo;s no reason to give.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Piggy,&rdquo; said Henry thoughtfully, &ldquo;will want
-one. It&rsquo;s all very well for you, Tony, to write him a
-letter and say you&rsquo;re going to chuck your job without
-giving a reason. I&rsquo;ve got to stand up at the other
-side of his table and stick out a cross-examination
-on the probable nature of the reasons which you
-haven&rsquo;t given. You&rsquo;re putting me in an impossible
-position.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s that damned conscience of yours, I suppose!
-I cannot tell a lie, and all that sort of thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not to Piggy about this.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_165">165</div>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Anthony, getting to his feet,
-&ldquo;tell him the truth. Why should I care? I suppose,
-in common with everybody else, he is perfectly well
-aware that I once made a fool of myself about Lady
-Heritage. Well, I thought I could stick being down
-here and seeing her, but I can&rsquo;t. It just comes to
-that. I can&rsquo;t stick it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Does she know you&rsquo;re here?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, she doesn&rsquo;t. She sees me in an overall and a
-mask. She has been pleased to commend my skill.
-This afternoon she leaned over my shoulder to watch
-what I was doing. Well, I came away and wrote to
-Piggy. I can&rsquo;t stand it, and you can tell him so with
-the utmost circumstance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry was leaning forward, chin in hand. He looked
-past Anthony at the black moving water.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you see Raymond?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;No,
-Tony, you&rsquo;ve just got to listen to me. What you&rsquo;ve
-been saying is true as far as it goes, but it doesn&rsquo;t
-go very far. You wouldn&rsquo;t chuck your job just for
-that. You know, and I know that you&rsquo;re chucking
-it because you are afraid that Raymond is involved.
-If you know it, and I know it, don&rsquo;t you think Piggy
-will know it too? That&rsquo;s why I say, see Raymond.
-If she&rsquo;s let herself get mixed up with this show, it&rsquo;s
-because she&rsquo;s had a rotten time and wants to hit back.
-She said as much to me&mdash;oh, not &agrave; propos of this, of
-course; we were just talking.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I heard her,&rdquo; said Anthony Luttrell. He paused,
-and added with a distinct sneer, &ldquo;You displayed an
-admirable discretion.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_166">166</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you, Tony. Now what&rsquo;s the good of you
-clearing out? If you do, Piggy will send some one
-else down here, and if Raymond has got mixed up
-with any of Ember&rsquo;s devilry, she&rsquo;ll get caught out.
-For the Lord&rsquo;s sake, Tony, see her, let her know you&rsquo;re
-alive! I believe she&rsquo;d chuck the whole thing and go
-to the ends of the earth with you. Nobody would
-press the matter. We should catch Ember out, and
-you and Raymond could go abroad for a bit. I don&rsquo;t
-see any other way out of it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You seem to me to be assuming a good deal,
-Henry,&rdquo; said Anthony Luttrell.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not assuming anything&rdquo;&mdash;Henry&rsquo;s tone was
-very blunt. &ldquo;I know three things.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One&rdquo;&mdash;Henry ticked his facts off on the fingers of
-his left hand: &ldquo;the passages are being used. Two:
-they&rsquo;ve been wired for electric light. Three: Raymond
-has been through them, and quite lately. Those
-three facts, taken in conjunction with a deposition
-stating that something of a highly dangerous and
-anti-social nature is being manufactured on these
-premises, and under cover of the Government experiments&mdash;well,
-Tony, I don&rsquo;t suppose you want me to
-dot the &lsquo;i&rsquo;s&rsquo; and cross the &lsquo;t&rsquo;s.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It never occurred to you that my father might
-have had the place wired, I suppose?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s no good, Tony.
-You can&rsquo;t bluff me, and I hate your trying to.
-There&rsquo;s only one way out of this. You&rsquo;ve got to see
-Raymond.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Anthony made an impatient movement.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You assume too much,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ll put
-that on one side. From the cold, official standpoint,
-where does my interview with Lady Heritage come
-in? Wouldn&rsquo;t it rather complicate matters? You
-appear to assume that there is a conspiracy, and then
-to suggest that I should warn one of the conspirators.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_167">167</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I do not. I ask you to let Raymond know
-that you are alive, nothing more. In my view nothing
-more is necessary. She&rsquo;ll naturally think you are here
-to see her, and you can let her think so. As to the
-cold, official standpoint, the last thing that the department
-would want is a scandal about a woman in
-Raymond&rsquo;s position. Piggy would say what I say&mdash;for
-the Lord&rsquo;s sake get her out of it and let us have a
-free hand. She&rsquo;s an appalling complication.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Women always are,&rdquo; said Anthony Luttrell in
-his bitter drawl.</p>
-<p>He moved a pace or two away, and then turned back
-again. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re not a bad sort in spite of the conscience,
-Henry,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;From your standpoint,
-what you&rsquo;ve just said is sense&mdash;good, plain common
-sense&mdash;in fact, exactly the thing which one has no
-use for in certain moods.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Scrap the moods, Tony,&rdquo; said Henry, in an expressionless
-voice.</p>
-<p>Anthony laughed, rather harshly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My good Henry,&rdquo; he said&mdash;there was affection
-as well as mockery in his tone&mdash;&ldquo;does one ask for
-one&rsquo;s temperament? Look here, I haven&rsquo;t seen
-Raymond because I haven&rsquo;t dared&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know what
-I might do or say if I did see her. Now that is the
-plain, unvarnished truth. When I was in Petrograd
-I once hid for three days in a cellar with a temperamental
-Russian lady. There was nothing to do except
-to talk, and we talked endlessly. She told me a lot
-of home truths&mdash;said my nature was like a glacier, cold
-and slow, and that once I had got going I had to go on,
-even if I ground all my own dearest hopes to powder
-in doing so.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_168">168</div>
-<p>&ldquo;In other words, if you&rsquo;ve got a grouch, you&rsquo;re a
-devil to keep it,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s quite true; you
-always were. But, look here, Tony, why all this to
-my address? Why not get it off your chest to
-Raymond, and if you <i>will</i> deal in geological parallels,
-well&mdash;she&rsquo;s rather in the volcano line, or used to be,
-and I don&rsquo;t mind betting she&rsquo;ll blow your glacier to
-smithereens?&rdquo; Henry looked at his watch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I must go,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Think it over, Tony, and
-same place, to-morrow, same time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He turned, without waiting for an answer, and
-walked into the darkness of the cave.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_169">169</div>
-<h2 id="c17"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XVII</span></h2>
-<p>Jane went to her room that night, but she did
-not undress. Two entirely opposite lines of reasoning
-had ended in inducing one and the same
-decision. On the one hand, it might be argued that
-Lady Heritage and Mr. Ember, having passed the
-greater part of last night abroad upon their mysterious
-business, would be most unlikely to spend a second
-sleepless night so soon, and Jane might, therefore,
-count on finding the coast clear for a little exploring
-on her own account. On the other hand, an equally
-logical train of thought suggested that these midnight
-comings and goings might be part of a routine, and
-that Jane, if on the watch, might acquire some very
-valuable information.</p>
-<p>She therefore locked her door and proceeded to
-consider the question of what she should wear with
-as much attention as if she had been going to a
-ball. Neither barefoot nor with only stockings would
-she go into any passage which had left those unpleasant
-dark stains upon Lady Heritage&rsquo;s overall.
-A really heartfelt shudder passed over her at the
-very idea. No, Renata possessed slippers of maroon
-felt. Misguided talent had stenciled upon the toe of
-one a Dutch boy in full trousers, and upon the toe
-of the other a Dutch girl in full petticoats. Jane
-had a fierce loathing for the slippers, but they had
-cork soles and would at once keep out the damp
-and be very silent. She therefore placed them in
-readiness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_170">170</div>
-<p>Prolonged hesitation between the claims of the
-crimson flannel dressing-gown and an aged blue
-serge dress resulted in a final selection of the latter.
-She decided that it would flap less, and that if it got
-stained and damp the housemaids would be less likely
-to notice it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course, on the other hand,&rdquo; said Jane to herself,
-&ldquo;if I&rsquo;m caught, it absolutely does in any excuse about
-walking in my sleep, but I don&rsquo;t think that&rsquo;s an
-earthly, anyhow. If I&rsquo;m caught, they&rsquo;ll jolly well
-know what I was doing. The thing is not to be
-caught.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At half-past eleven precisely she made her way down
-to the hall.</p>
-<p>To-night there was no patch of moonlight to pass
-through, only a vague greyness which showed that the
-moon had risen and that the clouds outside were thin
-enough to let some of the light filter through.</p>
-<p>Jane felt her way downstairs and across the hall to
-Sir William&rsquo;s study. The study door afforded the nearest
-point from which she could watch what she called
-Willoughby Luttrell&rsquo;s corner without exposing herself
-to detection.</p>
-<p>She made up her mind that she would wait until she
-heard twelve strike, and then explore the corner. She
-had so thoroughly planned a period of waiting that it
-was with a feeling of shocked surprise that she became
-aware, even as she reached and crossed the threshold
-of the study, that some one was coming down the stairs
-behind her.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_171">171</div>
-<p>If she had been one moment later, if she had stayed,
-as she very nearly did stay, to look out of the window
-and see whether the night was fair, they would have
-walked into one another at the top of the stairs. As
-it was, she had escaped by the very narrowest margin.</p>
-<p>The door opened inwards, and she had just time to
-get behind it and close all but a crack, when through
-that crack she saw Raymond Heritage pass, wrapped
-in the same black cloak which she had worn the night
-before, only this time she wore beneath it, not her linen
-overall, but the dress she had worn for dinner. She
-held an electric lamp in her left hand.</p>
-<p>As soon as she had passed the door, Jane opened it a
-little wider and came forward a step.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage went straight to the corner of the
-hall. She put the torch down upon a chair which stood
-immediately under Willoughby Luttrell&rsquo;s portrait.
-Then she went quite close to the wall and reached up,
-with her arms stretched out widely. Her right hand
-touched the bottom left-hand corner of the portrait
-and her left rested in the angle of the corner.</p>
-<p>Jane heard the same click which she had heard the
-night before.</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage stepped back, took up her light, and,
-going to the corner, pushed hard against the wall.</p>
-<p>Jane watched with all her eyes, and saw a section of
-the panelling turn on some unseen pivot, leaving a
-narrow door through which Raymond passed. For a
-moment she stared at the lighter oblong in the wall;
-then there was a second click and the unbroken shadow
-once again.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_172">172</div>
-<p>Tingling with excitement, Jane stepped from her
-doorway and came to the corner. She must, oh she
-must, find the spring, and find it in time to follow.
-Raymond stood here and reached up, but she was tall,
-much taller than Jane. She stood on her tiptoes and
-could not reach the lowest edge of the portrait.</p>
-<p>With the very greatest of care she moved the chair
-that was under the picture a yard or two to the left.
-It weighed as though it were made of lead instead of
-oak, and she was gasping as she set it down, but she
-had made no noise. Renata&rsquo;s cork soles slipped as
-she climbed on to the polished seat, but she gripped the
-solid back and did not fall.</p>
-<p>Raymond had pressed something in the wall with
-both hands at once. Jane began to feel carefully
-along the lower edge of the portrait until she came to
-the massively foliated corner with its fat gilt acanthus
-leaves. A cross-piece of the panelling came just on the
-same level. She felt along it with light, sensitive finger-tips.
-There was a knot in the wood, but nothing else.
-&ldquo;If there is another knot in the corner, I&rsquo;ll try pressing
-on them,&rdquo; she thought to herself, and on the instant
-her left hand found the second knot. She pressed with
-all her might, and for the third time that evening she
-heard the little scarcely audible click. This time it
-spelt victory.</p>
-<p>In a curiously methodical manner Jane got down,
-put the chair carefully back into its place, and pushed
-against the wall as she had seen Lady Heritage do.
-The panelling yielded to her hand and swung inwards.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_173">173</div>
-<p>There was a black gap in the corner. Jane passed
-through it without any hesitation, and pulled the panelling
-to. She meant to leave it just ajar, but her hand
-must have shaken, or else there was some controlling
-spring, for as she stood in the black dark she heard the
-click again. She drew a long breath and stood motionless
-for a moment, but only for a moment. She had
-come there to follow Raymond Heritage, and follow
-her she would.</p>
-<p>She put out a cautious foot and it went down, so far
-down that for a sickening instant she thought that she
-must overbalance and fall headlong; then, just in
-time, it touched a step, the first of ten which went
-down very steeply. At the bottom she felt her way
-round a corner, and then with intensest thankfulness
-she saw, a good way ahead, a moving figure with a
-light.</p>
-<p>The passage that stretched before her was about six
-feet high and four feet wide. The air felt very damp
-and heavy. At intervals there were openings on the
-left-hand side where other passages seemed to branch
-off. Jane began to have a growing horror of these other
-passages. If she lost Lady Heritage, how would she
-ever find her way back, and&mdash;yet more horrid thought&mdash;who,
-or what, might at any moment come out of one
-of those dark tunnels behind her? It was at this
-point that she began to run, only to check herself
-severely. &ldquo;She&rsquo;ll hear you, you fool. Jane, I absolutely
-forbid you to be such a fool; and Renata&rsquo;s
-slippers will come off if you run, nasty sloppy things,
-and then you&rsquo;ll tread in green slime, and get it between
-all your toes. <i>It will squelch.</i>&rdquo; The horror of the
-black passages was eclipsed; Jane stopped running
-obediently, but she took longer steps and diminished
-the distance between herself and her unconscious guide.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_174">174</div>
-<p>The passage had begun to run uphill. Jane
-wondered where they were going. At any moment
-Lady Heritage might turn. If she did so, Jane must
-infallibly be caught unless she were near enough to
-one of the side tunnels. She went on with her heart
-in her mouth.</p>
-<p>A line from one of Christina Rossetti&rsquo;s poems came
-into her head:</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&ldquo;Does the road wind uphill all the way?</p>
-<p class="t0">Yes, to the very end.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The sort of cheery thing one <i>would</i> remember,&rdquo;
-thought Jane to herself; and she continued to climb
-the endless slope, her eyes fixed on the dark, moving
-silhouette of Lady Heritage.</p>
-<p>At last there was a pause. The light ceased to
-move. Jane crept closer, but dared not come too
-near. Next moment she saw what looked like a slab
-of stone in the passage wall swing round on a pivot as
-the panelling had done. Lady Heritage passed out
-of sight through the opening, and at the same moment
-a great breath of wind from the sea drove into the
-passage, clear, fresh, exquisite.</p>
-<p>Jane hurried to the opening and looked out. She
-saw first the dark, curving walls of a small cave, and,
-immediately in front of her, the black outline of a
-bench, beyond that a stretch of uneven ground, a
-tangle of wire, and the black movement of the sea.
-The moon behind the clouds made a vague, dusky
-twilight, and the wind blew. Lady Heritage was
-standing just on the other side of the stone seat. It
-startled Jane to find that she was so near. She stood
-quite still looking at the shadowed water and the
-cloudy sky.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_175">175</div>
-<p>Then, without any warning, a tall, dark figure came
-into sight. To Jane it seemed as if it rose out of the
-ground. Afterwards she thought that, if any one
-had been sitting on the grass and then had risen, it
-would, of course, have looked like that. At the time
-she leaned against the rock for support and had much
-ado not to scream.</p>
-<p>It was Lady Heritage who called out, with an inarticulate
-cry that mingled with the wind and was
-carried away.</p>
-<p>The dark figure stood still just where it had so
-suddenly appeared, and in an instant Raymond had
-turned her light upon it. In the circle of light Jane
-saw a man&mdash;a tall man, bareheaded. He had thrown
-up his arm as if to screen his face, but it only hid the
-mouth and chin. Over it his eyes looked straight
-at Raymond Heritage.</p>
-<p>And Raymond gave a great cry of &ldquo;Anthony!&rdquo;
-The light dropped from her hand, fell with a crash on
-the stones, rolled over, and went out. Anthony
-Luttrell did not stir, but Raymond began to move
-towards him after a strange rigid fashion, and as she
-moved, she kept saying his name over and over:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony&mdash;Tony&mdash;Tony&mdash;Tony.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Her voice fell lower and lower. As she reached
-him it was nearly gone.</p>
-<p>Jane turned from the stone wall where she was
-leaning, and stumbled back along the dark passage
-with the tears running down her face.</p>
-<p>At that last whisper of his name, Anthony spoke:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not a ghost, Raymond. Did you think I was?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_176">176</div>
-<p>They were so close together that if she had stretched
-out those groping hands another inch they would have
-touched him. Something in his tone set a barrier
-between them and Raymond&rsquo;s hands fell empty.
-The world was whirling round her. Life and death,
-love and hate, their parting and this meeting were
-merged in a confusion that robbed her of thought
-and almost of consciousness. It seemed to her as if
-they had been standing there for a long, long time,
-or, rather, as if time had nothing to do with them, and
-they had been cast into a strange eternity. Out of
-the turmoil of her thought arose the remembrance of
-the last time she and Anthony had trysted in this
-place&mdash;a sky almost unbearably blue and the sea
-brilliant under the noonday sun. Now there was no
-light anywhere.</p>
-<p>Anthony was alive. That should have been joy
-unbelievable. All through the years since she had
-read his name in the list of missing with what an overwhelming
-surge of joy would her heart have lifted to
-the words, &ldquo;Anthony is alive.&rdquo; Now she said them to
-herself and felt only a deeper, more terrible sense of
-separation than any that had touched her yet. They
-stood together, and between them there was a gulf
-unpassable&mdash;and no light anywhere.</p>
-<p>Raymond moved very slowly back along the way
-that she had come. She came to the stone seat,
-caught at the back of it with a hand that suddenly
-began to shake, and sat down. A few slow moments
-passed. Then she bent and began to grope for the
-torch which she had dropped.</p>
-<p>Anthony came towards her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he said, and she answered him in a
-low, fluttering voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My light&mdash;I dropped&mdash;it&rsquo;s so dark&mdash;I want the
-light.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The strong, capable hand groping without aim stirred
-something in Anthony. He said, almost roughly:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_177">177</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll find it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then a moment later he had picked it up, found it
-intact save for a crack in the glass, and, switching it
-on, put it down on the seat beside her.</p>
-<p>He was not prepared for her immediately flashing
-the light on to his face. An exclamation broke from
-him, and to cover it he said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am changed out of knowledge.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Changed&mdash;yes&mdash;Tony, that scar.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Her voice trembled away into silence. Her hand
-fell. The dusk was between them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ugly, isn&rsquo;t it? But I haven&rsquo;t the monopoly of
-change, have I? You, I think, have changed also.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With an impulse she hardly understood, she raised
-the light and turned it until her face and her bare
-throat were brilliantly illuminated. The dark cloak
-fell away a little. The dark eyes looked at him with
-defiance and appeal. Her beauty, seen like that, had
-something that startled; it was so devoid of life and
-colour, and yet so great! After a long, breathless
-minute Anthony said in his slow voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You have changed more than I have, Lady
-Heritage, for you have changed your name.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He saw the last vestige of colour leave her face.
-She put the lamp down, and her silence startled
-him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No one would have known me,&rdquo; he said after a
-pause that was all strain.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I knew you,&rdquo; said Raymond very low.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Only because the lower part of my face was hidden.
-You&rsquo;d have passed me in daylight. You have
-passed me.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_178">178</div>
-<p>She winced at that, turned the light full on to him
-again, and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are working in the laboratory&mdash;that&rsquo;s&mdash;that&rsquo;s
-why....&rdquo; She broke off for a minute and went on with
-a sort of violence, &ldquo;You say that I didn&rsquo;t know you,
-but I did&mdash;I did. All this week I&rsquo;ve been tormented
-with your presence. All this week I&rsquo;ve felt you just
-at hand, just out of reach. I kept saying to myself,
-&lsquo;Tony&rsquo;s dead,&rsquo; and expecting to meet you round
-every corner. It was driving me mad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It sounds most uncomfortable,&rdquo; said Anthony
-dryly.</p>
-<p>Raymond saw a mocking look pass over his face.
-She turned the light away and set it down. If she had
-not felt physically incapable of rising to her feet, she
-would have left him then. This was not Anthony at
-all, only the anger, the bitterness, the cold resentment
-which she had hated in him. These, not Anthony, had
-come back from the grave.</p>
-<p>He was speaking again:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I shouldn&rsquo;t ask, but ... are you expecting
-to meet any one here? Am I in the way?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She answered him with a sort of heartbroken simplicity
-quite beyond pride:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what I expected. You were haunting
-me so. I came here because ... oh, Tony, don&rsquo;t you
-remember at all?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_179">179</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I remember something that you appear to have
-forgotten, Raymond. When like a fool, and a dishonourable
-fool at that, I gave you the secret of these
-passages, I remember very well the rather enthusiastic
-terms in which you asserted your conviction that the
-secret was a sacred trust, and one that you would keep
-absolutely inviolate. As, however, I broke my own trust
-in giving you the secret, I can, I suppose, hardly complain
-because you have imitated my lack of discretion.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Raymond did rise then.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony, what do you mean?&rdquo; she cried.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear Raymond, you know very well what I
-mean.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I do not.&rdquo; Her voice had risen; this was more
-the Raymond of their old quarrels, a creature quick to
-passionate anger, vehement and reckless.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I say you know very well.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And I say that I do not. That I haven&rsquo;t the
-shadow of an idea&mdash;and that you must explain, Tony;
-explain.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll explain all right!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The last word was almost lost in a battering gust of
-wind. He waited for it to die away, and then:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How soon did you give away the secret to Ember?&rdquo;
-he said, and heard her gasp.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To Jeffrey&mdash;you think I told Jeffrey?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Anthony laughed. It needed only her use of Ember&rsquo;s
-name.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know that you told Ember,&rdquo; he said in a voice
-like ice.</p>
-<p>Raymond put her hands to her head. She pressed
-her throbbing temples and stared at this shadow of
-Anthony. It was beyond any nightmare that they
-should meet like this. She made a very great effort,
-and came up to him, touching his wrist, trying to take
-his hand.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_180">180</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony, I don&rsquo;t know what you&rsquo;re thinking of. I
-don&rsquo;t know how you can speak to me like this. I don&rsquo;t
-know what you mean&mdash;I don&rsquo;t indeed. Since you went
-I have only been into the passages twice, last night and
-to-night. I went there because&mdash;oh, why do people go
-and weep upon a grave? I had no grave to go to, but
-I thought that, if I came here where we used to meet,
-perhaps the you that was haunting me would take
-shape so that I could see it, or else leave me. I felt
-driven, and I didn&rsquo;t know what was driving me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the breathless silence that followed she heard
-him say:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I <i>know</i> that you told Ember&rdquo;&mdash;and quite suddenly
-all the strength went out of her.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_181">181</div>
-<h2 id="c18"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XVIII</span></h2>
-<p>When Jane turned, and ran back down the
-dark passage, she had just the one thought&mdash;to
-get away out of earshot. That she, or any one but
-Anthony Luttrell, should have heard that breaking
-tone in Raymond&rsquo;s voice shocked her profoundly.
-She felt guilty of having intruded upon the innermost
-sacred places of another woman&rsquo;s life. It shocked and
-moved her very deeply. Tears blinded her, and she
-ran into the dark without a thought for herself. It
-was only when, looking back, she could not see even a
-glimmer of outside twilight that she halted and began
-to think what she must do.</p>
-<p>The practical was never very long in abeyance with
-Jane. She began to plan rapidly, even whilst she
-dried her eyes. She would feel her way to the foot of
-the stairs. If she kept touching the left-hand wall,
-there would be very little risk of losing her way. Only
-one passage had led off in that direction and that one
-diverged at right angles, so that she would not run
-the risk of going down it unawares. When she came
-to the foot of the stairs, she would turn back again
-and wait in the first cross-passage until Raymond
-passed. Then she would follow her up the steps and
-watch to see how the door opened on this side.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_182">182</div>
-<p>Jane was very much pleased with her plan when
-she had made it. It made her feel very intelligent
-and efficient. She began to put it into practice at
-once, walking quite quickly with her right hand feeling
-in front of her and the left just brushing the wall.
-Of course the stone was horrid to touch&mdash;cold, damp,
-slimy. She was sure the slime was green. Once she
-jabbed her finger on a rock splinter, and once she
-touched something soft which squirmed. The dark
-seemed to get darker and darker, and the silence was
-like a weight that she could hardly carry.</p>
-<p>Her little glow of self-satisfaction died down and
-left her coldly afraid. Then, quite suddenly, she
-came to the cross-passage. Her fingers slid from the
-stone into black air, groped, stretched out, and touched&mdash;something&mdash;warm,
-alive.</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s gasping scream went echoing down the dark.
-A hand came up and caught her wrist, another fell
-upon her right shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane, for the Lord&rsquo;s sake, hush!&rdquo; said Henry&rsquo;s voice.</p>
-<p>Jane caught her breath as if she were going to
-scream again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry, you utter, utter, <i>utter</i> beast!&rdquo; she said,
-and incontinently burst into tears.</p>
-<p>Henry put his arms round her, and Jane wept as
-she had never wept in her life, her face tightly pressed
-against the rough tweed of his coat sleeve, her whole
-figure shaking with tumultuous sobs.</p>
-<p>Presently, when she was mopping her eyes and feeling
-quite desperately ashamed, she exclaimed:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had just touched a slug, and you were worse.
-I didn&rsquo;t think anything could be worse than a slug,
-but you were.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry had kissed the back of her neck twice while
-she was crying. Now he managed to kiss a little bit
-of damp cheek.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_183">183</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not to,&rdquo; said Jane, in a muffled whisper.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; said Henry, with the utmost simplicity.
-&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mind it, you know you don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
-He did it again. &ldquo;Jane, if you had minded, you
-wouldn&rsquo;t have clung to me like that. Jane darling,
-you do like me a little bit, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t! And I didn&rsquo;t cling, I didn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You did. Take it from me, you did.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane made a very slight effort to detach herself.
