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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Vanished Messenger by Oppenheim
+#4 in our series by by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
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+The Vanished Messenger
+
+by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+April, 1999 [Etext #1699]
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Vanished Messenger by Oppenheim
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+This Etext prepared by an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Vanished Messenger
+
+by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+There were very few people upon Platform Number Twenty-one of
+Liverpool Street Station at a quarter to nine on the evening
+of April 2 - possibly because the platform in question is one of
+the most remote and least used in the great terminus. The
+station-master, however, was there himself, with an inspector in
+attendance. A dark, thick-set man, wearing a long travelling
+ulster and a Homburg hat, and carrying in his hand a brown leather
+dressing-case, across which was painted in black letters the name
+MR. JOHN P. DUNSTER, was standing a few yards away, smoking a
+long cigar, and, to all appearance absorbed in studying the
+advertisements which decorated the grimy wall on the other side of
+the single track. A couple of porters were seated upon a barrow
+which contained one solitary portmanteau. There were no signs of
+other passengers, no other luggage. As a matter of fact, according
+to the time-table, no train was due to leave the station or to
+arrive at it, on this particular platform, for several hours.
+
+Down at the other end of the platform the wooden barrier was thrust
+back, and a porter with some luggage upon a barrow made his noisy
+approach. He was followed by a tall young man in a grey tweed suit
+and a straw hat on which were the colours of a famous cricket club.
+
+The inspector watched them curiously. "Lost his way, I should
+think," he observed.
+
+The station-master nodded. "It looks like the young man who missed
+the boat train," he remarked. "Perhaps he has come to beg a lift."
+
+The young man in question made steady progress up the platform.
+His hands were thrust deep into the pockets of his coat, and his
+forehead was contracted in a frown. As he approached more closely,
+he singled out Mr. John P. Dunster, and motioning his porter to wait,
+crossed to the edge of the track and addressed him.
+
+"Can I speak to you for a moment, sir?"
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster turned at once and faced his questioner. He
+did so without haste - with a certain deliberation, in fact - yet
+his eyes were suddenly bright and keen. He was neatly dressed,
+with the quiet precision which seems as a rule to characterise the
+travelling American. He was apparently of a little less than
+middle-age, clean-shaven, broad-shouldered, with every appearance
+of physical strength. He seemed like a man on wires, a man on the
+alert, likely to miss nothing.
+
+"Are you Mr. John P. Dunster?" the youth asked.
+
+"I carry my visiting-card in my hand, sir," the other replied,
+swinging his dressing-case around. "My name is John P. Dunster."
+
+The young man's expression was scarcely ingratiating. To a natural
+sullenness was added now the nervous distaste of one who approaches
+a disagreeable task.
+
+"I want, if I may, to ask you a favour," he continued. "If you don't
+feel like granting it, please say no and I'll be off at once. I am
+on my way to The Hague. I was to have gone by the boat train which
+left half an hour ago. I had taken a seat, and they assured me that
+the train would not leave for at least ten minutes, as the mails
+weren't in. I went down the platform to buy some papers and stood
+talking for a moment or two with a man whom I know. I suppose I
+must have been longer than I thought, or they must have been quicker
+than they expected with the mailbags. Anyhow, when I came back the
+train was moving. They would not let me jump in. I could have done
+it easily, but that fool of an inspector over there held me."
+
+"They are very strict in this country, I know."
+
+Mr. Dunster agreed, without change of expression.
+"Please go on."
+
+"I saw you arrive - just too late for the train. While I was
+swearing at the inspector, I heard you speak to the station-master.
+Since then I have made inquiries. I understand that you have
+ordered a special train to Harwich."
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster said nothing, only his keen, clear eyes seemed
+all the time to be questioning this gloomy-looking but apparently
+harmless young man.
+
+"I went to the station-master's office," the latter continued,
+"and tried to persuade them to let me ride in the guard's van of
+your special, but he made a stupid fuss about it, so I thought I'd
+better come to you. Can I beg a seat in your compartment, or
+anywhere in the train, as far as Harwich?"
+
+Mr. Dunster avoided, for the moment, a direct reply. He had the
+air of a man who, whether reasonably or unreasonably, disliked the
+request which had been made to him.
+
+"You are particularly anxious to cross to-night?" he asked.
+
+"I am," the youth admitted emphatically. "I never ought to have
+risked missing the train. I am due at The Hague to-morrow."
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster moved his position a little. The light from a
+rain-splashed gas lamp shone now full upon the face of his suppliant:
+a boy's face, which would have been pleasant and even handsome but
+for the discontented mouth, the lowering forehead, and a shadow in
+the eyes, as though, boy though he certainly was in years, he had
+already, at some time or another, looked upon the serious things of
+life. His nervousness, too, was almost grotesque. He had the air
+of disliking immensely this asking a favour from a stranger. Mr.
+Dunster appreciated all these things, but there were reasons which
+made him slow in granting the young man's request.
+
+"What is the nature of your pressing business at The Hague?" he asked.
+
+The youth hesitated.
+
+"I am afraid," he said grimly, "that you will not think it of much
+importance. I am on my way to play in a golf tournament there."
+
+"A golf tournament at The Hague! " Mr. Dunster repeated, in a
+slightly altered tone. "What is your name?"
+
+"Gerald Fentolin."
+
+Mr. Dunster stood quite still for a moment. He was possessed of a
+wonderful memory, and he was conscious at that moment of a subtle
+appeal to it. Fentolin! There was something in the name which
+seemed to him somehow associated with the things against which he
+was on guard. He stood with puzzled frown, reminiscent for several
+minutes, unsuccessful. Then he suddenly smiled, and moving
+underneath the gas lamp, shook open an evening paper which he had
+been carrying. He turned over the pages until he arrived at the
+sporting items. Here, in almost the first paragraph, he saw the
+name which had happened to catch his eye a moment or two before:
+
+ GOLF AT THE HAGUE
+
+ Among the entrants for the tournament which commences
+ to-morrow, are several well-known English players,
+ including Mr. Barwin, Mr. Parrott, Mr. Hillard and
+ Mr. Gerald Fentolin.
+
+Mr. Dunster folded up the newspaper and replaced it in his pocket.
+He turned towards the young man.
+
+"So you're a golfer, are you?"
+
+"I play a bit," was the somewhat indifferent reply.
+
+Mr. Dunster turned to another part of the paper and pointed to the
+great black head-lines.
+
+"Seems a queer thing for a young fellow like you to be worrying
+about games," he remarked. "I haven't been in this country more
+than a few hours, but I expected to find all the young men getting
+ready."
+
+"Getting ready for what?"
+
+"Why, to fight, of course," Mr. Dunster replied. "Seems pretty
+clear that there's an expeditionary force being fitted out,
+according to this evening's paper, somewhere up in the North Sea.
+The only Englishman I've spoken to on this side was willing to lay
+me odds that war would be declared within a week."
+
+The young man's lack of interest was curious.
+
+"I am not in the army," he said. "It really doesn't affect me."
+
+Mr. Dunster stared at him.
+
+"You'll forgive my curiosity," he said, "but say, is there nothing
+you could get into and fight if this thing came along?"
+
+"Nothing at all, that I know of," the youth replied coolly. "War
+is an affair which concerns only the military and naval part of two
+countries. The civil population -"
+
+"Plays golf, I suppose," Mr. Dunster interrupted. "Young man, I
+haven't been in England for some years, and you rather take my
+breath away. All the same, you can come along with me as far as
+Harwich."
+
+The young man showed signs of some satisfaction. "I am very much
+obliged to you, sir," he dedared. "I promise you I won't be in
+the way."
+
+The station-master, who had been looking through a little pile of
+telegrams brought to him by a clerk from his office, now turned
+towards them. His expression was a little grave.
+
+"Your special will be backing down directly, sir," he announced,
+"but I am sorry to say that we hear very bad accounts of the line.
+They say that this is only the fag-end of the storm that we are
+getting here, and that it's been raging for nearly twenty-four
+hours on the east coast. I doubt whether the Harwich boat will be
+able to put off."
+
+"We must take our chance about that," Dunster remarked. "If the
+mail boat doesn't run, I presume there will be something else we
+can charter."
+
+The station-master looked the curiosity which he did not actually
+express in words.
+
+"Money will buy most things, nowadays, sir," he observed, "but if
+it isn't fit for our mail boat, it certainly isn't fit for anything
+else that can come into Harwich Harbour. However, you'll hear what
+they say when you get there."
+
+Mr. Dunster nodded and relapsed into a taciturnity which was
+obviously one of his peculiarities. The young man strolled down
+the platform, and catching up with the inspector, touched him on
+the shoulder.
+
+"Do you know who the fellow is he asked curiously. "It's awfully
+decent of him to let me go with him, but he didn't seem very keen
+about it."
+
+The inspector shook his head.
+
+"No idea, sir," he replied. "He drove up just two minutes after
+the train had gone, came straight into the office and ordered a
+special. Paid for it, too, in Bank of England notes before he
+went out. I fancy he's an American, and he gave his name as John
+P. Dunster."
+
+The young man paused to light a cigarette.
+
+"If he's an American, I suppose that accounts for it," he observed.
+"He must be in a precious hurry to get somewhere, though."
+
+"A night like this, too!" the inspector remarked, with a shiver.
+"I wouldn't leave London myself unless I had to. They say there's
+a tremendous storm blowing on the east coast. Here comes the train,
+sir - just one saloon and the guard's van."
+
+The little train backed slowly along the platform side. The
+engine was splashed with mud and soaking wet. The faces of the
+engine-driver and his companion shone from the dripping rain. The
+station-master held open the door of the saloon.
+
+"You've a rough journey before you, sir," he said. "You'll catch
+the boat all right, though - if it goes. The mail train was very
+heavy to-night. You should catch her up this side of Colehester."
+
+Mr. Dunster nodded.
+
+"I am taking this young gentleman with me," he announced shortly.
+"It seems that he, too, missed the train. I am much obliged to you,
+station-master, for your attention. Good night!"
+
+They were about to start when Mr. Dunster once more let down the
+window.
+
+"By the way," he said, "as it is such a wild night, you will oblige
+me very much if you will tell the engine-driver that there will be
+a five pound note for himself and his companion if we catch the
+mail. Inspector!"
+
+The inspector touched his hat. The station-master had turned
+discreetly away. He had been an inspector himself once, and
+sovereigns had been useful to him, too. Then the train glided from
+the platform side, plunged with a scream through a succession of
+black tunnels, and with rapidly increasing speed faced the storm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+The young man sat on one side of the saloon and Mr. John P. Dunster
+on the other. Although both of them were provided with a certain
+amount of railway literature, neither of them made any pretence at
+reading. The older man, with his feet upon the opposite seat and
+his arms folded, was looking pensively through the rain-splashed
+window-pane into the impenetrable darkness. The young man, although
+he could not ignore his companion's unsociable instincts, was
+fidgety.
+
+"There will be some floods out to-morrow," he remarked.
+
+Mr. Dunster turned his head and looked across the saloon. There
+was something in the deliberate manner of his doing so, and his
+hesitation before he spoke, which seemed intended to further impress
+upon the young man the fact that he was not disposed for conversation.
+
+"Very likely," was his sole reply.
+
+Gerald Fentolin sighed as though he regretted his companion's
+taciturnity and a few minutes later strolled to the farther end of
+the saloon. He spent some time trying to peer through the streaming
+window into the darkness. He chatted for a few minutes with the
+guard, who was, however, in a bad temper at having had to turn out
+and who found little to say. Then he took one of his golf clubs
+from the bag and indulged in several half swings. Finally he
+stretched himself out upon one of the seats and closed his eyes.
+
+"May as well try to get a nap," he yawned. "There won't be much
+chance on the steamer, if it blows like this."
+
+Mr. Dunster said nothing. His face was set, his eyes were looking
+somewhere beyond the confines of the saloon in which he was seated.
+So they travelled for over an hour. The young man seemed to be
+dozing in earnest when, with a succession of jerks, the train
+rapidly slackened speed. Mr. Dunster let down the window. The
+interior of the carriage was at once thrown into confusion. A
+couple of newspapers were caught up and whirled around, a torrent
+of rain beat in. Mr. Dunster rapidly closed the window and rang
+the bell. The guard came in after a moment or two. His clothes
+were shiny from the wet; raindrops hung from his beard.
+
+"What is the matter?" Mr. Dunster demanded. "Why are we waiting
+here?"
+
+"There's a block on the line somewhere, the man replied. "Can't
+tell where exactly. The signals are against us; that's all we
+know at present."
+
+They crawled on again in about ten minutes, stopped, and resumed
+their progress at an even slower rate. Mr. Dunster once more
+summoned the guard.
+
+"Why are we travelling like this?" he asked impatiently. "We shall
+never catch the boat."
+
+"We shall catch the boat all right if it runs, sir," the man assured
+him. "The mail is only a mile or two ahead of us; that's one reason
+why we have to go so slowly. Then the water is right over the line
+where we are now, and we can't get any news at all from the other
+side of Ipswich. If it goes on like this, some of the bridges will
+be down; that's what I'm afraid of."
+
+Mr. Dunster frowned. For the first time he showed some signs of
+uneasiness.
+
+"Perhaps," he muttered, half to himself," a motorcar would have been
+better."
+
+"Not on your life," his young companion intervened. "All the roads
+to the coast here cross no end of small bridges - much weaker
+affairs than the railway bridges. I bet there are some of those
+down already. Besides, you wouldn't be able to see where you were
+going, on a night like this."
+
+"There appears to be a chance," Mr. Dunster remarked drily, "that
+you will have to scratch for your competition to-morrow."
+
+"Also," the young man observed, "that you will have taken this
+special train for nothing. I can't fancy the Harwich boat going
+out a night like this."
+
+Mr. Dunster relapsed into stony but anxious silence. The train
+continued its erratic progress, sometimes stopping altogether for
+a time, with whistle blowing repeatedly; sometimes creeping along
+the metals as though feeling its way to safety. At last, after a
+somewhat prolonged wait, the guard, whose hoarse voice they had
+heard on the platform of the small station in which they were
+standing, entered the carriage. With him came a gust of wind, once
+more sending the papers flying around the compartment. The rain
+dripped from his clothes on to the carpet. He had lost his hat,
+his hair was tossed with the wind, his face was bleeding from a
+slight wound on the temple.
+
+"The boat train's just ahead of us, sir," he announced. "She can't
+get on any better than we can. We've just heard that there's a
+bridge down on the line between Ipswich and Harwich."
+
+"What are we going to do, then?" Mr. Dunster demanded.
+
+"That's just what I've come to ask you, sir," the guard replied.
+"The mail's going slowly on as far as Ipswich. I fancy they'll
+lie by there until the morning. The best thing that I can see is,
+if you're agreeable, to take you back to London. We can very
+likely do that all right, if we start at once."
+
+Mr. Dunster, ignoring the man's suggestion, drew from one of the
+voluminous pockets of his ulster a small map. He spread it open
+upon the table before him and studied it attentively.
+
+"If I cannot get to Harwich," he asked, "is there any possibility
+of keeping straight on and reaching Yarmouth?"
+
+The guard hesitated.
+
+"We haven't heard anything about the line from Ipswich to Norwich,
+sir," he replied, "but we can't very well change our course without
+definite instructions."
+
+"Your definite instructions," Mr. Dunster reminded him drily, "were
+to take me to Harwich. You have been forced to depart from them.
+I see no harm in your adopting any suggestions I may have to make
+concerning our altered destination. I will pay the extra mileage,
+naturally."
+
+"How far did you wish to go, sir?" the guard enquired.
+
+"To Yarmouth," Mr. Dunster replied firmly. "If there are bridges
+down, and communication with Harwich is blocked, Yarmouth would
+suit me better than anywhere."
+
+The guard shook his head.
+
+"I couldn't go on that way, sir, without instructions."
+
+"Is there a telegraph office at this station?" Mr. Dunster inquired.
+
+"We can speak anywhere on the line," the guard replied.
+
+"Then wire to the station-master at Liverpool Street," Mr. Dunster
+instructed. "You can get a reply from him in the course of a few
+minutes. Explain the situation and tell him what my wishes are."
+
+The guard hesitated.
+
+"It's a goodish way from here to Norwich," he observed, "and for
+all we know -"
+
+"When we left Liverpool Street Station," Mr. Dunster interrupted,
+"I promised five pounds each to you, the engine-driver, and his mate.
+That five pounds shall be made twenty-five if you succeed in
+getting me to the coast. Do your best for me."
+
+The guard raised his hat and departed without another word.
+
+"It will probably suit you better," Mr. Dunster continued, turning
+to his companion, " to leave me at Ipswich and join the mail."
+
+The latter shook his head.
+
+"I don't see that there's any chance, anyway, of my getting over in
+time now," he remarked. "If you'll take me on with you as far as
+Norwich, I can go quietly home from there!"
+
+"You live in this part of the world, then?" Mr. Dunster asked.
+
+The young man assented. Again there was a certain amount of
+hesitation in his manner.
+
+"I live some distance the other side of Norwich," he said. "I don't
+want to sponge on you too much," he went on, "but if you're really
+going to stick it out and try and get there, I'd like to go on, too.
+I am afraid I can't offer to share the expense, but I'd work my
+passage if there was anything to be done."
+
+Mr. Dunster drummed for a moment upon the table with his fingers.
+All the time the young man had been speaking, his eyes had been
+studying his face. He turned now once more to his map.
+
+"It was my idea," he said, "to hire a steam trawler from Yarmouth.
+If I do so, you can, if you wish, accompany me so far as the port
+at which we may land in Holland. On the other hand, to be perfectly
+frank with you, I should prefer to go alone. There will be, no
+doubt, a certain amount of risk in crossing tonight. My own business
+is of importance. A golf tournament, however, is scarcely worth
+risking your life for, is it?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know about that!" the young man replied grimly. "I
+fancy I should rather like it. Let's see whether we can get on to
+Norwich, anyhow, shall we? We may find that there are bridges down
+on that line."
+
+They relapsed once more into silence. Presently the guard
+reappeared.
+
+"Instructions to take you on to Yarmouth, if possible, sir," he
+announced, "and to collect the mileage at our destination."
+
+"That will be quite satisfactory," Mr. Dunster agreed. "Let us be
+off, then, as soon as possible." Presently they crawled on. They
+passed the boat train in Ipswich Station, where they stayed for a
+few moments. Mr. Dunster bought wine and sandwiches, and his
+companion followed his example. Then they continued their journey.
+An hour or more passed; the storm showed no signs of abatement.
+Their speed now rarely exceeded ten or fifteen miles an hour. Mr.
+Dunster smoked all the time, occasionally rubbing the window-pane
+and trying to look out. Gerald Fentolin slept fitfully.
+
+"Have you any idea where we are?" Mr. Dunster asked once.
+
+The boy cautiously let down the window a little way. With the noise
+of the storm came another sound, to which he listened for a moment
+with puzzled face: a dull, rumbling sound like the falling of water.
+He closed the window, breathless.
+
+"I don't think we are far from Norwich. We passed Forncett, anyhow,
+some time ago."
+
+"Still raining?"
+
+"In torrents! I can't see a yard ahead of me. I bet we get some
+floods after this. I expect they are out now, if one could only see."
+
+They crept on. Suddenly, above the storm, they heard what sounded
+at first like the booming of a gun, and then a shrill whistle from
+some distance ahead. They felt the jerk as their brakes were hastily
+applied, the swaying of the little train, and then the crunching of
+earth beneath them, the roar of escaping steam as their engine
+ploughed its way on into the road bed.
+
+"Off the rails!" the boy cried, springing to his feet. "Hold on
+tightly, sir. I'd keep away from the window."
+
+The carriage swayed and rocked. Suddenly a telegraph post seemed
+to come crashing through the window and the polished mahogany panels.
+The young man escaped it by leaping to one side. It caught Mr.
+Dunster, who had just risen to his feet, upon the forehead. There
+was a crash all around of splitting glass, a further shock. They
+were both thrown off their feet. The light was suddenly extinguished.
+With the crashing of glass, the splitting of timber - a hideous,
+tearing sound - the wrecked saloon, dragging the engine half-way
+over with it, slipped down a low embankment and lay on its side,
+what remained of it, in a field of turnips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+As the young man staggered to his feet, he had somehow a sense of
+detachment, as though he were commencing a new life, or had suddenly
+come into a new existence. Yet his immediate surroundings were
+charged with ugly reminiscences. Through a great gap in the ruined
+side of the saloon the rain was tearing in. As he stood up, his
+head caught the fragments of the roof. He was able to push back
+the wreckage with ease and step out. For a moment he reeled, as he
+met the violence of the storm. Then, clutching hold of the side of
+the wreck, he steadied himself. A light was moving back and forth,
+close at hand. He cried out weakly: "Hullo!"
+
+A man carrying a lantern, bent double as he made his way against the
+wind, crawled up to them. He was a porter from the station close
+at hand.
+
+"My God! "he exclaimed. "Any one alive here?"
+
+"I'm all right," Gerald muttered, "at least, I suppose I am. What's
+it all - what's it all about? We've had an accident."
+
+The porter caught hold of a piece of the wreckage with which to
+steady himself.
+
+"Your train ran right into three feet of water," he answered. "The
+rails had gone - torn up. The telegraph line's down."
+
+"Why didn't you stop the train?"