-It was unsuccessful because Henry was a good deal
-stronger than she was and he held her firmly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry, I really hate you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Any one
-might cling, if they thought it was a slug or Mr. Ember
-and then found it wasn&rsquo;t.&rdquo; Then, after a pause,
-&ldquo;Henry, when a person says they hate you, it&rsquo;s
-usual to let go of them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My book of etiquette,&rdquo; said Henry firmly, &ldquo;says&mdash;page
-163, para. ii.&mdash;&lsquo;A profession of hatred is more
-compromising than a confession of love; a woman who
-expresses hatred in words has love in her heart.&rsquo; And
-I really did see that in a book yesterday, so it&rsquo;s bound
-to be true, isn&rsquo;t it?&mdash;isn&rsquo;t it, darling?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry, I told you to stop,&rdquo; said Jane; &ldquo;I simply
-<i>won&rsquo;t</i> be kissed by a man I&rsquo;m not engaged to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, but we are,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;I mean you will,
-won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane came a very little nearer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We should quarrel,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;quite dreadfully.
-You know there are some people you feel you&rsquo;d never
-quarrel with, not if you lived with them a hundred
-years; and there are others, well, you know from the
-very first minute that you&rsquo;d quarrel with them and
-keep on doing it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_184">184</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Like we&rsquo;re doing now?&rdquo; said Henry hopefully.
-Jane nodded. Of course Henry could not see the
-nod, but he felt it because it bumped his chin.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All really happily married people quarrel,&rdquo; he
-said. &ldquo;The really hopeless marriages are the polite
-ones. And you know you&rsquo;ll like quarrelling with me,
-Jane. We&rsquo;ll make up in between whiles, and there
-won&rsquo;t be a dull moment. Will you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mind promising to quarrel,&rdquo; said Jane.
-&ldquo;No, Henry, you&rsquo;re positively not to kiss me any
-more. I&rsquo;m here on business, if you&rsquo;re not. How
-did you get here? And why were you lurking here,
-pretending to be a slug?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Suppose you tell me first,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;How
-did <i>you</i> get here?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I followed Lady Heritage. I&rsquo;ve got an immense
-amount to tell you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She leaned against Henry&rsquo;s arm in the darkness,
-and spoke in a soft, eager voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It really began yesterday. I woke up and couldn&rsquo;t
-go to sleep again, so I came down for a book, and just
-as I was at the drawing-room door, I saw Lady Heritage
-come out of the corner by Willoughby Luttrell&rsquo;s
-picture. Did you know there was a door there, Henry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. Go on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She went upstairs, and I was trying to screw up my
-courage to cross the hall when Mr. Ember came down
-the stairs and disappeared into the same corner. Of
-course then I <i>knew</i> there must be a door there, so
-I made up my mind to come down to-night and look
-for it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_185">185</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane, wait,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;You say Ember came
-down the stairs and went through the door. Do you
-think Lady Heritage left it open? Or do you think he
-watched her come out, and then found the way for
-himself?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jane; &ldquo;neither. I mean I&rsquo;m quite sure
-it wasn&rsquo;t like that at all. She shut the door, for I heard
-it, and it certainly wasn&rsquo;t the first time Mr. Ember had
-been that way. Why, he even put his light out before
-he came to the wall, and any one would have to know
-the way very well to find it in the dark.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. Then what happened?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I went back to bed. Henry, you simply haven&rsquo;t
-any idea how much I hated going up those stairs.
-There was a perfectly fiendish patch of moonlight, and
-I felt as if I couldn&rsquo;t go through it and perhaps be
-pounced on by some one just round the corner. If it
-hadn&rsquo;t been for the housemaids finding me in the morning,
-I believe I should just have stuck where I was.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry&rsquo;s arm tightened a little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, to-night I hid in the study quite early, but
-I had hardly got there when Lady Heritage came down.
-I watched to see what she did, and as soon as she had
-gone through the door and shut it, I hauled that great
-heavy chair along and climbed on to it, and found the
-spring. Your old secret door was made for much taller
-people than me, and I was just dreadfully frightened
-that some one would come and find me standing on the
-chair in the corner, and looking like a perfect fool. Oh,
-I <i>was</i> thankful when I really got into the passage and
-found that Lady Heritage was still in sight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think it was frightfully clever of you,&rdquo; said
-Henry, &ldquo;frightfully clever and frightfully brave; but
-you&rsquo;re not to do it again. You might have run into
-Ember or any one.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_186">186</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you do believe there&rsquo;s something dreadful
-going on,&rdquo; said Jane quickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about what I believe, but I know
-that the passages are being used, and that they&rsquo;ve been
-wired for electric light. I haven&rsquo;t explored them yet,
-but people don&rsquo;t do that sort of thing for nothing.
-Now go on. I may say that I saw Raymond pass, and
-you after her. What happened next?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane hesitated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;She opened another
-door, and went out&mdash;why, it&rsquo;s been puzzling me, but of
-course I know now, the passage leads to the headland.
-And the other day, when I was so frightened, Mr.
-Patterson must have come out of it; and he was there
-to-night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, go on. Did they meet?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Jane, in a queer, shy voice. &ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t
-help hearing. I ran away at once, but I couldn&rsquo;t help
-hearing her call him Tony. It&rsquo;s your cousin, Anthony
-Luttrell, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s Tony,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;Thank the Lord
-they&rsquo;ve met. I&rsquo;d just left him there after jawing him
-about seeing Raymond.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I hope they&rsquo;ve made it up,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;She
-looked so dreadfully unhappy last night that I felt I
-simply couldn&rsquo;t bear it. It&rsquo;s so dreadful to see people
-hurt like that, and not be able to do anything. Do you
-think they&rsquo;ll make it up?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_187">187</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope so,&rdquo; said Henry not very hopefully.
-&ldquo;Tony&rsquo;s a queer sort of fellow, you know&mdash;frightfully
-hard to move, and a perfect devil for hugging a grievance.
-He&rsquo;s had a rotten time of it too. What with
-Raymond marrying some one else, and then getting
-knocked out himself, and coming round to find himself
-a prisoner&mdash;well, there wasn&rsquo;t much to take his mind
-off it. He escaped three times before he actually got
-away, and then he went to Russia and had the worst
-time of the lot. So that he&rsquo;s got a good deal of excuse
-for sticking to his grouch.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane suddenly pinched Henry very hard, put her
-lips quite close to his ear, and breathed:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some one&rsquo;s coming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As she spoke Henry drew her noiselessly back a yard
-or two. The faint glow which Jane had seen brightened
-until it seemed dazzling. The arched entrance to
-the tunnel in which they stood became sharply defined.
-The light struck the opposite wall, showing it rough
-and black, with patches of dull green slime.</p>
-<p>Instantly Jane felt that her finger-tips would never
-be clean again. As the thought shuddered through her
-mind the light went by. That&rsquo;s what it looked like,
-the passing of a light. Raymond&rsquo;s dark figure hardly
-showed behind it. The lighted archway faded. The
-darkness spread an even surface over everything
-again.</p>
-<p>Jane laid her face against Henry&rsquo;s sleeve, pressed
-quite close to him, and said in a little voice that
-trembled:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, they haven&rsquo;t made it up&mdash;they haven&rsquo;t. He&rsquo;d
-have come with her if they had.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid so.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_188">188</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Of <i>course</i> he&rsquo;d have come with her. You wouldn&rsquo;t
-have let me go by myself, you know you wouldn&rsquo;t.
-No, they haven&rsquo;t made it up, they can&rsquo;t have, and&mdash;oh,
-Henry, why do people quarrel like that? You won&rsquo;t
-with me, will you&mdash;ever? I mean that dreadful
-world-without-end sort. I couldn&rsquo;t bear it. You
-won&rsquo;t, will you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane was shaking all over. Henry put his arms
-round her very tight, laid his cheek against hers, and
-said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not much! It&rsquo;s a mug&rsquo;s game.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After a little while Jane said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I must go. You know she came to my room
-before, and last night when I got back I found the door
-shut. I had left it open so as not to make any noise,
-but it was shut when I got back. That frightened me
-more than anything, but now I think it must have
-been the wind that shut it. I think so, only I&rsquo;m not
-sure. It might have been the wind, or it might
-have been ... somebody. It&rsquo;s much more frightening
-not to be sure. So I&rsquo;d better go, hadn&rsquo;t I?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, you must go,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come with
-you and show you how to get out. And you must
-promise me, Jane, that you won&rsquo;t come down here by
-yourself?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How can I promise? I might have to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know why,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;but I might have
-to. Supposing they were murdering some one, and
-I heard the screams? Or suppose I knew that they
-were just going to blow the house up?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Henry, with strong common sense, &ldquo;I
-don&rsquo;t see what good you&rsquo;d do by getting murdered and
-blown up too, which is what it would come to. You
-really must promise me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I really won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry gave her an exasperated shake.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_189">189</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Look here, Jane,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the whole thing&rsquo;s
-most infernally complicated. Tony&rsquo;s chucking his
-job here, says he can&rsquo;t stand it, and I must go back
-to town and see Piggy about that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who on earth is Piggy?&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sir Julian Le Mesurier, my chief. Every one calls
-him Piggy. I must see him about Tony, and I also
-want to report what I told you about the passages
-being wired and in use. I&rsquo;ll try and see Tony again
-before I go. You see the thing is, I don&rsquo;t know how
-far Raymond is involved, and I want to get her out
-of the way. Tony&rsquo;s the only man who can get her
-out of the way. I suppose I ought to go through
-all the passages to-night, but I&rsquo;m not going to. I
-shall tell Piggy why. As a matter of fact, he&rsquo;ll be
-just as keen as I am on getting Raymond out of it.
-Once she&rsquo;s clear, we can come down on Ember like
-a cartload of bricks and smash up any devilry he may
-have been contriving. Now do you see why you must
-keep clear? I can&rsquo;t possibly do my job if I&rsquo;m torn in
-bits about your running into danger. And next time
-you went feeling along these passages you might really
-run into your friend Ember, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t unless I&rsquo;ve got to,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;You
-don&rsquo;t imagine I like green slime, and slugs, and the
-pitch dark, do you? But I won&rsquo;t promise. Now I&rsquo;m
-going. Good-bye, Henry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re an obstinate little devil, Jane,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>Jane gave a little gurgling laugh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We haven&rsquo;t made an assignation yet,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;When are you coming back?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_190">190</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ve made an appointment with Tony for
-to-morrow night, but I&rsquo;ll try and catch him now and
-put that off for twenty-four hours. If for any reason
-I have to come down sooner, I will come and tap on
-your cupboard door. If I&rsquo;m not there by midnight
-to-morrow, don&rsquo;t expect me. But I&rsquo;ll be there for
-certain the following night&mdash;let me see, that&rsquo;s Sunday.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But if you don&rsquo;t come?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, just supposing something prevented you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Henry cheerfully.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_191">191</div>
-<h2 id="c19"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XIX</span></h2>
-<p>Henry found Anthony Luttrell sitting on the
-stone bench and so oblivious of his surroundings
-that it needed a hand on his shoulder to rouse him.
-Then he said vaguely:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, you&rsquo;re back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rouse up a bit, Tony. It might have been Mr.
-Jeffrey Ember, you know. He was in the passages
-last night, and, for all I know, he may be there every
-night. I came back to say that I shan&rsquo;t be down
-to-morrow. Make our appointment Sunday night
-instead.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I want to be out of this by then,&rdquo; said Anthony.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go sick if there&rsquo;s no other way. Stay here
-another forty-eight hours I cannot, and will not. I
-tell you I can&rsquo;t answer for myself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry gave an inward groan. Jane had evidently
-been entirely right. They had not made it up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve seen Raymond. I saw her pass.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen ... Lady Heritage. Henry, will you
-tell me what the devil women are made of? She
-seemed to expect to take things up exactly as if the last
-seven years had never been at all, exactly as if there
-had been no breach, no war, no John Heritage, and
-no Jeffrey Ember. Oh, damn Jeffrey Ember!...&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_192">192</div>
-<p>&ldquo;And I suppose you stood there and fired off sarcastic
-remarks at the poor girl, instead of thanking
-heaven for your luck. What&rsquo;s the good of brooding
-over the past, Tony, and letting it spoil everything for
-you now? Raymond cares a heap more for you than
-you deserve, and if she&rsquo;s got into a mess, it&rsquo;s up to you
-to get her out of it. After all, you don&rsquo;t want a
-scandal, do you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to get away. It&rsquo;s no good, Henry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give Piggy your letter,&rdquo; Henry went on, &ldquo;and
-tell him how you feel. He&rsquo;ll recall you all right.
-But I know he&rsquo;s very strong on your coming to life
-again. You ought to have done it ages ago; when
-you came back from Russia, in fact. Look here,
-Tony, be a reasonable being. Shave off your beard,
-and take the artistic colour off that scar. Turn up
-in London as yourself, and wire Raymond to come up
-and meet you. I want her got away from here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then get Piggy to wire to her, or her father.
-There are a dozen ways in which it can be done. I
-refuse quite definitely to have anything to do with it.
-If Piggy hasn&rsquo;t recalled me by Monday, I shall simply
-go. You can tell him that, if you like; and you can
-tell him that I shall probably kill some one if I stay
-here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Without another word he got up, walked round the
-seat, and disappeared into the passage.</p>
-<p>A little later Henry emerged from a cave upon the
-seashore. There were a number of these caves, some
-large, some small, under the far side of the headland.</p>
-<p>The boundary of Luttrell Marches lay a quarter of a
-mile behind.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_193">193</div>
-<p>Henry walked briskly along the shore, keeping close
-to the cliff so that he might walk on rock instead of
-shingle. Presently he left the beach and climbed a
-steep zigzagging path. Twenty minutes&rsquo; walk brought
-him to a small inn where he picked up his car and
-drove away.</p>
-<p>Next day in Sir Julian&rsquo;s room he unburdened himself
-and delivered Anthony&rsquo;s letter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;M, yes; I&rsquo;ll recall him,&rdquo; said Piggy frowning.
-&ldquo;He&rsquo;s no good where he is, if that&rsquo;s his frame of mind.
-But it&rsquo;s a pity&mdash;a pity. It bears out exactly what
-I&rsquo;ve always said. He has extraordinary abilities;
-I suppose he might have made a brilliant success in
-almost any profession, but he&rsquo;s <i>impayable</i>.... I
-don&rsquo;t think we&rsquo;ve got a word for it in English ...;
-he lacks the vein of mediocrity which I maintain is
-indispensable&mdash;the faculty of being ordinary which, for
-instance, you possess.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry blushed a little, and Sir Julian laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think I&rsquo;ll send him abroad again. Of course
-it&rsquo;s high time he came to life, as you say, if it&rsquo;s only
-for the sake of getting you out of what must be an
-extremely awkward position. My wife tells me that
-match-making mammas of her acquaintance regard
-you with romantic interest as the owner of Luttrell
-Marches. Well, I&rsquo;ll see him when he comes up. Meanwhile,
-I&rsquo;ve had Simpson&rsquo;s report. He says that,
-according to reliable information, two men were concerned
-in the sale of Formula &lsquo;A.&rsquo; One is a man called
-Belcovitch, the other, who seems to have kept in the
-background, is described as a big good-looking man&mdash;florid
-complexion, blue eyes, either English or American,
-though he passed under the name of Bernier and
-professed to be Swiss. Does that fit your friend Ember
-by any chance?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Henry, &ldquo;but it sounds very much like
-Molloy.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_194">194</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Molloy was supposed to have gone to the States,
-wasn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Piggy had been drawing a neat brick wall at the foot
-of a sheet of foolscap. He now sketched in rapidly two
-fighting cats. It was a spirited performance. Each
-cat had wildly up-ended fur and a waving tail.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, he and Ember told Miss Smith that he was
-going to the States. I don&rsquo;t know that that goes for
-very much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;M, no,&rdquo; said Piggy. &ldquo;Well, Bernier passed
-through Paris yesterday, and is in London to-day.
-Belcovitch has gone to Vienna. Now, if Bernier is
-Molloy, he&rsquo;ll probably communicate with Ember. I
-was having him shadowed, of course, but the fool who
-was on the job has managed to let him slip. I&rsquo;m
-hoping to pick him up again, but meanwhile....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Piggy was putting in the cats&rsquo; claws as he spoke, his
-enormous hand absolutely steady over the delicate
-curves and sharp points.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing more about Ember?&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>Sir Julian shook his head, and went on drawing.
-&ldquo;He wore the white flower of a blameless life in Chicago,
-and was absolutely unknown to the police,&rdquo; he
-said. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a three-volume novel about Molloy,
-though. You&rsquo;d better have it to read. Now you go off
-and have some sleep, and ... er, by the way, if Miss
-Smith ... what&rsquo;s her other name?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, if she wants to get away at any time, my
-wife will be very pleased to put her up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you awfully, sir,&rdquo; said Henry.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_195">195</div>
-<p>When he had gone, Sir Julian asked the Exchange
-for his private number. He sat holding the receiver to
-his ear and touching up his cats until Isobel&rsquo;s voice
-said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, who is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then he said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;M&rsquo; dear, in the matter of Henry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes? Has anything happened?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the matter of Henry,&rdquo; said Piggy firmly, &ldquo;I
-should say, from his conscious expression, that he had
-brought it off. Her name is Jane Smith.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And I mayn&rsquo;t ask any questions?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not one. I just thought you&rsquo;d better know her
-name in case she suddenly arrived to stay with you.
-That&rsquo;s all. I shall be late.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He rang off.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_196">196</div>
-<h2 id="c20"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XX</span></h2>
-<p>It was not till next day that Jane missed her
-handkerchief. When she reached her room
-after saying good-bye to Henry she had rolled the
-serge dress, the wet felt slippers and the damp stockings
-into a bundle, and pushed them right to the back
-of her cupboard. She was so sleepy that she hardly
-knew how she undressed.</p>
-<p>The instant her head touched the pillow, she slept,
-a pleasant, dreamless sleep, and only woke with the
-housemaid&rsquo;s knock.</p>
-<p>It was when she was drinking a very welcome cup
-of tea that she began to wonder whether she was
-engaged to Henry or not. On the one hand, Henry
-undoubtedly appeared to think that she was; on the
-other, Jane felt perfectly satisfied that she had pledged
-herself to nothing more formidable than a promise to
-quarrel. A small but very becoming dimple appeared
-in Jane&rsquo;s cheek as she came to the conclusion that
-Henry was possibly engaged to her, but that she was
-certainly not engaged to Henry. It seemed to her
-to be a very pleasant state of affairs. It was, in fact,
-with great reluctance that she transferred her thoughts
-to more practical matters.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_197">197</div>
-<p>Having dressed, she extracted the bundle of clothes
-from the cupboard, and decided that the serge dress
-might be hung up. There were one or two damp
-patches and several green smears, but the former
-would dry and the latter when dry would brush
-off.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But the slippers are awful,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>They were; the cork soles sopping wet, the felt
-drenched and slimy. She made a brown paper parcel
-of them, and put it at the extreme back of the cupboard.
-The stockings she consigned to the clothes
-basket.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can wash them out later on,&rdquo; she thought.</p>
-<p>It was at this point that she missed her handkerchief.
-She had had a handkerchief the night before. She
-was sure of that, because she remembered drying her
-eyes with it after she had cried.</p>
-<p>A little colour came into her face at the recollection
-of how vehemently she had wept on Henry&rsquo;s shoulder
-with Henry&rsquo;s arm round her, but it died again at the
-insistently recurring thought:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had a handkerchief. I dried my eyes with it.
-Where is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Not only had she dried her eyes with it, but after
-that she remembered scrubbing the finger-tips that had
-touched the slug. The handkerchief must be horribly
-smeared and wet. It was one of Renata&rsquo;s, of course,
-white with a blue check border, and &ldquo;R. Molloy, 12&rdquo;
-in marking-ink across one corner. Imagine buying
-twelve horrors like that! Mercifully Renata must
-have lost most of them, for Jane had only inherited
-four.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_198">198</div>
-<p>She brought her thoughts back with a jerk. Where
-was it? If she had dropped it in the house it would
-have been either in the hall, on the stairs, or in the
-corridor, and one of the housemaids would have
-brought it to her by now. It must have fallen in the
-cross-passage where she had stood with Henry, and if
-it were found....</p>
-<p>Jane moved a step or two backwards, and sat down
-on the edge of the bed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of all the first-class prize <i>idiots</i>!&rdquo; she said, and
-there words failed her.</p>
-<p>If she had dropped it in the cross-passage, it might
-lie there until Sunday night when she could get Henry
-to retrieve it, or it might not. Ember&mdash;Lady Heritage&mdash;Anthony
-Luttrell, any one of these three people
-might have business in that cross-passage, in which
-case a handkerchief, even if stained, was just the most
-unlikely thing in the world to pass unnoticed. Even
-if no one went up that passage, it might be seen from
-the main tunnel. Of course, if it were Anthony
-Luttrell who found it, it would not matter. But it
-was so very much more likely to be one of the others.</p>
-<p>At intervals during the morning, Jane continued to
-argue the question, or rather two questions. First,
-the probabilities for and against the handkerchief
-being discovered; and second, should she, or should
-she not, go and look for it herself in defiance of Henry&rsquo;s
-prohibition? She had spoken the truth, but not the
-whole truth, when she told Henry that she hated the
-idea of going into the passages alone. She hated
-going, but she wanted to go. Most ardently she
-desired to find things out before Henry found them
-out. It would be nice and safe to sit with her hands
-in her lap whilst Henry explored secret subterranean
-caverns, and unravelled dangerous conspiracies&mdash;safe
-but hideously dull. When Henry had finished exploring
-and unravelling, he would come along frightfully
-pleased with himself and want her to be engaged
-to him, and he would always, always feel superior
-and convinced that he had done the whole thing
-himself. It was a most intolerable thought, more
-intolerable than green slime and being alone in the
-dark. It was at this point that Jane made up her
-mind that she would go and look for her handkerchief
-herself without waiting for Henry.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_199">199</div>
-<p>Having made her decision, she found an unlooked-for
-opportunity for carrying it out, for at lunch Lady
-Heritage announced her intention of putting in several
-hours of laboratory work, whilst it transpired that
-Ember was going out in the two-seater car which he
-drove himself, and that he was quite uncertain when
-he would be back. Jane at once made up her mind
-that, as soon as the coast was quite clear, she would
-slip down into the passages. She would wait until
-lunch had been cleared and the servants were safely
-out of the way. No one was likely to come into the
-hall, and the whole thing would be so much less
-terrifying than another midnight expedition.</p>
-<p>Ember excused himself before lunch was over, and
-she heard him drive away a few minutes later; but
-Lady Heritage sat on, her untasted coffee beside her.
-She sat with her chin in her hand, looking out of the
-window, and it was obvious enough that her thoughts
-were far away. She was probably unconscious of
-Jane&rsquo;s presence, certainly undesirous of it, and yet, for
-the life of her, Jane could not have risen or asked if
-she might go. Once or twice she looked from under
-her lashes at Raymond&rsquo;s still white face. There was a
-new look upon it since yesterday. She was sadder and
-yet softer. She looked as if she had not slept at all.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_200">200</div>
-<p>After a very long half-hour she turned her eyes on
-Jane. There was a flash of surprise and then a
-frown.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t have waited,&rdquo; she said in a cold voice,
-and then got up and went out without another word.</p>
-<p>Jane took a book into the hall and sat there.</p>
-<p>Presently she caught a glimpse of Raymond&rsquo;s white
-overall in the upper corridor, and heard the clang with
-which the steel gate closed behind her. She sat quite
-still and went on reading until all sounds from the
-direction of the dining-room had ceased. Silence
-settled upon the house, and she told herself that this
-was her opportunity.</p>
-<p>She ran up to her room, changed into the serge dress,
-and put on a pair of outdoor shoes. She did not possess
-an electric torch, and the question of a light had
-exercised her a good deal. The best she could do was
-to pocket a box of matches and one of the bedroom
-candles which was half burnt down. She then went
-downstairs, and, after listening anxiously for some
-moments, she once more moved the heavy chair and,
-climbing on it, began to feel for the knots on the panelling.
-As her fingers found and pressed them, she
-heard, simultaneously with the click of the released
-spring, a faint thudding noise. With a spasm of
-horror she knew that some one had passed through the
-baize door that shut off the servants&rsquo; wing. The
-sound she had heard was the sound of the door falling
-back into place, and at any other moment it would have
-gone unnoticed.</p>
-<p>Fortunately for herself Jane was accustomed to a
-rapid transition from thought to action. She was off the
-chair, across the hall, and sitting with a book on her lap
-when the butler made his usual rather slow entrance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_201">201</div>
-<p>She had recognised at once that it would be impossible
-for her to replace the chair and escape discovery.
-It stood in the shadow, and she hoped for the best.</p>
-<p>Blotson crossed the hall and disappeared into Sir
-William&rsquo;s study.</p>
-<p>Jane gazed at a printed page upon which the letters
-of the alphabet were playing &ldquo;General post.&rdquo; After
-some interminable minutes Blotson reappeared. He
-shut the study door, approached Jane, and in a low
-and confidential voice inquired would she have tea in
-the hall, the drawing-room, or the library.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, the library,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;the library, Blotson.&rdquo;
-And with a majestic, &ldquo;Very good, miss,&rdquo; Blotson
-withdrew.</p>
-<p>Blotson&rsquo;s &ldquo;Very good&rdquo; always reminded Jane of
-the Royal Assent to an Act of Parliament. It was
-doubtless a form, but how stately, how dignified a
-form.</p>
-<p>When the chill superinduced by the presence of
-Blotson had yielded to a more natural temperature,
-Jane went on tiptoe across the hall and replaced the
-chair. It was a comfort to reflect that it had escaped
-Blotson&rsquo;s all-embracing eye. With a hasty glance she
-swung the panel inwards, slipped through, and closed
-it again.</p>
-<p>She descended all the steps before she ventured to
-light her candle, and she was careful to put the spent
-match into her pocket. Renata&rsquo;s dress really did have
-a pocket, which, of course, made the dropping of the
-handkerchief quite inexcusable.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_202">202</div>
-<p>The passage was much less terrifying when one had
-a light of one&rsquo;s own instead of the distant glimmer of
-somebody else&rsquo;s and the horrid possibility of being
-left at any moment in total darkness, with no idea of
-one&rsquo;s whereabouts or of how to get out.</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s spirits rose brightly. To dread a thing and
-then to find it easy provides one with a pleasant sense
-of difficulty overcome. In great cheerfulness of spirit
-Jane walked along until she came to the cross-passage
-on her right. She turned up it, walked a few steps
-holding her candle high, and there, a couple of yards
-from the entrance, lay the handkerchief rolled into a
-wet and very dirty ball. She picked it up gingerly, and
-put it into her convenient pocket.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And I suppose I ought to go back at once; but
-what a waste, when every one is safely out of the way,
-and I&rsquo;ve got through the really horrid part, which is
-opening that abominable spring.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane hesitated, weighing the duty of a swift return
-against the pleasure of exploring and perhaps getting
-ahead of Henry. The recollection that Henry had
-forbidden her to explore turned the scale&mdash;towards
-pleasure.</p>
-<p>She had four inches of candle and a whole box of
-matches. She had at least two hours of liberty, and,
-most important of all, she felt herself to be in a frame
-of mind which invited success. The question was
-where to begin.</p>
-<p>On the right-hand side there was only this single
-passage. Jane did not feel attracted by it. She was
-almost sure that it must lead to the potting-shed,
-and to descend from conspiracies to garden lumber
-would indeed be an anti-climax.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_203">203</div>
-<p>On the left there were four passages. Jane walked
-back along the way she had come. The first passage
-left the main tunnel at an acute angle which obviously
-carried it back under the main block of the house.
-Jane decided to explore it. She held her candle high
-in one hand and her skirts close with the other. The
-passage was low, and she had to bend a little. After
-half a dozen yards she came to a flight of steps. They
-were wet, slippery, and very steep. Jane stood on
-the top step and looked down.</p>
-<p>The walls oozed moisture, the candlelight showed
-her a pale slug about five inches long&mdash;Jane said six to
-start with, but, under pressure from Henry, retreated
-as far as five and would not yield another half-inch;
-she also said that the slug waved its horns at her and
-was crawling in her direction. Right there, as the
-Americans say, she made up her mind that this would
-be a good passage to explore with Henry, later on.
-She caught a glimpse of another slug on a level with
-the fifth step, whisked round, and ran.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The <i>one</i> point about slugs is that they can&rsquo;t run,&rdquo;
-she said as she came back into the main corridor.</p>
-<p>Without giving herself time to think, she plunged
-into the next opening on the left. It ran at right
-angles to the central passage, and was comparatively
-dry. It kept on the same level too, and Jane, trying
-to make a mental plan, thought that it must run under
-the house, cutting across the north wing. It occurred
-to her that there might be vaults of some kind under
-the terrace, and that this passage would perhaps lead
-to them. If this were so, it must soon either curve
-gradually to the left or take a sudden sharp turn. She
-wished she had thought of counting her steps, but it
-was difficult to pace regularly on a slippery floor and
-in such a poor light.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_204">204</div>
-<p>Just as she had begun to think that the passage
-must run out to sea, she came to the sharp turn which
-she had expected. A wall of black rock faced her, to
-her right a tunnel ran in at a sharp angle, and to her
-left there was a dark stone arch, a few feet of a new
-sort of tunnel built of brick, and then a steel gate
-exactly like the gates which shut off the laboratories
-in the house above.</p>
-<p>Jane stared at the gate as if she expected it to
-dissolve into the surrounding darkness. The candle-light
-danced on the steel. It was rusty, but not so
-very rusty, and therefore it could not have been for
-very long in its present position. She came closer
-and touched it. It was real.</p>
-<p>Her amazing good fortune almost overcame her.
-What a thing to tell Henry! What a justification
-for flouting his orders!! <i>What a score!!!</i></p>
-<p>Jane transferred the candle to her left hand, put
-out a right hand which trembled with excitement,
-and tried the gate. It was open. For a moment
-she drew back. Like the child who sits looking at a
-birthday parcel, the mere sight of which provides
-it with so many thrills that it cannot bring itself to
-cut the string and unwrap the paper, Jane stood and
-looked at her gate, her discovery&mdash;hers, not Henry&rsquo;s.</p>
-<p>As she looked, her eyes were caught by a small knob
-on the right-hand wall. It was about four feet above
-the floor and quite close to the steel bars. It was
-made of some dull metal and looked exactly like an
-electric-light switch. By going quite close to the
-gate and looking through she could see that a cased
-wire ran along the bricks on the same level, and she
-remembered that Henry had said the passages were
-wired.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_205">205</div>
-<p>Had Henry been first on the field after all? She
-turned, held her light high, and looked back. The
-wire went up to the roof and ran along until she lost
-it in the darkness. She reflected hopefully that Henry
-might have seen the wire much farther along, and
-turned back again.</p>
-<p>Her fingers were on the switch when a really dreadful
-thought pricked her. Suppose the switch controlled
-some horrible explosive! It might turn on a light,
-most likely it did; but, on the other hand, it might
-let loose a raging demon of destruction that would
-blow the whole place to smithereens. It was an unreasonable
-thought, the sort of thought that one
-dismisses instantly in the daylight, but which by
-candlelight in an underground tunnel assumes a certain
-degree of credibility.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The question is, am I going on or not?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The silence having failed to supply her with an
-answer, she said viciously, &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a worse rabbit
-than Renata,&rdquo; shut her eyes, held her breath, and
-jerked the switch down.</p>
-<p>Through her closed lids came a red flash. She clung
-to the switch and waited. A drop of boiling wax
-guttered down upon her left forefinger. She opened
-her eyes and saw the steel gate like a black tracery
-against a lighted space beyond. With a quickly
-drawn breath of relief she pushed the steel gate, took
-one step forward, and then stood rigid, listening to the
-muffled yet insistent whir of an alarm bell. After
-one horrified moment she pulled the door towards her
-again. The sound ceased. Jane considered.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_206">206</div>
-<p>As a result of her consideration she turned out the
-electric light, opened the gate, slipped through, and
-closed it again so quickly that the bell was hardly
-heard. She did not allow it to latch, and, stooping,
-set a piece of broken brick to hold it ajar. The
-candlelight seemed very inadequate, but she decided
-that she must make it do, and holding it well up in
-front of her, she came through a brick arch into a
-long chamber with walls of stone.</p>
-<p>Jane looked about her with ignorant, widely opened
-eyes. She had never been in a laboratory, but she
-knew that this must be one. The printed page does
-not exist for nothing. The vague yellow light flickered
-on strange cylindrical shapes and was flung back by
-glass jars and odd twisted retorts. A great many
-appliances, for which she could find no name, emerged
-from dense shadow into the uncertain dusk.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s like a medi&aelig;val torture chamber&mdash;only worse,
-colder&mdash;more calculating! It&rsquo;s a sort of torture
-chamber. I <i>hate</i> it. It gives me the grues,&rdquo; said
-Jane.</p>
-<p>She moved slowly down the room. It was quite
-dry in here. There was no slime, and there were
-no slugs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hate it a thousand times more than the passages,&rdquo;
-she said.</p>
-<p>Her feet moved slowly and unwillingly. In the far
-corner there were two more arches. She thought she
-would just see what lay beyond them and then return.
-She took the one on the right hand first. It ran along
-a little way and then terminated in a small round
-chamber which was full of packing-cases. She returned
-and went down the second passage. She was just
-inside it when with startling suddenness she found
-herself looking at her own shadow. It lay clear and
-black on the brick floor in front of her. Some one had
-turned on the electric light.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_207">207</div>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s candle tilted and the wax dropped. Her
-horrified eyes looked about wildly for a place of refuge.
-The light showed her one. Within a yard of the
-entrance there was an arched hollow. With a sort of
-gasp she blew her candle out and bolted for the shelter.
-The whir of the electric bell sounded as she gained it,
-sounded and then ceased. She heard Ember say,
-&ldquo;Quite a good run, wasn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; and a voice which
-she did not expect answer, &ldquo;Well enough.&rdquo; The
-voice puzzled her. It was a pleasant voice, deep and
-rich. It had something of a brogue and something of
-a twang.</p>
-<p>A most unpleasant light broke upon Jane. It was
-the voice of the Anarchist Uncle. It was the voice of
-Mr. Molloy.</p>
-<p>Jane got as far back into her hollow as she could.
-It was not very far. There had evidently been a
-tunnel here, but the roof had fallen in, and the floor
-was rough and uneven with the d&eacute;bris.</p>
-<p>She heard the two men moving in the room beyond,
-and she experienced a most sincere repentance for not
-having attended to the counsels of Henry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And now we can talk,&rdquo; said Ember. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve
-got the cash?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not with me,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, just in case....&rdquo;&mdash;a not unmelodious
-whistle completed the sentence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They paid the higher figure?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_208">208</div>
-<p>&ldquo;They did,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy. &ldquo;Belcovitch was for
-taking their second bid, but I told him &lsquo;No.&rsquo; Belcovitch
-has his points, but he&rsquo;s not the bold bargainer. I told
-him &lsquo;No.&rsquo; I told him &lsquo;It&rsquo;s this way&mdash;if they want it
-they&rsquo;ll pay our price.&rsquo; And pay it they did. I don&rsquo;t
-know that I ever handled that much money before, and
-all for a sheet or two of paper. Well, well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You should have brought the money with you.
-Why didn&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the now brightly lighted laboratory Molloy sat
-negligently on the end of a bench and lifted his eyebrows
-a little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In a place of safety.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, we&rsquo;ve pulled it off,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;By the way,
-the fact of the sale is known. We&rsquo;ve had an interfering
-young jack-in-office down here making inquiries, and
-Sir William has gone up to town in a very considerable
-state of nerves.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Anarchist Uncle,&rdquo; said Jane to herself, &ldquo;has
-been selling the Government Formula &lsquo;A.&rsquo; He doesn&rsquo;t
-trust Mr. Ember enough to hand the money over.
-Pleasant relations I&rsquo;ve got!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Molloy whistled again, a long-drawn note with a hint
-of dismay in it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wonder who let the cat out of the bag,&rdquo; he
-said.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_209">209</div>
-<p>&ldquo;These things always leak out. It doesn&rsquo;t really
-signify. With this money at our command we can
-complete our arrangements at once, and be ready to
-strike within the next few weeks. You and Belcovitch
-had better keep out of the way until the time comes.
-He should be here in four days&rsquo; time, travelling by the
-route we settled; then you&rsquo;ll have company. You
-must both lie close here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the devil of a plan now, Ember,&rdquo; said Molloy.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll be no better than rats in a drain.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s for your safety,&rdquo; said Ember. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re
-out for blood over this business of Formula &lsquo;A,&rsquo; I
-can tell you, and there&rsquo;s nowhere you&rsquo;d be half so
-safe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane was listening with all her ears. She decided
-that Mr. Ember&rsquo;s solicitude was not all on Molloy&rsquo;s
-account. &ldquo;He thinks that if Molloy and Belcovitch
-are arrested, they&rsquo;ll give him away over the big thing
-in order to save themselves. I expect they&rsquo;d be able to
-make a pretty good bargain for themselves, really.&rdquo;
-She heard Molloy give a sulky assent. Then Ember
-was speaking again:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I want to check the lists with you. Not the continental
-ones&mdash;I&rsquo;ll keep those for Belcovitch&mdash;but those
-for the States and here. I&rsquo;ve got them complete now,
-but I&rsquo;m not very sure about all the names. Hennessey
-now, he&rsquo;s down for Chicago, but I don&rsquo;t know that I
-altogether trust Hennessey.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s late in the day to say that,&rdquo; said Molloy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, what about Hayling Taylor?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane listened, and heard name follow name. Ember
-appeared to be reading from a list. He would name a
-large town and follow it with a list of persons who
-apparently acted as agents there. Sometimes these
-names were passed with an assenting grunt by Molloy,
-sometimes there was a discussion.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_210">210</div>
-<p>There are a great many large towns in the United
-States of America. Jane became stiffer and stiffer.
-At last she could bear her constrained half-crouching
-position no longer. Very gingerly, moving half an inch
-at a time, she let herself down until she was sitting
-on the pile of broken bricks which blocked the tunnel.
-The names went on. It was dull and monotonous to a
-degree, but behind the dullness and the monotony there
-was a sense of lurking horror.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s like being in a fog,&rdquo; said Jane&mdash;&ldquo;the sort you
-can&rsquo;t see through at all, and knowing that there&rsquo;s a
-tiger loose somewhere.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>One thing became clearer and clearer to her. Those
-lists that sounded like geography lessons must be got
-hold of somehow. Henry must have them.</p>
-<p>After what seemed like a long time Ember folded
-up one paper and produced another. If Jane had been
-able to watch Mr. Molloy&rsquo;s face, she would have
-noticed that, every now and then, it was crossed by a
-look of hesitation. He seemed constantly about to
-speak and yet held his peace.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like you to check the names for Ireland too,&rdquo;
-said Ember. &ldquo;Grogan sent me the completed list two
-days ago. You&rsquo;d better look at it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Molloy took the paper and ran his finger down
-the names, mumbling them only half audibly. His
-finger travelled more and more slowly. All at once
-he stopped, and threw the paper from him along the
-bench.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; said Ember, in his cool tones.</p>
-<p>Molloy frowned, got up, walked to the end of the
-room, and came back again. He appeared to have
-something to say, and to experience extreme difficulty
-in saying it. His words, when he did speak, seemed
-irrelevant:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_211">211</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a big sum they paid us for Formula &lsquo;A,&rsquo;&rdquo;
-he said. &ldquo;Did you ever handle as much money as that,
-Ember?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jeffrey Ember, short and sharp.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nor I. It&rsquo;s a queer thing the feeling it gives
-you. I tell you I came across with fear upon me, not
-knowing for sure whether I&rsquo;d get away with it; but
-there was a lot besides fear in it. There was power,
-Ember, I tell you&mdash;power. Whilst I&rsquo;d be sitting in the
-train, or walking down the street, or lying in my bed
-at an hotel, I&rsquo;d be thinking to myself, I&rsquo;ve got as
-much as would buy you up, and then there would
-be leavings.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What are you driving at, Molloy?&rdquo; said Ember.</p>
-<p>Molloy&rsquo;s florid colour deepened. He narrowed his
-lids and looked through them at Ember.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe I was thinking,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that there&rsquo;s a
-proverb we might take note of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s just a proverb,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s been
-in my mind since I had the handling of the money&mdash;&lsquo;A
-bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember&rsquo;s eyes lost their dull film. They brightened
-until Mr. Molloy was unable to sustain their glance.
-He shifted his gaze, and Ember said very quietly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you thinking of selling us?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Molloy broke into an oath. &ldquo;And that&rsquo;s a thing no
-one shall say of me,&rdquo; he said, with a violence that sent
-his voice echoing along through the open arches.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then may I ask you what you meant?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, just this.&rdquo; Molloy dropped to an ingratiating
-tone. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s the money safe&mdash;certain&mdash;in our
-hands now. What&rsquo;s the need of all this?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_212">212</div>
-<p>He came forward with two or three great strides,
-picked up the list from where he had thrown it, and
-beat with it upon his open hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All this,&rdquo; he repeated&mdash;&ldquo;this and what it stands
-for. You may say there&rsquo;s no risk, but there&rsquo;s a big
-risk. It&rsquo;s a gamble, and what&rsquo;s the need to be
-gambling when we&rsquo;ve got the money safe?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In plain English, you want to back out at the last
-moment?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I do not, and I defy you to say that I do.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then what&rsquo;s come to you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s the thing that&rsquo;s come to me. It came to
-me when I ran me eye down this list. See there, and
-that&rsquo;ll tell ye what has come to me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He thrust the list in front of Ember.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Galway you&rsquo;ve got set down there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, and what of it?&rdquo; said Ember.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What of it?&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy. &ldquo;I was born in
-Galway, and the only sister I ever had is married there.
-Four sons she has, decent young men by all the
-accounts I&rsquo;ve had of them. If I haven&rsquo;t been in Galway
-for thirty years, that&rsquo;s not to say that I&rsquo;ve no feeling
-for my own flesh and blood. Why, the first girl I
-ever courted lived out Barna way. Many&rsquo;s the time
-I&rsquo;ve met her in the dusk on the seashore, and she half
-crying for fear of what her father would do. Katie
-Blake her name was. They married her to old Timmy
-Dolan before I&rsquo;d been six months out of the country. A
-fistful of gold he had, and a hard fist it was. I heard
-tell he beat her, poor Katie. But ye see now, Ember,
-it&rsquo;s the same way with your native place and your first
-love, ye can&rsquo;t get quit of them. Now I hadn&rsquo;t been a
-month in Chicago before I was courting another girl,
-but to save my neck I couldn&rsquo;t tell ye what her name
-was, and ye may blow Chicago to hell to-morrow and
-I&rsquo;ll not say a word.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_213">213</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But not Galway?&rdquo; Mr. Ember&rsquo;s tone was very
-dry indeed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve said it. Not Galway. I&rsquo;ll not stand for
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember laughed. It was a laugh without merriment,
-cool, sarcastic.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Molloy, the man of sentiment!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Now
-doesn&rsquo;t it strike you that it&rsquo;s just a little late in the
-day for this display of feeling? May I ask why you
-never raised the interesting subject of your birthplace
-before?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is it sentiment that you&rsquo;re sarcastic about?&rdquo;
-said Molloy. &ldquo;If it is, I&rsquo;d have you remember that
-I&rsquo;ve never let it interfere with business yet, and I
-wouldn&rsquo;t now. Many&rsquo;s the time I&rsquo;ve put my feelings
-on one side when I was up against a business proposition.
-But I tell you right here that when I see
-my way to good money and to keeping what I call my
-sentiment too it looks pretty good to me, and I say to
-myself what I say to you, &lsquo;What&rsquo;s the sense of going
-looking for trouble?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember laughed again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will translate,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;From the sale of the
-Government formula you see your way to deriving a
-competency. You become, in a mild way, a capitalist.
-Luxuries before undreamed of are within your grasp&mdash;romantic
-sentiment, childhood&rsquo;s memories, the finer
-feelings in fact. As a poor man you could not dream of
-affording them, though I dare say you&rsquo;d have enjoyed
-them well enough. Is it a correct translation?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is,&rdquo; said Molloy.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_214">214</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Molloy the capitalist!&rdquo; Ember&rsquo;s voice dropped
-just a little lower. &ldquo;Molloy the man of sentiment!
-Molloy the traitor! No you don&rsquo;t, Molloy, I&rsquo;ve got
-you covered. Why, you fool, you don&rsquo;t suppose I
-meet a man twice my own size in a place that no one
-knows of without taking the obvious precautions?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Molloy had first started violently, and next made a
-sort of plunge in Ember&rsquo;s direction. At the sight of
-the small automatic pistol he checked himself, backed
-a pace or two, and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll take that word back. It&rsquo;s a damned lie.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He breathed hard and stared at the pistol in Ember&rsquo;s
-hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is it?&rdquo; said Ember coolly. &ldquo;I hope it is, for your
-sake. I&rsquo;d remind you, Molloy, that no one would
-move heaven and earth to find you if you disappeared,
-and that it would be hard to find a handier place for
-the disposal of a superfluous corpse. Now listen to
-me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He set his left hand open on the lists.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is going through. It&rsquo;s going through in
-every detail. It&rsquo;s going through just as we planned
-it.&rdquo; He spoke in level, expressionless tones. He
-looked at Molloy with a level, expressionless gaze. A
-little of the colour went out of the big Irishman&rsquo;s face.
-He drew a long breath, and came to heel like a dog
-whose master calls him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Have it your own way,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It was just
-talk, and to see what you thought of it. If you&rsquo;re
-set on the plan, why the plan it is.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_215">215</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re all committed to the plan,&rdquo; said Ember.
-&ldquo;You were talking a while ago as if you and I could
-do a deal and leave the rest of the Council out. Setting
-Belcovitch on one side, weren&rsquo;t you forgetting to
-reckon with Number One?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe I was,&rdquo; said Molloy. &ldquo;And come to that,
-Ember, when are we to have the full Council meeting
-you&rsquo;ve been talking of for months past? Belcovitch
-and I had a word about it, and he agrees with me.
-We want a full meeting and Number One in the chair
-instead of getting all our instructions through you.
-It&rsquo;s reasonable.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s reasonable.&rdquo; Ember paused, and then
-added, &ldquo;You shall have the full Council when Belcovitch
-comes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane on her pile of d&eacute;bris leaned forward to catch
-the words. Ember&rsquo;s voice had dropped very low.
-She was shaking with excitement. Her movement
-was not quite a steady one. A small piece of rubble
-slid under the pressure she placed on it. Something
-slipped and rolled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; said Ember sharply.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some more of the passage falling in,&rdquo; said Molloy,
-&ldquo;by the sound of it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just take a light and see.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It might have been a rat,&rdquo; said Molloy carelessly.</p>
-<p>There was a pause. Jane remained absolutely
-motionless. If they thought it was a rat perhaps
-they would not come and look. She stiffened herself,
-wondering how long she could keep this cramped
-position. Then, with a spasm of terror, she heard
-Molloy say, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have a look round. We don&rsquo;t want
-rats in here,&rdquo; heard his heavy footfall, and saw a
-brilliant beam of light stream past the entrance of her
-hiding-place.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_216">216</div>
-<p>Before she had time to do more than experience a
-stab of fear, Molloy walked straight past. She heard
-him go up the passage, heard him call out, &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
-nothing here.&rdquo; Then he turned. He was coming
-back. Would he pass her again? It was just
-possible. She tried to think he would, and then she
-knew that he would not. The light flashed into the
-broken tunnel mouth. It flashed on the sagging roof,
-the damp walls and the broken rubble. It flashed on
-to Jane.</p>
-<p>Jane saw only a white glare. She knew exactly
-what a beetle must feel like when it is pinned out as a
-specimen. The light went through and through her.
-It seemed to deprive her of thought, volition, power to
-move. She just stared at it.</p>
-<p>Mr. Molloy using his flashlight cheerfully, and much
-relieved at a break in his conversation with Ember,
-received one of the severest shocks of his not unadventurous
-life. One is not a Terrorist for thirty
-years without learning a little elementary self-control
-in moments of emergency. He did not therefore
-exclaim. He merely stared. He saw a sagging roof
-and damp walls. He saw a muddled heap of broken
-bricks unnaturally clear cut and distinct. He saw the
-shadows which they cast, unnaturally black and hard.
-He saw Jane, whom he took to be his daughter Renata.
-His brain boggled at it. He passed his hand across his
-eyes, and looked again. His daughter Renata was
-still there. She was half sitting, half crouching on the
-pile of rubble. Her body was bent forward, her elbows
-resting on her knees, her hands one on either side of
-her colourless cheeks. Her face was tilted a little
-looking up at him. Her mouth was a little open. Her
-eyes stared into the light.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_217">217</div>
-<p>Jane stared, and Mr. Molloy stared. Then, with a
-sudden turn he swung round and passed back into
-the laboratory. As he went he whistled the air of
-&ldquo;The Cruiskeen Lawn.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane remained rigid. The beetle was unpinned.
-The light was gone. But the darkness was full of
-rockets and Catherine-wheels. Her ears were buzzing.
-From a long way off she heard Ember speak and
-Molloy answer. The rockets and the Catherine-wheels
-died away. She put her head down on her knees, and
-the darkness came back restfully.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_218">218</div>
-<h2 id="c21"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXI</span></h2>
-<p>The clang of the steel gate was the next really
-distinct impression which Jane received. In
-a moment she was herself. It was just as if she
-had been asleep, and then, to the jar of a striking
-clock, had come broad awake. She listened
-intently.</p>
-<p>That clang meant that the gate had been shut. One
-of the men had gone, probably Ember. One of them
-certainly remained, for she could see that the lights
-in the laboratory were still on. If it were Molloy, he
-would come and find her. But it was just possible that
-it was Jeffrey Ember who had remained behind, so
-she must keep absolutely still, she knew.</p>
-<p>At this moment Jane felt that she had really had
-as much adventure as she wanted for one day. She
-thought meekly of Henry, and soulfully of her tea.
-Blotson would be laying it in the library. There would
-be muffins. She was dreadfully thirsty. Jane could
-have found it in her heart to weep. The thought of the
-slowly congealing muffins unnerved her. She would
-almost have admitted that woman&rsquo;s place is in the
-home. There is no saying what depths she might not
-have arrived at, had the return of the Anarchist Uncle
-not distracted her thoughts. The heavy tread convinced
-her that it was not Mr. Ember, but she did not
-stir until he came round the corner and flashed the
-light upon her face. Jane blinked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_219">219</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Holy Niagara!&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy. &ldquo;It was the
-fright of my life you gave me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane scrambled to her feet. She was not quite sure
-what the situation demanded of her in the way of filial
-behaviour. Did one embrace one&rsquo;s Anarchist Parent?
-Or did one just lean against the wall and look dazed?