+
+"We were doing all we could," the man retorted gloomily. "We weren't
+expecting anything else through to-night. We'd a man along the line
+with a lantern, but he's just been found blown over the embankment,
+with his head in a pool of water. Any one else in your carriage?"
+
+"One gentleman travelling with me," Gerald answered. "We'd better
+try to get him out. What about the guard and engine-driver?"
+
+"The engine-driver and stoker are both alive," the porter told him.
+"I came across them before I saw you. They're both knocked sort
+of sillylike, but they aren't much hurt. The guard's stone dead."
+
+"Where are we?"
+
+"A few hundred yards from Wymondham. Let's have a look for the
+other gentleman."
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster was lying quite still, his right leg doubled
+up, and a huge block of telegraph post, which the saloon had carried
+with it in its fall, still pressing against his forehead. He
+groaned as they dragged him out and laid him down upon a cushion
+in the shelter of the wreckage.
+
+"He's alive all right," the porter remarked. "There's a doctor on
+the way. Let's cover him up quick and wait."
+
+"Can't we carry him to shelter of some sort Gerald proposed.
+
+The man shook his head. Speech of any sort was difficult. Even
+with his lips close to the other's ears, he had almost to shout.
+
+"Couldn't be done," he replied. "It's all one can do to walk alone
+when you get out in the middle of the field, away from the shelter
+of the embankment here. There's bits of trees flying all down the
+lane. Never was such a night! Folks is fair afraid of the morning
+to see what's happened. There's a mill blown right over on its side
+in the next field, and the man in charge of it lying dead. This
+poor chap's bad enough."
+
+Gerald, on all fours, had crept back into the compartment. The
+bottle of wine was smashed into atoms. He came out, dragging the
+small dressing-case which his companion had kept on the table before
+him. One side of it was dented in, but the lock, which was of great
+strength, still held.
+
+"Perhaps there's a flask somewhere in this dressing-case," Gerald
+said. " Lend me a knife."
+
+Strong though it had been, the lock was already almost torn out
+from its foundation. They forced the spring and opened it. The
+porter turned his lantern on the widening space. Just as Gerald
+was raising the lid very slowly to save the contents from being
+scattered by the wind, the man turned his head to answer an
+approaching hail. Gerald raised the lid a little higher and
+suddenly closed it with a bang.
+
+"There's folks coming at last!" the porter exclaimed, turning around
+excitedly. "They've been a time and no mistake. The village isn't
+a quarter of a mile away. Did you find a flask, sir?"
+
+Gerald made no answer. The dressing-case once more was closed, and
+his hand pressed upon the lid. The porter turned the light upon his
+face and whistled softly.
+
+"You're about done yourself, sir," he remarked. "Hold up."
+
+He caught the young man in his arms. There was another roar in
+Gerald's ears besides the roar of the wind. He had never fainted
+in his life, but the feeling was upon him now - a deadly sickness,
+a swaying of the earth. The porter suddenly gave a little cry.
+
+"If I'm not a born idiot!" he exclaimed, drawing a bottle from the
+pocket of his coat with his disengaged hand. "There's whisky here.
+I was taking it home to the missis for her rheumatism. Now, then."
+
+He drew the cork from the bottle with his teeth and forced some of
+the liquid between the lips of the young man. The voices now were
+coming nearer and nearer. Gerald made a desperate effort.
+
+"I am all right," he declared. "Let's look after him."
+
+They groped their way towards the unconscious man, Gerald still
+gripping the dressing-case with both hands. There were no signs
+of any change in his condition, but he was still breathing heavily.
+Then they heard a shout behind, almost in their ears. The porter
+staggered to his feet.
+
+"It's all right now, sir!" he exclaimed. "They've brought blankets
+and a stretcher and brandy. Here's a doctor, sir."
+
+A powerful-looking man, hatless, and wrapped in a great ulster,
+moved towards them.
+
+"How many are there of you?" he asked, as he bent over Mr. Dunster.
+
+"Only we two," Gerald replied. "Is my friend badly hurt?"
+
+"Concussion," the doctor announced. "We'll take him to the village.
+What about you, young man? Your face is bleeding, I see."
+
+"Just a cut," Gerald faltered; "nothing else."
+
+"Lucky chap," the doctor remarked. "Let's get him to shelter of
+some sort. Come along. There's an inn at the corner of the lane
+there."
+
+They all staggered along, Gerald still clutching the dressing-case,
+and supported on the other side by an excited and somewhat
+incoherent villager.
+
+"Such a storm as never was," the latter volunteered. "The telegraph
+wires are all down for miles and miles. There won't be no trains
+running along this line come many a week, and as for trees - why,
+it's as though some one had been playing ninepins in Squire
+Fellowes's park. When the morning do come, for sure there will be
+things to be seen. This way, sir. Be careful of the gate."
+
+They staggered along down the lane, climbing once over a tree
+which lay across the lane and far into the adjoining field. Soon
+they were joined by more of the villagers, roused from their beds
+by rumours of terrible happenings. The little, single-storey,
+ivy-covered inn was all lit up and the door held firmly open. They
+passed through the narrow entrance and into the stone-flagged
+barroom, where the men laid down their stretcher. As many of the
+villagers as could crowd in filled the passage. Gerald sank into
+a chair. The sudden absence of wind was almost disconcerting. He
+felt himself once more in danger of fainting. He was only vaguely
+conscious of drinking hot milk, poured from a jug by a red-faced
+and sympathetic woman. Its restorative effect, however, was
+immediate and wonderful. The mist cleared from before his eyes,
+his brain began to work. Always in the background the horror and
+the shame were there, the shame which kept his hand pressed with
+unnatural strength upon the broken lock of that dressing-case.
+He sat a little apart from the others and listened. Above the
+confused murmur of voices he could hear the doctor's comment and
+brief orders, as he rose to his feet after examining the unconscious
+man.
+
+"An ordinary concussion," he declared. "I must get round and see
+the engine-driver now. They have got him in a shed by the embankment.
+I'll call in again later on. Let's have one more look at you,
+young man."
+
+He glanced at the cut on Gerald's forehead, noted the access of
+colour in his cheeks, and nodded.
+
+"Born to be hanged, you were," he pronounced. "You've had a
+marvellous escape. I'll be in again presently. No need to worry
+about your friend. He looks as though he'd got a mighty constitution.
+Light my lantern, Brown. Two of you had better come with me to the
+shed. It's no night for a man to be wandering about alone."
+
+He departed, and many of the villagers with him. The landlady sat
+down and began to weep.
+
+"Such a night! Such a night!" she exclaimed, wringing her hands.
+"And there's the doctor talks about putting the poor gentleman to
+bed! Why, the roof's off the back part of the house, and not a
+bedroom in the place but mine and John's, and the rain coming in
+there in torrents. Such a night! It's the judgment of the Lord
+upon us! That's what it is - the judgment of the Lord!"
+
+"Judgment of the fiddlesticks!" her husband growled. "Can't you
+light the fire, woman? What's the good of sitting there whining?"
+
+"Light the fire," she repeated bitterly, "and the chimney lying out
+in the road! Do you want to suffocate us all, or is the beer still
+in your head? It's your evil doings, Richard Budden, and others
+like you, that have brought this upon us. If Mr. Wembley would
+but come in and pray!"
+
+Her husband scoffed. He was dressed only in his shirt and trousers,
+his hair rough, his braces hanging down behind.
+
+"Come in and pray!" he repeated. "Not he! Not Mr. Wembley! He's
+safe tucked up in his bed, shivering with fear, I'll bet you. He's
+not getting his feet wet to save a body or lend a hand here. Souls
+are his job. You let the preacher alone, mother, and tell us what
+we're going to do with this gentleman."
+
+"The Lord only knows!" she cried, wringing her hands.
+
+"Can I hire a motor-car from anywhere near?" Gerald asked.
+
+"There's motor-cars, right enough," the innkeeper replied, "but not
+many as would be fools enough to take one out. You couldn't see
+the road, and I doubt if one of them plaguey things would stir in
+this storm."
+
+"Such nonsense as you talk, Richard Budden!" his wife exclaimed
+sharply. "It's twenty minutes past three of the clock, and there's
+light coming on us fast. If so be as the young gentleman knows
+folks round about here, or happens to live nigh, why shouldn't he
+take one of them motor-cars and get away to some decent place?
+It'll be better for the poor gentleman than lying here in a house
+smitten by the Lord."
+
+Gerald rose stiffly to his feet. An idea was forming in his brain.
+His eyes were bright. He looked at the body of John Dunster upon
+the floor, and felt once more in his pocket.
+
+"How far off is the garage?" he asked.
+
+"It's right across the way," the innkeeper replied, a speculation
+of Neighbour Martin's, and a foolish one it do seem to me. He's two
+cars there, and one he lets to the Government for delivering the
+mails."
+
+Gerald felt in his pocket and produced a sovereign.
+
+"Give this," he said, "to any man you can find who will go across
+there and bring me a car - the most powerful they've got, if there's
+any difference. Tell them I'll pay well. This - my friend will be
+much better at home with me than in a strange place when he comes
+to his senses."
+
+"It's sound common sense," the woman declared. "Be off with you,
+Richard."
+
+The man was looking at the coin covetously, but his wife pushed him
+away.
+
+"It's not a sovereign you'll be taking from the gentleman for a
+little errand like that," she insisted sharply. "He shall pay us
+for what he's had when he goes, and welcome, and if so be that he's
+willing to make it a sovereign, to include the milk and the brandy
+and the confusion we've been put to this night, well and good. It's
+a heavy reckoning, maybe, but the night calls for it. We'll see
+about that afterwards. Get along with you, I say, Richard."
+
+"I'll be wet through," the man muttered.
+
+"And serve you right!" the woman exclaimed. "If there's a man in
+this village to-night whose clothes are dry, it's a thing for him
+to be ashamed of."
+
+The innkeeper reluctantly departed. They heard the roar of the
+wind as the door was opened and closed. The woman poured out another
+glass of milk and brought it to Gerald.
+
+"A godless man, mine," she said grimly. "If so happen as Mr. Wembley
+had come to these parts years ago, I'd have seen myself in my grave
+before I'd have married a publican. But it's too late now. We're
+mostly too late about the things that count in this world. So it's
+your friend that's been stricken down, young man. A well-living man,
+I hope?"
+
+Gerald shivered ever so slightly. He drank the milk, however. He
+felt that he might need his strength.
+
+"What train might you have been on the woman continued. "There's
+none due on this line that we knew of. David Bass, the
+station-master, was here but two hours ago and said he'd finished
+for the night, and praised the Lord for that. The goods trains
+had all been stopped at Ipswich, and the first passenger train was
+not due till six o'clock."
+
+Gerald shook his head with an affectation of weariness.
+
+"I don't know," he replied. "I don't remember anything about it.
+We were hours late, I think."
+
+The woman was looking down at the unconscious man. Gerald rose
+slowly to his feet and stood by her side. The face of Mr. John P.
+Dunster, even in unconsciousness, had something in it of strength
+and purpose. The shape of his head, the squareness of his jaws,
+the straightness of his thick lips, all seemed to speak of a hard
+and inflexible disposition. His hair was coal black, coarse, and
+without the slightest sprinkling of grey. He had the neck and
+throat of a fighter. But for that single, livid, blue mark across
+his forehead, he carried with him no signs of his accident. He was
+a little inclined to be stout. There was a heavy gold chain
+stretched across his waist-coat. From where he lay, the shining
+handle of his revolver protruded from his hip, pocket.
+
+"Sakes alive!." the woman muttered, as she looked down. "What does
+he carry a thing like that for - in a peaceful country, too!"
+
+"It was just an idea of his," Gerald answered. "We were going
+abroad in a day or two. He was always nervous. If you like, I'll
+take it away."
+
+He stooped down and withdrew it from the unconscious man's pocket.
+He started as he discovered that it was loaded in every chamber.
+
+"I can't bear the sight of them things," the woman declared. "It's
+the men of evil ways, who've no trust in the Lord, who need that
+sort of protection."
+
+They heard the door pushed open, the howl of wind down the passage,
+and the beating of rain upon the stone flags. Then it was softly
+closed again. The landlord staggered into the room, followed by a
+young man.
+
+"This 'ere is Mr. Martin's chaffer," he announced. "You can tell
+him what you want yerself."
+
+Gerald turned almost eagerly towards the newcomer.
+
+"I want to go to the other side of Holt," he said, "and get my
+friend - get this gentleman away from here - get him home, if
+possible. Can you take me?"
+
+The chauffeur looked doubtful.
+
+"I'm afraid of the roads, sir," he replied. "There's talk about
+many bridges down, and trees, and there's floods out everywhere.
+There's half a foot of water, even, across the village street now.
+I'm afraid we shouldn't get very far."
+
+"Look here," Gerald begged eagerly, "let's make a shot at it. I'll
+pay you double the hire of the car, and I'll be responsible for any
+damage. I want to get out of this beastly place. Let's get
+somewhere, at any rate, towards a civilised country. I'll see you
+don't lose anything. I'll give you a five pound note for yourself
+if we get as far as Holt."
+
+"I'm on," the young man agreed shortly. "It's an open car, you know."
+
+"It doesn't matter," Gerald replied. "I can stick it in front with
+you, and we can cover - him up in the tonneau."
+
+"You'll wait until the doctor comes back?" the landlord asked.
+
+"And why should they?" his wife interposed sharply. "Them doctors
+are all the same. He'll try and keep the poor gentleman here for
+the sake of a few extra guineas, and a miserable place for him to
+open his eyes upon, even if the rest of the roof holds, which for
+my part I'm beginning to doubt. They'd have to move him from here
+with the daylight, anyhow. He can't lie in the bar parlour all day,
+can he?"
+
+"It don't seem right, somehow," the man com plained doggedly. "The
+doctor didn't say anything about having him moved."
+
+"You get the car," Gerald ordered the young man. "I'll take the
+whole responsibility."
+
+The chauffeur silently left the room. Gerald put a couple of
+sovereigns upon the mantelpiece.
+
+"My friend is a man of somewhat peculiar temperament," he said
+quietly. "If he finds himself at home in a comfortable room when
+he comes to his senses, I am quite sure that he will have a better
+chance of recovery. He cannot possibly be made comfortable here,
+and he will feel the shock of what has happened all the more if he
+finds himself still in the neighbourhood when he opens his eyes.
+If there is any change in his condition, we can easily stop somewhere
+on the way."
+
+The woman pocketed the two sovereigns.
+
+"That's common sense, sir," she agreed heartily, "and I'm sure we
+are very much obliged to you. If we had a decent room, and a roof
+above it, you'd be heartily welcome, but as it is, this is no place
+for a sick man, and those that say different don't know what they
+are talking about. That's a real careful young man who's going to
+take you along in the motor-car. He'll get you there safe, if any
+one will."
+
+"What I say is," her husband protested sullenly, "that we ought to
+wait for the doctor's orders. I'm against seeing a poor body like
+that jolted across the country in an open motor-car, in his state.
+I'm not sure that it's for his good."
+
+"And what business is it of yours, I should like to know?" the woman
+demanded sharply. "You get up-stairs and begin moving the furniture
+from where the rain s coming sopping in. And if so be you can
+remember while you do it that this is a judgment that's come upon us,
+why, so much the better. We are evil-doers, all of us, though them
+as likes the easy ways generally manage to forget it."
+
+The man retreated silently. The woman sat down upon a stool and
+waited. Gerald sat opposite to her, the battered dressing-case
+upon his knees. Between them was stretched the body of the
+unconscious man.
+
+"Are you used to prayer, young sir?" the woman asked.
+
+Gerald shook his head, and the woman did not pursue the subject.
+Only once her eyes were half closed and her words drifted across
+the room.
+
+"The Lord have mercy on this man, a sinner!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+"My advice to you, sir, is to chuck it!"
+
+Gerald turned towards the chauffeur by whose side he was seated a
+little stiffly, for his limbs were numbed with the cold and
+exhaustion. The morning had broken with a grey and uncertain light.
+A vaporous veil of mist seemed to have taken the place of the
+darkness. Even from the top of the hill where the car had come to
+a standstill, there was little to be seen.
+
+"We must have come forty miles already," the chauffeur continued,
+"what with going out of our way all the time because of the broken
+bridges. I'm pretty well frozen through, and as for him," he added,
+jerking his thumb across his shoulder, "it seems to me you're taking
+a bit of a risk."
+
+"The doctor said he would remain in exactly the same condition for
+twenty-four hours," Gerald declared.
+
+"Yes, but he didn't say anything about shaking him up over forty
+miles of rough road," the other protested. "You'll excuse me, sir,"
+he continued, in a slightly changed tone; "it isn't my business, of
+course, but I'm fairly done. It don't seem reasonable to stick at
+it like this. There's Holt village not a mile away, and a comfortable
+inn and a fire waiting. I thought that was as far as you wanted to
+come. We might lie up there for a few hours, at any rate."
+
+His passenger slipped down from his place, and, lifting the rug,
+peered into the tonneau of the car, over which they had tied a hood.
+To all appearance, the condition of the man who lay there was
+unchanged. There was a slightly added blueness about the lps but
+his breathing was still perceptible. It seemed even a little
+stronger. Gerald resumed his seat.
+
+"It isn't worth while to stay at Holt," he said quietly. "We are
+scarcely seven miles from home now. Sit still for a few minutes
+and get your wind."
+
+"Only seven miles," the chauffeur repeated more cheerfully. "That's
+something, anyway."
+
+"And all downhill."
+
+"Towards the sea, then?"
+
+"Straight to the sea," Gerald told him. "The place we are making
+for is St. David's Hall, near Salthouse."
+
+The chauffeur seemed a little startled.
+
+"'Why, that's Squire Fentolin's house!"
+
+Gerald nodded.
+
+"That is where we are going. You follow this road almost straight
+ahead."
+
+The chauffeur slipped in the clutch.
+
+"Oh, I know the way now, sir, right enough!" he exclaimed. "There's
+Salthouse marsh to cross, though. I don't know about that."
+
+"We shall manage that all right," Gerald declared. "'We've more
+light now, too."
+
+They both looked around. During the last few minutes the late
+morning seemed to have forced its way through the clouds. They had
+a dim, phantasmagoric view of the stricken country: a watery plain,
+with here and there great patches of fields, submerged to the
+hedges, and houses standing out amidst the waste of waters like
+toy dwellings. There were whole plantations of uprooted trees.
+Close to the road, on their left, was a roofless house, and a
+family of children crying underneath a tarpaulin shelter. As they
+crept on, the wind came to them with a brackish flavour, salt with
+the sea. The chauffeur was gazing ahead doubtfully.
+
+"I don't like the look of the marsh," he grumbled. "Can't see the
+road at all. However, here goes."
+
+"Another half-hour," Gerald assured him encouragingly, "and we shall
+be at St. David's Hall. You can have as much rest as you like then."
+
+They were facing the wind now, and conversation became impossible.
+Twice they had to pull up sharp and make a considerable detour, once
+on account of a fallen tree which blocked the road, and another
+time because of the yawning gap where a bridge had fallen away.
+Gerald, however, knew every inch of the country they were in and
+was able to give the necessary directions. They began to meet farm
+wagons now, full of people who had been driven from their homes.
+Warnings and information as to the state of the roads were shouted
+to them continually. Presently they came to the last steep descent,
+and emerged from the devastated fragment of a wood almost on to the
+sea level. The chauffeur clapped on his brakes and stopped short.
+
+"My God!" he exclaimed. "Here's more trouble!"
+
+Gerald for a moment was speechless. They seemed to have come
+suddenly upon a huge plain of waters, an immense lake reaching as
+ar as they could see on either side. The road before them stretched
+like a ribbon for the next three miles. Here and there it
+disappeared and reappeared again. In many places it was lapped by
+little waves. Everywhere the hedges were either altogether or half
+under water. In the distance was one farmhouse, only the roof of
+which was visible, and from which the inhabitants were clambering
+into a boat. And beyond, with scarcely a break save for the rising
+of one strangely-shaped hill, was the sea. Gerald pointed with his
+finger.
+
+" There's St. David's Hall," he said, "on the other side of the
+hill. The road seems all right."
+
+"Does it!" the chauffeur grunted. "It's under water more than half
+the way, and Heaven knows how deep it is at the sides! I'm not
+going to risk my life along there. I am going to take the car back
+to Holt."
+
+His hand was already upon the reverse lever, but Gerald gripped it.
+
+"Look here," he protested, "we haven't come all this way to turn back.
+You don't look like a coward."
+
+"I am not a coward, sir," was the quiet answer. "Neither am I a
+fool. I don't see any use in risking our lives and my master's
+motor-car, because you want to get home."
+
+"Naturally," Gerald answered calmly, "but remember this. I am
+responsible for your car - not you. Mr. Fentolin is my uncle."
+
+The chauffeur nodded shortly.
+
+"You're Mr. Gerald Fentolin, aren't you, sir?" he remarked. "I
+thought I recognised you."
+
+"I am," Gerald admitted. "We've had a rough journey, but it doesn't
+seem sense to turn back now, does it, with the house in sight?"
+
+"That's all very well, sir," the chauffeur objected doubtfully, "but
+I don't believe the road's even passable, and the floods seem to me
+to be rising."