-She thought the latter.</p>
-<p>Molloy turned the light away, and then flashed it
-back again with great suddenness. Jane shut her
-eyes. Mr. Molloy pursed his lips and emitted a whistle
-which travelled rapidly up the chromatic scale and
-achieved a top note of piercing intensity. Without a
-word he took Jane by the arm and brought her out of
-her hiding-place into the lighted laboratory. He then
-pushed her a little away, took a good look at her, and
-repeated his former odd expletive:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Holy Niagara!&rdquo; he said in low but heartfelt
-tones.</p>
-<p>Jane felt a little giddy, and she sat down on the
-bench. Her right hand went out, feeling for support,
-and touched a sheaf of papers. Through all the confusion
-of her thought she recognised that these must be
-the lists from which Ember had been reading.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; she said faintly.</p>
-<p>Molloy put down his electric torch, came quite close
-to her, bent down with a hand on either knee until
-his face was on a level with hers, and said in what he
-doubtless intended for a whisper:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And <i>where</i> is me daughter Renata?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_220">220</div>
-<p>Jane leaned back so as to get as far away from the
-flushed face as possible. She opened her mouth
-without knowing what she was going to say, and quite
-suddenly she began to laugh. She leaned her head
-against the brick wall behind her, and the laughter
-shook her from head to foot.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Glory be to God, is it a laughing matter?&rdquo; said
-Mr. Molloy; &ldquo;whisht, I tell you, whisht, or you&rsquo;ll
-be having Ember back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He straightened himself, and made a gesture in the
-direction of the roof.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s crazy she is,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>Jane put her hand to her throat, gasped for breath,
-and stopped laughing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It was&mdash;you were&mdash;I
-mean, what did you say?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I said, where is me daughter Renata?&rdquo; said Molloy
-in his deepest tones.</p>
-<p>Jane gulped down a gurgle of laughter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your daughter Renata?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Me daughter Renata,&rdquo; repeated Mr. Molloy
-sternly. &ldquo;Where is she?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane felt herself steadying.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you think&mdash;what makes you think&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That you&rsquo;re not my daughter? They say it&rsquo;s a
-wise child that knows its own father, but it&rsquo;s a damn
-fool father that wouldn&rsquo;t know his own daughter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>How</i> do you know?&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>Molloy laughed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_221">221</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s telling,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t mind telling
-you. You&rsquo;re my niece Jane Smith and not my
-daughter Renata Molloy; and, even if I wasn&rsquo;t her
-father, I&rsquo;d always know you from Renata, the way I
-could always tell your two mothers apart when no one
-else could. Your mother had a little mole on her
-left eyelid, just in the corner where it wouldn&rsquo;t show
-unless she shut her eyes. My wife hadn&rsquo;t got it, and
-that&rsquo;s the way I could always tell her from her sister.
-And my daughter Renata hasn&rsquo;t got it, but you have;
-and when you blinked, in yonder, I got a glimpse of
-it; and when I flashed the light on to you again and
-you shut your eyes, I made sure. And now, perhaps
-you&rsquo;ll tell me where in all the world is Renata?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s gaze rested intelligently upon Mr. Molloy.
-The corners of her mouth lifted a little. The dimple
-showed in her left cheek.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Renata,&rdquo; she said in a very demure voice, &ldquo;is in
-a safe place, like the money you went abroad for.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Molloy looked at her uncertainly; in the end he
-laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Meaning you won&rsquo;t tell me,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Meaning that I&rsquo;m not sure whether I&rsquo;ll tell you or
-not.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe it would be better if I didn&rsquo;t know. That&rsquo;s
-what you&rsquo;re thinking?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, that was what I was thinking.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy. Then he laughed
-again. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve the joke on Ember anyhow,&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;He thinks he&rsquo;s got a patent for most of the brains in
-the country, and here he&rsquo;s been led by the nose by a
-slip of a girl just out of school. And what&rsquo;s more,
-he was taken in and I wasn&rsquo;t. He&rsquo;ll find that hard to
-swallow, will Mr. Jeffrey Ember. You&rsquo;d not have
-taken me in, you know, even if I&rsquo;d not had the mole
-to go by. And one of these fine days I shall twit
-Ember with that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you so sure you&rsquo;d have known me?&rdquo; said
-Jane. &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_222">222</div>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear girl,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy, &ldquo;if you knew your
-cousin Renata, you&rsquo;d not be asking me that. If I
-find a girl in an underground passage all in the dark,
-well, that girl is not my daughter Renata. And if,
-by any queer sort of chance, Renata had been in that
-hole where I found you, she&rsquo;d have screamed blue
-murder when I turned the light on her. Then, at
-an easy guess, I should say you had Renata beat to a
-frazzle in the matter of brains. I&rsquo;m not saying, mind
-you, that I&rsquo;m an admirer of brains in a woman. It&rsquo;s
-all a matter of opinion, and there&rsquo;s all sorts in the
-world. But you&rsquo;ve got brains, and Renata hasn&rsquo;t,
-and Ember&rsquo;s had you under his nose all this time
-without ever knowing the difference.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I didn&rsquo;t exactly obtrude my superior
-intelligence on Mr. Ember,&rdquo; she said. Her eyes
-danced. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve no idea how stupid I can be when
-I try, and I&rsquo;ve been trying very hard indeed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The devil you have?&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy. &ldquo;Well,
-you had Ember deceived and that&rsquo;s a grand feather
-in your cap, I can tell you. He&rsquo;s a hard one to deceive
-is Ember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane gurgled suddenly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;As a matter of fact,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I deceived you,
-too. Yes, I did, I really did. You know the morning
-you went off to America, or rather the morning you
-went off <i>not</i> to America? At the flat? You said
-good-bye to me, not to Renata.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And where was Renata then?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane twinkled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the safe place,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll swear it was Renata the night before,&rdquo; said
-Molloy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, that&rsquo;s clever of you. It was.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_223">223</div>
-<p>Molloy was thinking hard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And which of you was it in the night when we
-thought the roof had fallen in, and came into Renata&rsquo;s
-room to look out of the window? I&rsquo;d my heart in my
-mouth, for I thought it was a bomb. Was it you
-or Renata sitting up in bed like a ghost?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was me,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t have
-been nearly so frightened as I was.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you changed places between eight and eleven
-that night?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We changed places,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;just as you and
-Mr. Ember came home. I shut Renata&rsquo;s door just
-as you opened the door of the flat. I was in the hall
-when the lift stopped.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then I think I know how you did it,&rdquo; said Molloy.
-He seemed interested. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;d like to know who
-put you up to it; and I&rsquo;d like to know who gave the
-back entrance away; and I&rsquo;d like to know how Renata,
-who hasn&rsquo;t the nerve of a mouse, got down that blamed
-fire-escape alone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane dimpled again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You do want to know a lot, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; she
-said.</p>
-<p>There was a pause. Then Jane said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And now, what happens next, please?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That,&rdquo; said Molloy, &ldquo;is just what I&rsquo;m wondering.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I ought to be getting back, I think,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, ought you now?&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy thoughtfully.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_224">224</div>
-<p>There was another pause. Jane thought she would
-leave Mr. Molloy to break it this time. She sat considering
-him. Her eyes dwelt upon him with a calm
-scrutiny which he found extremely embarrassing. The
-longer it continued, the more embarrassing he found
-it. In the end he said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You want me to let you go?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And not tell Ember?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane gave another nod, cool and brief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, the devil&rsquo;s in it,&rdquo; said Molloy, with sudden
-violence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t need the devil; you&rsquo;ve got Mr. Ember,&rdquo;
-said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And that&rsquo;s true enough, for it&rsquo;s the very devil
-and all he is, and, if I let you go, I&rsquo;ll have him to
-reckon with&mdash;some day. I&rsquo;d rather face the Day of
-Judgment myself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I tell you what I think,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;I think Mr.
-Ember is mad. That is to say, I think he is the sort of
-fanatic who sees what he wants and sets out to get
-it, without knowing half the difficulties and obstacles
-that block the way. When he does begin to know
-them he doesn&rsquo;t care, he just goes along blind. Where
-a reasonable man would alter his plan to suit the circumstances,
-this sort of fanatic just goes on because
-he&rsquo;s made his plan and will stick to it whatever
-happens. He isn&rsquo;t governed by reason at all. He
-doesn&rsquo;t care what risks he runs, or what risks he makes
-other people run. He goes right on, whatever happens.
-If the next step is over a precipice he&rsquo;ll take it. He
-must go on. Mr. Ember is like that. I think he is
-mad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Molloy stared hard at Jane, then he nodded
-slowly three times.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_225">225</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Now you&rsquo;re not like that,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
-reasonable. You don&rsquo;t want to run appalling risks
-when there&rsquo;s absolutely nothing to be gained by it.
-Of course, every one&rsquo;s willing to run risks if it&rsquo;s worth
-while. I&rsquo;m sure you are. I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;ve done
-awfully dangerous things.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy, with simple pride.
-&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no one that&rsquo;s done more for The Cause, or
-run greater risks. I could tell you things&mdash;but there,
-maybe I&rsquo;d better not.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane clasped her hands round her knees. She
-leaned back against the wall and regarded Mr. Molloy
-with what he took to be admiration.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now do tell me,&rdquo; she said&mdash;&ldquo;when you speak of
-The Cause, what do you mean?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In her heart of hearts Jane had a pretty firm conviction
-that, to Mr. Molloy, The Cause stood for
-whatever promoted the wealth, welfare, and advancement
-of himself, the said Molloy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy reverentially. He spread out
-his hands with a fine gesture. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a big question.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, what I mean,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;is this. What do
-you really call yourself? You know, I always used to
-call you &lsquo;The Anarchist Uncle,&rsquo; but the other day some
-one said that there were no Anarchists any more,
-so I wondered what you really were. Are you a
-Socialist, or a Communist, or a Bolshevist, or what?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A doubtful expression crossed Mr. Molloy&rsquo;s handsome
-face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it would depend on the
-company I was in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane had a struggle with the dimple and subdued it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You mean,&rdquo; she ventured, &ldquo;that if you were with
-Socialists, you would be a Socialist; and if you were
-with Bolshevists, you would be a Bolshevist?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_226">226</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it would be something like that,&rdquo; admitted
-Mr. Molloy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;And, of course, whatever you
-were, you&rsquo;d naturally want to be sure that it was going
-to be worth your while. I mean you&rsquo;d want to get
-something out of it?&rdquo; She waited a moment, and
-then went on, with a complete change of voice and
-manner, &ldquo;What are you going to get out of this?&rdquo;
-She spoke with the utmost gravity. &ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t
-know, I can tell you. Disaster&mdash;at best a long term
-of imprisonment, at the worst death, the sort of death
-one doesn&rsquo;t care about having in one&rsquo;s family. The
-question is, is it worth it? You&rsquo;re not in the least
-mad. You&rsquo;re not a fanatic either. You are a perfectly
-sane and reasonable person, and you know
-that what I&rsquo;m saying is the sane and reasonable
-truth. Isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Faith, and wasn&rsquo;t I saying so to Ember myself,&rdquo;
-said Molloy in gloomy agreement. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got money
-enough, and we can live on it retired, so to speak. The
-life&rsquo;s all very well when you&rsquo;re young, but a man of my
-age isn&rsquo;t just so keen on taking chances as he was, and
-that&rsquo;s the truth. Then there&rsquo;s the old times come over
-him, and he thinks of the place where he was born, and
-he thinks, maybe, he&rsquo;d like to see it again. Why,
-with the money I&rsquo;ve got,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s a
-fine house I could have in Galway, and a car, and a
-horse or two. That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;d like.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane saw his face light up.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_227">227</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a fine town Galway,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and there are
-people I&rsquo;d like to see there, and places too. The
-people would be changed, I&rsquo;m thinking, but not the
-places. I&rsquo;d like well enough to go up the river past
-Menlough again. It&rsquo;s the grand woods there are there,
-and then there&rsquo;s a place where you&rsquo;d see nothing but
-reeds, and no way at all for a boat. But let you push
-through the reeds and a way there is, and you come
-out to the grey open water and the country round it
-just as bare as if you&rsquo;d taken sand-paper to it. They
-used to say that the water went down to hell, but I&rsquo;m
-not saying that I believe it; but deep it is, for no one&rsquo;s
-ever touched the bottom. Many&rsquo;s the stone I&rsquo;ve
-dropped in there, and wakened in the night to wonder
-if it was still sinking; and many&rsquo;s the time I&rsquo;ve played
-truant, and gone there fishing for the great pike that
-they said was in it. Hundreds of years old he is by
-the tales, and once I could swear I saw him, only
-maybe it was only a cloud that was passing overhead.
-What I saw was just a grey shadow, and all at once it
-come over me that I should be getting back to my
-work. I was black frightened, that&rsquo;s the truth, but I
-couldn&rsquo;t tell you why.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane looked at Mr. Molloy, and experienced some
-very strange sensations. He might sell her to Ember
-next moment, but for this moment he was utterly
-sincere and as simple as a child. His sentiments were
-not hypocrisy. They represented real feeling and
-emotion; but feeling, emotion, and sentiment had been
-trained to take the wall obediently at the bidding of
-what Mr. Molloy would call business. For all her
-youth, Jane felt a rush of pity for anything so played
-upon from without, so ungoverned from within as this
-big handsome man who stood there talking earnestly
-of his boyhood&rsquo;s home.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you go back and see it all again?&rdquo;
-she said.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_228">228</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;d like to,&rdquo; said Mr. Molloy, &ldquo;but what
-good&rsquo;ll my house in Galway do me if I waken up some
-fine night with a knife in me heart or a bomb gone off
-under me bed?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It seemed a difficult question to answer.</p>
-<p>Molloy began to pace the room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I must think,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>All the time that Jane had been talking, part of her
-mind had been continually occupied with the question
-of the lists, those lists of towns and the agents in each
-who were to be entrusted with the work of destruction.
-It might not be so difficult to get hold of them, but
-to get hold of them without their being missed by
-Ember ... that was the difficulty. She had only to
-drop her right hand to the bench on which she sat and
-it touched the flimsy sheets.</p>
-<p>Whilst Molloy was discoursing of his birthplace, she
-considered more than one plan. She must not precipitate
-Ember&rsquo;s suspicions until she could place this
-evidence in Henry&rsquo;s hands. If she took the lists and
-Ember missed them, he would suspect and accuse
-Molloy, and Molloy would most certainly exonerate
-himself at her expense. On the other hand, if she let
-the lists slip when they were under her hand, who was
-to say whether the opportunity would recur. Ember
-would return. He already distrusted Molloy, and
-what would be more likely than that he would remove
-such incriminating papers from Molloy&rsquo;s care?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_229">229</div>
-<p>Then, quite suddenly, Jane knew what she must do.
-She didn&rsquo;t want to do it, but she knew she must.
-She must get the papers now, she must copy them,
-and she must put them back before daybreak whilst
-the Anarchist Uncle was asleep. Jane had never
-contemplated anything which frightened her half so
-much as the idea of putting those papers back in that
-discouraging hour before the dawn, but she knew that
-it must be done.</p>
-<p>As Mr. Molloy walked up and down frowning intently,
-there were moments when his back was turned
-towards Jane. The first time this happened Jane&rsquo;s
-hand took hold of the thin papers and doubled them
-in half. The next time that it happened she doubled
-them again. She went on doubling them until the
-large thin sheaf had become a small fat wad. Then
-whilst Molloy&rsquo;s back was turned she lifted her skirt
-and pushed the wad down inside her stocking top.
-When Molloy faced her again her hands were folded
-on her lap.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I really must be going,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>He threw her an odd, sidelong glance. It made
-Jane feel a little cold.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Since you heard so much just now, I don&rsquo;t doubt
-you heard Ember tell me just how convenient this
-place would be for putting some one that wasn&rsquo;t
-wanted out of the way?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I heard what he said,&rdquo; said Jane, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;m
-afraid Mr. Ember doesn&rsquo;t know everything. As far
-as I remember, he described these passages as a place
-no one knew anything about.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He did,&rdquo; said Molloy, staring.</p>
-<p>Jane gave a little laugh, and felt pleased with herself
-because it sounded steady.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, to my certain knowledge, three other people
-know the way in here,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>Molloy showed signs of uneasiness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_230">230</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Meaning you and me and ... since you heard
-the rest, I&rsquo;m supposing you heard me name Number
-One.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I didn&rsquo;t mean you and me at all,&rdquo; said Jane.
-&ldquo;I was thinking of two quite different people, and as to
-Number One, I could answer that better if I were sure
-who Number One was. The third person I&rsquo;m thinking
-of may be Number One, or may not. I&rsquo;m not
-sure.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m thinking,&rdquo; said Molloy&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;m thinking you
-know too much. I&rsquo;m thinking you know a deal too
-much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane met his eyes full. Her own were steady, his
-were not.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you going to tell Mr. Ember, and let him
-&lsquo;eliminate&rsquo; me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Molloy gave a violent start.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you hear that?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t I who heard that, it was Renata. It
-was one of the things that made her so anxious to
-change places with me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And what made you willing to change with her?&rdquo;
-Molloy&rsquo;s voice was harsh with suspicion.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hadn&rsquo;t a job, or any relations to go to. I had
-exactly one-and-sixpence in the world. I didn&rsquo;t know
-where I was going to sleep that night&mdash;that&rsquo;s pretty
-awful for a girl, you know; and then ... Renata was
-so frightened.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She would be,&rdquo; was Molloy&rsquo;s comment. &ldquo;And
-weren&rsquo;t you frightened now?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose I was,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_231">231</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You had need to be.&rdquo; The something that had
-made Jane feel cold before was in Molloy&rsquo;s look and
-voice. &ldquo;You had need to be more afraid than you&rsquo;ve
-ever been in your life. Renata would have stayed
-quiet, but nothing would serve you but you must
-push, and poke, and pry. What were you doing here
-at all now, will you tell me that? Who showed you
-how to get down here? You say there are others
-who know the secret&mdash;who are they? Tell me
-that, will you ... who are they?&rdquo; Molloy&rsquo;s
-sudden passion took Jane by surprise. Her heart
-began to beat, and she had difficulty in controlling
-her voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which question am I to answer first?&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;Shall I begin at the beginning? I found the
-passages by accident....&rdquo; Molloy gave an impatient
-snort. &ldquo;Yes, I did really, on my word of
-honour. I couldn&rsquo;t sleep and came down to get a
-book. I was standing in the shadow and I saw some
-one come out of the panelling. Next night I thought
-I&rsquo;d try and find the place. The same person came
-downstairs and went through the door in the wall. I
-followed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was it Ember?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, it wasn&rsquo;t Mr. Ember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who was it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I believe you know,&rdquo; said Jane, speaking
-slowly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was it a woman?&rdquo; said Molloy. He dropped
-his voice to a whisper and looked over his
-shoulder.</p>
-<p>Jane nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Glory be to God!&rdquo; said Molloy. &ldquo;Did you see
-her face?&rdquo; Jane nodded again. Molloy came quite
-close, bent down, and whispered:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_232">232</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Was it the old man&rsquo;s daughter? Was it&rdquo;&mdash;his
-voice dropped to the very edge of inaudibility&mdash;&ldquo;was
-it Lady Heritage?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane nodded for the third time.</p>
-<p>Molloy spun round, went straight to the steel door,
-and, opening it, looked up the passage. After a
-moment he came back.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You saw her face? Will you swear that you
-saw her face?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, of course.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you&rsquo;ve seen more than I have. Do you
-know, I&rsquo;ve never been sure. I&rsquo;ve never really been
-sure. Ember&rsquo;s talk, and&mdash;it was her face you saw,
-not that mask thing they wear in the laboratory, for
-that&rsquo;s all I&rsquo;ve seen? You saw her face?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I saw her face quite plainly,&rdquo; said Jane. In
-her own mind something seemed to say with cold
-finality, &ldquo;Then Lady Heritage is Number One.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well.... Well.... Well.... Well....&rdquo; said
-Mr. Molloy.</p>
-<p>There was a long pause. He seemed lost in thought,
-but suddenly he turned on Jane with the question
-which she hoped he had forgotten:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You were saying that there were two others who
-knew the secret&mdash;you saw them down here?&mdash;down
-here in the passages?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Jane, without hesitation, &ldquo;I did. They
-were men. One of them had a beard. I couldn&rsquo;t tell
-you their names or describe them any more than
-that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Molloy looked desperately puzzled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ember may know,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He may,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;I should ask him.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_233">233</div>
-<p>Molloy gave a grunt and began to walk up and down
-again. The simile of the rat in the drain which he had
-made use of in conversing with Ember came back upon
-him with unpleasant force. His thoughts were confused
-by an access of unreasoning fear. Every time
-the question of what to do with Jane presented itself,
-he shied away from it. Jane knew too much. There
-was no doubt about that. She knew too much.</p>
-<p>In the circles frequented by Mr. Molloy self-preservation
-dictated a certain course with regard to the person
-who knew too much. After thirty years Molloy
-still disliked the contemplation of that course of action.
-He was of those who pass by upon the other side. He
-had a well-cultivated faculty for looking the other way.
-It occurred to him that, after all, Jane was Ember&rsquo;s
-affair. Let her go back to the house, she was Ember&rsquo;s
-affair, not his. He became instantly very anxious to
-see the last of Jane.</p>
-<p>Just as she was wondering how long this rather
-horrid silence was going to last, he walked up to her
-in a purposeful manner, put his hand on her arm, and
-pulled her to her feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d best be getting back,&rdquo; he said shortly.</p>
-<p>Jane felt as if some one had lifted a heavy weight off
-the top of her head. The weight must have been
-fear, and yet she did not know that she had been
-afraid.</p>
-<p>At the gate Molloy turned to her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can you get into the hall?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Without
-being seen, I mean.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not sure, it&rsquo;s awfully risky. But I could walk
-home from the headland, that would be much safer,
-and if I&rsquo;ve been missed, it would account for my
-absence.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_234">234</div>
-<p>Molloy bent a sulky look on her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The headland&mdash;you know that too?&rdquo; he said.
-Then, with an impatient jerk he switched off the light,
-turned on his torch, and walked ahead of Jane in
-silence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_235">235</div>
-<h2 id="c22"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXII</span></h2>
-<p>Never in all her life had Jane seen anything so
-beautiful as the clear rain-washed sky, the grey
-rain-stilled sea. The little thud of the stone closing
-between her and Mr. Molloy was one of the most
-delightful sounds that she had ever heard. She felt
-as if she had never really appreciated the daylight
-before. There were nice woolly clouds on the horizon.
-The damp air was fresh, not like the air in those abominable
-passages. There was a gorse bush with about
-two and a half yellow flowers on it, rather sodden with
-the rain. Jane regarded them with intense affection.</p>
-<p>She walked down the gravel path, drawing long
-breaths and ready to sing with pure relief&mdash;&ldquo;Ease after
-toyle, port after stormie seas.&rdquo; She frowned, remembering
-the next line. After all, they were not out of
-the wood yet. An unpleasant proverb succeeded
-Spenser&rsquo;s line&mdash;&ldquo;He laughs longest who laughs last.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rubbish,&rdquo; said Jane out loud, and she began to
-run.</p>
-<p>She came in with such a glowing colour that Mr.
-Ember, who met her in the hall, was moved to remark
-upon it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You seem to have enjoyed your walk. Where
-have you been?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Round by the headland,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_236">236</div>
-<p>The roll of typed paper pricked her knee beneath
-her stocking top. In her arms she carried a sheaf of
-yellow tulips. She made haste to her room and set
-the flowers in a jar on the broad window ledge where
-they could be plainly seen from the terrace. With all
-her heart she prayed that George Patterson, who was
-Anthony Luttrell, would see them. She did not know
-that George Patterson had ceased to exist, and that
-Anthony Luttrell, having taken the law into his own
-impatient hands, was on his way to London.</p>
-<p>There had been an encounter with Raymond in the
-laboratory&mdash;her hand for a moment on his arm, his
-muscles rigid under her touch; not a word spoken on
-either side, not a word needed. The scene carried
-Anthony to his breaking-point. At the next roll-call
-George Patterson was missing. Meanwhile Raymond
-was behind a locked door, and Jane set yellow tulips
-on her window-sill.</p>
-<p>Having made her signal, Jane turned her mind to
-the lists. She was afraid to keep them on her, and she
-was afraid to hide them anywhere else. If Molloy
-missed them, and had any means of communicating
-with Ember, she would be searched, and her room
-would be searched. Whatever happened to her, they
-must not recover the lists until she had copied
-them.</p>
-<p>She remembered the trap-door in the cupboard,
-but it was just possible that Ember knew about it,
-not likely but possible. After five minutes&rsquo; profound
-thought, she went to a drawer into which she had
-emptied a quantity of odds and ends.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_237">237</div>
-<p>Renata, it appeared, had a mild taste for drawing.
-There were pencils, indiarubber, a roll of cartridge
-paper, and some drawing-pins. Jane took out the
-cartridge paper and the drawing-pins. She extracted
-the lists from her stocking top and smoothed them out
-flat. Then she opened the cupboard door, mounted
-on a chair drawn as close to the cupboard as possible,
-and pinned the lists on to the cupboard ceiling with
-a sheet of cartridge paper covering them. They just
-fitted in between two rows of hooks. Jane got down
-with a sigh of relief and unlocked her bedroom door.</p>
-<p>The evening passed like a dream. Lady Heritage
-did not appear at all, and Jane found a strange unreality
-in the situation which kept her talking to Mr.
-Ember in set schoolgirl phrases whilst he condescended
-to her with more than a hint of sarcasm. She was
-glad when she could take a book and read.</p>
-<p>It was eleven o&rsquo;clock before she dared begin her
-night&rsquo;s work, but she came up to her room with her
-plan all ready. First she took off her dress and put
-on a dressing-gown, just in case any one should come
-to the door. Then, having turned the key and switched
-off the light, she took a candle into the cupboard, set
-it on a shoe box, and took down the lists. She put
-a cushion on the floor, fetched Renata&rsquo;s fountain pen
-and some sheets of foolscap which she had taken from
-the library, and began her work of copying. With
-the cupboard door shut there was no chance that
-any one would see her candle.</p>
-<p>She wrote steadily, town after town, name after
-name. More towns, more names. As she finished
-each sheet, she checked it very carefully by its original.
-It was weary, monotonous work; but the weariness
-and the monotony were like a grey curtain which
-hung between her and something which she dreaded
-inexpressibly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_238">238</div>
-<p>The idea of descending into the passage again, of
-creeping up to the laboratory in order to put back the
-lists before they were missed, filled her with shuddering
-repugnance. To allow her mind to dwell upon this
-idea was to become incapable of carrying it out.
-She therefore held her attention firmly to the endless
-names, and drove an industrious pen. She had to
-get up twice for more ink. Each time, as she stretched
-herself and walked the few paces to the table and back,
-the thought came to her like a cold breath, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-coming nearer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At last, in the dead stillness of the sleeping hours,
-the lists were finished. She pinned the copies on to
-the cupboard ceiling in the same way that she had
-pinned the originals, carefully covered with a piece of
-cartridge paper. Then she took the originals in her
-hand and faced the necessity for action. Her feet and
-hands were very cold. She felt as if it were days
-since she had had anything to eat. She wanted most
-dreadfully to go to bed and sleep. She wanted to
-have a good cry. What she had to do was to go down
-into slug- and possibly rat-haunted passages and risk
-waking an Anarchist Uncle out of his beauty sleep.
-Jane gave herself a mental shake.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be a rabbit, Jane Smith,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-got to be done. You know that just as well as I do.
-If it&rsquo;s got to be done, you can do it. Get going at
-once.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_239">239</div>
-<p>She got going. First she put the lists back in her
-stocking top. Then she put on the old serge dress.
-Her fancy played hopefully with the thought that
-some day she would give herself the pleasure of burning
-that abominable garment. She extracted the maroon
-felt slippers from the paper parcel to which she had
-consigned them. They were still sopping. She put
-them on. They felt limp, damp, and discouraging,
-but they had the merit of making no noise. Then
-she took a good length of candle and a box of matches
-and opened her door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, here goes,&rdquo; said Jane, and stepped into
-pitch darkness. This time she shut the door behind
-her. As she took her hand off the handle she felt
-as if she were letting go of her last hold on safety, an
-idiotic thought, as she instantly told herself. She
-knew by now just how many paces took one to the
-place where the light should have been burning, and
-just how many more to the stairhead. The rose
-window showed like a pattern painted on the dark.
-It gave no light, but it marked the position of the door.</p>
-<p>Jane felt the soles of her feet stick and cling to the
-damp slippers as she crawled down the stairs. They
-just didn&rsquo;t squelch and that was all; they only felt
-like it.</p>
-<p>She hated moving the big chair in the dark, but it
-had to be done. Suppose she dropped it with a crash,
-suppose she pulled Willoughby Luttrell&rsquo;s picture down
-when she was feeling for the catch; suppose a mouse
-ran over her foot&mdash;there is no end to the cheerful
-suppositions which will throng one&rsquo;s brain in circumstances
-like these.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_240">240</div>
-<p>Jane did not drop the chair with a crash, neither
-did Willoughby Luttrell&rsquo;s picture fall down, nor did
-a mouse run over her foot. She passed through the
-panelled door, shut it behind her, groped her way to
-the foot of the steps, and lighted the candle. It was
-then that the cheering thought that she might perhaps
-encounter Henry came to her, only to fade as she remembered
-how long past midnight it now was. However,
-if she had not Henry she had at least a light.
-It is much harder to be brave in the pitch dark even
-when, as in the present case, the darkness is really
-a protection.</p>
-<p>Jane walked quite blithely up the second passage on
-the left until she came to the point where she knew
-that she must put the light out again. Molloy might
-be awake. She blew out her candle and began to
-feel her way forward. She came to the corner, and
-passed it. Moving very slowly and cautiously, she
-crept up to the steel gate and stood with her fingertips
-on it, listening, and thinking hard. She could feel
-that the door was ajar. That struck her as strange,
-very strange. If there ever was a man badly scared,
-Molloy was that man when she had said that the secret
-of the passages was not confined to himself and Ember.
-Yet he had gone to sleep leaving the gate ajar. Had
-he? Jane&rsquo;s mind gave her a clear and definite answer.
-He hadn&rsquo;t, he wouldn&rsquo;t. She had been so sure that
-the gate would be shut, so ready with her plan. She
-was going to unfold the papers, push them between
-the bars, and jerk them as far across the room as
-possible. Molloy might think they had fallen from
-the bench, or, if he had his doubts, might well wish
-to avoid letting Ember know that Jane had been in the
-laboratory. All this she had so present in her thought,
-that to feel the gate give to her hand staggered her
-and set her shaking. She quieted herself and listened
-intently. Not a sound.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_241">241</div>
-<p>She did not somehow fancy that Molloy would be a
-quiet sleeper. She had anticipated snores of a certain
-rich bass quality. Here was silence in which one
-might have heard an infant draw its breath, a silence
-undisturbed, inviolate.</p>
-<p>It was not only the silence which spoke to Jane.
-That odd, dim, only half-understood sense which some
-people possess, clamoured to her that the place was
-empty. As she stood there, and the seconds dragged
-into minutes, this sense became so insistent that she
-found herself resolving to act in obedience to its
-dictates.</p>
-<p>She pushed the gate and heard the alarm ring.
-With all her ears she listened for the sound of a man
-stirring, waking, and starting up. At the first movement
-she would have been away, and Molloy, new
-roused from sleep, would never have caught sight of
-her. There was no movement. The bell went on
-ringing, a little continuous trickle of metallic sound,
-not loud but as confusing as the buzzing of a mosquito.</p>
-<p>Jane switched on the light, slipped round the gate,
-and closed it. The bell stopped ringing. The jarred
-silence settled slowly, as dust settles when it has been
-stirred. There was no one there. The unshaded light
-showed every corner of the chamber. Molloy&rsquo;s bag
-was gone. Like a flick in the face came certainty.
-&ldquo;He&rsquo;s gone. Molloy&rsquo;s gone too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Slowly, almost mechanically, Jane extracted the
-rolled-up lists from her stocking. She was still holding
-the unlighted candle in her left hand. The lists
-bothered her. She moved towards the bench to put
-them down, but first she laid the candle carefully on
-its side so as not to stub the wick, and, sitting down,
-began to smooth the papers out upon her knee. It
-was whilst she was doing this that she saw the note.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_242">242</div>
-<p>It lay on the end of the bench propped up against
-a book. It was addressed to Jeffrey Ember, Esquire.
-The capital E&rsquo;s were magnificent flourishes; an underlining
-like an ornamental scroll supported the superscription.
-Jane, like other well-brought-up people,
-was not in the habit of opening letters not addressed
-to herself. It may be said, however, that no solitary
-scruple so much as raised its head on this occasion.
-She tore open the tough linen envelope, and unfolded
-a lordly sheet. Molloy wrote a good, bold hand and
-legible withal. Every word stood clear.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;<span class="sc">My dear Ember</span>,&mdash;I&rsquo;m off. The place is getting
-altogether too crowded. I&rsquo;ve seen Renata, and she
-tells me that there are two men use the passages. One
-has a beard, but she couldn&rsquo;t tell me their names or
-describe them further. She knows all about the
-passages herself. She confessed to having found them
-through following Number One. She has also seen
-you come in and go out. I don&rsquo;t think this place is
-very healthy, so I&rsquo;m making my get-away whilst I
-can. Drop the whole thing and get out quick is what
-I advise. I&rsquo;m staunch, as you&rsquo;ll find. Why did
-you take the lists after saying you&rsquo;d leave them for
-me to look through? I&rsquo;ll not work with a man that
-doesn&rsquo;t trust me. You can write me at the old
-place.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The letter was signed with a large Roman three.
-It appeared that Mr. Molloy was more careful over his
-own identity than over that of Mr. Jeffrey Ember.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_243">243</div>
-<p>Jane sat looking at the letter. It made her feel
-rather sick. If she had not come down, if she had
-shirked putting the papers back, if the letter addressed
-to Jeffrey Ember, Esquire, had reached Jeffrey Ember&rsquo;s
-hands&mdash;well, it was a good enough death-warrant,
-and Molloy must have known that very well when he
-wrote it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s exactly like a Moral Tract,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;I
-hated coming back, and I did it from a Sense of Duty,
-and this is the Reward of Virtue.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She put the Reward of Virtue down rather gingerly
-on the bench beside her. She felt about touching it
-rather as she had felt when she touched the slug. She
-wanted to wash her hands. An odd creature Molloy.
-He had given her away exactly and completely, yet he
-had left her any small shred of protection which she
-might be supposed to derive from passing as his
-daughter.</p>
-<p>Jane turned her thoughts from Molloy to the more
-pressing consideration of her own immediate course of
-action. Ember would come in the morning, and would
-find Molloy gone, and no word to say where he had
-gone, or why. The idea of following in Molloy&rsquo;s footsteps
-presented itself vividly before Jane&rsquo;s imagination.
-Why should she stay any longer at Luttrell Marches?
-The idea of getting away set her heart dancing. And
-what was there to stay for? She had all the evidence
-necessary to procure Ember&rsquo;s arrest and the smashing
-of the conspiracy. The sooner she was out of Luttrell
-Marches and with her precious papers in a place of
-security the better. For a moment she contemplated
-taking the originals of the lists; Ember would naturally
-conclude that it was Molloy who had gone off with
-them. But on second thoughts she decided that it
-would be in the highest degree unwise to put Ember
-on his guard. His distrust of Molloy might be so
-great as to induce flight. She decided to leave the
-originals and to take the copies&mdash;but she had left the
-copies in her room pinned to the cupboard ceiling.
-Go back for them she could not. Even if she could
-have forced herself to the effort, the risk was too great.
-They must stay where they were, whilst she found
-Henry. The sooner she got off the better. She had
-no watch, but the night must be very far spent, and
-if Ember were to take it into his head to come back&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_244">244</div>
-<p>The bare idea brought Jane to her feet. She picked
-up her candle, lit it, and with feelings of extreme
-satisfaction set fire to Molloy&rsquo;s letter, making a little
-pent roof of it like the beginning of a card house on the
-stone floor. She had often admired the way in which
-masses of compromising documents are consumed in
-an instant by the hero or heroine of the adventure
-novel. She used four matches before she considered
-that this particular letter was really harmless. The
-envelope took two more. Then she collected the ash
-very carefully, crumbled it up well, and scattered it
-amongst the rubble in the broken-down passage where
-Molloy had found her. Then, having taken a good look
-round to make sure that nothing compromising remained,
-she picked up her candle and passed through
-the gate, leaving the laboratory in darkness behind her.
-When she came to the turn she hesitated, and finally
-went straight on, following the passage which she had
-not yet explored, down which Molloy and Ember had
-come the day before. She was almost sure that it
-would lead back into the main corridor just short of the
-headland exit; but she had not gone more than a yard
-or two along it when she heard something that brought
-her heart into her mouth.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_245">245</div>
-<p>Almost as the sound reached her she had blown her
-candle out and was pinching the glow from the wick.
-For a moment the darkness was full of phantom
-tongue-shaped flames; then she stopped seeing them
-and saw instead a faint glow coming from the direction
-in which she herself had come on her way to the
-laboratory. Somebody was coming along the passage.
-If she had gone back by the same way that she had
-come, she would have met this somebody. As it was,
-she might escape notice. If the person were going to
-the laboratory, he would have to take a sharp turn
-to the left, a right-angled turn. The passage in
-which she was ran off at an acute angle, and the person
-approaching would have his back to her as he
-passed.</p>
-<p>The glow became a beam. Next moment Ember
-passed without turning his head. Jane saw the back
-of his shoulder dark against the light from his torch,
-and caught a fleeting glimpse of his profile, just enough
-for recognition and no more. Indeed, it was the fur
-coat that she recognised as much as the man. She
-stood quite still whilst he switched on the electric light
-and passed into the laboratory, then she turned and
-walked away as quickly as she dared, feeling her way
-by the wall till a turn in the passage gave her enough
-courage to light her candle. She put the spent match
-in her pocket, looked ahead, and drew a sharp, almost
-agonised, breath.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_246">246</div>
-<p>About two feet from where she stood, and exactly
-in her path, was the black mouth of an uncovered well.
-Jane looked at it, and quite suddenly, she had no idea
-how, found herself sitting on the floor with hot wax
-running down her hand from the guttering candle. It
-seemed to be quite a little time before she could make
-sure of walking steadily enough to skirt the well. She
-went by it at last with averted head and fingers that,
-regardless of slime, clung to the wall.</p>
-<p>As she had expected, the passage ran suddenly into
-the main corridor. She passed the headland exit, and
-once more was on unknown ground. The passage
-swung round to the right and began to slope downhill.
-Jane held her candle high and looked at every step;
-but there were no more traps. She quickened her pace
-almost to a run as the dreadful thought came to her
-that Ember might follow Molloy. The passage sloped
-more and more. Finally there were steps, smooth,
-worn, and damp, that went down, and down, and down.
-At the bottom of the steps a yard or two of peculiarly
-slimy passage, and then a blank stone wall. Obviously
-Jane had arrived.</p>
-<p>She looked at the stone wall, and the stone wall
-presented a front of uncompromising blankness. She
-looked up and she looked down, she looked to the left
-and she looked to the right, she gazed at the ceiling and
-she gazed at the floor. Nowhere was there any sign of
-a catch, a knob, a spring, or a lever. There must be
-one, but where was it? She tapped the wall and
-stamped on the floor, but with no result. The door in
-the panelling opened from inside with an ordinary
-handle. She had not been close enough to Lady Heritage
-to see what she did to pivot the stone behind the
-bench on the headland. In any case, this exit might
-have been quite differently planned.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_247">247</div>
-<p>A most dreadful sense of discouragement came over
-her. To have got so far, to have been, as it were, halfway
-to safety and Henry, and to have to turn back
-again! Then for the first time it occurred to her that,
-even if she had got out and got away, she had no money
-and no hat. She looked down at the maroon slippers,
-and pictured herself descending ticketless upon a
-London platform in bedroom slippers whose original
-colour was almost obscured by green slime.</p>
-<p>Jane wanted to laugh, and she wanted to cry. She
-did not know which she wanted most, but presently
-she found that the tears were running down her face.
-She kept winking them away, because it is not at all
-easy to climb slippery stone steps by the light of a
-guttering candle if your eyes keep filling with tears.
-The tears magnified the candle flame, and sometimes
-made it look like two or three little flames, which was
-dreadfully confusing. Jane stood still, wiped her eyes
-with determined energy, and then climbed up more
-steps and back along the way that she had come.</p>
-<p>At the headland exit she stood still, taking breath
-and thought. Nothing would induce her to pass that
-well again. She would keep to the main passage, and,
-horrid thought, she would have to put out her light in
-case Ember should suddenly emerge from the side
-passage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thinking about things makes them worse, not
-better,&rdquo; said Jane to herself. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s perfectly beastly;
-but then it&rsquo;s all perfectly beastly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She blew out the candle and moved slowly forward.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_248">248</div>
-<p>It seemed ages before she came past the opening
-where she had run into Henry to the foot of the steps.
-She went up three steps, raised her foot to take the
-fourth, and felt a hardly perceptible check. Instantly
-she drew back a shade, set her foot down beside the
-other, and put out a tentative, groping hand. There
-was a thread of cotton stretched from wall to wall at
-the level of her waist. If her movements had been less
-gentle she would have brushed through it without
-noticing. Then, as she stood there thinking, the thread
-between her fingers, something else came to her. The
-last yard of passage just at the stair foot had felt
-different&mdash;dry, gritty.</p>
-<p>Jane descended the three steps backwards, and,
-crouching on the bottom one, put down her hand and
-felt the floor of the passage. There was sand on it, dry
-sand which had not been there when she came down,
-and in the dry sand her footprints would be clearly
-marked. Obviously Mr. Ember had his suspicions and
-his methods of verifying them: &ldquo;Though what on
-earth he&rsquo;d make of cork soles I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said
-Jane. She decided not to worry him with this
-problem.</p>
-<p>It was horribly dangerous, but she must have a
-light. She set her candle end on the step above
-her and struck a match. It made a noise like a
-squib and went out. She struck another and got the
-candle lighted.</p>
-<p>The sand was yellow sand off the beach, but nice and
-dry. Two and a half of her footprints showed plainly
-on its smooth surface. Jane leaned forward and
-smoothed them out. Then she blew out her candle and
-felt safer. Feeling for the thread of cotton, she crawled
-beneath it, then very, very slowly up the rest of the
-steps, her hand before her all the way till she came to
-the door in the panelling. She opened it and slipped
-through into the hall.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_249">249</div>
-<p>The grey, uncertain light was filtering into it. Everything
-looked strange and cold. Jane closed the door,
-and never knew that a loose strand of cotton had fallen
-as she passed. Neither did she know that at that
-very moment Jeffrey Ember was standing by the open
-well mouth, the ray from his powerful electric torch
-focused upon a little patch of candle grease.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_250">250</div>
-<h2 id="c23"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXIII</span></h2>
-<p>Anthony Luttrell caught a slow local train
-at Withstead&mdash;the sort of train that serves little
-country places all over England. It dawdled slowly
-from station to station, sometimes taking what
-appeared to be an unnecessary rest at a signal box as
-well. It finally reached Maxton ten minutes late,
-thereby missing the London express and leaving
-Anthony Luttrell with a two hours&rsquo; wait.</p>
-<p>Waiting just at present was about as congenial an
-occupation as being racked. He walked up and down
-with a dragging, restless step, and tried unsuccessfully
-to shut off his torturing thoughts behind a safety
-curtain. The time dragged intolerably. Presently he
-left the platform and went up on to the bridge which
-ran from one side of the station to the other. Here he
-began his pacing again, stopping every now and then
-to watch a train come in or a train go out. From the
-bridge one could see all the platforms.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_251">251</div>
-<p>When an express rushed through, the whole structure
-shook and clouds of white steam blotted out everything.
-It was when the steam was clearing away,
-and the roar of the receding train was dying down,
-that Anthony noticed another local running in to the
-Withstead platform. He bent over the rail and
-watched the passengers get out&mdash;just a handful. There
-was a young woman with two children, two farmers,
-three or four nondescript women, and a big man with a
-suit-case. Anthony looked at the big man and went
-on looking at him. Something about him seemed
-vaguely familiar. The man came along the platform
-and began to mount the steps that led up to the bridge.
-Half-way up he put down his suit-case, took off his
-hat for a moment as if to cool himself, and stood
-there looking up. Then he replaced his hat, shifted
-the suit-case to the other hand, and came up the rest
-of the steps. He seemed hot.</p>
-<p>He passed Anthony and went down the steps on to
-the London platform. Anthony followed him.</p>
-<p>When the big man stood still and looked up, eight
-years were suddenly wiped out. Memory is a queer
-thing, and plays queer tricks. What Anthony&rsquo;s
-memory did was to set him down in the year 1912, in
-the gallery of a hall in Chicago. There was a packed
-and rather vociferous audience. There was a big man
-on the platform, a big man who seemed hot. His
-speech was, in fact, of a sufficiently inflammatory
-nature to make any one feel hot. It breathed fire and
-fury. Its rolling eloquence must have involved a
-good deal of physical exertion. Suddenly, after a
-period, the speaker stopped and looked up at the
-gallery for applause. It came like a veritable cyclone.
-The meeting was subsequently broken up by the
-police.</p>
-<p>Anthony remembered that the speaker&rsquo;s name was
-Molloy. If Mr. Molloy had come from Withstead,
-it occurred to Anthony that his destination would
-probably be of interest.</p>
-<p>The London train was due in ten minutes. When it
-came in, Molloy got into a third-class carriage, and
-Anthony followed his example.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_252">252</div>
-<p>It was at seven-thirty on Sunday morning that Mrs.
-March&rsquo;s cook, who was sweeping the hall, was given
-what she afterwards described as a turn by the arrival
-of an odd-looking man who would give no name and
-insisted on seeing her master.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Awful he looked with that &rsquo;orrid scar and his &rsquo;air
-that wild, and not giving me a chance to shut the door
-in his face, for he pushes in the moment I got it open&mdash;that&rsquo;s
-what give me the worst turn of all&mdash;and walks
-into the dining-room as bold as brass, and says, &lsquo;I
-want to see Captain March&mdash;and be quick, please.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When Henry came into the dining-room he shut the
-door behind him very quickly and looked as if he also
-had had a turn.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good Lord, Tony, what&rsquo;s happened?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; said Anthony, with nonchalance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then in Heaven&rsquo;s name, why are you here?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m through, that&rsquo;s all. You can&rsquo;t say I didn&rsquo;t
-give notice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not a question of what I say, it&rsquo;s what Piggy&rsquo;ll
-say.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ve got a sop for Piggy. I&rsquo;ve been doing the
-faithful sleuth. I&rsquo;ve trailed a man from Withstead
-to a highly genteel boarding-house in South Kensington;
-and as I last saw the gentleman addressing an
-I. W. W. meeting in Chicago, I imagine Piggy might
-be interested.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who was it?&rdquo; said Henry quickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Molloy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re sure?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Absolutely.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_253">253</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Good man. You&rsquo;re in luck. Molloy, under the
-interesting <i>alias</i> of Bernier, has just been selling the
-Government Formula &lsquo;A.&rsquo; He was trailed over here
-with the swag and then lost sight of. For a dead cert
-he&rsquo;s been to Luttrell Marches by the back way and
-seen Ember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Anthony turned away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the devil to pay down there,&rdquo; he said....
-&ldquo;No, no, the girl&rsquo;s all right.... This is something
-I ought to have told you when you were down. I ought
-to have told you the whole thing. I couldn&rsquo;t bring
-myself to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sit down, Tony. What is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I can&rsquo;t sit.&rdquo; He walked to the window and
-stood there, looking out. His hands made restless
-movements. He spoke, keeping his back to Henry:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t go through all the passages?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I was going to to-night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I ought to have told you. The big place under
-the terrace, you know&mdash;they&rsquo;ve turned it into a laboratory.
-Molloy may have been working there, for all I
-know; he had the name of an expert chemist.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, go on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d have found it yourself to-night, but I
-couldn&rsquo;t let you go blundering in unwarned. Ember
-might be there&mdash;any one might be there. It&rsquo;s damnable,
-Henry, but I believe she&rsquo;s up to her neck in it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry was silent. There seemed to be nothing to
-say. He also believed that Raymond Heritage was
-up to her neck in whatever secret enterprise was being
-developed at Luttrell Marches. He remembered the
-passion in her voice when she said, &ldquo;I should like to
-smash it all,&rdquo; and he remembered how she had sung,
-&ldquo;Would we not shatter it to bits, and then re-mould
-it nearer to the heart&rsquo;s desire?&rdquo; Whatever the thing
-was, he believed she was in it up to her neck. So he
-was silent, and Anthony was grateful for his silence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_254">254</div>
-<p>The silence was broken by a tapping, and a rustling,
-and the turning of a handle. The door opened very
-abruptly, and Mrs. de Luttrelle March made a precipitous
-entrance. She wore a pink silk <i>n&eacute;glig&eacute;</i> and
-a boudoir cap embroidered in forget-me-nots, also an
-expression of extreme terror&mdash;the cook&rsquo;s description
-of their early visitor having prepared her to find
-Henry&rsquo;s corpse stretched upon the hearth-rug. When
-a living and annoyed Henry confronted her, she clung
-to his arm and gazed round-eyed at the long, thin
-man who had swung round at her entrance. Uncertainty
-succeeded fear. Henry was saying, &ldquo;Do
-go back to your room, Mother,&rdquo; but it is doubtful
-whether she heard him.</p>
-<p>Gradually her grasp of his arm relaxed. She walked
-slowly across the room, and stared with horrified
-amazement at Anthony.</p>
-<p>He looked over her head at Henry, shrugged his
-shoulders just perceptibly, and made as if to turn
-back to the window again. Either that shrug, or the
-faintly sarcastic lift of the eyebrows that accompanied
-it, brought a sort of broken gasp to Mrs. March&rsquo;s lips.
-She put out her hand, touched his coat sleeve with her
-finger-tips, and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anthony&mdash;it&rsquo;s Anthony&mdash;oh, Henry, it&rsquo;s Anthony!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She backed a little at each repetition of the name,
-looked wildly round, and sinking on to the nearest
-chair, burst into tears.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry&mdash;oh, please somebody speak,&rdquo; she sobbed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all right, Aunt Rosa. I&rsquo;m not a ghost,&rdquo; said
-Anthony in his driest voice.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_255">255</div>
-<p>Henry experienced a cold dread of what his mother
-would say next. She had talked so much and thought
-so incessantly of Luttrell Marches. Latterly she had
-been so sure of Henry&rsquo;s ownership, and so proud of it.
-What would she say now&mdash;as she dropped her hands
-from her face and gazed with streaming eyes at
-Anthony, who regarded her quizzically?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony, you&rsquo;re so dreadfully changed. That fearful
-scar&mdash;oh, my dear, where have you been all this time?
-We thought you were dead. I don&rsquo;t know how I
-recognised you. And you were <i>such</i> a pretty little
-boy, my dear. I used to be jealous because you had
-longer eyelashes than Henry, but you haven&rsquo;t now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t I?&rdquo; said Anthony, with perfect gravity.
-He took his aunt&rsquo;s plump white hand and gave it a
-squeeze and a pat. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s very nice of you to welcome
-me, Aunt Rosa. The scar isn&rsquo;t as bad as it looks, and
-Henry&rsquo;s going to lend me a razor and some clothes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was later, when Anthony could be heard splashing
-in the bathroom, that Mrs. March beckoned Henry
-into her room, flung her arms round his neck, and
-burst into tears all over again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My poor boy,&rdquo; she sobbed, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s so hard on you&mdash;about
-Luttrell Marches, I mean&mdash;do you mind
-dreadfully?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not an atom. Besides, I knew Tony was alive;
-I always told you he would turn up.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_256">256</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t think of any one but him at first,&rdquo; said
-Mrs. March, sniffing gently. &ldquo;Then afterwards it
-came over me Henry won&rsquo;t have the place&mdash;and I
-couldn&rsquo;t help crying because, of course, one does get
-to count on a thing, with every one saying to me as they
-did, &lsquo;<i>Of course</i> your son comes into Luttrell Marches,
-such a beautiful place,&rsquo;&mdash;and so it is, and I did think
-it was yours, and what I felt about it was, if I feel badly
-about it, what must Henry feel? You see, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry endeavoured to disengage himself.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Mother, but you needn&rsquo;t worry&mdash;you really
-needn&rsquo;t. Look here, you dress and don&rsquo;t cry any more.
-I&rsquo;ve got to telephone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mrs. March clasped her hands about his arm.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry, wait, just a minute,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;That
-Miss Smith&mdash;you&rsquo;re not still thinking about her, are
-you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; said Mrs. March. She fidgeted with
-Henry&rsquo;s coat sleeve, bridled a little, and looked down
-at her mauve satin slippers. &ldquo;Well&mdash;you know, my dear
-boy, I didn&rsquo;t want to be <i>unkind</i>, but I simply couldn&rsquo;t
-picture her at Luttrell Marches&mdash;as its mistress, I
-mean&mdash;and I&rsquo;m sure you did think me unkind about
-it; but now that it&rsquo;s all different&mdash;Tony coming back
-like this does make a difference, of course, and what I
-was going to say about it is this. If you really do care
-for her and it would make up to you for the disappointment,
-I wouldn&rsquo;t hold out about it, not if you really
-wanted it, my dear, and really cared for her, only of
-course you&rsquo;d have to be quite sure, because once you&rsquo;re
-married you&rsquo;re married, and there&rsquo;s no way out of it
-except divorce, and, whether it&rsquo;s the fashion now or not,
-I always have said and always will say, that it&rsquo;s not respectable,
-it really isn&rsquo;t, and it&rsquo;s not a thing we&rsquo;ve ever
-had in our family&mdash;not on either side,&rdquo; added Mrs.