+
+"Try it," the young man begged. "Look here, I don't want to bribe
+you, or anything of that sort. You know you're coming out of this
+well. It's a serious matter for me, and I shan't be likely to forget
+it. I want to take this gentleman to St. David's Hall and not to
+a hospital. You've brought me here so far like a man. Let's go
+through with it. If the worst comes to the worst, we can both swim,
+I suppose, and we are not likely to get out of our depth."
+
+The chauffeur moved his head backwards.
+
+"How about him?"
+
+"He must take his chance," Gerald replied. "He's all right where
+he is. The car won't upset and there are plenty of people who'll
+see if we get into trouble. Come, let's make a dash for it."
+
+The chauffeur thrust in his clutch and settled himself down. They
+glided off along that winding stretch of road. To its very edge,
+on either side of them, so close that they could almost touch it,
+came the water, water which stretched as far as they could see,
+swaying, waveless, sinister-looking. Even Gerald, after his first
+impulse of wonder, kept his eyes averted and fixed upon the road
+ahead. Soon they reached a place where the water met in front.
+There were only the rows of white palings on either side to guide
+them. The chauffeur muttered to himself as he changed to his first
+speed.
+
+"If the engine gets stopped," he said, "I don't know how we shall
+get out of this."
+
+They emerged on the other side. For some time they had a clear run.
+Then suddenly the driver clapped on his brakes.
+
+"My God!" he cried. "We can't get through that!"
+
+In front of them for more than a hundred yards the water seemed
+suddenly to have flowed across the road. Still a mile distant,
+perched on a ridge of that strangely-placed hill, was their
+destination.
+
+"It can't be done, sir!" the man groaned. "There isn't a car ever
+built could get through that. See, it's nearly up to the top of
+those posts. I must put her in the reverse and get back, even if
+we have to wait on the higher part of the road for a boat."
+
+He glanced behind, and a second cry broke from his lips. Gerald
+stood up in his place. Already the road which had been clear a
+few minutes before was hidden. The water was washing almost over
+the tops of the white posts behind them. Little waves were breaking
+against the summit of the raised bank.
+
+"We're cut off!" the chauffeur exclaimed. "'What a fool I was to
+try this! There's the tide coming in as well!"
+
+Gerald sat down in his place.
+
+"Look here," he said, "we can't go back, whether we want to or not.
+It's much worse behind there than it is in front. There's only one
+chance. Go for it straight ahead in your first speed. It may not
+stop the engine. In any case, it will be worse presently. There's
+no use funking it. If the worst happens, we can sit in the car.
+The water won't be above our heads and there are some boats about.
+Blow your horn well first, in case there's any one within hearing,
+and then go for it."
+
+The chauffeur obeyed. They hissed and spluttered into the water.
+Soon all trace of the road was completely lost. They steered only
+by the tops of the white posts.
+
+"It's getting deeper," the man declared. "It's within an inch or
+two of the bonnet now. Hold on."
+
+A wave broke almost over them but the engine continued its beat.
+
+"If we stop now," he gasped, "we're done!"
+
+The engine began to knock.
+
+"Stick at it," Gerald cried, rising in his place a little. "Look,
+there's only one post lower than the last one that we passed. They
+get higher all the time, ahead. You can almost see the road in
+front there. Now, in with your gear again, and stick at it."
+
+Another wave broke, this time completely over them. They listened
+with strained ears - the engine continued to beat. They still moved
+slowly. Then there was a shock. The wheel had struck something in
+the road - a great stone or rock. The chauffeur thrust the car out
+of gear. The engine still beat. Gerald leaped from the car. The
+water was over his knees. He crossed in front of the bonnet and
+stooped down.
+
+"I've got it!" he exclaimed, tugging hard. "It's a stone."
+
+He moved it, rolled it on one side, and pushed at the wheel of the
+car as his companion put in the speed. They started again. He
+jumped back his place.
+
+"We've done it, all right!" he cried. "Don't you see? It's getting
+lower all the time."
+
+The chauffeur had lost his nerve. His cheeks were pale, his teeth
+were chattering. The engine, however, was still beating. Gradually
+the pressure of the water grew less. In front of them they caught
+a glimpse of the road. They drew up at the top of a little bridge
+over one of the dikes. Gerald uttered a brief exclamation of triumph.
+
+"We're safe!" he almost sobbed. "There's the road, straight ahead
+and round to the right. There's no more water anywhere near."
+
+They had left the main part of the flood behind them. There were
+still great pools in the side of the road, and huge masses of
+seaweed had been carried up and were lying in their track. There
+was no more water, however. At every moment they drew nearer to
+the strangely-shaped hill with its crown of trees.
+
+"The house is on the other side," Gerald pointed out. "We can go
+through the lodge gates at the back here. The ascent isn't so
+steep."
+
+They turned sharply to the right, along another stretch of straight
+road set with white posts, ending before a red brick lodge and a
+closed gate. They blew the horn and a gardener came out. He gazed
+at them in amazement.
+
+"It's all right," Gerald cried. "Let us through quickly, Foulds.
+We've a gentleman in behind who's ill."
+
+The man swung open the gate with a respectful salute. They made
+their way up a winding drive of considerable length, and at last
+they came to a broad, open space almost like a platform. On their
+left were the marshes, and beyond, the sea. Along their right
+stretched the long front of an Elizabethan mansion. They drew up
+in front of the hail door. Their coming had been observed, and
+servants were already waiting. Gerald sprang to the ground.
+
+"There's a gentleman in behind who's ill," he explained to the
+butler. "He has met with an accident on the way. Three or four
+of you had better carry him up to a bedroom - any one that is ready.
+And you, George," he added, turning to a boy, "get into the car and
+show this man the way round to the garage, and then take him to the
+servants' hall."
+
+Several of the servants hastened to do his bidding, and Gerald did
+his best to answer the eager but respectful stream of questions.
+And then, just as they were in the act of lifting the still
+unconscious man on to the floor of the hall, came a queer sound - a
+shrill, reverberating whistle. They all looked up the stairs.
+
+"The master is awake," Henderson, the butler, remarked, dropping
+his voice a little.
+
+Gerald nodded.
+
+"I will go to him at once," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+Accustomed though he was to the sight which he was about to face,
+Gerald shivered slightly as he opened the door of Mr. Fentolin's
+room. A strange sort of fear seemed to have crept into his bearing
+and expression, a fear of which there had been no traces whatever
+during those terrible hours through which he had passed - not even
+during that last reckless journey across the marshes. He walked
+with hesitating footsteps across the spacious and lofty room. He
+had the air of some frightened creature approaching his master.
+Yet all that was visible of the despot who ruled his whole
+household in deadly fear was the kindly and beautiful face of an
+elderly man, whose stunted limbs and body were mercifully concealed.
+He sat in a little carriage, with a rug drawn closely across his
+chest and up to his armpits. His beautifully shaped hands were
+exposed, and his face; nothing else. His hair was a silvery white;
+his complexion parchment-like, pallid, entirely colourless. His
+eyes were a soft shade of blue. His features were so finely cut
+and chiselled that they resembled some exquisite piece of statuary.
+He smiled as his nephew came slowly towards him. One might almost
+have fancied that the young man's abject state was a source of
+pleasure to him.
+
+"So you are back again, my dear Gerald. A pleasant surprise,
+indeed, but what is the meaning of it? And what of my little
+commission, eh?"
+
+The young man's face was dark and sullen. He spoke quickly but
+without any sign of eagerness or interest in the information he
+vouchsafed.
+
+"The storm has stopped all the trains," he said. "The boat did not
+cross last night, and in any ease I couldn't have reached Harwich.
+As for your commission, I travelled down from London alone with the
+man you told me to spy upon. I could have stolen anything he had
+if I had been used to the work. As it was - I brought the man
+himself."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's delicate fingers played with the handle of his chair.
+The smile had passed from his lips. He looked at his nephew in
+gentle bewilderment.
+
+"My dear boy," he protested, "come, come, be careful what you are
+saying. You have brought the man himself! So far as my information
+goes, Mr. John P. Dunster is charged with a very important diplomatic
+commission. He is on his way to Cologne, and from what I know about
+the man, I think that it would require more than your persuasions to
+induce him to break off his journey. You do not really wish me to
+believe that you have brought him here as a guest?"
+
+"I was at Liverpool Street Station last night," Gerald declared.
+"I had no idea how to accost him, and as to stealing any of his
+belongings, I couldn't have done it. You must hear how fortune
+helped me, though. Mr. Dunster missed the train; so did I
+- purposely. He ordered a special. I asked permission to travel
+with him. I told him a lie as to how I had missed the train. I
+hated it, but it was necessary."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded approvingly.
+
+"My dear boy," he said, "to trifle with the truth is always
+unpleasant. Besides, you are a Fentolin, and our love of truth is
+proverbial. But there are times, you know, when for the good of
+others we must sacrifice our scruples. So you told Mr. Dunster a
+alsehood."
+
+"He let me travel with him," Gerald continued. "We were all night
+getting about half-way here. Then - you know about the storm, I
+suppose?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin spread out his hands.
+
+"Could one avoid the knowledge of it he asked. "Such a sight has
+never been seen."
+
+"We found we couldn't get to Harwich," Gerald went on. "They
+telegraphed to London and got permission to bring us to Yarmouth.
+We were on our way to Norwich, and the train ran off the line."
+
+"An accident?" Mr. Fentolin exclaimed.
+
+Gerald nodded.
+
+"Our train ran off the line and pitched down an embankment. Mr.
+Dunster has concussion of the brain. He and I were taken to a
+miserable little inn near Wymondham. From there I hired a motor-car
+and brought him here."
+
+"You hired a motor-car and brought him here," Mr. Fentolin repeated
+softly. "My dear boy - forgive me if I find this a little hard to
+understand. You say that you have brought him here. Had he nothing
+to say about it?"
+
+"He was unconscious when we picked him up," Gerald explained. "He
+is unconscious now. Tbe doctor said he would remain so for at least
+twenty-four hours, and it didn't seem to me that the journey would
+do him any particular harm. The roof had been stripped off the inn
+where we were, and the place was quite uninhabitable, so we should
+have had to have moved him somewhere. We put him in the tonneau of
+the car and covered him up. They have carried him now into a
+bedroom, and Sarson is looking after him."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat quite silent. His eyes blinked once or twice, and
+there was a curious curve about his lips.
+
+"You have done well, my boy," he pronounced slowly. "Your scheme
+of bringing him here sounds a little primitive, but success
+justifies everything."
+
+Mr. Fentolin raised to his lips and blew softly a little gold
+whistle which hung from a chain attached to his waistcoat. Almost
+immediately the door opened. A man entered, dressed somberly in
+black, whose bearing and demeanour alike denoted the servant, but
+whose physique was the physique of a prize-fighter. He was scarcely
+more than five feet six in height, but his shoulders were
+extraordinarily broad. He had a short, bull neck and long, mighty
+arms. His face, with the heavy jaw and small eyes, was the face
+of the typical fighting man, yet his features seemed to have become
+disposed by habit into an expression of gentle, almost servile
+civility.
+
+"Meekins," Mr. Fentolin said, "a visitor has arrived. Do you happen
+to have noticed what luggage he brought?"
+
+"There is one small dressing-case, sir," the man replied; "nothing
+else that I have seen."
+
+"That is all we brought," Gerald interposed.
+
+"You will bring the dressing-case here at once," Mr. Fentolin
+directed, "and also my compliments to Doctor Sarson, and any
+pocket-book or papers which may help us to send a message to the
+gentleman's friends."
+
+Meekins closed the door and departed. Mr. Fentolin turned back
+towards his nephew.
+
+"My dear boy," he said, "tell me why you look as though there were
+ghosts flitting about the room? You are not ill, I trust?"
+
+"Tired, perhaps," Gerald answered shortly. "We were many hours in
+the car. I have had no sleep."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's face was full of kindly sympathy.
+
+"My dear fellow," he exclaimed, "I am selfish, indeed! I should not
+have kept you here for a moment. You had better go and lie down."
+
+"I'll go directly," Gerald promised. "Can I speak to you for one
+moment first?"
+
+"Speak to me Mr. Fentolin repeated, a little wonderingly. "My
+dear Gerald, is there ever a moment when I am not wholly at your
+service?"
+
+"That fellow Dunster, on the platform, the first moment I spoke to
+him, made me feel like a cur," the boy said, with a sudden access
+of vigour in his tone. "I told him I was on my way to a golf
+tournament, and he pointed to the news about the war. Is it true,
+uncle, that we may be at war at any moment?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"A terrible reflection, my dear boy," he admitted softly, "but, alas!
+the finger of probability points that way."
+
+"Then what about me Gerald exclaimed. "I don't want to complain,
+but listen. You dragged me home from a public school before I could
+even join my cadet corps. You've kept me banging around here with
+a tutor. You wouldn't let me go to the university. You've stopped
+my entering either of the services. I am nineteen years old and
+useless. Do you know what I should do to-morrow if war broke out?
+Enlist! It's the only thing left for me."
+
+Mr. Fentolin was shocked.
+
+"My dear boy !" he exclaimed. "You must not talk like that! I am
+quite sure that it would break your mother's heart. Enlist, indeed!
+Nothing of the sort. You are part of the civilian population of
+the country."
+
+"Civilian population be d-d!" the boy suddenly cried, white with
+rage. "Uncle, forgive me, I have stood all I can bear. If you
+won't let me go in for the army - I could pass my exams to-morrow
+- I'm off. I'll enlist without waiting for the war. I can't bear
+this idle life any longer."
+
+Mr. Fentolin leaned a little forward in his chair.
+
+"Gerald!" he said softly.
+
+The boy turned his head, turned it unwillingly. He had the air of
+a caged animal obeying the word of his keeper. A certain savage
+uncouthness seemed to have fallen upon him during the last few
+minutes. There was something almost like a snarl in his expression.
+
+"Gerald!" Mr. Fentolin repeated.
+
+Then it was obvious that there was something between those two, some
+memory or some living thing, seldom, if ever, to be spoken of, and
+yet always present. The boy began to tremble.
+
+"You're a little overwrought, Gerald," Mr. Fentolin declared.
+"Sit quietly in my easy-chair for a few moments. Walt until I have
+examined Mr. Dunster's belongings. Ah! Meekins has been prompt,
+indeed."
+
+There was a stealthy tap at the door. Meekins entered with the
+small dressing-case in his hand. He brought it over to his master's
+chair. Mr. Fentolin pointed to the floor.
+
+"Open it there, Meekins," he directed. "I fancy that the pocket-book
+you are carrying will prove more interesting. We will just glance
+through the dressing-case first. Thank you. Yes, you can lay the
+things upon the floor. A man of Spartan-like life, I should imagine
+Mr. Dunster. A spare toothbrush, though, I am glad to see. Pyjamas
+of most unattractive pattern. And what a taste in shirts! Nothing
+but wearing apparel and singularly little of that, I fancy."
+
+The dressing-case was empty, its contents upon the floor. Mr.
+Fentolin held out his hand and took the pocket-book which Meekins
+had been carrying. It was an ordinary morocco affair, similar to
+those issued by American banking houses to enclose letters of credit.
+One side of it was filled with notes. Mr. Fentolin withdrew them
+and glanced them through.
+
+"Dear me!" he murmured. "No wonder our friend engages special
+trains! He travels like a prince, indeed. Two thousand pounds, or
+near it, in this little compartment. And here, I see, a letter, a
+sealed letter with no address."
+
+He held it out in front of him. It was a long commercial envelope
+of ordinary type, and although the flap was secured with a blob of
+sealing wax, there was no particular impression upon it.
+
+"We can match this envelope, I think," Mr. Fentolin said softly.
+"The seal we can copy. I think that, for the sake of others, we
+must discover the cause for this hurried journey on the part of Mr.
+John P. Dunster."
+
+With his long, delicate forefinger Mr. Fentolin slit the envelope
+and withdrew the single sheet of paper which it contained. There
+were a dozen lines of written matter, and what appeared to be a
+dozen signatures appended. Mr. Fentolin read it, at first with
+ordinary interest. Then a change came. The look of a man drawn
+out of himself, drawn out of all knowledge of his surroundings or
+his present state, stole into his face. Literally he became
+transfixed. The delicate fingers of his, left hand gripped the
+sides of his little carriage. His eyes shone as though those few
+written lines upon which they were riveted were indeed some message
+from an unknown, an unimagined world. Yet no word ever passed his
+lips. There came a time when the tension seemed a little relaxed.
+With fingers which still trembled, he folded up the sheet and
+replaced it in the envelope. He guarded it with both his hands and
+sat quite still. Neither Gerald nor his servant moved. Somehow,
+the sense of Mr. Fentolin's suppressed excitement seemed to have
+become communicated to them. It was a little tableau, broken at
+last by Mr. Fentolin himself.
+
+"I should like," he said, turning to Gerald, "to be alone. It may
+interest you to know that this docu which Mr. Dunster has brought
+across the seas, and which I hold in my hands, is the most amazing
+message of modern times."
+
+Gerald rose to his feet.
+
+"What are you going to do about it?" he asked abruptly. "Do you
+want any one in from the telegraph room?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head slowly.
+
+"At present," he announced, "I am going to reflect. Meekins, my
+chair to the north window - so. I am going to sit here," he went
+on, " and I am going to look across the sea_and reflect. A very
+fortunate storm, after all, I think, which kept Mr. John P. Dunster
+from the Harwich boat last night. Leave me, Gerald, for a time.
+Stand behind my chair, Meekins, and see that no one enters."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat in his chair, his hands still gripping the wonderful
+document, his eyes travelling over the ocean now flecked with
+sunlight. His eyes were fixed upon the horizon. He looked steadily
+eastward.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster opened his eyes upon strange surroundings. He
+found himself lying upon a bed deliciously soft, with lace-edged
+sheets and lavender-perfumed bed hangings. Through the discreetly
+opened upper window came a pleasant and ozone-laden breeze. The
+furniture in the room was mostly of an old-fashioned type, some of
+it of oak, curiously carved, and most of it surmounted with a coat
+of arms. The apartment was lofty and of almost palatial proportions.
+The whole atmosphere of the place breathed comfort and refinement.
+The only thing of which he did not wholly approve was the face of
+the nurse who rose silently to her feet at his murmured question:
+
+"Where am I?"
+
+She felt his forehead, altered a bandage for a moment, and took his
+wrist between her fingers.
+
+"You have been ill," she said. "There was a railway accident. You
+are to lie quite still and not say a word. I am going to fetch the
+doctor now. He wished to see you directly you spoke."
+
+Mr. Dunster dozed again for several moments. When he reopened his
+eyes, a man was standing by his bedside, a short man with a black
+beard and gold-rimmed glasses. Mr. Dunster, in this first stage of
+his convalescence, was perhaps difficult to please, for he did not
+like the look of the doctor, either.
+
+"Please tell me where I am?" he begged.
+
+"You have been in a railway accident," the doctor told him, "and
+you were brought here afterwards."
+
+"In a railway accident," Mr. Dunster repeated. "Ah, yes, I remember!
+I took a special to Harwich - I remember now. Where is my
+dressing-bag?"
+
+"It is here by the side of your bed."
+
+"And my pocket-book?"
+
+"It is on your dressing-table."
+
+"Have any of my things been looked at?"
+
+"Only so far as was necessary to discover your identity," the doctor
+assured him. "Don't talk too much. The nurse is bringing you some
+beef tea."
+
+"When," Mr. Dunster enquired, " shall I be able to continue my
+journey?"
+
+"That depends upon many things," the doctor replied.
+
+Mr. Dunster drank his beef tea and felt considerably stronger. His
+head still ached, but his memory was returning.
+
+"There was a young man in the carriage with me," he asked presently.
+"Mr. Gerald something or other I think he said his name was?"
+
+"Fentolin," the doctor said. "He is unhurt. This is his relative's
+house to which you have been brought."
+
+Mr. Dunster lay for a time with knitted brows. Once more the name
+of Fentolin seemed somehow familiar to him, seemed somehow to bring
+with it to his memory a note of warning. He looked around the room
+fretfully. He looked into the nurse's face, which he disliked
+exceedingly, and he looked at the doctor, whom he was beginning to
+detest.
+
+"Whose house exactly is this?" he demanded.
+
+"This is St. David's Hall - the home of Mr. Miles Fentolin," the
+doctor told him. "The young gentleman with whom you were travelling
+is his nephew."
+
+"Can I send a telegram?" Mr. Dunster asked, a little abruptly.
+
+"Without a doubt," the doctor replied. "Mr. Fentolin desired me to
+ask you if there was any one whom you would like to apprise of your
+safety."
+
+Again the man upon the bed lay quite still, with knitted brows.
+There was surely something familiar about that name. Was it his
+fevered fancy or was there also something a little sinister?
+
+The nurse, who had glided from the room, came back presently with
+some telegraph forms. Mr. Dunster held out his hand for them and
+then hesitated.
+
+"Can you tell me any date, Doctor, upon which I can rely upon
+leaving here?"
+
+"You will probably be well enough to travel on the third day from
+now," the doctor assured him.
+
+"The third day," Mr. Dunster muttered. "Very well."
+
+He wrote out three telegrams and passed them over.
+
+"One," he said, "is to New York, one to The Hague, and one to London.
+There was plenty of money in my pocket. Perhaps you will find it
+and pay for these."
+
+"Is there anything more," the doctor asked, "that can be done for
+your comfort?"