-March thoughtfully, after a slight pause for breath.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_257">257</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I really do care for her, and I really am sure,&rdquo; said
-Henry. He kissed his mother affectionately, and once
-more attempted to detach himself from her hold.</p>
-<p>Mrs. March let go with one hand in order to dab her
-eyes with a scrap of pink-and-white chiffon. Then she
-looked up at her son fondly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your eyelashes are <i>much</i> the longest,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>Henry made an abrupt departure.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Piggy&rsquo;ll see you as soon as you can get there,&rdquo; he
-told Anthony five minutes later&mdash;&ldquo;at his house. I&rsquo;m
-off to Luttrell Marches. I was going down anyhow
-to-night, but, things being as they are, I think I&rsquo;ll get
-a move on. Piggy&rsquo;s sending some one to the address
-you gave, to keep an eye on Molloy. He doesn&rsquo;t want
-him arrested yet, as he&rsquo;s in hopes that Belcovitch will
-roll up&mdash;that&rsquo;s the other man concerned in the actual
-sale of the formula. He went to Vienna, but was in
-Paris yesterday. Good Lord, Tony, I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;ve
-got rid of that beastly beard!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_258">258</div>
-<h2 id="c24"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXIV</span></h2>
-<p>Sir Julian Le Mesurier&rsquo;s study was an
-extremely pleasant room, friendly with books,
-and comforted by admirable chairs.</p>
-<p>A Sabbath peace reigned outside in the deserted
-street. Within there was no peace at all. A crocodile
-hunt was in progress. Piggy, as a large and very fierce
-crocodile, was performing a feat described by himself
-as &ldquo;trailing his sinuous length&rdquo; across the floor, his
-objective a Persian carpet island upon which a small
-fat girl of three in a fluffy Sunday dress was lifting
-first one plump foot and then the other, whilst at
-regular intervals she uttered small but piercing screams.
-Upon the crocodile&rsquo;s back sat a thin, determined little
-boy of six who battered continuously upon the crocodile&rsquo;s
-ribs with the heels of a new pair of boots, whilst
-he shouted his defiance at the foe. At the far end of the
-room sat Lady Le Mesurier with a book. At intervals
-she looked up from it to say helplessly, &ldquo;Piggy, it&rsquo;s
-Sunday&rdquo;&mdash;or &ldquo;Baby&rsquo;s got a new frock on, and I
-expect nurse will give notice if you tear it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not tear,&rdquo; said the fat little girl, patting her skirts.
-Then she shrieked, for the crocodile made a sudden
-snap at the nearest ankle.</p>
-<p>Upon this scene the door opened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Luttrell,&rdquo; said an expressionless voice, and
-Anthony entered.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_259">259</div>
-<p>Lady Le Mesurier gathered her baby and her book,
-the crocodile unseated the small boy and arose, dusting
-its trousers. A well-trained family vanished, and Sir
-Julian shook hands and waved his visitor to a chair.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come up to report?&rdquo; said Piggy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not primarily,&rdquo; began Anthony, but was cut short.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You followed Molloy. Yes, I think I prefer to have
-it that way, if you don&rsquo;t mind. You followed Molloy
-to this South Kensington address. How do you know
-he&rsquo;s stopping there?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I asked the servant who was cleaning the knocker
-whether they had a room, and she said, &lsquo;No&rsquo;&mdash;that
-the gentleman who had just come in made them quite
-full up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ve sent a man to watch the place. Now,
-what have you to report from Luttrell Marches?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Anthony looked straight over Sir Julian&rsquo;s shoulder
-with a hard, level gaze, and spoke in a hard, forced
-voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There are a number of secret passages and chambers
-under the house at Luttrell Marches. One of the
-passages has an exit outside the grounds on the seashore
-about a mile and a half from Withstead. The
-secret has been very carefully preserved until now.
-Each successive owner told his heir. No one else was
-supposed to know. My father told me. When he
-thought that I was dead, he also told my cousin,
-Henry March. Until I went to Luttrell Marches the
-other day I had no idea that any one else had discovered
-the secret. I have to report that the passages have
-not only been discovered, but made use of in a way
-which points to something of an illegal nature. One of
-the chambers is a fair-sized one: it has been turned into
-a laboratory&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_260">260</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Any sign that it has been used as such?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Every sign. Power has been diverted from the
-dynamos which were installed for the Government
-experiments and the passages have been wired, and
-some of the chambers fitted with electric light. The
-whole thing has been going on under Sir William&rsquo;s very
-nose.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;M&rsquo;, I&rsquo;ve had him here to see me&mdash;terribly gone to
-pieces, quite past his job, also very much annoyed with
-me for having sent Henry down. Now the question
-is, who&rsquo;s been wiring the passages and using the
-laboratory?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Ember; there&rsquo;s no doubt about that, I think.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And the sale of the formula? Ember?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure of it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Must have proof. No earthly good my being sure,
-or your being sure, or Henry&rsquo;s being sure. We&rsquo;ve got
-to have something so solid that, after Sir Dash Blank,
-K.C., has done his best to tear it into shreds, what&rsquo;s
-left of it will convince a jury. Now who else is in it
-besides Ember and Molloy? In the household, I
-mean, down there at Luttrell Marches? Any one
-else?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Anthony continued to look over Sir Julian&rsquo;s shoulder.
-He remained silent. Piggy got up and walked to
-his writing-table. When he reached it he swung round,
-and asked again sharply:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Any one else, Luttrell?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was still silence. Then Piggy said dryly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I take it that there is somebody else involved. I
-don&rsquo;t wish to cross-examine you, but I must know one
-thing. Is it suspicion, moral certainty, or proof?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_261">261</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Moral certainty,&rdquo; said Anthony Luttrell. He
-passed his tongue across his dry lips. Piggy did not
-look at him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, look here,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it seems to me that
-Luttrell Marches is about to be the centre of some
-unpleasant happenings. I think, I rather think, it
-would be advisable to induce any ladies who may be
-there to leave the place. Lady Heritage is there, is
-she not, and er, er, Miss...?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Molloy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Exactly. Miss&mdash;er, Molloy. Now I consider that
-these two ladies should leave at once. When I say
-at once I mean to-day. I should like you to go
-down&mdash;by car, of course, there won&rsquo;t be any Sunday
-trains&mdash;and er, fetch them away, using such inducements
-and persuasions as you may think expedient.
-Only they must leave. You understand, they must
-leave to-day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Anthony rose stiffly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid, sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that I must decline the
-responsibility. The reasons which made me leave
-Luttrell Marches make it impossible for me to return
-there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Piggy. He picked up a piece of indiarubber,
-and occupied himself for about a minute and a
-half in endeavouring to balance it upon the edge of a
-handsome brass inkstand with an inscription on it.
-When the indiarubber fell into the ink with a splash
-he fished it out, using a pen with a sharp nib as a gaff,
-dried it carefully on a new sheet of white blotting-paper,
-and turned again to Anthony.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_262">262</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like just to put a hypothetical case to you,&rdquo;
-he said. &ldquo;Government puts a certain very important
-and confidential piece of work into the hands of an
-eminent man, a man of European reputation and
-unblemished probity. Evidence comes to hand of
-things entirely incompatible with the secrecy and
-other conditions which were an honourable obligation.
-Worse suspicions of illegality and conspiracy. Cumulative
-evidence. Arrests. A public trial. Now, my
-dear Luttrell, can you tell me what would happen
-to the Government which had displayed such incompetence
-as, first, to commit a vital undertaking to a
-person capable of betraying it; and second, of permitting
-the consequent scandal to become public
-property in such a manner as to make this country a
-laughing-stock in the eyes of the world? It&rsquo;s not a
-question that requires a great deal of answering,
-is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sir William is not involved,&rdquo; said Anthony harshly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear Luttrell, I was putting a hypothetical
-case. But if you wish to talk without camouflage
-I will do so&mdash;for five minutes. I will do so because I
-consider that the situation is one of the most serious
-which I have ever had to deal with. Sir William is not
-involved, but Sir William has become incompetent
-to control his household and incapable of perceiving
-that a dangerous conspiracy is being carried on under
-his roof. It&rsquo;s not only the matter of the stolen formula.
-Your report of a hidden laboratory certainly tends to
-corroborate the very grave allegations made by Miss
-Molloy. A situation so entirely serious justifies me
-in demanding the sacrifice of your personal feelings
-and inclinations. I repeat, Lady Heritage and Miss
-Molloy must leave Luttrell Marches to-day. I don&rsquo;t
-care what inducements you use. They must leave.
-I believe you can get them to leave. I don&rsquo;t believe
-any one else can. I am detaining Sir William in town&mdash;it
-was not difficult to do so. What more natural
-than that his daughter should join him. My wife is
-expecting Miss Smith to pay us a visit. There must
-be no delay of any kind. You understand, Luttrell?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_263">263</div>
-<p>There was a short tense pause.</p>
-<p>Anthony stood as he had been standing during all
-the time that Sir Julian talked. He looked moodily
-out of the window. Now and then his face twitched,
-now and then he moved his hands with a sort of jerk.
-At last he said in a constrained voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;understand.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said Piggy briskly. &ldquo;Then you&rsquo;d
-better be off. From the fact that you have shaved and
-returned to civilised raiment, I imagine that George
-Patterson is now obsolete, and that Mr. Luttrell has
-ceased to be a corpse in some unknown grave?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ve come back.&rdquo; A pause&mdash;then, &ldquo;Sir
-Julian&mdash;this&mdash;this duty is particularly unwelcome. If
-I undertake it, will you send me abroad again as soon
-as possible? England is distasteful, impossible&mdash;but,
-of course, I realise that I couldn&rsquo;t go on being dead&mdash;there
-are too many legal complications, and it wasn&rsquo;t
-fair on Henry.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_264">264</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry,&rdquo; observed Piggy, &ldquo;was becoming the
-object of most particular attentions from matchmaking
-mammas. My wife informs me that his
-stock has been very high for some months past.
-Gilt-edged, in fact. I&rsquo;m afraid there will be a slump
-as soon as your resurrection is established. Henry,
-I think, will bear up. Well now, about sending you
-abroad&mdash;I can&rsquo;t say for certain, but I rather think it
-could be managed, if you still wish it, you know. I
-wouldn&rsquo;t be in a hurry, if I were you, Luttrell, about
-going abroad, but as to the matter in hand&mdash;well,
-hurry is the word. You&rsquo;ll find a car outside with
-Inspector Davison. Take him along. I hope he
-won&rsquo;t be needed, but&mdash;well&mdash;take him along.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_265">265</div>
-<h2 id="c25"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXV</span></h2>
-<p>Mr. Ember was spending a busy Sunday. As
-he stood in the empty laboratory, realising
-Molloy&rsquo;s defection and all that it involved, there was
-no change in his impassive face. The web of his plan
-was broken. Like some accurate machine his brain
-picked up the loose ravelled threads and wove them
-into a new combination.</p>
-<p>Molloy himself was no loss. His place could be
-filled a dozen times over. As to any harm that he
-could do, unless he had gone straight to the police, he
-could be reached&mdash;reached and silenced. And Ember
-knew his Molloy. He would not go straight to the
-police. If he meant to sell them, he would set about it
-with a certain regard for appearances. There would
-be <i>pourparlers</i>, some dexterous method of approach
-which would save his face and leave him an emergency
-exit. Ember checked over in his mind the four or five
-places to which Molloy might have retreated. Then
-there was the money. That they must have; but
-Molloy, once found, could be scared into giving
-it up.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_266">266</div>
-<p>Ember let his eyes travel around the laboratory.
-The lists lay upon the bench where Jane had put them
-not five minutes before. He frowned and picked them
-up, stared at them, and frowned more deeply still.
-They had been folded and refolded, doubled into a
-small package since he had last handled them. Who
-had done it? The sheets had been smooth from the
-typewriter when he gave them to Molloy. They had
-been handled and creased, with the creases that come
-from tight folding. Had Molloy meant to take them
-with him, and then at the last moment been afraid?
-It looked like it. He turned over the pages, counting
-them. Suddenly his eyes fixed, his fingers tightened
-their hold. There was a fresh smudge of ink on the
-top of the fifth page&mdash;a smudge so fresh that the blue
-ink had not yet turned black. That meant two
-things: Molloy had copied the lists before he left, and
-he had only been gone an hour or two&mdash;that at the
-outside, probably less.</p>
-<p>In the moment that passed before Ember laid the
-papers down, Mr. Molloy received his death sentence
-as duly and irrevocably as if it had been pronounced
-by an Assize Judge in scarlet and ermine, white wig
-and black cap.</p>
-<p>Ember gave just a little nod, opened a safe that stood
-in the corner, pushed the papers into it, and pocketed
-the key.</p>
-<p>It was a little later that he found the first spot
-of candle grease. It was half-way up one of
-the side passages, on the spot where Jane had
-been standing when he and Molloy entered the
-laboratory the evening before. He looked at it for
-a long time very thoughtfully before he took his
-torch and proceeded to a systematic search of the
-passages.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_267">267</div>
-<p>He found no living person, but came upon dropped
-wax in three more places, at the edge of the well, by
-the headland exit, and half-way down the steps to the
-beach. He came slowly back along the main passage,
-and stood for some time with his light focused on the
-sand which he had spread at the foot of the stair.
-There was no footmark upon it, but he was prepared
-to swear that it was not as he had left it. He had
-scattered the sand loosely, and it was pressed down and
-too smooth. He thought that it had been smoothed
-by a hand passing over it. He mounted the first two
-steps. The thread of cotton which he had fastened
-across the stairway was still there. He bent beneath
-it, came to the top, and threw his light full upon the
-back of the panelled door. The second piece of cotton
-was gone.</p>
-<p>He flashed the ray upon the floor once&mdash;twice. The
-third time he found what he was looking for, a fine
-black thread lying across the threshold. It ran out
-of sight under the door. Some one had gone out
-that way since Mr. Ember had come in. Who?
-Not Molloy&mdash;impossible that it could have been
-Molloy.</p>
-<p>Ember passed through the panel, closed it behind
-him, and walked slowly and meditatively along the corridor
-to the library, still pursuing his train of thought.
-Molloy would have blundered through that first piece
-of cotton without ever feeling it at all, just as Molloy&rsquo;s
-foot in its heavy boot would have been unaware of the
-sand. If it was a woman who had passed&mdash;now who
-would have used a candle in the passages? Not
-Raymond. She had more than one electric torch which
-she used constantly for night work. But Renata, the
-little soft-spoken stupid mouse of a thing, if she had a
-fancy to go spying, she&rsquo;d take a candle; yes, and let it
-gutter too.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_268">268</div>
-<p>Mr. Ember&rsquo;s instinct for danger had always reacted
-to this question of Renata Molloy. Over and over
-again there had been the tremor, the response, the
-warning prick. An extreme regret that he had not
-arranged for a convenient accident to overtake Renata
-possessed Jeffrey Ember. The omission, he decided,
-should be rectified with as little delay as possible.
-He locked the library door and went to the
-telephone.</p>
-<p>It took him half an hour to get the number that he
-wanted, but he betrayed no impatience. When at last
-a man&rsquo;s voice came to him, along the wire, he inquired
-in the Bavarian dialect, &ldquo;Is that you, Number Five?&rdquo;
-The voice said, &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; whereupon Ember gave a password
-and waited until he had received the countersign.
-He then began to issue orders, using an unhurried
-voice. Every now and then he shivered a little in the
-early morning cold, and shrugged his coat higher about
-his ears.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are promoted. You go up to Four and come
-on to the Council. I will notify you of the next
-meeting. Number Three is a traitor. He left here
-last night with copies of lists containing names of
-all agents. It is believed that it is his design to
-sell us. He has secreted a large sum of money, the
-property of the Council. Before he is eliminated
-he must be made to hand this over. Take down
-the following addresses; he may be at any one of
-them. Put Six and Seven on to finding and dealing
-with him immediately.&rdquo; He read out the addresses,
-and paused whilst they were repeated. He then continued
-speaking:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_269">269</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I shall require the motor-boat off Withstead Cove
-at nightfall. Yes, to-night, and without fail. A
-change of base is imperative. Proceed first to ...&rdquo;&mdash;he
-gave another address&mdash;&ldquo;and communicate
-also with Ten. If Belcovitch has arrived tell
-him that he is promoted to Three, and bring him with
-you. The Council can then meet, as Number One
-is here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A very slight gleam of something hard to define
-broke for a moment the dull impassivity of Ember&rsquo;s
-voice as he pronounced the last words. Then he
-added:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Repeat my instructions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He listened attentively whilst the voice reproduced
-his own words. Then he said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That is all. We shall meet to-night,&rdquo; and rang
-off.</p>
-<p>He had breakfast alone with Jane, and ate it with a
-good appetite. He talked very pleasantly too. Jane
-wondered why every succeeding moment left her more
-afraid. She had been up all night, of course. It
-must be that, yes, of course, it must be that. She
-faltered in the middle of some inane sentence and
-stopped. Ember&rsquo;s eyes were fixed on her with an
-entire lack of expression, yet behind those blank
-windows she felt that there were strange guests.
-It was like looking at the windows of a haunted
-house, quite blank and empty, and yet at any
-moment out of them might look some unimaginable
-horror.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_270">270</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You seem a little tired this morning, Miss Renata,&rdquo;
-said Ember gently. &ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you follow Lady
-Heritage&rsquo;s example and have your breakfast upstairs?
-You don&rsquo;t look to me as if you had had much sleep.
-You haven&rsquo;t been walking in your sleep again by any
-chance, have you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane clenched her foot in Renata&rsquo;s baggy shoe.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I hope I haven&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t always
-know when I&rsquo;ve been doing it. What made you think
-of it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It just crossed my mind,&rdquo; said Ember. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a
-very dangerous habit, Miss Renata.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane pushed her chair back and rose.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going into the garden,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;this
-room is too hot for anything. It&rsquo;s like....&rdquo; A
-little devil suddenly commandeered her tongue.
-She reached the door, opened it, and flung over her
-shoulder:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s like the snake house at the Zoo, Mr.
-Ember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She ran straight out into the garden after that, and
-stayed there. She had the feeling that it was safer to
-be in the open. She wanted to keep away from walls,
-and doors, and passages. She saw no one all the
-morning, and came back to lunch with her nerve
-steadier. As soon as lunch was over, she went out
-again. The hour in the house had brought her fears
-back with reinforcements. She began to count the
-hours before Henry could arrive. It was only half-past
-two, and perhaps he would not come till
-midnight.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_271">271</div>
-<p>The thought of the dark hours after sunset was like
-a black cloud coming nearer and nearer. If she could
-hide, if she could only get away and hide until Henry
-came. She felt as if it was quite beyond her to go
-back into the house and sit for hour after hour, perhaps
-alone with Jeffrey Ember, his blank eyes watching
-her, or to endure Raymond Heritage&rsquo;s presence,
-and, looking at her, remember the line in Molloy&rsquo;s
-letter: &ldquo;Renata followed Number One.&rdquo; It was
-Raymond she had followed. She had told Molloy
-that she had followed Raymond. Then Raymond,
-beyond doubt or cavil, was the Number One of
-that horrible Council. She could not bear it. She
-thought of Raymond&rsquo;s voice breaking when she said
-&ldquo;Anthony,&rdquo; and she could not bear it. If she could
-only get away and hide until Henry came.</p>
-<p>She went into the walled garden and walked up and
-down. Perhaps Anthony Luttrell would come to her
-as he had come once before. Presently she came to
-the tool-shed, stopped for a moment hesitating on the
-threshold, and then went in. There was a way into
-the passages from here; she was quite sure of it.
-If she could find the spring, she believed that she
-would be able to reach the cross-passage where she had
-run into Henry. She did not believe that Ember used
-it. Why should he, since it would be of no use to his
-schemes? If she could get into the passage and hide
-there, she need not go back to the house. She could
-wait there for Henry and catch him as he passed.
-She would be able to warn him too, and it came to her
-with startling suddenness that he stood very much
-in need of warning; so much had come to light in the
-forty-eight hours since he left.</p>
-<p>It took Jane an hour to find the spring. She might
-not have found it then, but for the chance that made
-her slip and throw all her weight upon one place just
-under the wide potting-shelf. There was a creak,
-and one of the boards gave a little. She found a trap-door
-and steps beneath it.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_272">272</div>
-<p>There were some old sacks in the shed. Jane took
-one of them, climbed down the steps, and shut the
-trap-door again. She felt her way down to the level,
-spread the sack on the second step, and sat down.
-She felt utterly forlorn and weary.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_273">273</div>
-<h2 id="c26"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXVI</span></h2>
-<p>Mr. Ember, having completed all his arrangements,
-went in search of Lady Heritage.
-She had sat silently through lunch and disappeared
-directly afterwards. Having failed to find her downstairs,
-Ember was about to pass along the upper
-corridor to the steel gate which shut off the north wing,
-when he noticed that the door of the small Oak Room
-on his left was standing ajar. He thought he heard a
-movement within, and, after pausing for a moment to
-listen, he pushed the door wide and looked in. As
-far as his knowledge went, Lady Heritage had never
-entered this room during the time that they had been
-in the house. He accepted the fact and could have
-stated the reasons for it. It had been the playroom,
-and the walls were covered with Anthony Luttrell&rsquo;s
-school groups. The book shelves held his books, the
-cabinets his collections. In a very intimate sense it
-was his room.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_274">274</div>
-<p>Raymond Heritage stood at the far end of it now.
-She wore a dress of soft white wool bound with a
-plaited girdle from the ends of which heavy tassels
-swung. She had taken one of the groups from the wall
-and was looking at it with an intensity which closed
-her thought to all other impressions. She stood half
-turned from the door. Ember looked at her and,
-looking, experienced some strange sensations. This
-was Raymond Carr-Magnus, a younger, softer, lovelier
-woman than Raymond Heritage. The curious cold
-something, like transparent glass or very thin ice,
-which seemed to wall her from her fellows, was gone.
-It was as if the ice had dissolved leaving the air misty
-and tremulous.</p>
-<p>The little flame which always burned in him took on
-brightness and intensity, and a second flame sprang
-up beside it, a flame that burned to a still white heat
-of anger because this change, this softening, was for
-Anthony Luttrell and not for Jeffrey Ember.</p>
-<p>There was no sign of emotion, however, in face or
-expression as he moved slightly and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you busy? May I speak to you for a few
-minutes?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was characteristic of Raymond that she did not
-appear in the least startled. She turned quite slowly,
-laid the photograph on the open front of the bureau
-by which she stood, and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now? Do you want me now?&rdquo; A softness was
-in her voice as she spoke, and a dream in her eyes.</p>
-<p>Her beauty struck Ember as a thing seen for the first
-time. He had to use great force to keep his answer on
-a note of indifference.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you can spare the time,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>Raymond looked round her. There was a caressing
-quality in her glance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; I&rsquo;ll come downstairs,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>This was Anthony&rsquo;s room. She would not talk to
-another man in Anthony&rsquo;s room. The thought may
-have been in her mind. The breath of it beat on
-Ember&rsquo;s flames and fanned them higher still. He led
-the way downstairs and into Sir William&rsquo;s study.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_275">275</div>
-<p>Raymond Heritage had passed from the despairing
-mood of her first interview with Anthony. Then to
-know him alive and to feel him unforgiving had stabbed
-her to the quick. But that phase had passed. During
-the many hours that she had spent alone the one amazing
-radiant thought that he was alive had come to
-dominate everything. The cold finality of death had
-been lifted. Instead of a blank wall, there opened
-before her an infinite number of ways, any one of
-which might lead her back to her lost happiness. She
-began to live in the past, to go over the old times, to
-make a dream her companion.</p>
-<p>She came into the study with Ember and waited to
-hear what he wanted, giving him just that surface
-attention which he recognised and resented. His first
-words were meant to startle her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lady Heritage,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you know, of course,
-that there are certain passages and rooms under this
-house?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She did start a little, he thought. Certainly her
-attention deepened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who told you that, Jeffrey?&rdquo; she said, and hardly
-heard her own voice because Anthony&rsquo;s rang in her ears
-insisting, &ldquo;I <i>know</i> that you told Ember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Luttrell told me,&rdquo; said Ember.</p>
-<p>She exclaimed incredulously. At least her thoughts
-were not wandering now. Ember felt a certain
-triumph as he realised it. He went on speaking quite
-quietly:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_276">276</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It was when Sir William and I were down here the
-year before Mr. Luttrell died. He, Mr. Luttrell, was
-taken very ill and I sat up with him. In the night he
-was delirious. It was obvious that he had something
-on his mind. He began to talk about the passages and
-to say that the secret must not be lost. He took me
-for his nephew Henry March, and nothing would serve
-him but he must show me the entrance in the hall. He
-got out of bed, and was so much excited that I thought
-it best to give way. When he had shown me the spring
-he calmed down and went quietly back to bed. In the
-morning he had forgotten all about it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Raymond listened, frowning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you tell me this?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I knew
-Mr. Luttrell had told Henry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry March knows?&rdquo; said Ember.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I think so. Yes, I&rsquo;m sure he does. Why,
-Jeffrey?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember was too busy with his thoughts to speak for
-a moment. What an appalling risk they had run. If
-Henry March knew of the passages, then they had been
-on the very brink of the abyss all along. He spoke at
-last, very seriously:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I want you to come down with me into the passages
-if you will. There&rsquo;s something I want to show you&mdash;something
-which I think you ought to know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Something wrong?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think you ought to see for yourself. I&rsquo;d rather
-not say any more if you don&rsquo;t mind. I&rsquo;ll show you
-what I mean. I really think you ought to come and
-see for yourself. This is a good time, as the servants
-are safely out of the way and Miss Molloy seems to
-have taken herself off.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very well, I&rsquo;ll come. I must get a cloak though,
-or I shall get into such a mess. Those passages simply
-cover one with slime.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember stood still with his hand on the half-opened
-door.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_277">277</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been down there?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, once or twice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lately?&rdquo; His voice was rather low.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, quite lately.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember gripped the door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And how did you know&mdash;oh, I beg your pardon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I don&rsquo;t think we need go into that.&rdquo; She
-spoke gently but from a distance. As she spoke she
-passed him and went through the hall and up the stairs.