+
+"Nothing at present," Mr. Dunster replied. "My head aches now, but
+I think that I shall want to leave before three days are up. Are
+you the doctor in the neighbourhood?"
+
+Sarson shook his head.
+
+"I am physician to Mr. Fentolin's household," he answered quietly.
+"I live here. Mr. Fentolin is himself somewhat of an invalid and
+requires constant medical attention."
+
+Mr. Dunster contemplated the speaker steadfastly.
+
+"You will forgive me," he said. "I am an American and I am used to
+plain speech. I am quite unused to being attended by strange
+doctors. I understand that you are not in general practice now.
+Might I ask if you are fully qualified?"
+
+"I am an M.D. of London," the doctor replied. "You can make
+yourself quite easy as to my qualifications. It would not suit
+Mr. Fentolin's purpose to entrust himself to the care of any one
+without a reputation."
+
+He left the room, and Mr. Dunster closed his eyes. His slumbers,
+however, were not altogether peaceful ones. All the time there
+seemed to be a hammering inside his head, and from somewhere back
+in his obscured memory the name of Fentolin seemed to be continually
+asserting itself. From somewhere or other, the amazing sense which
+sometimes gives warning of danger to men of adventure, seemed to
+have opened its feelers. He rested because he was exhausted, but
+even in his sleep he was ill at ease.
+
+The doctor, with the telegrams in his hand, made his way down a
+splendid staircase, past the long picture gallery where masterpieces
+of Van Dyck and Rubens frowned and leered down upon him; descended
+the final stretch of broad oak stairs, crossed the hail, and entered
+his master's rooms. Mr. Fentolin was sitting before the open window,
+an easel in front of him, a palette in his left hand, painting with
+deft, swift touches.
+
+"Ah!" he exclaimed, without looking around, "it is my friend the
+doctor, my friend Sarson, M.D. of London, L.R.C.P. and all the
+rest of it. He brings with him the odour of the sick room. For a
+moment or two, just for a moment, dear friend, do not disturb me.
+Do not bring any alien thoughts into my brain. I am absorbed, you
+see - absorbed. It is a strange problem of colour, this."
+
+He was silent for several moments, glancing repeatedly out of the
+window and back to his canvas, painting all the time with swift and
+delicate precision.
+
+"Meekins, who stands behind my chair," Mr. Fentolin continued, "even
+Meekins is entranced. He has a soul, my friend Sarson, although you
+might not think it. He, too, sees sometimes the colour in the skies,
+the glitter upon the sands, the clear, sweet purity of those long
+stretches of virgin water. Meekins, I believe, has a soul, only he
+likes better to see these things grow under his master's touch than
+to wander about and solve their riddles for himself."
+
+The man remained perfectly immovable. Not a feature twitched. Yet
+it was a fact that, although he stood where Mr. Fentolin could not
+possibly observe him, he never removed his gaze from the canvas.
+
+"You see, my medical friend, that there has been a great tide in the
+night, following upon the flood? Even our small landmarks are
+shifted. Soon, in my little carriage, I shall ride down to the
+Tower. I shall sit there, and I shall watch the sea. I think that
+this evening, with the turn of the tide, the spray may reach even
+to my windows there. I shall paint again. There is always
+something fresh in the sea, you know - always something fresh in
+the sea. Like a human face - angry or pleased, sullen or joyful.
+Some people like to paint the sea at its calmest and most beautiful.
+Some people like to see happy faces around them. It is not every
+one who appreciates the other things. It is not quite like that
+with me, eh, Sarson?"
+
+His hand fell to his side. Momentarily he had finished his work.
+He turned around and eyed the doctor, who stood in taciturn silence.
+
+"Answer. Answer me," he insisted.
+
+The doctor's gloomy face seemed darker still.
+
+"You have spoken the truth, Mr. Fentolin," he admitted. "You are
+not one of the vulgar herd who love to consort with pleasure and
+happiness. You are one of those who understand the beauty of
+unhappiness - in others," he added, with faint emphasis.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled. His face became almost like the face of one
+of those angels of the great Italian master.
+
+"How well you know me!" he murmured. "My humble effort, Doctor
+- how do you like it?"
+
+The doctor bent over the canvas.
+
+"I know nothing about art," he said, a little roughly. "Your work
+seems to me clever - a little grotesque, perhaps; a little straining
+after the hard, plain things which threaten. Nothing of the
+idealist in your work, Mr. Fentolin."
+
+Mr. Fentolin studied the canvas himself for a moment.
+
+"A clever man, Sarson," he remarked coolly, "but no courtier. Never
+mind, my work pleases me. It gives me a passing sensation of
+happiness. Now, what about our patient?"
+
+"He recovers," the doctor pronounced. "From my short examination,
+I should say that he had the constitution of an ox. I have told
+him that he will be up in three days. As a matter of fact, he will
+be able, if he wants to, to walk out of the house to-morrow."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head.
+
+"We cannot spare him quite so soon," he declared. "We must avail
+ourselves of this wonderful chance afforded us by my brilliant young
+nephew. We must keep him with us for a little time. What is it
+that you have in your hands, Doctor? Telegrams, I think. Let me
+look at them."
+
+The doctor held them out. Mr. Fentolin took them eagerly between
+his thin, delicate fingers. Suddenly his face darkened, and became
+like the face of a spoilt and angry child.
+
+"Cipher!" he exclaimed furiously. "A cipher which he knows so well
+as to remember it, too! Never mind, it will be easy to decode. It
+will amuse me during the afternoon. Very good, Sarson. I will take
+charge of these."
+
+"You do not wish anything dispatched?"
+
+"Nothing at present," Mr. Fentolin sighed. "It will be well, I
+think, for the poor man to remain undisturbed by any communications
+from his friends. Is he restless at all?"
+
+"He wants to get on with his journey."
+
+"We shall see," Mr. Fentolin remarked. "Now feel my pulse, Sarson.
+How am I this morning?"
+
+The doctor held the thin wrist for a moment between his fingers,
+and let it go.
+
+"In perfect health, as usual," he announced grimly.
+
+"Ah, but you cannot be sure!" Mr. Fentolin protested. "My tongue,
+if you please."
+
+He put it out.
+
+"Excellent!"
+
+"We must make quite certain," Mr. Fentolin continued. "There are
+so many people who would miss me. My place in the world would not
+be easily filed. Undo my waistcoat, Sarson. Feel my heart, please.
+Feel carefully. I can see the end of your stethoscope in your
+pocket. Don't scamp it. I fancied this morning, when I was lying
+here alone, that there was something almost like a palpitation - a
+quicker beat. Be very careful, Sarson. Now."
+
+The doctor made his examination with impassive face. Then he
+stepped back.
+
+"There is no change in your condition, Mr. Fentolin," he announced.
+"The palpitation you spoke of is a mistake. You are in perfect
+health."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed gently.
+
+"Then," he said, "I will now amuse myself by a gentle ride down to
+the Tower. You are entirely satisfied, Sarson? You are keeping
+nothing back from me?"
+
+The doctor looked at him with grim, impassive face. "There is
+nothing to keep back," he declared. "You have the constitution of
+a cowboy. There is no reason why you should not live for another
+thirty years.
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed, as though a weight bad been removed from his
+heart.
+
+"I will now," he decided, reaching forward for the handle of his
+carriage, "go down to the Tower. It is just possible that a few
+days' seclusion might be good for our guest."
+
+The doctor turned silently away. There was no one there to see his
+expression as he walked towards the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+The two men who were supping together in the griliroom at the Cafe
+Milan were talking with a seriousness which seemed a little out of
+keeping with the rose-shaded lamps and the swaying music of the
+band from the distant restaurant. Their conversation had started
+some hours before in the club smoking-room and had continued
+intermittently throughout the evening. It had received a further
+stimulus when Richard Hamel, who had bought an Evening Standard on
+their way from the theatre a few minutes ago, came across a certain
+paragraph in it which he read aloud.
+
+"Hanged if I understand things over here, nowadays, Reggie!" he
+declared, laying the paper down. "Here's another Englishman
+imprisoned in Germany - this time at a place no one ever heard of
+before. I won't try to pronounce it. What does it all mean? It's
+all very well to shrug your shoulders, but when there are eighteen
+arrests within one week on a charge of espionage, there must be
+something up."
+
+For the first time Reginald Kinsley seemed inclined to discuss the
+subject seriously. He drew the paper towards him and read the
+little paragraph, word by word. Then he gave some further order to
+an attentive maitre d'hotel and glanced around to be sure that they
+were not overheard.
+
+"Look here, Dick, old chap," he said, "you are just back from abroad
+and you are not quite in the hang of things yet. Let me ask you a
+plain question. What do you think of us all?"
+
+"Think of you?" Hamel repeated, a little doubtfully. "Do you mean
+personally?"
+
+"Take it any way you like," Kinsley replied. Look at me. Nine
+years ago we played cricket in the same eleven. I don't look much
+like cricket now, do I?"
+
+Hamel looked at his companion thoughtfully. For a man who was
+doubtless still young, Kinsley had certainly an aged appearance.
+The hair about his temples was grey; there were lines about his
+mouth and forehead. He had the air of one who lived in an
+atmosphere of anxiety.
+
+"To me," Hamel declared frankly, "you look worried. If I hadn't
+heard so much of the success of your political career and all the
+rest of it, I should have thought that things were going badly
+with you."
+
+"They've gone well enough with me personally," Kinsley admitted,
+"but I'm only one of many. Politics isn't the game it was. The
+Foreign Office especially is ageing its men fast these few years.
+We've been going through hell, Hamel, and we are up against it now,
+hard up against it."
+
+The slight smile passed from the lips of Hamel's sunburnt,
+good-natured face. He himself seemed to become infected with
+something of his companion's anxiety.
+
+"There's nothing seriously wrong, is there, Reggie?" he asked.
+
+"Dick," said Kinsley, with a sigh, "I am afraid there is. It's
+very seldom I talk as plainly as this to any, one but you are just
+the person one can unburden oneself to a little; and to tell you
+the truth, it's rather a relief. As you say, these eighteen arrests
+in one week do mean something. Half of the Englishmen who have been
+arrested are, to my certain knowledge, connected with our Secret
+Service, and they have been arrested, in many cases, where there are
+no fortifications worth speaking of within fifty miles, on one
+pretext or another. The fact of the matter is that things are going
+on in Germany, just at the present moment, the knowledge of which is
+of vital interest to us."
+
+"Then these arrests," Hamel remarked," are really bona fide?"
+
+"Without a doubt," his companion agreed. "I only wonder there have
+not been more. I am telling you what is a pretty open secret when
+I tell you that there is a conference due to be held this week at
+some place or another on the continent-I don't know where, myself
+- which will have a very important bearing upon our future. We know
+just as much as that and not much more."
+
+"A conference between whom? " Hamel asked.
+
+Kinsley dropped his voice almost to a whisper.
+
+"We know," he replied, "that a very great man from Russia, a greater
+still from France, a minister from Austria, a statesman from Italy,
+and an envoy from Japan, have been invited to meet a German minister
+whose name I will not mention, even to you. The subject of their
+proposed discussion has never been breathed. One can only suspect.
+When I tell you that no one from this country was invited to the
+conference, I think you will be able, broadly speaking, to divine
+its purpose. The clouds have been gathering for a good many years,
+and we have only buried our heads a little deeper in the sands. We
+have had our chances and wilfully chucked them away. National
+Service or three more army corps four years ago would have brought
+us an alliance which would have meant absolute safety for twenty-one
+years. You know what happened. We have lived through many rumours
+and escaped, more narrowly than most people realise, a great many
+dangers, but there is every indication this time that the end is
+really coming."
+
+"And what will the end be?" Hamel enquired eagerly.
+
+Kinsley shrugged his shoulders and paused while their glasses were
+filled with wine.
+
+"It will be in the nature of a diplomatic coup," he said presently.
+"Of that much I feel sure. England will be forced into such a
+position that she will have no alternative left but to declare war.
+That, of course, will be the end of us. With our ridiculously
+small army and absolutely no sane scheme for home defence, we shall
+lose all that we have worth fighting for - our colonies - without
+being able to strike a blow. The thing is so ridiculously obvious.
+It has been admitted time after time by every sea lord and every
+commander-in-chief. We have listened to it, and that's all. Our
+fleet is needed under present conditions to protect our own shores.
+There isn't a single battleship which could be safely spared. Canada,
+Australia, New Zealand, Egypt, India, must take care of themselves.
+I wonder when a nation of the world ever played fast and loose with
+great possessions as we have done!"
+
+"This is a nice sort of thing to hear almost one's first night in
+England," Hamel remarked a little gloomily. "Tell me some more
+about this conference. Are you sure that your information is
+reliable?"
+
+"Our information is miserably scanty," Kinsley admitted. "Curiously
+enough, the man who must know most about the whole thing is an
+Englishman, one of the most curious mortals in the British Empire.
+A spy of his succeeded in learning more than any of our people, and
+without being arrested, too."
+
+"And who is this singular person?" Hamel asked.
+
+"A man of whom you, I suppose, never heard," Kinsley replied. "His
+name is Fentolin - Miles Fentolin - and he lives somewhere down in
+Norfolk. He is one of the strangest characters that ever lived,
+stranger than any effort of fiction I ever met with. He was in the
+Foreign Office once, and every one was predicting for him a brilliant
+career. Then there was an accident - let me see, it must have been
+some six or seven years ago - and he had to have both his legs
+amputated. No one knows exactly how the accident happened, and there
+was always a certain amount of mystery connected with it. Since then
+he has buried himself in the country. I don't think, in fact, that he
+ever moves outside his place; but somehow or other he has managed to
+keep in touch with all the political movements of the day."
+
+"Fentolin," Hamel repeated softly to himself. "Tell me, whereabouts
+does he live?"
+
+"Quite a wonderful place in Norfolk, I believe, somewhere near the
+sea. I've forgotten the name, for the moment. He has had wireless
+telegraphy installed; he has a telegraph office in the house,
+half-a-dozen private wires, and they say that he spends an immense
+amount of money keeping in touch with foreign politics. His excuse
+is that he speculates largely, as I dare say he does; but just
+lately," Kinsley went on more slowly, "he has been an object of
+anxiety to all of us. It was he who sent the first agent out to
+Germany, to try and discover at least where this conference was to
+be held. His man returned in safety, and he has one over there now
+who has not been arrested. We seem to have lost nearly all of ours."
+
+"Do you mean to say that this man Fentolin actually possesses
+information which the Government hasn't as to the intentions of
+foreign Powers?" Hamel asked.
+
+Kinsley nodded. There was a slight flush upon his pallid cheeks.
+
+"He not only has it, but he doesn't mean to part with it. A few
+hundred years ago, when the rulers of this country were men with
+blood in their veins, he'd have been given just one chance to tell
+all he knew, and hung as a traitor if he hesitated. We don't do
+that sort of thing nowadays. We rather go in for preserving
+traitors. We permit them even in our own House of Commons. However,
+I don't want to depress you and play the alarmist so soon after your
+return to London. I dare say the old country'll muddle along through
+our time."
+
+"Don't be foolish," Hamel begged. "There's no other subject of
+conversation could interest me half as much. Have you formed any
+idea yourself as to the nature of this conference?"
+
+"We all have an idea," Kinsley replied grimly; "India for Russia; a
+large slice of China for Japan, with probably Australia thrown in;
+Alsace-Lorraine for France's neutrality. There's bribery for you.
+What's to become of poor England then? Our friends are only human,
+after all, and it's merely a question of handing over to them
+sufficient spoil. They must consider themselves first: that's the
+first duty of their politicians towards their country."
+
+"You mean to say," Hamel asked, "that you seriously believe that a
+conference is on the point of being held at which France and Russia
+are to be invited to consider suggestions like this?"
+
+"I am afraid there's no doubt about it," Kinsley declared. "Their
+ambassadors in London profess to know nothing. That, of course,
+is their reasonable attitude, but there's no doubt whatever that
+the conference has been planned. I should say that to-night we are
+nearer war, if we can summon enough spirit to fight, than we have
+been since Fashoda."
+
+"Queer if I have returned just in time for the scrap," Hamel remarked
+thoughtfully. "I was in the Militia once, so I expect I can get a
+job, if there's any fighting."
+
+"I can get you a better job than fighting - one you can start on
+to-morrow, too," Kinsley announced abruptly, "that is if you really
+want to help?"
+
+"Of course I do," Hamel insisted. "I'm on for anything."
+
+"You say that you are entirely your own master for the next six
+months?"
+
+"Or as much longer as I like," Hamel assented. "No plans at all,
+except that I might drift round to the Norfolk coast and look up
+some of the places where the governor used to paint. There's a
+queer little house - St. David's Tower, I believe they call it
+- which really belongs to me. It was given to my father, or rather
+he bought it, from a man who I think must have been some relative
+of your friend. I feel sure the name was Fentolin."
+
+Reginald Kinsley set down his wine-glass.
+
+"Is your St. David's Tower anywhere near a place called Salthouse?"
+he asked reflectively.
+
+"That's the name of the village," Hamel admitted. "My father used
+to spend quite a lot of time in those parts, and painted at least a
+dozen pictures down there."
+
+"This is a coincidence," Reginald Kinsley declared, lighting a
+cigarette. "I think, if I were you, Dick, I'd go down and claim
+my property."
+
+"Tired of me already?" Hamel asked, smiling.
+
+Reginald Kinsley knocked the ash from his cigarette.
+
+"It isn't that. The fact is, that job I was speaking to you about
+was simply this. We want some one to go down to Salthouse - not
+exactly as a spy, you know, but some one who has his wits about him.
+We are all of us very curious about this man Fentolin. There are
+o end of rumours which I won't mention to you, for they might only
+put you off the scent. But the man seems to be always intriguing.
+It wouldn't matter so much if he were our friend, or if he were
+simply a financier, but to tell you the truth, we have cause to
+suspect him."
+
+"But he's an Englishman, surely?" Hamel asked. "The Fentolin who
+was my father's friend was just a very wealthy Norfolk squire - one
+of the best, from all I have heard."
+
+"Miles Fentolin is an Englishman," Kinsley admitted. "It is true,
+too, that he comes of a very ancient Norfolk family. It doesn't do,
+however, to build too much upon that. From all I can learn of him,
+he is a sort of Puck, a professional mischief-maker. I don't
+suppose there's anything an outsider could find out which would be
+really useful to us, but all the same, if I had the time, I should
+certainly go down to Norfolk myself."
+
+The conversation drifted away for a while. Mutual acquaintances
+entered, there were several introductions, and it was not until
+the two found themselves together in Kinsley's rooms for a few
+minutes before parting that they were alone again. Hamel returned
+then once more to the subject.
+
+"Reggie," he said, "if you think it would be of the slightest use,
+I'll go down to Salthouse to-morrow. I am rather keen on going
+there, anyway. I am absolutely fed up with life here already."
+
+"It's just what I want you to do," Kinsley said. "I am afraid
+Fentolin is a little too clever for you to get on the right side
+of him, but if you could only get an idea as to what his game is
+down there, it would be a great help. You see, the fellow can't
+have gone into all this sort of thing blindfold. We've lost
+several very useful agents abroad and two from New York who've
+gone into his pay. There must be a method in it somewhere. If
+it really ends with his financial operations - why, all right.
+That's very likely what it'll come to, but we should like to know.
+The merest hint would be usefuL"
+
+"I'll do my best," Hamel promised. "In any case, it will be just
+the few days' holiday I was looking forward to."
+
+Kinsley helped himself to whisky and soda and turned towards his
+friend.
+
+"Here's luck to you, Dick! Take care of yourself. All sorts of
+things may happen, you know. Old man Fentolin may take a fancy to
+you and tell you secrets that any statesman in Europe would be glad
+to hear. He may tell you why this conference is being held and
+what the result will be. You may be the first to hear of our coming
+fall. Well, here's to you, anyway! Drop me a line, if you've
+anything to report."
+
+"Cheero!" Hamel answered, as he set down his empty tumbler.
+"Astonishing how keen I feel about this little adventure. I'm
+perfectly sick of the humdrum life I have been leading the last
+week, and you do sort of take one back to the Arabian Nights, you
+know, Reggie. I am never quite sure whether to take you seriously
+or not."
+
+Kinsley smiled as he held his friend's band for a moment.
+
+"Dick," he said earnestly, "if only you'd believe it, the adventures
+in the Arabian Nights were as nothing compared with the present-day
+drama of foreign politics. You see, we've learned to conceal things
+nowadays - to smooth them over, to play the part of ordinary citizens
+to the world while we tug at the underhand levers in our secret
+moments. Good night! Good luck!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Richard Hame1, although he certainly had not the appearance of a
+person afflicted with nerves, gave a slight start. For the last
+half-hour, during which time the train had made no stop, he had
+been alone in his compartment. Yet, to his surprise, he was
+suddenly aware that the seat opposite to him had been noiselessly
+taken by a girl whose eyes, also, were fixed with curious
+intentness upon the broad expanse of marshland and sands across
+which the train was slowly making its way. Hamel had spent a great
+many years abroad, and his first impulse was to speak with the
+unexpected stranger. He forgot for a moment that he was in England,
+travelling in a first-class carriage, and pointed with his left hand
+towards the sea.