-The heavy tassels of her girdle knocked softly against
-each shallow step.</p>
-<p>Ember went on gripping the door until she came
-down again wrapped in a long black cloak. When he
-dropped his hand there was a red incised line across
-the palm. He saw that the cloak was smeared with
-green. How near to the edge they had been, how
-horribly near!</p>
-<p>He opened the door and lighted her down the steps
-in silence, and in silence walked as far as the laboratory
-turning. When he turned to the left and flashed
-his light ahead of them, Raymond spoke:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve never been along that passage,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I
-know there are holes in some of them, and I&rsquo;ve never
-liked the look of these side tunnels.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This one&rsquo;s quite safe,&rdquo; said Ember, and led the
-way.</p>
-<p>Jane heard the murmur of their voices, and for a
-moment saw the faint glow of the light. Then the
-glow and the voices died again. It was dark, she was
-alone, she was cold, she wanted Henry, oh, how she
-wanted Henry.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_278">278</div>
-<p>At that moment Jane&rsquo;s idea of Paradise was to be
-able to put her head down on Henry&rsquo;s shoulder and
-cry. It was not, perhaps, a very exalted idea, but it
-was very insistent.</p>
-<p>When Ember switched on the light, swung open the
-steel gate, and stood aside for her to pass, Lady
-Heritage uttered a sharp exclamation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jeffrey, what&rsquo;s this?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That is what I wanted you to see,&rdquo; replied Ember.</p>
-<p>She crossed the threshold, walked a pace or two into
-the room, and looked around her with eyes from which
-all dreaminess had vanished. Bewilderment took its
-place.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who did this? What does it mean?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-<p>Ember did not answer her until he too was within
-the chamber. He pushed the steel gate with his hand
-and it fell to with a clang.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is, as you see, a well-equipped laboratory,&rdquo;
-he said&mdash;&ldquo;worth coming to see, I think.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, but, Jeffrey&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are interested? I thought you would be;
-won&rsquo;t you sit down?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She looked about her with puzzled eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do sit,&rdquo; said Ember in his quiet, friendly way.
-&ldquo;You will find this chair more comfortable than the
-benches.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He brought it forward as he spoke&mdash;a high-backed
-chair with arms. It struck her then as a curious
-piece of furniture to find in a laboratory.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Brought here on purpose for you,&rdquo; said Ember.</p>
-<p>But Raymond did not sit. Instead she rested her
-hands lightly on the back of the chair, and, looking
-across it, said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jeffrey, what does all this mean?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_279">279</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to tell you,&rdquo; said Ember seriously. &ldquo;I
-have brought you here to tell you, only I wish you
-would sit down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, thank you. Jeffrey, what is this place?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A laboratory,&rdquo; said Ember. &ldquo;As you see, a
-laboratory, and the scene of some extremely interesting
-experiments.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Carried out by you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Carried out by me ... and some others.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You have brought other people in here? Jeffrey,
-I think that was inexcusable.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have not yet attempted to excuse myself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>For a moment his eyes met hers. She saw something,
-a spark, a flash, from the flames within. It was her
-first hint that there was, or could be, a flame there at
-all. It startled her in just the same degree that an
-actual spark touching her flesh would have startled
-her&mdash;not more.</p>
-<p>He spoke again at once.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just now I called this place a laboratory. If I
-were a poet&rdquo;&mdash;he laughed easily&mdash;&ldquo;I might have used
-another word. I might have said, &lsquo;This is the crucible
-out of which has come the new Philosopher&rsquo;s Stone.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Raymond lifted her eyebrows.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve not been touched by that medi&aelig;val
-dream?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;This is the twentieth century,
-Jeffrey.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Ember slowly. &ldquo;Yes, the twentieth
-century, and I said ... &lsquo;a <i>new</i> Philosopher&rsquo;s Stone.&rsquo;
-The medi&aelig;val alchemists dreamed of something that
-would turn all it touched to gold, that would transmute
-the baser metals. I have found something which will
-touch this base civilisation, this rotten fabric with
-which we have surrounded ourselves, and dissolve
-it. And when it is in solution there will be gold and
-to spare.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_280">280</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; said Lady Heritage.</p>
-<p>Ember met her frown with a smile.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was it a week ago that I heard you say, &lsquo;If I
-could smash it all&rsquo;? And didn&rsquo;t you sing:</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&ldquo;&lsquo;Ah Love, could you and I with Fate conspire</p>
-<p class="t0">To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,</p>
-<p class="t">Would we not shatter it to bits, and then</p>
-<p class="t0">Re-mould it nearer to the Heart&rsquo;s Desire?&rsquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p>You sang that as if you meant it, Raymond. You
-sang it with all your heart in your beautiful voice.
-Well, Fate has conspired for you and given this sorry
-scheme of things into your hands to shatter&mdash;to
-shatter and re-mould.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Raymond had been leaning a little forward over
-the back of the chair, touching it lightly. She
-straightened herself when Ember used her name, and
-looked at him with a sort of grave displeasure. He
-laughed a little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you begin to understand?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think, Jeffrey, that I want to understand,&rdquo;
-said Lady Heritage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How like a woman,&rdquo; said Mr. Ember. &ldquo;Here is
-what you cried out for. Here is opportunity, power,
-the greatest adventure that ever has been or ever
-will be, and you are afraid to face it. I offer you
-the throne of the world&mdash;and you don&rsquo;t wish to
-understand.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The extreme quiet of his voice was in sharp contradiction
-to the flamboyant words. Raymond looked
-at him in some anxiety.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_281">281</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not well,&rdquo; she began, and then stopped
-before the sarcasm of his glance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not mad,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;This is a business
-proposition. You&rsquo;ve had poetry, but I can give you
-prose if you prefer it. I have discovered something&mdash;I
-won&rsquo;t at this moment go into details&mdash;which enables
-me to smash up civilisation as you&rsquo;d smash a rotten
-egg. Every city, every town of the so-called civilised
-world is accounted for, divided amongst my agents.
-They only await my signal. Those alone whom we
-mark for survival will survive, the rest are eliminated.
-Remains a world at our disposal to recreate.
-In that world I am supreme&mdash;and you. Is that plain
-enough?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Her face showed deep distress and concern.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jeffrey, indeed you&rsquo;re not well,&rdquo; she repeated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Am I not?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He came a step towards her and saw her draw back,
-as it were, involuntarily. &ldquo;Have I not made you
-understand yet? Perhaps a little documentary evidence
-will assist you?&rdquo; He took a quick step towards
-her, looked at her full, and said in a different voice,
-&ldquo;Raymond, I&rsquo;m in dead earnest&mdash;dead sober earnest.&rdquo;
-Then with a sudden movement he turned away and
-went across to the safe in the far corner of the
-chamber. With his back to Raymond he unlocked it,
-and occupied himself for a minute or two with the
-picking out of some papers. When he turned she
-was at the gate with her hand on it. He spoke at
-once in his most ordinary voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a safety-catch. It won&rsquo;t open without
-the key.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will you open it, please?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_282">282</div>
-<p>He said, &ldquo;No, Raymond,&rdquo; in a tone of cool finality,
-and she lost colour a little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jeffrey,&rdquo; she began, then paused and bit her
-lip.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Raymond.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A scarlet patch of anger came suddenly to her cheek
-and she was silent until it had died again. Long years
-of self-control do not go for nothing. When she spoke
-at last there was only sadness in her voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jeffrey, I have valued our friendship&mdash;very
-much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that you will value my love even
-more.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Her hand dropped from the door. She did not
-answer. The hope of moving him died. She drew
-her cloak about her, crossed the floor slowly, and
-seated herself in the chair. She did not look at
-Ember.</p>
-<p>When the last faint murmur of voices ceased, and
-the dark silence closed about her, Jane sat quite still
-for a while. It is very difficult indeed to keep one&rsquo;s
-eyes open in the dark. Jane found that her lids
-dropped, or else that the blackness became full of odd
-traceries that worried and disturbed her. She felt
-as if she had been there for hours and hours; and
-she knew that it really might be hours before Henry
-came.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_283">283</div>
-<p>She got up and walked slowly to where the passage
-came out into the main corridor. She stood under the
-arch and looked towards the laboratory turning. She
-had only to feel her way as far as that, turn up it, and
-she would come within sight of the lighted chamber
-where Ember and Lady Heritage were talking. The
-laboratory drew her, and the light drew her. She began
-to move cautiously along the corridor. She had on
-light house-shoes which made no sound.</p>
-<p>The little glow which presently relieved the blackness
-cheered her unreasonably. It was a danger signal
-and she knew it, but it cheered her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One would rather be doing something dangerous
-than just mouldering in the pitch dark,&rdquo; she told
-herself, and edged slowly nearer and nearer to the
-light.</p>
-<p>She was now at the corner, and could look round it
-and through the steel bars into part of the laboratory.
-The disadvantage of her position was that she might be
-taken in the rear by any one who came along either
-the passage that she herself had come up or the slanting
-passage with the well in it which ran into the other
-at an acute angle, about six feet from where she was
-standing.</p>
-<p>Jane, however, knew of no one who was at all likely
-to arrive except Henry. She therefore did not trouble
-about her rear, but looked with all her eyes into the
-laboratory. She saw Lady Heritage sitting in a tall
-chair, a little turned away. Her right elbow rested
-on one arm, and her chin was in her hand. Her eyes
-were downcast. She was speaking in a cold, gentle
-voice:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have not many friends&mdash;I thought you were my
-friend. Was it all lies, Jeffrey?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Ember came into view for a moment. He must
-have been at the far end of the room. He came down
-it now, walked past Lady Heritage, and turned to
-face her. Jane saw his profile. He was smiling
-faintly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_284">284</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not fond of lies,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;they are very
-entangling&mdash;so hard to keep one&rsquo;s head and remember
-what one has said. Now the truth is so simple and
-easy; besides, you may believe it or not, I really do
-dislike lying to you. I have always told you the truth
-where it was humanly possible to do so. Even in the
-matter of Miss Molloy&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage exclaimed suddenly and sharply,
-lifting her chin from her hand and throwing her head
-back:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Renata Molloy! She&rsquo;s in this wretched conspiracy
-of yours, I suppose?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then what is she?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish I knew,&rdquo; said Ember, speaking soberly
-enough.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But what you told me wasn&rsquo;t true?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some of it was. I was really rather pleased with
-my neat dovetailing. I&rsquo;ll run over it, and you&rsquo;ll see
-that I told the truth whenever I could. All that about
-my having known Molloy in Chicago&mdash;solid fact. Then
-I think I said that I ran across him again in London,
-and found he had taken Government service with
-Scotland Yard&mdash;that was fiction, and so was the yarn
-about his warning me that foreign agents were on the
-track of the Government formula. But it&rsquo;s perfectly
-true that he has a daughter, and that she sometimes
-walks in her sleep. When I told you that she had come
-in&mdash;sleep walking&mdash;during an important conversation
-about the Government formula, and that neither Molloy
-nor I was sure how much she had heard, I was
-mingling fact and fiction. Renata Molloy happened in
-on a meeting of The Great Council&mdash;that is the Council
-of the managing agents from all the countries within
-the scope of our operations, and no one knew what she
-had heard, or what she understood. When I told you
-that I thought she would be safer down here under my
-own eye, and that I was not sure whether she had been
-got at, I was speaking very serious fact indeed. They&rsquo;d
-have killed her then and there if corpses were just a
-little easier to dispose of in London. I now very much
-regret that we didn&rsquo;t chance it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_285">285</div>
-<p>A trembling bewilderment had descended upon
-Jane. She saw Raymond stare for a moment at
-Ember with a curious horrified look and then drop
-her chin upon her hand again. Ember came a step
-nearer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Having disposed of that,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I should be
-glad if you would just look at these papers. Documentary
-evidence, as I said just now, is convincing.
-This is a short summary of our plans which has been
-issued to all managing agents. This is a list of those
-agents. They form The Great Council. These four
-names&rdquo;&mdash;he paused&mdash;&ldquo;I should have told you that
-there was an Inner Council. It is the Inner Council
-which really runs everything. There are four members.
-I come Second, Molloy was Third, and Belcovitch,
-who will be here presently, is Number Four.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s heart beat faster and faster. She heard that
-Belcovitch would be there presently, but she could not
-tear herself away. She saw Raymond Heritage put
-out her left hand for the papers and glance at them
-indifferently, saw her brow contract as she read, saw
-her drop the first two papers upon her lap and lift the
-third. There was a dead silence whilst she read it.
-It was the list which gave the names of the Inner
-Council. She let it drop from her hand and an extraordinary
-rush of colour transformed her.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_286">286</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What is my name doing there?&rdquo; she said. Her
-voice was not loud, but it rang.</p>
-<p>Ember turned upon her a face from which all blankness
-and coldness had vanished.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your name?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why, the whole thing
-has been built up round your name. The head of the
-Council, the inspiration of the movement, the driving
-force&mdash;you, you, Raymond, you. You are as indissolubly
-knit with the plan as if you had conceived it.
-The whole Council, The Great Council, knows you
-as Number One of The Four who are the Inner Council.
-The work has been done here under your auspices.&rdquo;
-His air of excitement vanished suddenly, his voice
-dropped to an ordinary note. &ldquo;I told you it was a
-business proposition. I assure you that it has been
-most adequately worked out. In the painful and
-improbable event of criminal proceedings, you would
-be cast for the chief r&ocirc;le. A wealth of corroborative
-detail has been provided. In business, as you know,
-one has to think of everything. I&rsquo;m showing you
-the penalty of failure, but we shan&rsquo;t fail. I&rsquo;m showing
-what success will mean. Think of it&mdash;the absolute
-power to say, &lsquo;This shall be done.&rsquo; The absolute
-power to impose your will! The absolute power to
-blot out of existence whatever crosses it!&rdquo; A gleam
-came into his eyes like nothing that Jane had ever
-seen before. &ldquo;Raymond, I&rsquo;m not a visionary or a madman.
-The thing is within my grasp. I&rsquo;m offering it to
-you. It&rsquo;s yours for the taking.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_287">287</div>
-<p>Raymond did not speak. She only lifted her eyes
-and looked at him. It was a long look. Whilst it
-lasted Jane held her breath. Raymond looked down
-again; there was silence.</p>
-<p>Into the silence came a distant sound&mdash;a faint
-dragging sound.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_288">288</div>
-<h2 id="c27"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXVII</span></h2>
-<p>Henry left his car at The Three Farmers on
-the Withstead road, and proceeded with
-energy towards the beach. He was glad enough to
-walk after the long drive.</p>
-<p>The day was chilly, the air full of moisture, and a
-thin, cold mist was rising off the marshes. What
-breeze there was came from the land and took the
-mist only a few hundred yards out to sea. The motor-boat
-telephoned for by Mr. Ember earlier in the day
-ran into it as she came into Withstead Cove to land
-a passenger. The passenger, who was Mr. Belcovitch,
-was very glad indeed to be landed. He had no
-nautical tendencies, and would have preferred danger
-on dry land to safety at sea. He made his way up
-the beach and, confused by the mist, went into the
-wrong cave. As he turned to come out of it, having discovered
-his mistake, he heard footsteps, and promptly
-sheltered himself behind a convenient buttress.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_289">289</div>
-<p>Henry walked briskly past and, as Mr. Belcovitch
-stared after him, disappeared into the next cave. He
-disappeared and he did not return. Belcovitch heard
-a familiar sound, the sound made by the pivoting stone
-as it swung back into its place. He recognised it, and
-became a prey to some rather violent emotions, of
-which fear, hatred, and a desire to annihilate Henry
-were the chief. Henry was unknown to him, therefore
-Henry was not one of them. His walk, his
-carriage, his whole appearance marked him out as
-belonging to that class which Mr. Belcovitch made
-a profession of detesting. He possessed the secret
-of the passages, and was therefore in the highest
-degree dangerous.</p>
-<p>Belcovitch followed him as rapidly and as silently
-as a man can follow whose very existence has for many
-years depended on his proficiency in these respects.
-He closed the stone behind him with a good deal more
-care than Henry had taken, and, having done so,
-went up the steps at a surprising rate and in a moment
-had his quarry in view. Henry had switched on a
-torch and was proceeding at a moderate rate down the
-main passage. Belcovitch, moving after him like a
-cat, did some rapid thinking. It would be very easy
-to shoot, but it would make a noise. He fingered
-a length of lead piping in one of his pockets and
-thought with impassioned earnestness of the back of
-Henry&rsquo;s neck. Yet, supposing that Ember knew of
-Henry&rsquo;s visit&mdash;he did not want any unpleasantness
-with Ember. It would probably be better not to
-kill Henry in case it should prove that Ember would
-rather have him alive. It was always better to be on
-good terms with Ember. Molloy had fallen out with
-him, and it appeared that at this very moment two
-comrades were on their way to eliminate Molloy.
-All this very rapidly.</p>
-<p>He decided not to kill Henry. It was a pity, because
-there was a most convenient well into which he could
-have dropped him. He decreased the distance
-between them and unfastened the black silk muffler
-which he wore instead of collar and tie.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_290">290</div>
-<p>Henry pursued his unconscious path, his mind
-occupied with Jane, and plans, and Jane, and Ember,
-and Anthony, and Raymond, and Jane again. It is
-to be regretted that he did not look behind him. The
-villain ought not to be able to steal upon the hero in
-the dark without being heard, but Henry had not had
-Mr. Belcovitch&rsquo;s advantages. The latter had all the
-tricks of the half-world at his command, and Henry
-had not.</p>
-<p>Just before the laboratory turning Belcovitch came
-up with a quick run, and that was the first that Henry
-heard of him. The next instant he felt himself tripped,
-struggling desperately to keep his footing, slipped in
-the slime, and came down choking, with a black silk
-muffler tightly knotted about his throat. Belcovitch
-was a very neat operator. First the trip, then the
-twist, and then the chloroform bottle. He had never
-made a crisper job of it. He took Henry by the heels
-and proceeded to drag him along the passage towards
-the laboratory, Henry being mercifully oblivious of
-what was happening.</p>
-<p>When Jane heard that faint dragging sound, she had
-just about half a minute to decide which passage it
-came from, and to get away down the other one. It
-really took her less than thirty seconds to realise that
-some one was coming by the way that she herself had
-come, and to dart into the slanting passage which held
-the well. A yard or two down she turned and stood
-where she had stood to see Ember pass the day before.
-Whoever was coming had no light. Of course they
-could see the light from the laboratory and were steering
-by it. It was a man coming; she could tell by the
-tread. He was dragging something&mdash;something heavy.
-What? Or who? Jane sickened.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_291">291</div>
-<p>A dark figure passed between her and the glow that
-came from the laboratory. She took three light steps,
-and saw that what he dragged behind him was a senseless
-man&mdash;senseless or dead.</p>
-<p>She heard Ember call out, &ldquo;Belcovitch, is that
-you?&rdquo; And a voice with a strong foreign accent
-answered.</p>
-<p>Then a great many things seemed to happen at once:
-the steel gate opened; the helpless man was dragged
-in; and, as the gate fell to, there came Raymond
-Heritage&rsquo;s scream.</p>
-<p>Jane shook from head to foot. The scream cut like
-a knife. Why did she scream like that? Who was it?
-Who was it? Who <i>was</i> it? She got her answer in
-Raymond&rsquo;s gasp of &ldquo;Henry!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>An inner blackness, much, much worse than that intolerable
-dark which had oppressed her, swept between
-Jane and everything in the world. When Raymond said,
-&ldquo;Henry!&rdquo; the light went out of her world and left
-it black. She heard Ember say, &ldquo;Is he dead?&rdquo; but
-she could not see Belcovitch&rsquo;s shrug and shake of the
-head. She leaned against the wall and could not move.
-I suppose that in that moment she knew that she really
-loved Henry. It hurt&mdash;dreadfully.</p>
-<p>Then she heard Raymond&rsquo;s voice again:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What have you done to him? Devils, devils!&rdquo;
-And Ember:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear Raymond, calm yourself. He&rsquo;s not dead,
-nothing so crude. Mr. Belcovitch is an artist, and
-Captain March will come round in a minute or
-two and be none the worse. I&rsquo;m sorry you had a
-shock.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_292">292</div>
-<p>Light, dazzling light flooded Jane&rsquo;s consciousness.
-Henry wasn&rsquo;t dead. The dark was only a dream, and
-she was awake again. She was very much awake,
-and her whole waking thought was bent upon the
-necessity of getting help for Henry before that dream
-came true.</p>
-<p>Ember and Belcovitch would murder him if they had
-time. Raymond would make what time she could,
-but in the end they would murder him unless Jane
-could get help.</p>
-<p>She turned, holding to the wall, and moved along the
-passage. When she had taken a step or two something
-happened which she could never think of without self-abasement.
-Her nerve went suddenly, and she began
-to run. It was only for a dozen steps; then her self-control
-came into play. She pulled up panting, and,
-after listening for a moment, crept the rest of the way,
-reached the steps, and came out into the empty hall,
-dirty, wet, and as white as a sheet.</p>
-<p>As soon as she had the panel shut she ran across the
-hall and down the corridor to the library. She shut
-the library door with a sharp push, and was across the
-room and taking down the telephone receiver before the
-sound of the bang had died away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Exchange!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Exchange!&rdquo; and clenched
-her hand as she waited for the reply. It came with
-a dreamy accent, the voice of a girl disturbed in the
-middle of Sunday afternoon. Nobody should be telephoning
-in the middle of Sunday afternoon.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can you look up a London number for me? Sir
-Julian Le Mesurier&rdquo;&mdash;she spelt it. &ldquo;Please be very
-quick; <i>please</i>, it&rsquo;s important.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Righto,&rdquo; said the dreamy voice incongruously.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_293">293</div>
-<p>Silence fell. Jane held on to the telephone, and tried
-to control her breathing, which came in gasps. The
-room seemed full of mist; she shut her eyes.</p>
-<p>When Jane started to run down the laboratory
-passage Jeffrey Ember was superintending the removal
-of the black silk muffler from Henry&rsquo;s neck. When
-they rolled Henry over on to his face he groaned, and
-when they tied his hands behind his back with the
-muffler he tried to kick, whereupon Ember produced a
-piece of rope and they tied his ankles too.</p>
-<p>The sound of Jane&rsquo;s running feet had come very
-faintly upon Ember&rsquo;s ear. Henry was groaning and
-kicking, and Belcovitch was cursing in a steady undertone.
-It was not until he rose to get the piece of rope
-that his mind took hold of that faint sound and began
-to analyse it. There had been a sound in the passage
-outside&mdash;some one moving&mdash;some one running. Yes,
-that was it, some one running, light foot and very fast.</p>
-<p>Ember finished tying Henry up and got to his feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was some one in the passage just now,&rdquo; he
-said. &ldquo;I must go and see. There was something; I
-heard something. It was like some one running.&rdquo; He
-spoke as if to himself, and then turned to Raymond.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You will stay where you are in that chair&mdash;otherwise....&rdquo;
-He swung round to Belcovitch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If she moves, shoot Captain March at once,&rdquo; he
-said, and was gone, leaving the gate ajar behind him.</p>
-<p>In the library Jane waited for her call. It came with
-startling loudness&mdash;a bell that seemed to ring inside
-her head&mdash;and then the dreamy voice drawling, &ldquo;Here
-y&rsquo;are.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In Piggy&rsquo;s study Isobel Le Mesurier said, &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is that Lady Le Mesurier?&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, speaking.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_294">294</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Please tell your husband&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And Isobel&rsquo;s charming, friendly voice, &ldquo;He&rsquo;s here.
-Won&rsquo;t you speak to him yourself?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s hearing, always acute, was strung to an
-extraordinary pitch. She could hear the girl at the
-exchange speaking to some one; she could hear Isobel
-saying, &ldquo;Piggy, you&rsquo;re wanted&rdquo;; and behind these
-sounds, on the extreme edge of what was perceptible,
-she heard the click of the panel and Ember&rsquo;s footsteps
-as he crossed the polished floor. She knew that they
-were Ember&rsquo;s footsteps, and she heard them coming
-nearer.</p>
-<p>Sir Julian was speaking:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane heard her own voice, and it sounded small and
-far away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane Smith, speaking from Luttrell Marches.
-They&rsquo;ve got Henry in the passages. He&rsquo;s hurt.
-They&rsquo;ve got a motor-boat in Withstead Cove. Help
-as quickly as you can. Some one&rsquo;s coming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember was half-way down the corridor. Piggy was
-speaking:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anthony Luttrell&rsquo;s on his way&mdash;should be with you
-any minute.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember turned the handle. Jane called out:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, can&rsquo;t you get me that number&mdash;oh, can&rsquo;t you
-get it quickly?...&rdquo; And, as the door opened sharply,
-she dropped the receiver and turned.</p>
-<p>Ember came in&mdash;a new Ember. There was something
-terrifying in his look, and he said harshly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What are you doing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Trying to telephone,&rdquo; said Jane. &ldquo;They take such
-ages.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_295">295</div>
-<p>Mr. Ember&rsquo;s look was terrifying, but Jane was not
-terrified. As she dropped the receiver something happened
-to her which she did not understand. Within
-the last half-hour she had felt an extremity of fear and
-sudden anguish, violent relief, and again intensest fear
-and suspense. From this moment none of these things
-came near her. She moved among them, but they
-did not touch her at all. The thing was like a play in
-which she had her part duly written and rehearsed.