+
+"Queer country this, isn't it?" he remarked pleasantly. "Do you
+know, I never heard you come in. It gave me quite a start when I
+found that I had a fellow-passenger."
+
+She looked at him with a certain amount of still surprise, a look
+which he returned just as steadfastly, because even in those few
+seconds he was conscious of that strange selective interest,
+certainly unaccounted for by his own impressions of her appearance.
+She seemed to him, at that first glance, very far indeed from being
+good-looking, according to any of the standards by which he had
+measured good looks. She was thin, too thin for his taste, and she
+carried herself with an aloofness to which he was unaccustomed.
+Her cheeks were quite pale, her hair of a soft shade of brown, her
+eyes grey and sad. She gave him altogether an impression of
+colourlessness, and he had been living in a land where colour and
+vitality meant much. Her speech, too, in its very restraint, fell
+strangely upon his ears.
+
+"I have been travelling in an uncomfortable compartment," she
+observed. "I happened to notice, when passing along the corridor,
+that yours was empty. In any case, I am getting out at the next
+station."
+
+"So am I," he replied, still cheerfully. "I suppose the next
+station is St. David's?"
+
+She made no answer, but so far as her expression counted for
+anything at all, she was a little surprised. Her eyes considered
+him for a moment. Hamel was tall, well over six feet, powerfully
+made, with good features, clear eyes, and complexion unusually
+sunburnt. He wore a flannel collar of unfamiliar shape, and his
+clothes, although they were neat enough, were of a pattern and cut
+obviously designed to afford the maximum of ease and comfort with
+the minimum regard to appearance. He wore, too, very thick boots,
+and his hands gave one the impression that they were seldom gloved.
+His voice was pleasant, and he had the easy self-confidence of a
+person sure of himself in the world. She put him down as a colonial
+- perhaps an American - but his rank in life mystified her.
+
+"This seems the queerest stretch of country," he went on; "long
+spits of sand jutting right out into the sea, dikes and creeks
+- miles and miles of them. Now, I wonder, is it low tide or high?
+ Low, I should think, because of the sea-shine on the sand there."
+
+She glanced out of the window.
+
+"The tide," she told him, "is almost at its lowest."
+
+"You live in this neighbourhood, perhaps?" he enquired.
+
+"I do," she assented.
+
+"Sort of country one might get very fond of," he ventured.
+
+She glanced at him from the depths of her grey eyes.
+
+"Do you think so?" she rejoined coldly. "For my part, I hate it."
+
+He was surprised at the unexpected emphasis of her tone - the first
+time, indeed, that she had shown any signs of interest in the
+conversation.
+
+"Kind of dull I suppose you find it," he remarked pensively, looking
+out across the waste of lavender-grown marshes, sand hummocks piled
+with seaweed, and a far distant line of pebbled shore. "And yet, I
+don't know. I have lived by the sea a good deal, and however
+monotonous it may seem at first, there's always plenty of change,
+really. Tide and wind do such wonderful work."
+
+She, too, was looking out now towards the sea.
+
+"Oh, it isn't exactly that," she said quietly. "I am quite willing
+to admit what all the tourists and chance visitors call the
+fascination of these places. I happen to dislike them, that is all.
+Perhaps it is because I live here, because I see them day by day;
+perhaps because the sight of them and the thought of them have
+become woven into my life."
+
+She was talking half to herself. For a moment, even the knowledge
+of his presence had escaped her. Hamel, however, did not realise
+that fact. He welcomed her confidence as a sign of relaxation from
+the frigidity of her earlier demeanour.
+
+"That seems hard," he observed sympathetically. "It seems odd to
+hear you talk like that, too. Your life, surely, ought to be
+pleasant enough."
+
+She looked away from the sea into his face. Although the genuine
+interest which she saw there and the kindly expression of his eyes
+disarmed annoyance, she still stiffened slightly.
+
+"Why ought it?."
+
+The question was a little bewildering.
+
+"Why, because you are young and a girl," he replied. "It's natural
+to be cheerful, isn't it?"
+
+"Is it?" she answered listlessly. "I cannot tell. I have not had
+much experience."
+
+"How old are you?" he asked bluntly.
+
+This time it certainly seemed as though her reply would contain
+some rebuke for his curiosity. She glanced once more into his
+face, however, and the instinctive desire to administer that
+well-deserved snub passed away. He was so obviously interested,
+his question was asked so naturally, that its spice of
+impertinence was as though it had not existed.
+
+"I am twenty-one," she told him.
+
+"And how long have you lived here?
+
+"Since I left boarding-school, four years ago."
+
+"Anywhere near where I am going to bury myself for a time, I wonder?"
+he went on.
+
+"That depends," she replied. "Our only neighbours are the
+Lorneybrookes of Market Burnham. Are you going there?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I've got a little shanty of my own," he explained, "quite close to
+St. David's Station. I've never even seen it yet."
+
+She vouchsafed some slight show of curiosity.
+
+"Where is this shanty, as you call it?" she asked him.
+
+"I really haven't the faintest idea," he replied. "I am looking
+for it now. All I can tell you is that it stands just out of reach
+of the full tides, on a piece of rock, dead on the beach and about
+a mile from the station. It was built originally for a coastguard
+station and meant to hold a lifeboat, but they found they could
+never launch the lifeboat when they had it, so the man to whom all
+the foreshore and most of the land around here belongs - a Mr.
+Fentolin, I believe - sold it to my father. I expect the place has
+tumbled to pieces by this time, but I thought I'd have a look at it."
+
+She was gazing at him steadfastly now, with parted lips.
+
+"What is your name?" she demanded.
+
+"Richard Hamel."
+
+"Hamel."
+
+She repeated it lingeringly. It seemed quite unfamiliar.
+
+"Was your father a great friend of Mr. Fentolin's, then?" she asked.
+
+"I believe so, in a sort of way," he answered. "My father was Hamel
+the artist, you know. They made him an R.A. some time before he
+died. He used to come out here and live in a tent. Then Mr.
+Fentolin let him use this place and finally sold it to him. My
+father used often to speak to me about it before he died."
+
+"Tell me," she enquired, "I do not know much about these matters,
+but have you any papers to prove that it was sold to your father
+and that you have the right to occupy it now when you choose?"
+
+He smiled.
+
+"Of course I have," he assured her. "As a matter of fact, as none
+of us have been here for so long, I thought I'd better bring the
+title-deed, or whatever they call it, along with me. It's with the
+rest of my traps at Norwich. Oh, the place belongs to me, right
+enough!" he went on, smiling. "Don't tell me that any one's pulled
+it down, or that it's disappeared from the face of the earth?"
+
+"No," she said, "it still remains there. When we are round the next
+curve, I think I can show it to you. But every one has forgotten,
+I think, that it doesn't belong to Mr. Fentolin still. He uses it
+himself very often."
+
+"What for?"
+
+She looked at her questioner quite steadfastly, quite quietly,
+speechlessly. A curious uneasiness crept into his thoughts. There
+were mysterious tbings in her face. He knew from that moment that
+she, too, directly or indirectly, was concerned with those strange
+happenings at which Kinsley had hinted. He knew that there were
+things which she was keeping from him now.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin uses one of the rooms as a studio. He likes to paint
+there and be near the sea," she explained. "But for the rest, I do
+not know. I never go near the place."
+
+"I am afraid," he remarked, after a few moments of silence, "that I
+shall be a little unpopular with Mr. Fentolin. Perhaps I ought to
+have written first, but then, of course, I had no idea that any one
+was making use of the place."
+
+"I do not understand," she said, "how you can possibly expect to
+come down like this and live there, without any preparation."
+
+"Why not? "
+
+"You haven't any servants nor any furniture nor things to cook with."
+
+He laughed.
+
+"Oh! I am an old campaigner," he assured her. "I meant to pick up
+a few oddments in the village. I don't suppose I shall stay very
+long, anyhow, but I thought I'd like to have a look at the place.
+By-the-by, what sort of a man is Mr. Fentolin?"
+
+Again there was that curious expression in her eyes, an expression
+almost of secret terror, this time not wholly concealed. He could
+have sworn that her hands were cold.
+
+"He met with an accident many years ago," she said slowly. "Both
+his legs were amputated. He spends his life in a little carriage
+which he wheels about himself."
+
+"Poor fellow!" Hamel exclaimed, with a strong man's ready sympathy
+for suffering. "That is just as much as I have heard about him.
+Is he a decent sort of fellow in other ways? I suppose, anyhow,
+if he has really taken a fancy to my little shanty, I shall have
+to give it up."
+
+Then, as it seemed to him, for the first time real life leaped into
+her face. She leaned towards him. Her tone was half commanding,
+half imploring, her manner entirely confidential.
+
+"Don't!" she begged. "It is yours. Claim it. Live in it. Do
+anything you like with it, but take it away from Mr. Fentolin!"
+
+Hamel was speechless. He sat a little forward, a hand on either
+knee, his mouth ungracefully open, an expression of blank and
+utter bewilderment in his face. For the first time he began to
+have vague doubts concerning this young lady. Everything about
+her had been so strange: her quiet entrance into the carriage,
+her unusual manner of talking, and finally this last passionate,
+inexplicable appeal.
+
+"I am afraid," he said at last, "I don't quite understand. You
+say the poor fellow has taken a fancy to the place and likes being
+there. Well, it isn't much of a catch for me, anyway. I'm rather
+a wanderer, and I dare say I shan't be back in these parts again
+for years. Why shouldn't I let him have it if he wants it? It's
+no loss to me. I'm not a painter, you know, like my father."
+
+She seemed on the point of making a further appeal. Her lips, even,
+were parted, her head a little thrown back. And then she stopped.
+She said nothing. The silence lasted so long that he became almost
+embarrassed.
+
+"You will forgive me if I am a little dense, won't you?" he begged.
+"To tell you the truth," he went on, smiling, "I've got a sort of
+feeling that I'd like to do anything you ask me. Now won't you
+just explain a little more clearly what you mean, and I'll blow
+up the old place sky high, if it's any pleasure to you."
+
+She seemed suddenly to have reverted to her former self - the cold
+and colourless young woman who had first taken the seat opposite
+to his.
+
+"Mine was a very foolish request," she admitted quietly. "I am
+sorry that I ever made it. It was just an impulse, because the
+little building we were speaking of has been connected with one or
+two very disagreeable episodes. Nevertheless, it was foolish of
+me. How long did you think of staying there - that is," she added,
+with a faint smile," providing that you find it possible to prove
+your claim and take up possession? "
+
+"Oh, just for a week or so," he answered lightly, "and as to
+regaining possession of it," he went on, a slightly pugnacious
+instinct stirring him, "I don't imagine that there'll be any
+difficulty about that."
+
+"Really!" she murmured.
+
+"Not that I want to make myself disagreeable," he continued, "but
+the Tower is mine, right enough, even if I have let it remain
+unoccupied for some time."
+
+She let down the window - a task in which he hastened to assist her.
+A rush of salt, cold air swept into the compartment. He sniffed it
+eagerly.
+
+"Wonderful! " he exclaimed.
+
+She stretched out a long arm and pointed. Away in the distance, on
+the summit of a line of pebbled shore, standing, as it seemed, sheer
+over the sea, was a little black speck.
+
+That," she said, " is the Tower."
+
+He changed his position and leaned out of the window.
+
+"Well, it's a queer little place," he remarked. "It doesn't look
+worth quarrelling over, does it?"
+
+"And that," she went on, directing his attention to the hill, " is
+Mr. Fentolin's home, St. David's Hall."
+
+For several moments he made no remark at all. There was something
+curiously impressive in that sudden sweep up from the sea-line; the
+strange, miniature mountain standing in the middle of the marshes,
+with its tree-crowned background; and the long, weather-beaten front
+of the house turned bravely to the sea.
+
+"I never saw anything like it," he declared. "Why, it's barely a
+quarter of a mile from the sea, isn't it? "
+
+"A little more than that. It is a strangely situated abode, isn't
+it?"
+
+"Wonderful!" he agreed, with emphasis. "I must study the geological
+formation of that hill," he continued, with interest. "Why, it looks
+almost like an island now."
+
+"That is because of the floods," she told him. "Even at high tide
+the creeks never reach so far as the back there. All the water you
+see stretching away inland is flood water - the result of the storm,
+I suppose. This is where you get out," she concluded, rising to
+her feet.
+
+She turned away with the slightest nod. A maid was already
+awaiting her at the door of the compartment. Hamel was suddenly
+conscious of the fact that he disliked her going immensely.
+
+"We shall, perhaps, meet again during the next few days," he
+remarked.
+
+She half turned her head. Her expression was scarcely encouraging.
+
+"I hope," she said, "that you will not be disappointed in your
+quarters."
+
+Hamel followed her slowly on to the platform, saw her escorted to
+a very handsome motor-car by an obsequious station-master, and
+watched the former disappear down the stretch of straight road
+which led to the hill. Then, with a stick in one hand, and the
+handbag which was his sole luggage in the other, he left the
+station and turned seaward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Mr. Fentolin, surrounded by his satellites, was seated in his chair
+before the writing-table. There were present in the room most of
+the people important to him in his somewhat singular life. A few
+feet away, in characteristic attitude, stood Meekins. Doctor Sarson,
+with his hands behind him, was looking out of the window. At the
+further end of the table stood a confidential telegraph clerk, who
+was just departing with a little sheaf of messages. By his side,
+with a notebook in her hand, stood Mr. Fentolin's private secretary
+- a white-haired woman, with a strangely transparent skin and light
+brown eyes, dressed in somber black, a woman who might have been
+of any age from thirty to fifty. Behind her was a middle-aged man
+whose position in the household no one was quite sure about - a
+clean-shaven man whose name was Ryan, and who might very well have
+been once an actor or a clergyman.. In the background stood
+Henderson, the perfect butler.
+
+"It is perhaps opportune," Mr. Fentolin said quietly, "that you
+all whom I trust should be present here together. I wish you to
+understand one thing. You have, I believe, in my employ learned
+the gift of silence. It is to be exercised with regard to a
+certain visitor brought here by my nephew, a visitor whom I regret
+to say is now lying seriously ill."
+
+There was absolute silence. Doctor Sarson alone turned from the
+window as though about to speak, but met Mr. Fentolin's eye and at
+once resumed his position.
+
+"I rely upon you all," Mr. Fentolin continued softly. "Henderson, you, perhaps, have the most
+difficult task, for you have the servants to control. Nevertheless,
+I rely upon you, also. If one word of this visitor's presence here
+leaks out even so far as the village, out they go, every one of them.
+I will not have a servant in the place who does not respect my
+wishes. You can give any reason you like for my orders. It is a
+whim. I have whims, and I choose to pay for them. You are all
+better paid than any man breathing could pay you. In return I ask
+only for your implicit obedience."
+
+He stretched out his hand and took a cigarette from a curiously
+carved ivory box which stood by his side. He tapped it gently upon
+the table and looked up.
+
+"I think, sir," Henderson said respectfully, "that I can answer for
+the servants. Being mostly foreigners, they see little or nothing
+of the village people."
+
+No one else made any remark. It was strange to see how dominated
+they all were by that queer little fragment of humanity, whose head
+scarcely reached a foot above the table before which he sat. They
+departed silently, almost abjectly, dismissed with a single wave of
+the hand. Mr. Fentolin beckoned his secretary to remain. She came
+a little nearer.
+
+"Sit down, Lucy," he ordered.
+
+She seated herself a few feet away from him. Mr. Fentolin watched
+her for several moments. He himself had his back to the light.
+The woman, on the other hand, was facing it. The windows were high,
+and the curtains were drawn back to their fullest extent. A cold
+stream of northern light fell upon her face. Mr. Fentolin gazed at
+her and nodded her head slightly.
+
+"My dear Lucy," he declared, "you are wonderful - a perfect cameo,
+a gem. To look at you now, with your delightful white hair and your
+flawless skin, one would never believe that you bad ever spoken a
+single angry word, that you had ever felt the blood flow through
+your veins, or that your eyes had ever looked upon the gentle things
+of life."
+
+She looked at him, still without speech. The immobility of her
+face was indeed a marvellous thing. Mr. Fentolin's expression
+darkened.
+
+"Sometimes," he murmured softly, "I think that if I had strong
+fingers - really strong fingers, you know, Lucy - I should want to
+take you by the throat and hold you tighter and tighter, until your
+breath came fast, and your eyes came out from their shadows."
+
+She turned over a few pages of her notebook. To all appearance
+she had not heard a word.
+
+"To-day," she announced, "is the fourth of April. Shall I send out
+the various checks to those men in Paris, New York, Frankfort, St.
+Petersburg, and Tokio?"
+
+"You can send the checks," he told her. "Be sure that you draw
+them, as usual, upon the Credit Lyonaise and in the name you know
+of. Say to Lebonaitre of Paris that you consider his last reports
+faulty. No mention was made of Monsieur C's visit to the Russian
+Embassy, or of the supper party given to the Baron von Erlstein by
+a certain Russian gentleman. Warn him, if you please, that reports
+with such omissions are useless to me."
+
+She wrote a few words in her book.
+
+"You made a note of that?"
+
+She raised her head.
+
+"I do not make mistakes," she said.
+
+His eyebrows were drawn together. This was his work, he told
+himself, this magnificent physical subjection. Yet his
+inability to stir her sometimes maddened him.
+
+"You know who is in this house?" he asked. "You know the name of
+my unknown guest?"
+
+"I know nothing," she replied. "His presence does not interest me."
+
+"Supposing I desire you to know?" he persisted, leaning a little
+forward. "Supposing I tell you that it is your duty to know?"
+
+"Then," she said, "I should tell you that I believe him to be the
+special envoy from New York to The Hague, or whatever place on the
+Continent this coming conference is to be held at."
+
+"Right, woman!" Mr. Fentolin answered sharply. "Right! It is the
+special envoy. He has his mandate with him. I have them both - the
+man and his mandate. Can you guess what I am going to do with them?"
+
+"It is not difficult," she replied. "Your methods are scarcely
+original. His mandate to the flames, and his body to the sea!"
+
+She raised her eyes as she spoke and looked over Mr. Fentolin's
+shoulder, across the marshland to the grey stretch of ocean. Her
+eyes became fixed. It was not possible to say that they held any
+expression, and yet one felt that she saw beneath the grey waves,
+even to the rocks and caverns below.
+
+"It does not terrify you, then," he asked curiously, "to think that
+a man under this roof is about to die?"
+
+"Why should it?" she retorted. "Death does not frighten me - my
+own or anybody else's. Does it frighten you?"
+
+His face was suddenly livid, his eyes full of fierce anger. His
+lips twitched. He struck the table before him.
+
+"Beast of a woman!" he shouted. "You ghoul! How dare you! How
+dare you -"
+
+He stopped short. He passed his hand across his forehead. All the
+time the woman remained unmoved.
+
+"Do you know," he muttered, his voice still shaking a little, "that
+I believe sometimes I am afraid of you? How would you like to see
+me there, eh, down at the bottom of that hungry sea? You watch
+sometimes so fixedly. You'd miss me, wouldn't you? I am a good
+master, you know. I pay well. You've been with me a good many
+years. You were a different sort of woman when you first came."
+
+ "Yes," she admitted, "I was a different sort of woman."
+
+"You don't remember those days, I suppose," he went on, "the days
+when you had brown hair, when you used to carry roses about and
+sing to yourself while you beat your work out of that wretched
+typewriter?"
+
+"No," she answered, "I do not remember those days. They do not
+belong to me. It is some other woman you are thinking of."
+
+
+Their eyes met. Mr. Fentolin turned away first. He struck the
+bell at his elbow. She rose at once.
+
+"Be off!" he ordered. "When you look at me like that, you send
+shivers through me! You'll have to go; I can see you'll have to go.
+I can't keep you any longer. You are the only person on the face
+of the earth who dares to say things to me which make me think, the
+only person who doesn't shrink at the sound of my voice. You'll
+have to go. Send Sarson to me at once. You've upset me!"
+
+She listened to his words in expressionless silence. When he had
+finished, carrying her book in her hand, she very quietly moved
+towards the door. He watched her, leaning a little forward in his
+chair, his lips parted, his eyes threatening. She walked with
+steady, even footsteps. She carried herself with almost machine-like
+erectness; her skirts were noiseless. She had the trick of turning
+the handle of the door in perfect silence. He heard her calm voice
+in the hall.
+
+"Doctor Sarson is to go to Mr. Fentolin."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat quite still, feeling his own pulse.
+
+"That woman," he muttered to himself, "that -woman - some day I
+shouldn't be surprised if she really -"
+
+He paused. The doctor had entered the room.
+
+"I am upset, Sarson," he declared. "Come and feel my pulse quickly.
+That woman has upset me."
+
+"Miss Price?"
+
+"Miss Price, d-n it! Lucy - yes!"
+
+"It seems unlike her," the doctor remarked. "I have never heard her
+utter a useless syllable in my life."
+
+Mr. Fentolin held out his wrist.
+
+"It's what she doesn't say," he muttered.
+
+The doctor produced his watch. In less than a minute he put it
+away.
+
+"This is quite unnecessary," he pronounced. "Your pulse is
+wonderful."
+
+"Not hurried? No signs of palpitation?"
+
+"You have seven or eight footmen, all young men," Doctor Sarson
+replied drily. "I will wager that there isn't one of them has a
+pulse so vigorous as yours."