-There was no sense of responsibility, only a stage upon
-which she must play her part; and she knew her part
-very well. She did not have to think, or plan, or
-contrive. She knew what to do, and how and when
-to do it. From the moment that she dropped the
-receiver at the telephone she never faltered for an
-instant.</p>
-<p>Ember looked at her with eyes which saw every tell-tale
-stain upon her dress and hands. The something
-in his gaze which should have been frightening became
-intensified.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lady Heritage wants you in the study,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>Jane knew very well that he said the study because
-the study was next to the door in the panelling. If she
-refused to go, he would stun her or shoot her here. She
-did not refuse, and walked down the corridor by his
-side in silence. They crossed the hall, and Ember
-kept between her and the stairs. Jane walked meekly
-beside him with downcast eyes until he passed ahead
-of her to open the study door. In that moment she
-turned on her heel, sprang for the stairs and raced up
-them, running as she had never run in her life.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_296">296</div>
-<p>Ember would not risk shooting her in the hall&mdash;she
-felt sure of that&mdash;but he was after her like a flash, and
-she had very little start. She reached for the newel
-at the top and jumped the last three steps, with
-Ember about two yards behind. Then down the corridor
-with a rush and into her room, and the door
-banged and locked as he reached it.</p>
-<p>Jane wasted no time. She thought that Ember
-would hesitate to break down the door until he had at
-least tried promises and threats, but she was taking no
-chances. She heard him speaking as she opened the
-cupboard door and locked herself inside it. His voice
-was only a murmur as she heaved up the trap-door
-in the floor and climbed carefully down the ladder upon
-which Henry had stood that night which seemed like
-weeks and weeks ago. The catch in the wall at the
-bottom was a simple handle like the one behind the
-panelling. She emerged into the garden room, opened
-the window, dropped out of it, and ran quickly and
-lightly along the terrace, keeping close to the wall of
-the house.</p>
-<p>Ember talked through the door for five minutes.
-His remarks ranged from persuasive promises to
-threats, which lost nothing from being delivered in a
-chilly whisper. At the end of the five minutes he put
-his shoulder against the lock and broke it. He found
-an empty room and a locked cupboard. When he had
-broken the cupboard door and discovered nothing more
-exciting than Renata&rsquo;s schoolgirl wardrobe, he went to
-the open window and stared incredulously at the drop
-to the terrace. Jane had turned the corner of the
-house and was out of sight.</p>
-<p>Ember came downstairs with the knowledge that he
-must complete his business quickly if he meant to
-bring it to any conclusion other than disaster.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_297">297</div>
-<p>He went straight to the library and rang up the
-Withstead exchange.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The young lady who was telephoning just now, did
-she get the number she wanted? She did? Would
-you kindly tell me which number it was?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was a pause, and then the information came:
-Sir Julian Le Mesurier! There was certainly no
-time to be lost. Molloy and his daughter both traitors,
-both spies, both in Government pay! Molloy should
-be reckoned with by now, and some day without fail
-he would reckon with Renata.</p>
-<p>He came into the hall, and released the spring of the
-hidden door. As the panel turned under his hand, he
-heard the purr of a motor coming nearer. It drew up.
-The bell clanged. Mr. Ember stepped into the darkness
-and closed the panel behind him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_298">298</div>
-<h2 id="c28"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXVIII</span></h2>
-<p>Anthony Luttrell&rsquo;s distaste for his errand
-had certainly not lessened during the long
-drive from town. He stood now on his own doorstep
-facing a strange butler, and heard a formal &ldquo;Not at
-home,&rdquo; in response to his inquiry for Lady Heritage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And Miss Molloy?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not at home,&rdquo; repeated Blotson.</p>
-<p>If this was a reprieve it was an unwelcome one.
-Anthony would very much have preferred to get the
-thing over.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will wait,&rdquo; he said briefly, and walked past
-Blotson into the hall. &ldquo;I am Mr. Luttrell,&rdquo; he explained,
-and Blotson&rsquo;s resentment diminished very
-slightly. After a moment&rsquo;s hesitation he threw open
-the study door and ushered Anthony into the room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If Lady Heritage is in the house she will see me,&rdquo;
-said Anthony. &ldquo;If she is out I should like to see
-Miss Molloy or, failing her, Mr. Ember.&rdquo; He walked
-to the window and stood there looking out until Blotson
-returned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lady Heritage is out, sir, and Miss Molloy is out.
-Mr. Ember was in just now, but he must have stepped
-out again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will wait,&rdquo; said Anthony for the second time.</p>
-<p>When Blotson had gone, he stood quite still, following
-out a somewhat uneasy train of thought. As the
-minutes passed, uneasiness merged into anxiety.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_299">299</div>
-<p>Jane ran the whole way to the walled garden. Once
-inside its door she made herself walk in order to get her
-breath. When she came into the potting-shed she
-knew just what she was going to do, and set about
-doing it in a quiet, businesslike way. From a stack of
-pots she took about half a dozen, broke all but two of
-them, and gathered the sherds into the lap of her dress.
-She put the two unbroken pots on the top of the
-sherds. Then she took a sharp pruning-knife from the
-shelf, opened the trap-door, and went down the steps.</p>
-<p>As soon as she came into the main corridor she began
-to put down the broken sherds, taking care to make no
-noise. She laid a trail of them up to the laboratory
-turning, and then all along the turning itself, disposing
-them in the middle of the fairway in such a manner
-as to ensure that they should not fail to be seen by any
-one flashing a light along the passage. She put the
-last two or three sherds in a little pile about a yard
-short of the arch leading to the slanting passage with
-the well in it. As she bent down there she heard
-Belcovitch maintaining an impassioned Slavonic monologue
-within the laboratory.</p>
-<p>She stood in the archway, threw her two unbroken
-pots against the opposite wall with all her might, and
-then ran back down the well passage until it turned.</p>
-<p>Everything happened just as she knew that it would
-happen.</p>
-<p>Belcovitch stopped talking and swore. It was a
-polysyllabic curse, very effective. Then the steel
-gate was flung open, and in three languages Mr.
-Belcovitch demanded of the silence an account of what
-was happening. His voice ran away into a hollow
-echo, and died miserably.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_300">300</div>
-<p>Jane heard him stamp back into the chamber,
-cursing, and return. This time he flashed a light
-before him. Flattened against the wall, Jane saw its
-glow reflected from the side of the passage in which
-she was. Belcovitch had seen the sherds and was exclaiming
-and muttering. She heard him pass the arch.</p>
-<p>Jane stole to the mouth of the slanting passage.
-Belcovitch was two yards away on her left, flashing
-his light down the tunnel, seeing more broken pots,
-and more and more, and swearing all the time, not
-loudly but with considerable earnestness. Jane slipped
-like a shadow across behind him and round the corner.
-The steel gate was wide open. She ran through it and
-into the lighted laboratory.</p>
-<p>Henry lay on the stone floor in front of her, bound
-hand and foot. He had rolled over on to his side and
-was staring at the gate. Raymond had risen to her
-feet, and was taking a half-step towards Henry as
-Jane came running in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shut the gate,&rdquo; said Henry in a sharp whisper.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s another way out, and I don&rsquo;t think they
-know it. Quick, Jane, quick!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane slammed the gate. She had the pruning-knife
-in her hand, and she was down on her knees and at
-work on the black silk muffler before the sound of the
-slam reached Mr. Belcovitch. When it did reach him
-he spun round and came back at a run with a revolver
-in his hand and murderous fury in his heart.</p>
-<p>Jane cut through the last shred of silk, and because
-Belcovitch&rsquo;s hand was shaking with rage his first bullet
-missed her and Henry handsomely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get up against the wall, quick!&rdquo; Henry commanded.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_301">301</div>
-<p>As he spoke he was himself half rolling, half scrambling
-towards the wall. His ankles were still tied, but
-his arms were free. The second bullet just missed his
-head. Jane cried out, and then they were both out of
-the line of fire. Henry was breathing hard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Give me the knife,&rdquo; he panted, and began to saw at
-some of the toughest rope he had ever come across.</p>
-<p>Raymond had remained standing. She had retreated
-almost to the end of the room and wore a
-look of extreme surprise.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you call her Jane?&rdquo; she asked. Her
-deep voice came through the racket with strange
-irrelevance.</p>
-<p>Belcovitch continued to make the maximum amount
-of noise in which it is possible for a man and a revolver
-to collaborate. He banged the steel gate in the intervals
-of firing, and he cursed voluminously.</p>
-<p>The rope gave, and Henry was half-way on to
-his feet when there was a sudden cessation of all the
-sounds. Raymond gave a warning cry, and Henry
-caught at Jane&rsquo;s shoulder and straightened himself.
-The steel gate was opening.</p>
-<p>Jane said, &ldquo;Henry&mdash;oh, Henry darling!&rdquo; and there
-came in Mr. Jeffrey Ember, very cool and deadly, with
-his little automatic pistol levelled. Just behind him
-came Belcovitch, a silent Belcovitch, at his master&rsquo;s
-heel.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_302">302</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Touching scene,&rdquo; said Ember. &ldquo;Captain March, if
-you don&rsquo;t put your hands up at once I shall shoot Miss
-Molloy. From her last exclamation, I should imagine
-that you&rsquo;d rather I didn&rsquo;t. Miss Molloy, go across to
-the opposite wall and stand there. Belcovitch, kindly
-keep your revolver against that young lady&rsquo;s temple,
-but don&rsquo;t let it off till I give you leave. Raymond, I
-should be glad if you would resume your chair. A
-brief conversation is, I think, necessary, and I should
-prefer you to be seated.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He stood not far from the entrance, dominating the
-room. The gate had been closed by Belcovitch.
-Ember waited till his instructions had been carried
-out; then he came a little nearer to Lady Heritage
-and said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Time presses, Raymond. I must go. I wish that
-there were more time, for indeed I would rather not
-have hurried you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane, with the muzzle of Belcovitch&rsquo;s revolver cold
-against her temple, found her attention caught by
-Ember&rsquo;s words. Time ... yes, that&rsquo;s what they
-wanted&mdash;time. Piggy had said that Anthony might
-arrive at any moment. When he did arrive and found
-that they were all mysteriously absent, surely his first
-thought would be to search the passages. She raised
-her voice and said insistently:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Ember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ember threw her a dangerous look.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Be quiet,&rdquo; he said shortly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was something I wanted to tell you,&rdquo; said
-Jane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Out with it then, and be quick.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You called me Miss Molloy just now....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Jane, <i>no</i>!&rdquo; said Henry violently.</p>
-<p>Mr. Ember echoed the remark made by Lady
-Heritage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you call her Jane?&rdquo; he inquired.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That is what I was going to tell you,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_303">303</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You called me Miss Molloy, and I just thought I
-would like you to know that I&rsquo;m not Renata Molloy.
-It would make an untidy sort of finish if you went
-away thinking that I was, and I hate things untidy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a little devil,&rdquo; said Ember ... &ldquo;a little
-devil.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane stuck her chin in the air.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m not Renata Molloy anyhow,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;No one would ever have called her a devil. She was
-a white rabbit&mdash;a nice, quiet, tame white rabbit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane&rsquo;s voice failed suddenly on the last word. Yet
-Mr. Ember had not looked at her again. His eyes went
-past her to Belcovitch, and it was to Belcovitch that he
-spoke.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, not yet,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but if she speaks again you
-can shoot.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A long, slow shudder swept Jane. She leaned against
-the wall and was silent, and she shut her eyes because
-she could not bear to see Henry&rsquo;s face. Ember turned
-back to Raymond.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry to hurry you.&rdquo; His voice was low and
-confidential. &ldquo;What I have to offer, you know. It
-is yours for the taking. Please don&rsquo;t make any mistake.
-I have to change my base, it is true&mdash;I have even to
-change it with some haste&mdash;but neither that nor anything
-else can now affect my purpose and its achievement.
-What I offered is, without any shadow of
-uncertainty, mine to offer and yours to take, if you will
-... if you will, Raymond?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_304">304</div>
-<p>Raymond&rsquo;s sombre gaze dwelt on him as he spoke.
-The whole scene affected her as one is affected by something
-which is taking place at a great distance. She
-did not seem able to adjust her mental focus to it.
-Her mind seemed to be divided into two parts. One
-of them was entirely and unreasonably preoccupied
-with the relationship between Jane and Henry, and
-the reason why Henry should have addressed Renata
-Molloy as Jane. These thoughts seemed to circle as
-continuously, and with as little aim, as goldfish in a
-glass bowl. The other part of her mind was bruised
-and sick because Jeffrey Ember had been her friend.
-When he said, &ldquo;Will you, Raymond?&rdquo; she did not
-speak. She looked at him in silence, and presently
-made a slow gesture of refusal.</p>
-<p>Ember came a step nearer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told you,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that I was in dead earnest.
-Perhaps you don&rsquo;t realise just what I mean by that.
-I&rsquo;ve played for a high stake, and I mean to have what
-I&rsquo;ve played for or nothing. I&rsquo;ve played for you, and
-if....&rdquo; He broke off. &ldquo;Let me put it this way.
-Either we make the future together or there&rsquo;s no future
-for either of us. I&rsquo;m speaking quite soberly when I tell
-you this. Think well before you answer, but don&rsquo;t be
-too long. If there is to be no future our present will
-end here and now. This place is mined, and if I press
-that unobtrusive knob, which you may notice above
-the safe, the end will be quite a dramatic one. I have
-always had some such contingency in view, and this
-makes as good a stepping-off place as any other. Think
-before you refuse, Raymond.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She shook her head again. Her eyes never left his
-face. Ember made an impatient gesture.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_305">305</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Are your friends going to thank you?&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;You are taking the heroic pose, and forgive me if I
-say that it&rsquo;s a little unworthy of you. I expected something
-less obvious. Take my offer, and I guarantee to
-leave Captain March and Miss Molloy here unharmed.
-Can any woman resist sacrificing herself? Come, will
-you save them, Raymond?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lady Heritage spoke for the first time:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose that I must be a fool because I trusted
-you.... I did trust you, Jeffrey ... but I don&rsquo;t
-know what you have ever seen in me to make you
-suppose that I am such a fool as to trust you
-again ... now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Her words and her voice caused a change in Ember,
-a change as difficult to define as to describe. It is
-best realised by its effect upon those present. Some
-impression of shock was received in varying degree by
-them all. Henry March had, perhaps, the most vivid
-sense of it. In Belcovitch it bred panic.</p>
-<p>Whilst Ember was speaking the hand that held the
-revolver to Jane&rsquo;s temple had become more and more
-unsteady. The muzzle knocked cold against her
-cheek bone and jabbed against her ear. Jane wondered
-when the thing would go off. So, it is to be
-imagined, did Henry, for he was grey about the mouth
-and his forehead was wet.</p>
-<p>Ember did not speak for a moment. Then he
-said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Touch&eacute;!&rdquo; in a queer, bitter voice.</p>
-<p>Belcovitch began to mutter in an undertone that
-gradually became louder. His hand shook more and
-more.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure, Raymond?&rdquo; said Jeffrey Ember. &ldquo;Quite,
-quite sure?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He came up quite close, and laid his right hand
-lightly on her shoulder. It was the first time that he
-had touched her.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_306">306</div>
-<p>She said just the one word, &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; For a moment
-his hand closed hard upon her. Then he sprang back
-with a laugh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right, then we go up together.&rdquo; And, as he
-spoke, he made for the corner where a little vulcanite
-knob showed above the steel safe.</p>
-<p>With a sort of howl Belcovitch whirled to meet him.
-They crashed together and grappled, Ember silent,
-Belcovitch torrential in imprecation and fighting as
-a man frenzied with terror does fight. His revolver
-dropped from his hand, and Ember stumbled over it.</p>
-<p>Like a flash Henry had Raymond by the arm, whilst
-his eyes commanded Jane and he pointed to the
-passage that led out of the laboratory on the extreme
-right. It was the one that Jane had explored first,
-and as she ran into it she remembered that it ended
-in a small chamber full of packing-cases. In a panting
-whisper she said:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s full of boxes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then we must shift them,&rdquo; said Henry, and,
-groping in the almost dark, he began to pull the cases
-away from the right-hand wall.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A light&mdash;he can&rsquo;t find the spring without a light.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Raymond heard her own voice saying this, and then
-she ran back down the passage and into the laboratory.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_307">307</div>
-<p>Belcovitch had put his torch down on the bench
-from which Jane had taken the lists. Its exact position
-was, as it were, photographed on Raymond&rsquo;s consciousness.
-She reached, snatched it, and was back
-again in the least possible space of time. As she came,
-she saw Ember and Belcovitch swaying, struggling&mdash;horribly
-near the corner. And as she went she had
-an impression of Belcovitch falling and, as he fell,
-dragging Ember down with desperate, clawing hands.
-Then she was trying to steady her hand and throw the
-light upon the wall space which Henry had cleared;
-but the beam wavered and shook, shook and wavered;
-and Jane took the torch out of her hand, setting it on
-one of the packing-cases.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It should be here. It should be just here&rdquo;&mdash;Henry
-spoke in a muttering whisper; then with sharp irritation,
-&ldquo;Nearer with that light, Jane.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Jane held it closely to the wall. Henry&rsquo;s hands slid
-up and down, feeling ... pressing. Once they heard
-Belcovitch shout, and all the time the sound of the
-struggle filled their straining ears. Some one fired a
-shot&mdash;and Henry found the spring. A slab of stone
-swung outwards, pivoting as the other doors had
-done.</p>
-<p>Henry pushed Jane through the opening, flung his
-arm round Raymond, dragged her through and
-slammed the stone into place. They were in the narrow
-alley-way between the row of veronica bushes and the
-terrace wall, on the spot where Mr. George Patterson
-had stood listening to Raymond&rsquo;s voice. The air, the
-daylight, the mist, seemed wonderful beyond words.
-Jane never again beheld a mist without remembering
-that joyful lift of the heart which came to her when
-the stone shut and she drew her first long, free breath.
-Henry gave her no time to savour the joys of freedom.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Run, run like blazes!&rdquo; he shouted.</p>
-<p>Jane ran. Once she started she felt as if nothing
-would ever stop her. She heard Henry just behind
-her; she heard him urging Raymond on, and they
-came out of the alley-way round the end of the terrace,
-round the side of the house.</p>
-<p>Then it came.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_308">308</div>
-<p>The ground shook; there was a muffled thud and a
-long, heavy rumble that died slowly. Then with a
-terrific crash two of the stone urns along the terrace
-wall fell and broke. As the noise ebbed there came
-the tinkling sound of splintered glass falling upon
-stone.</p>
-<p>Jane stopped running as if she had been shot, and
-reeled up against Henry, who put his arms round her
-and held her tight. Up to that very moment the
-feeling of unreality, of playing a part in a play for
-which she had no responsibility whilst her real self
-looked on remotely&mdash;this feeling had dominated her.
-Now it was as if the curtain fell and she, Jane, was left
-groping amongst events that terrified her. She trembled
-very much, and clung to Henry, who was at that
-moment the one really safe and solid thing within
-reach.</p>
-<p>Raymond did not pause or turn her head, but walked
-straight on towards the house.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_309">309</div>
-<h2 id="c29"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XXIX</span></h2>
-<p>The last rumble of the explosion had hardly
-died away before Anthony Luttrell had flung
-open the study door, and was making his way at a
-run towards the Yellow Drawing-Room.</p>
-<p>At the glass door which led on to the terrace he
-halted, opened it wide, and stood on the step looking
-out. Some glass was still falling from the broken
-windows on this side of the house. All the terrace
-on the right of where he stood was like a drawing in
-which the perspective has gone wrong. There was a
-great bulge in one place, and some of the paving-stones
-were tilted aslant, whilst others had fallen in, leaving a
-gaping hole over which a cloud of dust was settling.</p>
-<p>Anthony turned his back upon all this and came
-back with great strides into the hall. Without so
-much as a look behind him to see whether he was
-observed, he loosened the spring, pushed open the
-door in the panelling and there halted, suddenly remembering
-the need of a light. He went back for a
-torch, and then passed down the steps without waiting
-to close the door.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_310">310</div>
-<p>That something appalling had happened was obvious.
-With the self-control without which it is impossible
-to meet an emergency Anthony kept his thought
-focused upon what he was doing. At the bottom of
-the steps the way was still clear. He saw Jane&rsquo;s
-broken pots and wondered what on earth they were
-doing there. Then he turned into the laboratory
-passage, flashing the light ahead of him. Half-way
-along the passage the roof had fallen in.</p>
-<p>Anthony turned, came back into the main corridor,
-ran along it until he came to the place where the well
-passage joined it. Here he turned off, made his way
-cautiously past the well, and again found a mass of
-stone and rubble blocking his path. A cold horror
-came over him, and all those thoughts to which he had
-barred his mind came insistently nearer, pressing past
-those barriers and taking his consciousness by storm.
-He came back into the hall and shut the door in the
-panelling.</p>
-<p>The hall was quite empty, but the voice of Blotson
-could be heard at no great distance. It was raised in
-exhortation and rebuke. Obviously he rallied a staff
-which inclined to hysteria, for one could hear a
-woman&rsquo;s sobs and a subdued chorus of perturbation
-and nervous inquiry.</p>
-<p>Anthony went to the front door and flung it open.
-His car stood at a little distance, the inspector and the
-chauffeur in close conversation. Anthony did not see
-them. He only saw Raymond Heritage, who was
-coming slowly up the steps. She was bareheaded, and
-her face was very pale. She wore a white dress with
-a black cloak over it. She stumbled twice as she
-climbed the steps and, if Anthony was only conscious
-of seeing her, she did not appear to be conscious of
-seeing any one at all.</p>
-<p>It was only when the hand which she put out in front
-of her actually touched Anthony that she lifted her
-eyes and looked at him. Then she said in an odd,
-piteous sort of voice:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_311">311</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it? What has happened, Raymond?
-Are you all right?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I must speak to you&mdash;I must,&rdquo; she said, catching
-at his arm and drawing him towards the study. They
-went in, and when the door was shut she turned to
-him with the tears running down her face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tony, you heard? I think he&rsquo;s dead. That place
-downstairs was mined, and he tried to kill us all, only
-we got away, Henry, the girl, and I. But Jeffrey&rsquo;s
-dead&mdash;yes, I think he must be dead, and I know now
-what you thought. I didn&rsquo;t know what you meant
-before, but I know now. You were wrong, Tony.
-Oh, Tony, won&rsquo;t you believe me? I didn&rsquo;t tell him
-about the passages, and I didn&rsquo;t know anything until
-to-day. They can tell you I was speaking the truth&mdash;Henry
-and Miss Molloy; but, oh, Tony, can&rsquo;t you
-believe me, just me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Anthony looked at her, and looked. His face was
-twitching. As her voice broke on the last two words
-he dropped to his knees, flung his arms about her, and
-hid his face in the folds of her cloak.</p>
-<p>By the time that Jane and Henry came into the
-house Blotson had set all his machinery running once
-more. He himself presented a magnificent front to
-two of the most dishevelled people whom he had ever
-been called upon to receive. It was not until afterwards
-when it came home to Henry how much green
-slime there was in his wildly ruffled hair, and how little
-the original colour of his collar could be discerned, that
-he realised how marvellous had been the unflinching
-calm of Blotson. He referred neither to the explosion
-nor to Henry&rsquo;s appearance. In point of fact, what
-were emergencies and accidents that Blotson should
-notice them? The hour being five o&rsquo;clock, it was his
-business to announce tea. He announced it.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_312">312</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Tea is served in the library,&rdquo; he said, and passed
-upon his way.</p>
-<p>But in the library the tea cooled while Henry, very
-much relieved to find that the wires had not been cut,
-galvanised the Withstead exchange and got on to a distinctly
-relieved Sir Julian.</p>
-<p>They arranged, speaking in Italian, that an explosion
-had occurred in the course of an important experiment
-in Sir William&rsquo;s laboratory. It was agreed to notify
-Sir William and the press. The loss of two lives was
-greatly to be deplored. When this was finished Piggy
-became less official.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That girl of yours is a brick; you can tell her so
-from me. She&rsquo;s all right, I hope?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry said &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; that Jane was quite all right.
-He sounded a trifle puzzled.</p>
-<p>Piggy laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you know she had rung me up to say you&rsquo;d
-been nobbled? Most businesslike communication I&rsquo;ve
-ever had from a lady in all my life. Told me they&rsquo;d
-got a motor-boat in Withstead Cove. And, thanks to
-her, we ought to have gathered it in. I got through
-to the coastguard station at once. Now look here,
-what&rsquo;s the likelihood of laying hands on Ember&rsquo;s
-papers?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ember&rsquo;s papers?&rdquo; repeated Henry. &ldquo;Well, there
-was a safe down there, and that&rsquo;s where he&rsquo;d be most
-likely to keep them; but I expect they&rsquo;re all gone to
-blazes, as the door was open.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At this point Jane&rsquo;s voice came in breathlessly:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_313">313</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Henry, wait, keep him on the line!&rdquo; she said,
-and was gone.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Jane, sir,&rdquo; said Henry. &ldquo;I think she&rsquo;s gone
-to get something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the middle of Piggy&rsquo;s subsequent instructions
-Jane came back. She held a bundle of closely written
-sheets. She spread them before Henry&rsquo;s eyes, holding
-them fan-wise like a hand at cards.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d forgotten them till you said that about the
-papers&mdash;I&rsquo;d actually forgotten them. It&rsquo;s lists of his
-agents in all the big towns everywhere. I sat up all
-night copying them because I didn&rsquo;t dare keep the
-originals. I keep forgetting you don&rsquo;t know what&rsquo;s
-been happening. But tell him, Henry, tell him we&rsquo;ve
-got the lists.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Henry told him.</p>
-<p>Jane heard Sir Julian answer, and then Henry hung
-up the receiver and hugged her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did he say? Henry, you&rsquo;re breaking my
-ribs! What did he say?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jane, you&rsquo;re a brick, and a wonder, and a darling,
-and he said&mdash;he said, &lsquo;Bless you, my children!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="smaller">THE END</span></p>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Copyright notice provided as in the original&mdash;this e-text is public domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)</li>
-<li>Generated cover and spine images based on elements in the book.</li>
-<li>Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith, by
-Patricia Wentworth
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