+
+Mr. Fentolin leaned a little back in his chair. An expression of
+satisfaction crept over his face.
+
+"You reassure me, my dear Sarson. That is excellent. What of our
+patient?"
+
+"There is no change."
+
+"I am afraid," Mr. Fentolin sighed, "that we shall have trouble
+with him. These strong people always give trouble."
+
+"It will be just the same in the long run," the doctor remarked,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+Mr. Fentolin held up his finger.
+
+"Listen! A motor-car, I believe?"
+
+"It is Miss Fentolin who is just arriving," the doctor announced.
+"I saw the car coming as I crossed the hall."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded gently.
+
+"Indeed?" he replied. "Indeed? So my dear niece has returned.
+Open the door, friend Sarson. Open the door, if you please. She
+will be anxious to see me. We must summon her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Mr. Fentolin raised to his lips the little gold whistle which hung
+from his neck and blew it. He seemed to devote very little effort
+to the operation, yet the strength of the note was wonderful. As
+the echoes died away, he let it fall by his side and waited with
+a pleased smile upon his lips. In a few seconds there was the
+hurried flutter of skirts and the sound of footsteps. The girl who
+had just completed her railway journey entered, followed by her
+brother. They were both a little out of breath, they both
+approached the chair without a smile, the girl in advance, with a
+certain expression of apprehension in her eyes. Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+He appeared to notice these things and regret them.
+
+"My child," he said, holding out his hands, "my dear Esther, welcome
+home again! I heard the car outside. I am grieved that you did not
+at once hurry to my side."
+
+"I have not been in the house two minutes," Esther replied, "and I
+haven't seen mother yet. Forgive me."
+
+She had come to a standstill a few yards away. She moved now very
+slowly towards the chair, with the air of one fulfilling a hateful
+task. The fingers which accepted his hands were extended almost
+hesitatingly. He drew her closer to him and held her there.
+
+"Your mother, my dear Esther, is, I regret to say, suffering from
+a slight indisposition," he remarked. "She has been confined to
+her room for the last few days. Just a trifling affair of the
+nerves; nothing more, Doctor Sarson assures me. But my dear child,"
+he went on, "your fingers are as cold as ice. You look at me so
+strangely, too. Alas! you have not the affectionate disposition
+of your dear mother. One would scarcely believe that we have been
+parted for more than a week."
+
+"For more than a week," she repeated, under her breath.
+
+"Stoop down, my dear. I must kiss your forehead - there! Now
+bring up a chair to my side. You seem frightened - alarmed. Have
+you ill news for me?"
+
+"I have no news," she answered, gradually recovering herself.
+
+"The gaieties of London, I fear," he protested gently, "have proved
+a little unsettling."
+
+"There were no gaieties for me," the girl replied bitterly. "Mrs.
+Sargent obeyed your orders very faithfully. I was not allowed to
+move out except with her."
+
+"My dear child, you would not go about London unchaperoned!"
+
+"There is a difference," she retorted, "between a chaperon and a
+jailer."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed. He shook his head slowly. He seemed pained.
+
+"I am not sure that you repay my care as it deserves, Esther," he
+declared. "There is something in your deportment which disappoints
+me. Never mind, your brother has made some atonement. I entrusted
+him with a little mission in which I am glad to say that he has
+been brilliantly successful."
+
+"I cannot say that I am glad to hear it," Esther replied quietly.
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat back in his chair. His long fingers played
+nervously together, he looked at her gravely.
+
+"My dear child," he exclaimed, in a tone of pained surprise, "your
+attitude distresses me!"
+
+"I cannot help it. I have told you what I think about Gerald and
+the life he is compelled to live here. I don't mind so much for
+myself, but for him I think it is abominable."
+
+"The same as ever," Mr. Fentolin sighed. "I fear that this little
+change has done you no good, dear niece.
+
+"Change!" she echoed. "It was only a change of prisons."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head slowly - a distressful gesture. Yet
+all the time he had somehow the air of a man secretly gratified.
+
+"You are beginning to depress me," he announced. "I think that
+you can go away. No, stop for just one moment. Stand there in
+the light. Dear me, how unfortunate! Who would have thought that
+so beautiful a mother could have so plain a daughter!"
+
+She stood quite still before him, her hands crossed in front of
+her, something of the look of the nun from whom the power of
+suffering has gone in her still, cold face and steadfast eyes.
+
+"Not a touch of colour," he continued meditatively, "a figure
+straight as my walking-stick. What a pity! And all the taste,
+nowadays, they tell me, is in the other direction. The lank
+damsels have gone completely out. We buried them with Oscar Wilde.
+Run along, my dear child. You do not amuse me. You can take Gerald
+with you, if you will. I have nothing to say to Gerald just now.
+He is in my good books. Is there anything I can do for you, Gerald?
+Your allowance, for instance - a trifling increase or an advance?
+I am in a generous humour."
+
+"Then grant me what I begged for the other day," the boy answered
+quickly. "Let me go to Sandhurst. I could enter my name next week
+for the examinations, and I could pass to-morrow."
+
+Mr. Fentolin tapped the table thoughtfully with his forefinger.
+
+"A little ungrateful, my dear boy," he declared, "a little ungrateful
+that, I think. Your confidence in yourself pleases me, though. You
+think you could pass your examinations?"
+
+"I did a set of papers last week," the boy replied. "On the given
+percentages I came out twelfth or better. Mr. Brown assured me
+that I could go in for them at any moment. He promised to write
+you about it before he left."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded gently.
+
+"Now I come to think of it, I did have a letter from Mr. Brown,"
+he remarked. "Rather an impertinence for a tutor, I thought it.
+He devoted three pages towards impressing upon me the necessity of
+your adopting some sort of a career."
+
+"He wrote because he thought it was his duty," the boy said doggedly.
+
+"So you want to be a soldier," Mr. Fentolln continued musingly.
+"Well, well, why not? Our picture galleries are full of them.
+There has been a Fentolin in every great battle for the last five
+hundred years. Sailors, too - plenty of them - and just a few
+diplomatists. Brave fellows! Not one, I fancy," he added, "like
+me - not one condemned to pass their days in a perambulator. You
+are a fine fellow, Gerald - a regular Fentolin. Getting on for
+six feet, aren't you?
+
+" Six feet two, sir."
+
+"A very fine fellow," Mr. Fentolin repeated. "I am not so sure
+about the army, Gerald. You see, there are some people who say,
+like your American friend, that we are even now almost on the brink
+of war."
+
+"All the more reason for me to hurry," the boy begged.
+
+Mr. Fentolin closed his eyes.
+
+"Don't!" he insisted. "Have you ever stopped to think what war
+means - the war you speak of so lightly? The suffering, the misery
+of it! All the pageantry and music and heroism in front; and behind,
+a blackened world, a trail of writhing corpses, a world of weeping
+women for whom the sun shall never rise again. Ugh! An ugly thing
+war, Gerald. I am not sure that you are not better at home here.
+Why not practise golf a little more assiduously? I see from the
+local paper that you are still playing at two handicap. Now with
+your physique, I should have thought you would have been a scratch
+player long before now."
+
+"I play cricket, sir," the boy reminded him, a little impatiently,
+"and, after all, there are other things in the world besides games."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's long finger shot suddenly out. He was leaning a
+little from his chair. His expression of gentle immobility had
+passed away. His face was stern, almost stony.
+
+"You have spoken the truth, Gerald," he said. "There are other
+things in the world besides games. There is the real, the tragical
+side of life, the duties one takes up, the obligations of honour.
+You have not forgotten, young man, the burden you carry?"
+
+The boy was paler, but he had drawn himself to his full height.
+
+"I have not forgotten, sir," he answered bitterly. "Do I show any
+signs of forgetting? Haven't I done your bidding year by year?
+Aren't I here now to do it?"
+
+"Then do it !" Mr. Fentolin retorted sharply. "When I am ready for
+you to leave here, you shall leave. Until then, you are mine.
+Remember that. Ah! this is Doctor Sarson who comes, I believe.
+That must mean that it is five o'clock. Come in, Doctor. I am not
+engaged. You see, I am alone with my dear niece and nephew. We
+have been having a little pleasant conversation."
+
+Doctor Sarson bowed to Esther, who scarcely glanced at him. He
+remained in the background, quietly waiting.
+
+"A very delightful little conversation," Mr. Fentolin concluded.
+"I have been congratulating my nephew, Doctor, upon his wisdom in
+preferring the quiet country life down here to the wearisome routine
+of a profession. He escapes the embarrassing choice of a career by
+preferring to devote his life to my comfort. I shall not forget it.
+I shall not be ungrateful. I may have my faults, but I am not
+ungrateful Run away now, both of you. Dear children you are, but
+one wearies, you know, of everything. I am going out. You see,
+the twilight is coming. The tide is changing. I am going down to
+meet the sea."
+
+His little carriage moved towards the door. The brother and sister
+passed out. Esther led Gerald into the great dining-room, and from
+there, through the open windows, out on to the terrace. She gripped
+his shoulder and pointed down to the Tower.
+
+"Something," she whispered in his ear, "is going to happen there."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+The little station at which Hamel alighted was like an oasis in the
+middle of a flat stretch of sand and marsh. It consisted only of
+a few raised planks and a rude shelter - built, indeed, for the
+convenience of St. David's Hall alone, for the nearest village was
+two miles away. The station-master, on his return from escorting
+the young lady to her car, stared at this other passenger in some
+surprise.
+
+"Which way to the sea?" Hamel asked.
+
+The man pointed to the white gates of the crossing.
+
+"You can take any of those paths you like, sir," he said. "If you
+want to get to Salthouse, though, you should have got out at the
+next station."
+
+"This will do for me," Hamel replied cheerfully.
+
+"Be careful of the dikes," the station-master advised him. "Some
+of them are pretty deep."
+
+Hamel nodded, and passing through the white gates, made his way by
+a raised cattle track towards the sea. On either side of him flowed
+a narrow dike filled with salt-water. Beyond stretched the flat
+marshland, its mossy turf leavened with cracks and creeks of all
+widths, filled also with sea-slime and sea-water. A slight grey
+mist rested upon the more distant parts of the wilderness which he
+was crossing, a mist which seemed to be blown in from the sea in
+little puffs, resting for a time upon the earth, and then drifting
+up and fading away like soap bubbles.
+
+More than once where the dikes had overflown he was compelled to
+change his course, but he arrived at last at the little ridge of
+pebbled beach bordering the sea. Straight ahead of him now was
+that strange-looking building towards which he had all the time
+been directing his footsteps. As he approached it, his forehead
+slightly contracted. There was ample confirmation before him of
+the truth of his fellow-passenger's words. The place, left to
+itself for so many years, without any attention from its actual
+owner, was neither deserted nor in ruins. Its solid grey stone
+walls were sea-stained and a trifle worn, but the arched wooden
+doors leading into the lifeboat shelter, which occupied one side
+of the building, had been newly painted, and in the front the window
+was hung with a curtain, now closely drawn, of some dark red
+material. The lock from the door had been removed altogether, and
+in its place was the aperture for a Yale latch-key. The last note
+of modernity was supplied by the telephone wire attached to the
+roof of the lifeboat shelter. He walked all round the building,
+seeking in vain for some other means of ingress. Then he stood for
+a few moments in front of the curtained window. He was a man of
+somewhat determined disposition, and he found himself vaguely
+irritated by the liberties which had been taken with his property.
+He hammered gently upon the framework with his fist, and the
+windows opened readily inwards, pushing back the curtain with them.
+He drew himself up on to the sill, and, squeezing himself through
+the opening, landed on his feet and looked around him, a little
+breathless.
+
+He found himself in a simply furnished man's sitting-room. An easel
+was standing close to the window. There were reams of drawing paper
+and several unfinished sketches leaning against the wall. There
+was a small oak table in the middle of the room; against the wall
+stood an exquisite chiffonier, on which were resting some cut-glass
+decanters and goblets. There was a Turkey carpet upon the floor
+which matched the curtains, but to his surprise there was not a
+single chair of any sort to be seen. The walls had been distempered
+and were hung with one or two engravings which, although he was no
+judge, he was quite sure were good. He wandered into the back room,
+where he found a stove, a tea-service upon a deal table, and several
+other cooking utensils, all spotlessly clean and of the most
+expensive description. The walls here were plainly whitewashed,
+and the floor was of hard stone. He then tried the door on the
+left, which led into the larger portion of the building - the shed
+in which the lifeboat had once been kept. Not only was the door
+locked, but he saw at once that the lock was modern, and the door
+itself was secured with heavy iron clamps. He returned to the
+sitting-room.
+
+"The girl with the grey eyes was right enough," he remarked to
+himself. "Mr. Fentolin has been making himself very much at home
+with my property."
+
+He withdrew the curtains, noticing, to his surprise, the heavy
+shutters which their folds had partly concealed. Then he made his
+way out along the passage to the front door, which from the inside
+he was able to open easily enough. Leaving it carefully ajar, he
+"went out with the intention of making an examination of the outside
+of the place. Instead, however, he paused at the corner of the
+building with his face turned landwards. Exactly fronting him now,
+about three-quarters of a mile away, on the summit of that strange
+hill which stood out like a gigantic rock in the wilderness, was St.
+David's Hall. He looked at it steadily and with increasing
+admiration. Its long, red brick front with its masses of clustering
+chimneys, a little bare and weather-beaten, impressed him with a
+sense of dignity due as much to the purity of its architecture as
+the singularity of its situation. Behind - a wonderfully effective
+background - were the steep gardens from which, even in this
+uncertain light, he caught faint glimpses of colouring subdued from
+brilliancy by the twilight. These were encircled by a brick wall
+of great height, the whole of the southern portion of which was
+enclosed with glass. From the fragment of rock upon which he had
+seated himself, to the raised stone terrace in front of the house,
+was an absolutely straight path, beautifully kept like an avenue,
+with white posts on either side, and built up to a considerable
+height above the broad tidal way which ran for some distance by its
+side. It had almost the appearance of a racing track, and its
+state of preservation in the midst of the wilderness was little
+short of remarkable.
+
+"This," Hamel said to himself, as he slowly produced a pipe from
+his pocket and began to fill it with tobacco from a battered silver
+box, "is a queer fix. Looks rather like the inn for me!"
+
+"And who might you be, gentleman?"
+
+He turned abruptly around towards his unseen questioner. A woman
+was standing by the side of the rock upon which he was sitting, a
+woman from the village, apparently, who must have come with
+noiseless footsteps along the sandy way. She was dressed in rusty
+black, and in place of a hat she wore a black woolen scarf tied
+around her head and underneath her chin. Her face was lined, her
+hair of a deep brown plentifully besprinkled with grey. She had a
+curious habit of moving her lips, even when she was not speaking.
+She stood there smiling at him, but there was something about that
+smile and about her look which puzzled him.
+
+"I am just a visitor," he replied. "Who are you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I saw you come out of the Tower," she said, speaking with a strong
+local accent and yet with a certain unusual correctness, "in at the
+window and out of the door. You're a brave man."
+
+"Why brave?" he asked.
+
+She turned her head very slowly towards St. David's Hall. A gleam
+of sunshine had caught one of the windows, which shone like fire.
+She pointed toward it with her head.
+
+"He's looking at you," she muttered. "He don't like strangers
+poking around here, that I can tell you."
+
+"And who is he?" Hamel enquired.
+
+"Squire Fentolin," she answered, dropping her voice a little. "He's
+a very kind-hearted gentleman, Squire Fentolin, but he don't like
+strangers hanging around."
+
+"Well, I am not exactly a stranger, you see," Hamel remarked. "My
+father used to stay for months at a time in that little shanty there
+and paint pictures. It's a good many years ago."
+
+"I mind him," the woman said slowly. "His name was Hamel."
+
+"I am his son," Hamel announced.
+
+She pointed to the Hall. "Does he know that you are here?"
+
+Hamel shook his head. "Not yet. I have been abroad for so long."
+
+She suddenly relapsed into her curious habit. Her lips moved, but
+no words came. She had turned her head a little and was facing
+the sea.
+
+"Tell me," Hamel asked gently, "why do you come out here alone, so
+far from the village?"
+
+She pointed with her finger to where the waves were breaking in a
+thin line of white, about fifty yards from the beach.
+
+"It's the cemetery,. that," she said, "the village cemetery, you
+know. I have three buried there: George, the eldest; James, the
+middle one; and David, the youngest. Three of them - that's why
+I come. I can't put flowers on their graves, but I can sit and
+watch and look through the sea, down among the rocks where their
+bodies are, and wonder."
+
+Hamel looked at her curiously. Her voice had grown lower and lower.
+
+"It's what you land folks don't believe, perhaps," she went on, "but
+it's true. It's only us who live near the sea who understand it.
+I am not an ignorant body, either. I was schoolmistress here before
+I married David Cox. They thought I'd done wrong to marry a
+fisherman, but I bore him brave sons, and I lived the life a woman
+craves for. No, I am not ignorant. I have fancies, perhaps - the
+Lord be praised for them! - and I tell you it's true. You look at
+a spot in the sea and you see nothing - a gleam of blue, a fleck of
+white foam, one day; a gleam of green with a black line, another;
+and a grey little sob, the next, perhaps. But you go on looking.
+You look day by day and hour by hour, and the chasms of the sea will
+open, and their voices will come to you. Listen!"
+
+She clutched his arm.
+
+"Couldn't you hear that?" she half whispered.
+
+"'The light!' It was David's voice! 'The light!'" Hamel was
+speechless. The woman's face was suddenly strangely transformed.
+Her mood, however, swiftly changed. She turned once more towards
+the hall.
+
+"You'll know him soon," she went on, "the kindest man in these
+parts, they say. It's not much that he gives away, but he's a kind
+heart. You see that great post at the entrance to the river there?"
+she went on, pointing to it. "He had that set up and a lamp hung
+from there. Fentolin's light, they call it. It was to save men's
+lives. It was burning, they say, the night I lost my lads.
+Fentolin's light!"
+
+"They were wrecked?" he asked her gently.
+
+"Wrecked," she answered. "Bad steering it must have been. James
+would steer, and they say that he drank a bit. Bad steering! Yes,
+you'll meet Squire Fentolin before long. He's queer to look at - a
+small body but a great, kind heart. A miserable life, his, but it
+will be made up to him. It will be made up to him!"
+
+She turned away. Her lips were moving all the time. She walked
+about a dozen steps, and then she returned.
+
+"You're Hamel's son, the painter," she said. "You'll be welcome
+down here. He'll have you to stay at the Hall - a brave place.
+Don't let him be too kind to you. Sometimes kindness hurts."
+
+She passed on, walking with a curious, shambling gait, and soon she
+disappeared on her way to the village. Hamel watched her for a
+moment and then turned his head towards St. David's Hall. He felt
+somehow that her abrupt departure was due to something which she
+had seen in that direction. He rose to his feet. His instinct had
+been a true one.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+>From where Hamel stood a queer object came strangely into sight.
+Below the terrace of St. David's Hall - from a spot, in fact, at
+the base of the solid wall - it seemed as though a gate had been
+opened, and there came towards him what he at first took to be a
+tricycle. As it came nearer, it presented even a weirder
+appearance. Mr. Fentolin, in a black cape and black skull cap,
+sat a little forward in his electric carriage, with his hand upon
+the guiding lever. His head came scarcely above the back of the
+little vehicle, his hands and body were motionless. He seemed to
+be progressing without the slightest effort, personal or mechanical,
+as though he rode, in deed, in some ghostly vehicle. From the same
+place in the wall had issued, a moment or two later, a man upon a
+bicycle, who was also coming towards him. Hamel was scarcely
+conscious of this secondary figure. His eyes were fixed upon the
+strange personage now rapidly approaching him. There was something
+which seemed scarcely human in that shrunken fragment of body, the
+pale face with its waving white hair, the strange expression with
+which he was being regarded. The little vehicle came to a
+standstill only a few feet away. Mr. Fentolin leaned forward. His
+features had lost their delicately benevolent aspect; his words
+were minatory.
+
+"I am under the impression, sir," he said, " that I saw you with my
+glasses from the window attempting to force an entrance into that
+building."
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"I not only tried but I succeeded," he remarked. "I got in through
+the window."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's eyes glittered for a moment. Hamel, who had resumed
+his place upon the rock close at hand, had been mixed up during his
+lifetime in many wild escapades. Yet at that moment he had a sudden
+feeling that there were dangers in life which as yet he had not
+faced.
+
+"May I ask for your explanation or your excuse?" "
+
+"You can call it an explanation or an excuse, whichever you like,"
+Hamel replied steadily, "but the fact is that this little building,
+which some one else seems to have appropriated, is mine. If I had
+not been a good-natured person, I should be engaged, at the present
+moment, in turning out its furniture on to the beach."
+
+"What is your name?" Mr. Fentolin asked suddenly.
+
+"My name is Hamel - Richard Hamel."
+
+For several moments there was silence. Mr. Fentolin was still
+leaning forward in his strange little vehicle. The colour seemed
+to have left even his lips. The hard glitter in his eyes had given
+place to an expression almost like fear. He looked at Richard
+Hamel as though he were some strange sea-monster come up from
+underneath the sands.
+
+"Richard Hamel," he repeated. "Do you mean that you are the son of
+Hamel, the R.A., who used to be in these parts so often? He was my
+brother's friend."
+
+"I am his son."
+
+"But his son was killed in the San Francisco earthquake. I saw his
+name in all the lists. It was copied into the local papers here."
+
+Hamel knocked the ashes from his pipe.
+
+"I take a lot of killing," he observed. "I was in that earthquake,
+right enough, and in the hospital afterwards, but it was a man named
+Hamel of Philadelphia who died."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat quite motionless for several moments. He seemed,
+if possible, to have shrunken into something smaller still. A few
+yards behind, Meekins had alighted from his bicycle and was standing
+waiting.
+
+"So you are Richard Hamel," Mr. Fentolin said at last very softly.
+"Welcome back to England, Richard Hamel! I knew your father
+slightly, although we were never very friendly."
+
+He stretched out his hand from underneath the coverlet of his little
+vehicle - a hand with long, white fingers, slim and white and
+shapely as a woman's. A single ring with a dull green stone was on
+his fourth finger. Hamel shook bands with him as he would have
+shaken hands with a woman. Afterwards he rubbed his fingers slowly
+together. There was something about the touch which worried him.
+
+"You have been making use of this little shanty, haven't you?" he
+asked bluntly.
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded. He was apparently begin ning to recover
+himself.
+
+"You must remember," he explained suavely, "that it was built by my
+grandfather, and that we have had rights over the whole of the
+foreshore here from time immemorial. I know quite well that my
+brother gave it to your father - or rather he sold it to him for a
+nominal sum. I must tell you that it was a most complicated
+transaction. He had the greatest difficulty in getting any lawyer
+to draft the deed of sale. There were so many ancient rights and
+privileges which it was impossible to deal with. Even now there
+are grave doubts as to the validity of the transaction. When nothing
+was heard of you, and we all concluded that you were dead, I ventured
+to take back what I honestly believed to be my own. Owing," he
+continued slowly, "to my unfortunate affliction, I am obliged to
+depend for interest in my life upon various hobbies. This little
+place, queerly enough, has become one of them. I have furnished it,
+in a way; installed the telephone to the house, connected it with
+my electric plant, and I come down here when I want to be quite
+alone, and paint. I watch the sea - such a sea sometimes, such
+storms, such colour! You notice that ridge of sand out yonder? It
+forms a sort of natural breakwater. Even on the calmest day you
+can trace that white line of foam."
+
+"It is a strange coast," Hamel admitted.
+
+Mr. Fentolin pointed with his forefinger northwards.
+
+"Somewhere about there," he indicated, "is the entrance to the
+tidal river which flows up to the village of St. David's yonder.
+You see?"
+
+His finger traced its course until it came to a certain point near
+the beach, where a tall black pillar stood, surmounted by a globe.
+
+"I have had a light fixed there for the benefit or the fishermen,"
+he said, "a light which I work from my own dynamo. Between where
+we are sitting now and there - only a little way out to sea - is a
+jagged cluster of cruel rocks. You can see them if you care to swim
+out in calm weather. Fishermen who tried to come in by night were
+often trapped there and, in a rough sea, drowned. That is why I
+had that pillar of light built. On stormy nights it shows the exact
+entrance to the water causeway."
+
+"Very kind of you indeed," Hamel remarked, "very benevolent."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"So few people have any real feeling for sailors," he continued.
+"The fishermen around here are certainly rather a casual class. Do
+you know that there is scarcely one of them who can swim? There
+isn't one of them who isn't too lazy to learn even the simplest
+stroke. My brother used to say - dear Gerald - that it served them
+right if they were drowned. I have never been able to feel like
+that, Mr. Hamel. Life is such a wonderful thing. One night," he
+went on, dropping his voice and leaning a little forward in his
+carriage -" it was just before, or was it just after I had fixed
+that light - I was down here one dark winter night. There was a
+great north wind and a huge sea running. It was as black as pitch,
+but I heard a boat making for St. David's causeway strike on those
+rocks just hidden in front there. I heard those fishermen shriek
+as they went under. I heard their shouts for help, I heard their
+death cries. Very terrible, Mr. Hamel! Very terrible!"
+
+Hamel looked at the speaker curiously. Mr. Fentolin seemed
+absorbed in his subject. He had spoken with relish, as one who
+loves the things he speaks about. Quite unaccountably, Hamel
+found himself shivering.
+
+"It was their mother," Mr. Fentolin continued, leaning again a
+little forward in his chair, "their mother whom I saw pass along
+the beach just now - a widow, too, poor thing. She comes here
+often - a morbid taste. She spoke to you, I think?"
+
+"She spoke to me strangely," Hamel admitted. "She gave me the
+impression of a woman whose brain had been turned with grief."
+
+"Too true," Mr. Fentolin sighed. "The poor creature! I offered her
+a small pension, but she would have none of it. A superior woman
+in her way once, filled now with queer fancies," he went on, eyeing
+Hamel steadily,-" the very strangest fancies. She spends her life
+prowling about here. No one in the village even knows how she lives.
+Did she speak of me, by-the-by?"
+
+"She spoke of you as being a very kind-hearted man."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"The poor creature! Well, well, let us revert to the object of
+your coming here. Do you really wish to occupy this little shanty,
+Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"That was my idea," Hamel confessed. "I only came back from Mexico
+last month, and I very soon got fed up with life in town. I am
+going abroad again next year. Till then, I am rather at a loose
+end. My father was always very keen indeed about this place, and
+very anxious that I should come and stay here for a little time, so
+I made up my mind to run down. I've got some things waiting at
+Norwich. I thought I might hire a woman to look after me and spend
+a few weeks here. They tell me that the early spring is almost the
+best time for this coast."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded slowly. He moistened his lips for a moment.
+One might have imagined that he was anxious.
+
+"Mr. Hamel," he said softly, "you are quite right. It is the best
+time to visit this coast. But why make a hermit of yourself? You
+are a family friend. Come and stay with us at the Hall for as long
+as you like. It will give me the utmost pleasure to welcome you
+there," he went on earnestly, "and as for this little place, of what
+use is it to you? Let me buy it from you. You are a man of the
+world, I can see. You may be rich, yet money has a definite value.
+To me it has none. That little place, as it stands, is probably
+worth - say a hundred pounds. Your father gave, if I remember
+rightly, a five pound note for it. I will give you a thousand for
+it sooner than be disturbed."
+
+Hamel frowned slightly.
+
+"I could not possibly think," he said, "of selling what was
+practically a gift to my father. You are welcome to occupy the
+place during my absence in any way you wish. On the other hand, I
+do not think that I care to part with it altogether, and I should
+really like to spend just a day or so here. I am used to roughing
+it under all sorts of conditions - much more used to roughing it
+than I am to staying at country houses."
+
+Mr. Fentolin leaned a little out of his carriage. He reached the
+younger man's shoulder with his hand.
+
+"Ah! Mr. Hamel," he pleaded, "don't make up your mind too suddenly.
+Am I a little spoilt, I wonder? Well, you see what sort of a
+creature I am. I have to go through life as best I may, and people
+are kind to me. It is very seldom I am crossed. It is quite
+astonishing how often people let me have my own way. Do not make
+up your mind too suddenly. I have a niece and a nephew whom you
+must meet. There are some treasures, too, at St. David's Hall.
+Look at it. There isn't another house quite like it in England.
+It is worth looking over."
+
+"It is most impressive," Hamel agreed, "and wonderfully beautiful.
+It seems odd," he added, with a laugh," that you should care about
+this little shanty here, with all the beautiful rooms you must have
+of your own."
+
+"It's Naboth's vineyard," Mr. Fentolin groaned. "Now, Mr. Hamel,
+you are going to be gracious, aren't you? Let us leave the question
+of your little habitation here alone for the present. Come back
+with me. My niece shall give you some tea, and you shall choose
+your room from forty. You can sleep in a haunted chamber, or a
+historical chamber, in Queen Elizabeth's room, a Victorian chamber,
+or a Louis Quinze room. All my people have spent their substance
+in furniture. Don't look at your bag. Clothes are unnecessary. I
+can supply you with everything. Or, if you prefer it, I can send a
+fast car into Norwich for your own things. Come and be my guest,
+please."
+
+Hamel hesitated. He had not the slightest desire to go to St.
+David's Hall, and though he strove to ignore it, he was conscious
+of an aversion of which he was heartily ashamed for this strange
+fragment of humanity. On the other hand, his mission, the actual
+mission which had brought him down to these parts, could certainly
+best be served by an entree into the Hall itself - and there was
+the girl, whom he felt sure belonged there. He had never for a
+moment been able to dismiss her from his thoughts. Her still, cold
+face, the delicate perfection of her clothes and figure, the grey
+eyes which had rested upon his so curiously, haunted him. He was
+desperately anxious to see her again. If he refused this invitation,
+if he rejected Mr. Fentolin's proffered friendship, it would be all
+the more difficult.
+
+"You are really very kind," he began hesitatingly -
+
+"It is settled," Mr. Fentolin interrupted, "settled. Meekins, you
+can ride back again. I shall not paint to-day. Mr. Hamel, you
+will walk by my side, will you not? I can run my little machine
+quite slowly. You see, I have an electric battery. It needs
+charging often, but I have a dynamo of my own. You never saw a
+vehicle like this in all your travellings, did you?"
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"An electrical bath-chair," Mr. Fentolin continued. "Practice has
+made me remarkably skilful in its manipulation. You see, I can
+steer to an inch."
+
+He was already turning around. Hamel rose to his feet.
+
+"You are really very kind," he said. "I should like to come up and
+see the Hall, at any rate, but in the meantime, as we are here,
+could I just look over the inside of this little place? I found the
+large shed where the lifeboat used to be kept, locked up."
+
+Mr. Fentolin was manoeuvring his carriage. His back was towards
+Hamel.
+
+"By all means," he declared. "We will go in together. I have had
+the entrance widened so that I can ride straight into the
+sitting-room. But wait."
+
+He paused suddenly. He felt in all his pockets.
+
+"Dear me," he exclaimed, "I find that I have left the keys! We
+will come down a little later, if you do not mind, Mr. Hamel. Or
+to-morrow, perhaps. You will not mind? It is very careless of me,
+but seeing you about the place and imagining that you were an
+intruder, made me angry, and I started off in a hurry. Now walk by
+my side up to the house, please, and talk to me. It is so
+interesting for me to meet men," he went on, as they started along
+the straight path, "who do things in life; who go to foreign
+countries, meet strange people, and have new experiences. I have
+been a good many years like this, you know."
+
+"It is a great affliction," Hamel murmured sympathetically.
+
+"In my youth I was an athlete," Mr. Fentolin continued. "I played
+cricket for the Varsity and for my county. I hunted, too, and shot.
+I did all the things a man loves to do. I might still shoot, they
+tell me, but my strength has ebbed away. I am too weak to lift a
+gun, too weak even to handle a fishing-rod. I have just a few
+hobbies in life which keep me alive. Are you a politician, Mr.
+Hamel?"
+
+"Not in the least," Hamel replied. "I have been out of England too
+long to keep in touch with politics."
+
+"Naturally," Mr. Fentolin agreed. "It amuses me to follow the
+course of events. I have a good many friends in London and abroad
+who are kind to me, who keep me informed, send me odd bits of
+information not available for every one, and it amuses me to put
+these things together in my mind and to try and play the prophet.
+I was in the Foreign Office once, you know. I take up my paper
+every morning, and it is one of my chief interests to see how near
+my own speculations come to the truth. Just now for example, there
+are strange things doing on the Continent."
+
+"In America," Hamel remarked, "they affect to look upon England as
+a doomed Power."
+
+"Not altogether supine yet," Mr. Fentolin observed, "yet even this
+last generation has seen weakening. We have lost so much
+self-reliance. Perhaps it is having these grown-up children who we
+think can take care of us - Canada and Australia, and the others.
+However, we will not talk of politics. It bores you, I can see.
+We will try and find some other subject. Now tell me, don't you
+think this is ingenious?"
+
+They had reached the foot of the hill upon which the Hall was
+situated. In front of them, underneath the terrace, was a little
+iron gate, held open now by Meekins, who had gone on ahead and
+dismounted from his bicycle.
+
+"I have a subterranean way from here into the Hall," Mr. Fentolin
+explained. "Come with me. You will only have to stoop a little,
+and it may amuse you. You need not be afraid. There are electric
+lights every ten yards. I turn them on with this switch - see."
+
+Mr. Fentolin touched a button in the wall, and the place was at
+once brilliantly illuminated. A little row of lights from the
+ceiling and the walls stretched away as far as one could see. They
+passed through the iron gates, which shut behind them with a click.
+Stooping a little, Hamel was still able to walk by the side of the
+man in the chair. They traversed about a hundred yards of
+subterranean way. Here and there a fungus hung down from the wall,
+otherwise it was beautifully kept and dry. By and by, with a
+little turn, they came to an incline and another iron gate, held
+open for them by a footman. Mr. Fentolin sped up the last few feet
+into the great hail, which seemed more imposing than ever by reason
+of this unexpected entrance. Hamel, blinking a little, stepped to
+his side.
+
+"Welcome!" Mr. Fentolin cried gaily. "Welcome, my friend Mr. Hamel,
+to St. David's Hall!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+During the next half-hour, Hamel was introduced to luxuries to which,
+in a general way, he was entirely unaccustomed. One man-servant
+was busy preparing his bath in a room leading out of his sleeping
+apartment, while another brought him a choice of evening clothes and
+superintended his disrobing. Hamel, always observant, studied his
+surroundings with keen interest. He found himself in a queerly
+mixed atmosphere of luxurious modernity and stately antiquity. His
+four-poster, the huge couch at the foot of his bed, and all the
+furniture about the room, was of the Queen Anne period. The
+bathroom which communicated with his apartment was the latest
+triumph of the plumber's art - a room with floor and walls of white
+tiles, the bath itself a little sunken and twice the ordinary size.
+He dispensed so far as he could with the services of the men and
+descended, as soon as he was dressed, into the hall. Meekins was
+waiting at the bottom of the stairs, dressed now in somber black.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin will be glad if you will step into his room, sir," he
+announced, leading the way.
+
+Mr. Fentolin was seated in his chair, reading the Times in a corner
+of his library. Shaped blocks had been placed behind and in front
+of the wheels of his little vehicle, to prevent it from moving. A
+shaded reading-lamp stood on the table by his side. He did not at
+once look up, and Hamel glanced around with genuine admiration.
+The shelves which lined the walls and the winged cases which
+protruded into the room were filled with books. There was a large
+oak table with beautifully carved legs, piled with all sorts of
+modern reviews and magazines. A log fire was burning in the big
+oaken grate. The perfume from a great bowl of lavender seemed to
+mingle curiously yet pleasantly with the half musty odour of the
+old leather-hound volumes. The massive chimneypiece was of black
+oak, and above it were carved the arms of the House of Fentolin.
+The walls were oak-panelled to the ceiling.
+
+"Refreshed, I hope, by your bath and change, my dear visitor?" the
+head of the house remarked, as he laid down his paper. "Draw a
+chair up here and join me in a glass of vermouth. You need not be
+afraid of it. It comes to me from the maker as a special favour.
+
+Hamel accepted a quaintly-cut wine-glass full of the amber liquid.
+Mr. Fentolin sipped his with the air of a connoisseur.
+
+"This," he continued, "is one of our informal days. There is no
+one in the house save my sister-in-law, niece, and nephew, and a
+poor invalid gentleman who, I am sorry to say, is confined to his
+bed. My sister-in-law is also, I regret to say, indisposed. She
+desired me to present her excuses to you and say how greatly she
+is looking forward to making your acquaintance during the next few
+days."
+
+Hamel bowed.
+
+"It is very kind of Mrs. Fentolin," he murmured.
+
+"On these occasions," Mr. Fentolin continued, "we do not make use
+of a drawing-room. My niece will come in here presently. You are
+looking at my books, I see. Are you, by any chance, a bibliophile?
+I have a case of manuscripts here which might interest you.
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"Only in the abstract, I fear," he answered. "I have scarcely
+opened a serious book since I was at Oxford."
+
+"What was your year?" Mr. Fentolin asked.
+
+"Fourteen years ago I left Magdalen," Hamel replied. "I had made
+up my mind to he an engineer, and I went over to the Boston
+Institute of Technology."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded appreciatively.
+
+"A magnificent profession," he murmured. "A healthy one, too, I
+should judge from your appearance. You are a strong man, Mr. Hamel."
+
+"I have had reason to be," Hamel rejoined. "During nearly the whole
+of the time I have been abroad, I have been practically pioneering.
+Building railways in the far West, with gangs of Chinese and Italians
+and Hungarians and scarcely a foreman who isn't terrified of his job,
+isn't exactly drawing-room work."
+
+"You are going back there?" Mr. Fentolin asked, with interest.
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"I have no plans," he declared. "I have been fortunate enough, or
+shall I some day say unfortunate enough, I wonder, to have inherited
+a large legacy."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"Don't ever doubt your good fortune," he said earnestly. "The
+longer I live - and in my limited way I do see a good deal of life
+- the more I appreciate the fact that there isn't anything in this
+world that compares with the power of money. I distrust a poor man.
+He may mean to be honest, but he is at all times subject to
+temptation. Ah! here is my niece.
+
+Mr. Fentolin turned towards the door. Hamel rose at once to his
+feet. His surmise, then, had been correct. She was coming towards
+them very quietly. In her soft grey dinner-gown, her brown hair
+smoothly brushed back, a pearl necklace around her long, delicate
+neck, she seemed to him a very exquisite embodiment of those
+memories which he had been carrying about throughout the afternoon.
+
+"Here, Mr. Hamel," his host said, " is a member of my family who
+has been a deserter for a short time. This is Mr. Richard Hamel,
+Esther; my niece, Miss Esther Fentolin."
+
+She held out her hand with the faintest possible smile, which might
+have been of greeting or recognition.
+
+"I travelled for some distance in the train with Mr. Hamel this
+afternoon, I think," she remarked.
+
+"Indeed?" Mr. Fentolin exclaimed. "Dear me, that is very
+interesting - very interesting, indeed! Mr. Hamel, I am sure, did
+not tell you of his destination?"
+
+He watched them keenly. Hamel, though he scareely understood, was
+quick to appreciate the possible significance of that tentative
+question.
+
+"We did not exchange confidences," he observed. "Miss Fentolin
+only changed into my carriage during the last few minutes of her
+journey. Besides," he continued, "to tell you the truth, my ideas
+as to my destination were a little hazy. To come and look for some
+queer sort of building by the side of the sea, which has been
+unoccupied for a dozen years or so, scarcely seems a reasonable
+quest, does it?"
+
+"Scarcely, indeed," Mr. Fentolin assented. "You may thank me, Mr.
+Hamel, for the fact that the place is not in ruins. My blatant
+trespassing has saved you from that, at least. After dinner we must
+talk further about the Tower. To tell you the truth, I have grown
+accustomed to the use of the little place."
+
+The sound of the dinner gong boomed through the house. A moment
+later Gerald entered, followed by a butler announcing dinner.
+
+"The only remaining member of my family," Mr. Fentolin remarked,
+indicating his nephew. "Gerald, you will be pleased, I know, to
+meet Mr. Hamel. Mr. Hamel has been a great traveller. Long before
+you can remember, his father used to paint wonderful pictures of
+this coast."
+
+Gerald shook hands with his visitor. His face, for a moment,
+lighted up. He was looking pale, though, and singularly sullen
+and dejected.
+
+"There are two of your father's pictures in the modern side of the
+gallery up-stairs," he remarked, a little diffidently. "They are
+great favourites with everybody here."
+
+They all went in to dinner together. Meekins, who had appeared
+silently, had glided unnoticed behind his master's chair and
+wheeled it across the hall.
+
+"A partie carree to-night," Mr. Fentolin declared. "I have a
+resident doctor here, a very delightful person, who often dines
+with us, but to-night I thought not. Five is an awkward number.
+I want to get to know you better, Mr. Hamel, and quickly. I
+want you, too, to make friends with my niece and nephew. Mr.
+Hamel's father," he went on, addressing the two latter," and your
+father were great friends. By-the-by, have I told you both
+exactly why Mr. Hamel is a guest here to-night - why he came to
+these parts at all? No? Listen, then. He came to take possession
+of the Tower. The worst of it is that it belongs to him, too. His
+father bought it from your father more years ago than we should
+care to talk about. I have really been a trespasser all this time."
+
+They took their places at a small round table in the middle of the
+dining-room. The shaded lights thrown downwards upon the table
+seemed to leave most of the rest of the apartment in semi-darkness.
+The gloomy faces of the men and women whose pictures hung upon the
+walls were almost invisible. The servants themselves, standing a
+little outside the halo of light, were like shadows passing swiftly
+and noiselessly back and forth. At the far end of the room was an
+organ, and to the left a little balcony, built out as though for an
+orchestra. Hamel looked about him almost in wonderment. There was
+something curiously impressive in the size of the apartment and
+its emptiness.
+
+"A trespasser," Mr. Fentolin continued, as he took up the menu and
+criticised it through his horn-rimmed eyeglass, "that is what I
+have been, without a doubt."
+
+"But for your interest and consequent trespass," Hamel remarked, "I
+should probably have found the roof off and the whole place in ruins."
+
+"Instead of which you found the door locked against you," Mr.
+Fentolin pointed out. "Well, we shall see. I might, at any rate,
+have lost the opportunity of entertaining you here this evening.
+I am particularly glad to have an opportunity of making you known
+to my niece and nephew. I think you will agree with me that here
+are two young people who are highly to be commended. I cannot offer
+them a cheerful life here. There is little society, no gaiety, no
+sort of excitement. Yet they never leave me. They seem to have no
+other interest in life but to be always at my beck and call. A case,
+Mr. Hamel, of really touching devotion. If anything could reconcile
+me to my miserable condition, it would he the kindness and
+consideration of those by whom I am surrounded."
+
+Hamel murmured a few words of cordial agreement. Yet he found
+himself, in a sense, embarrassed. Gerald was looking down upon his
+plate and his face was hidden. Esther's features had suddenly
+become stony and expressionless. Hamel felt instinctively that
+something was wrong.
+
+"There are compensations," Mr. Fentolin continued, with the air of
+one enjoying speech, "which find their way into even the gloomiest
+of lives. As I lie on my back, hour after hour, I feel all the more
+conscious of this. The world is a school of compensations, Mr. Hamel.
+The interests - the mental interests, I mean - of unfortunate people
+like myself, come to possess in time a peculiar significance and to
+yield a peculiar pleasure. I have hobbies, Mr. Hamel. I frankly
+admit it. Without my hobbies, I shudder to think what might become
+of me. I might become a selfish, cruel, misanthropical person.
+Hobbies are indeed a great thing."
+
+The brother and sister sat still in stony silence. Hamel, looking
+across the little table with its glittering load of cut glass and
+silver and scarlet flowers, caught something in Esther's eyes, so
+rarely expressive of any emotion whatever, which puzzled him. He
+looked swiftly back at his host. Mr. Fentolin's face, at that
+moment, was like a beautiful cameo. His expression was one of
+gentle benevolence.
+
+"Let me be quite frank with you," Mr. Fentolin murmured. "My
+occupation of the Tower is one of these hobbies. I love to sit
+there within a few yards of the sea and watch the tide come in.
+I catch something of the spirit, I think, which caught your father,
+Mr. Hamel, and kept him a prisoner here. In my small way I, too,
+paint while I am down there, paint and dream. These things may not
+appeal to you, but you must remember that there are few things left
+to me in life, and that those, therefore, which I can make use of,
+are dear to me. Gerald, you are silent to-night. How is it that
+you say nothing?"
+
+"I am tired, sir," the boy answered quietly.
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded gravely.
+
+"It is inexcusable of me," he declared smoothly, "to have forgotten
+even for a moment. My nephew, Mr. Hamel," he went on, "had quite
+an exciting experience last night - or rather a series of
+experiences. He was first of all in a railway accident, and then,
+for the sake of a poor fellow who was with him and who was badly
+hurt, he motored back here in the grey hours of the morning and
+ran, they tell me, considerable risk of being drowned on the marshes.
+A very wonderful and praiseworthy adventure, I consider it. I trust
+that our friend up-stairs, when he recovers, will be properly
+grateful."
+
+Gerald rose to his feet precipitately. The service of dinner was
+almost concluded, and he muttered something which sounded like an
+excuse. Mr. Fentolin, however, stretched out his band and motioned
+him to resume his seat.
+
+"My dear Gerald!" he exclaimed reprovingly. "You would leave us so
+abruptly? Before your sister, too! What will Mr. Hamel think of
+our country ways? Pray resume your seat."
+
+For a moment the boy stood quite still, then he slowly subsided into
+his chair. Mr. Fentolin passed around a decanter of wine which had
+been placed upon the table by the butler. The servants had now left
+the room.
+
+"You must excuse my nephew, if you please, Mr. Hamel," he begged.
+"Gerald has a boy's curious aversion to praise in any form. I am
+looking forward to hearing your verdict upon my port. The
+collection of wine and pictures was a hobby of my grandfather's, for
+which we, his descendants, can never be sufficiently grateful."
+
+Hamel praised his wine, as indeed he had every reason to, but for
+a few moments the smooth conversation of his host fell upon deaf
+ears. He looked from the boy's face, pale and wrinkled as though
+with some sort of suppressed pain, to the girl's still, stony
+expression. This was indeed a house of mysteries! There was
+something here incomprehensible, some thing about the relations of
+these three and their knowledge of one another, utterly baffling.
+It was the queerest household, surely, into which any stranger had
+ver been precipitated.
+
+"The planting of trees and the laying down of port are two virtues
+in our ancestors which have never been properly appreciated," Mr.
+Fentolin continued. "Let us, at any rate, free ourselves from the
+reproach of ingratitude so far as regards my grandfather - Gerald
+Fentolin - to whom I believe we are indebted for this wine. We
+will drink -"
+
+Mr. Fentolin broke off in the middle of his sentence. The august
+calm of the great house had been suddenly broken. From up-stairs
+came the tumult of raised voices, the slamming of a door, the
+falling of something heavy upon the floor. Mr. Fentolin listened
+with a grim change in his expression. His smile had departed, his
+lower lip was thrust out, his eyebrows met. He raised the little
+whistle which hung from his chain. At that moment, however, the
+door was opened. Doctor Sarson appeared.
+
+"I am sorry to disturb you, Mr. Fentolin," he said, "but our patient
+is becoming a little difficult. The concussion has left him, as I
+feared it might, in a state of nervous excitability. He insists
+upon an interview with you."
+
+Mr. Fentolin backed his little chair from the table. The doctor
+came over and laid his hand upon the handle.
+
+"You will, I am sure, excuse me for a few moments, Mr. Hamel,"
+his host begged. "My niece and nephew will do their best to
+entertain you. Now, Sarson, I am ready."
+
+Mr. Fentolin glided across the dim, empty spaces of the splendid
+apartment, followed by the doctor; a ghostly little procession it
+seemed. The door was closed behind them. For a few moments a
+curious silence ensued. Gerald remained tense and apparently
+suffering from some sort of suppressed emotion. Esther for the
+first time moved in her place. She leaned towards Hamel. Her lips
+were slowly parted, her eyes sought the door as though in terror.
+Her voice, although save for themselves there was no one else in
+the whole of that great apartment, had sunk to the lowest of
+whispers.
+
+"Are you a brave man, Mr. Hamel?" she asked.
+
+He was staggered but he answered her promptly.
+
+"I believe so."
+
+"Don't give up the Tower - just yet. That is what - he has brought
+you here for. He wants you to give it up and go back. Don't!"
+
+The earnestness of her words was unmistakable. Hamel felt the
+thrill of coming events.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Don't ask me," she begged. "Only if you are brave, if you have
+feeling for others, keep the Tower, if it be for only a week.
+Hush!"
+
+The door had been noiselessly opened. The doctor appeared and
+advanced to the table with a grave little bow.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin," he said, "has been kind enough to suggest that I
+take a glass of wine with you. My presence is not needed up-stairs.
+Mr. Hamel," he added, "I am glad, sir, to make your acquaintance.
+I have for a long time been a great admirer of your father's work."
+
+He took his place at the head of the table and, filling his glass,
+bowed towards Hamel. Once more Gerald and his sister relapsed
+almost automatically into an indifferent and cultivated silence.
+Hamel found civility towards the newcomer difficult. Unconsciously
+his attitude became that of the other two. He resented the
+intrusion. He found himself regarding the advent of Doctor Sarson
+as possessing some secondary significance. It was almost as though
+Mr. Fentolin preferred not to leave him alone with his niece and
+nephew.
+
+Neverthe1ess, his voice, when he spoke, was clear and
+firm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Mr. Fentolin, on leaving the dining-room, steered his chair with
+great precision through the open, wrought-iron doors of a small
+lift at the further end of the hall, which Doctor Sarson, who
+stepped in with him, promptly directed to the second floor. Here
+they made their way to the room in which Mr. Dunster was lying.
+Doctor Sarson opened the door and looked in. Almost immediately
+he stood at one side, out of sight of Mr. Dunster, and nodded to Mr.
+Fentolin.
+
+"If there is any trouble," he whispered, "send for me. I am better
+away, for the present. My presence only excites him."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"You are right," he said. "Go down into the dining-room. I am not
+sure about that fellow Hamel, and Gerald is in a queer temper. Stay
+with them. See that they are not alone."
+
+The doctor silently withdrew, and Mr. Fentolin promptly glided past
+him into the room. Mr. John P. Dunster, in his night clothes, was
+sitting on the side of the bed. Standing within a few feet of him,
+watching him all the time with the subtle intentness of a cat
+watching a mouse, stood Meekins. Mr. Dunster's head was still bound,
+although the bandage had slipped a little, apparently in some
+struggle. His face was chalklike, and he was breathing quickly.
+
+"So you've come at last!" he exclaimed, a little truculently. "Are
+you Mr. Fentolin?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin gravely admitted his identity. His eyes rested upon
+his guest with an air of tender interest. His face was almost
+beautiful.
+
+"You are the owner of this house - I am underneath your roof - is
+that so?"
+
+"This is certainly St. David's Hall," Mr. Fentolin replied. "It
+really appears as though your conclusions were correct."
+
+"Then will you tell me why I am kept a prisoner here?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's expression was for a moment clouded. He seemed hurt.
+
+"A prisoner," he repeated softly. "My dear Mr. Dunster, you have
+surely forgotten the circumstances which procured for me the pleasure
+of this visit; the condition in which you arrived here - only, after
+all, a very few hours ago?"
+
+"The circumstances," Mr. Dunster declared drily, "are to me still
+inexplicable. At Liverpool Street Station I was accosted by a
+young man who informed me that his name was Gerald Fentolin, and
+that he was on his way to The Hague to play in a golf tournament.
+His story seemed entirely probable, and I permitted him a seat in
+the special train I had chartered for Harwich. There was an accident
+and I received this blow to my head - only a trifling affair, after
+all. I come to my senses to find myself here. I do not know exactly
+what part of the world you call this, but from the fact that I can
+see the sea from my window, it must be some considerable distance
+from the scene of the accident. I find that my dressing-case has
+been opened, my pocket-book examined, and I am apparently a prisoner.
+I ask you, Mr. Fentolin, for an explanation."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled reassuringly.
+
+"My dear sir," he said, "my dear Mr. Dunster, I believe I may have
+the pleasure of calling you - your conclusions seem to me just a
+little melodramatic. My nephew - Gerald Fentolin - did what I
+consider the natural thing, under the circumstances. You had been
+courteous to him, and he repaid the obligation to the best of his
+ability. The accident to your train happened in a dreary part of
+the country, some thirty miles from here. My nephew adopted a
+course which I think, under the circumstances, was the natural and
+hospitable one. He brought you to his home. There was no hospital
+or town of any importance nearer."
+
+"Very well," Mr. Dunster decided. "I will accept your version of
+the affair. I will, then, up to this point acknowledge myself your
+debtor. But will you tell me why my dressing-case has been opened,
+my clothes removed, and a pocket-book containing papers of great
+importance to me has been tampered with?"
+
+"My dear Mr. Dunster," his host replled calmly, "you surely cannot
+imagine that you are among thieves! Your dressing-case was opened
+and the contents of your pocket-book inspected with a view to
+ascertaining your address, or the names of some friends with whom
+we might communicate."
+
+"Am I to understand that they are to be restored to me, then?" Mr.
+Dunster demanded.
+
+"Without a doubt, yes!" Mr. Fentolin assured him. "You, however,
+are not fit for anything, at the present moment, but to return to
+your bed, from which I understand you rose rather suddenly a few
+minutes ago."
+
+"On the contrary," Mr. Dunster insisted, "I am feeling absolutely
+well enough to travel. I have an appointment on the Continent of
+great importance, as you may judge by the fact that at Liverpool
+Street I chartered a special train. I trust that nothing in my
+manner may have given you offence, but I am anxious to get through
+with the business which brought me over to this side of the water.
+I have sent for you to ask that my pocket-book, dressing-case, and
+clothes be at once restored to me, and that I be provided with
+the means of continuing my journey without a moment's further delay."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head very gently, very regretfully, but also
+firmly.
+
+"Mr. Dunster," he pleaded, "do be reasonable. Think of all you have
+been through. I can quite sympathise with you in your impatience,
+but I am forced to tell you that the doctor who has been attending
+you since the moment you were brought into this house has absolutely
+forbidden anything of the sort."
+
+Mr. Dunster seemed, for a moment, to struggle for composure.
+
+"I am an American citizen," he declared. "I am willing to listen
+to the advice of any physician, but so long as I take the risk, I
+am not bound to follow it.
+
+In the present case I decline to follow it. I ask for facilities
+to leave this house at once."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"In your own interests," he said calmly, "they will not be granted
+to you."
+
+Mr. Dunster had spoken all the time like a man struggling to
+preserve his self-control. There were signs now that his will was
+ceasing to serve him. His eyes flashed fire, his voice was raised.
+
+"Will not be granted to me?" he repeated. "Do you mean to say,
+then, that I am to be kept here against my will?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin made no immediate reply. With the delicate fingers of
+his right hand he pushed back the hair from his forehead. He looked
+at his questioner soothingly, as one might look at a spoiled child.
+
+"Against my will?" Mr. Dunster repeated, raising his voice still
+higher. "Mr. Fentolin, if the truth must be told, I have heard of
+you before and been warned against you. I decline to accept any
+longer the hospitality of your roof. I insist upon leaving it.
+If you will not provide me with any means of doing so, I will walk."
+
+He made a motion as though to rise from the bed. Meekins' hand very
+gently closed upon his arm. One could judge that the grip was like
+a grip of iron.
+
+"Dear me," Mr. Fentolin said, "this is really very unreasonable of
+you! If you have heard of me, Mr. Dunster, you ought to understand
+that notwithstanding my unfortunate physical trouble, I am a person
+of consequence and position in this county. I am a magistrate,
+ex-high sheriff, and a great land-owner here. I think I may say
+without boasting that I represent one of the most ancient families
+in this country. Why, therefore, should you treat me as though it
+were to my interest to inveigle you under my roof and keep you there
+for some guilty purpose? Cannot you understand that it is for your
+own good I hesitate to part with you?"
+
+"I understand nothing of the sort," Mr. Dunster exclaimed angrily.
+"Let us bring this nonsense to an end. I want my clothes, and if
+you won't lend me a car or a trap, I'll walk to the nearest railway
+station."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head.
+
+"I am quite sure," he said, "that you are not in a position to
+travel. Even in the dining-room just now I heard a disturbance for
+which I was told that you were responsible."
+
+"I simply insisted upon having my clothes," Mr. Dunster explained.
+"Your servant refused to fetch them. rerhaps I lost my temper.
+If so, I am sorry. I am not used to being thwarted."
+
+"A few days' rest -" Mr. Fentolin began.
+
+"A few days' rest be hanged!" Mr. Dunster interrupted fiercely.
+"Listen, Mr. Fentolin," he added, with the air of one making a last
+effort to preserve his temper, "the mission with which I am charged
+is one of greater importance than you can imagine. So much depends
+upon it that my own life, if that is in danger, would be a mere
+trifle in comparison with the issues involved. If I am not allowed
+to continue upon my journey at once, the consequences may be more
+serious than I can tell you, to you and yours, to your own country.
+There! - I am telling you a great deal, but I want you to understand
+that I am in earnest. I have a mission which I must perform, and
+which I must perform quickly."
+
+"You are very mysterious," Mr. Fentolin murinured.
+
+"I will leave nothing to chance," Mr. Dunster continued. "Send
+this man who seems to have constituted himself my jailer out of
+earshot, and I will tell you even more."
+
+Mr. Fentolin turned to Meekins.
+
+"You can leave the room for a moment," he ordered. "Wait upon the
+threshold."
+
+Meekins very unwillingly turned to obey.
+
+"You will excuse me, sir," he objected doubtfully, "but I am not at
+all sure that he is safe."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled faintly.
+
+"You need have no fear, Meekins," he declared. "I am quite sure
+that you are mistaken. I think that Mr. Dunster is incapable of
+any act of violence towards a person in my unfortunate position.
+I am willing to trust myself with him - perfectly willing, Meekins."
+
+Meekins, with ponderous footsteps, left the room and closed the door
+behind him. Mr. Fentolin leaned a little forward in his chair. It
+seemed as though he were on springs. The fingers of his right hand
+had disappeared in the pocket of his black velvet dinner-coat. He
+was certainly prepared for all emergencies.
+
+"Now, Mr. Dunster," he said softly, "you can speak to me without
+reserve."
+
+Mr. Dunster dropped his voice. His tone became one of fierce
+eagerness.
+
+"Look here," he exclaimed, "I don't think you ought to force me to
+give myself away like this, but, after all, you are an Englishman,
+with a stake in your country, and I presume you don't want her to
+take a back seat for the next few generations. Listen here. It's
+to save your country that I want to get to The Hague without a
+second's delay. I tell you that if I don't get there, if the message
+I convey doesn't reach its destination, you may find an agreement
+signed between certain Powers which will mean the greatest diplomatic
+humiliation which Great Britain has ever known. Aye, and more than
+that!" Mr. Dunster continued. "It may be that the bogey you've been
+setting before yourself for all these years may trot out into life,
+and you may find St. David's Hall a barrack for German soldiers
+before many months have passed."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head in gentle disbelief.
+
+"You are speaking to one," he declared, "who knows more of the
+political situation than you imagine. In my younger days I was in
+the Foreign Office. Since my unfortunate accident I have preserved
+the keenest interest in politics. I tell you frankly that I do not
+believe you. As the Powers are grouped at present, I do not believe
+in the possibility of a successful invasion of this country."
+
+"Perhaps not," Mr. Dunster replied eagerly, "but the grouping of
+the Powers as it has existed during the last few years is on the
+eve of a great change. I cannot take you wholly into my confidence.
+I can only give you my word of honour as a friend to your country
+that the message I carry is her only salvation. Having told you as
+much as that, I do not think I am asking too much if I ask you for
+my clothes and dressing-case, and for the fastest motor-car you can
+furnish me with. I guess I can get from here to Yarmouth, and from
+there I can charter something which will take me to the other side."
+
+Mr. Fentolin raised the little gold whistle to his lips and blew it
+very softly. Meekins at once entered, closing the door behind him.
+He moved silently to the side of the man who bad risen now from the
+bed, and who was standing with his hand grasping the post and his
+eyes fixed upon Mr. Fentolin, as though awaiting his answer.
+
+"Our conversation," the latter said calmly, "has reached a point,
+Mr. Dunster, at which I think we may leave it for the moment. You
+have told me some very surprising things. I perceive that you are
+a more interesting visitor even than I had thought."
+
+He raised his left hand, and Meekins, who seemed to have been
+waiting for some signal of the sort, suddenly, with a movement of
+his knee and right arm, flung Dunster hack upon the bed. The man
+opened his mouth to shout, but already, with lightning-like
+dexterity, his assailant had inserted a gag between his teeth.
+Treating his struggles as the struggles of a baby, Meekins next
+proceeded to secure his wrists with handcuffs. He then held his
+feet together while he quietly wound a coil of cord around them.
+Mr. Fentolin watched the proceedings from his chair with an air of
+pleased and critical interest.
+
+"Very well done, Meekins - very neatly done, indeed!" he exclaimed.
+"As I was saying, Mr. Dunster," he continued, turning his chair,
+"our conversation has reached a point at which I think we may
+safely leave it for a time. We will discuss these matters again.
+Your pretext of a political mission is, of course, an absurd one,
+but fortunately you have fallen into good hands. Take good care of
+Mr. Dunster, Meekins. I can see that he is a very important
+personage. We must be careful not to lose sight of him."
+
+Mr. Fentolin steered his chair to the door, opened it, and passed
+out. On the landing he blew his whistle; the lift almost immediately
+ascended. A moment or two later he glided into the dining-room. The
+three men were still seated around the table. A decanter of wine,
+almost empty, was before Doctor Sarson, whose pallid cheeks, however,
+were as yet unflushed.
+
+"At last, my dear guest," Mr. Fentolin exclaimed, turning to Hamel,
+"I am able to return to you. If you will drink no more wine, let
+us have our coffee in the library, you and I. I want to talk to
+you about the Tower."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+Mr. Fentolin led the way to a delightful little corner of his
+library, where before the open grate, recently piled with hissing
+logs, an easy chair had been drawn. He wheeled himself up to the
+other side of the hearthrug and leaned back with a little air of
+exhaustion. The butler, who seemed to have appeared unsummoned
+from somewhere among the shadows, served coffee and poured some
+old brandy into large and wonderfully thin glasses.
+
+"Why my house should be turned into an asylum to gratify the
+hospitable instincts of my young nephew, I cannot imagine," Mr.
+Fentolin grumbled. "A most extraordinary person, our visitor,
+I can assure you. Quite violent, too, he was at first."
+
+"Have you had any outside advice about his condition?" Hamel
+inquired.
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced across those few feet of space and looked at
+Hamel with swift suspicion.
+
+"Why should I?" he asked. "Doctor Sarson is fully qualified, and
+the case seems to present no unusual characteristics."
+
+Hamel sipped his brandy thoughtfully.
+
+"I don't know why I suggested it," he admitted. "I only thought
+that an outside doctor might help you to get rid of the fellow."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"After all," he said, "the matter is of no real consequence. Doctor
+Sarson assures me that we shall be able to send him on his way very
+shortly. In the meantime, Mr. Hamel, what about the Tower?"
+
+"What about it?" Hamel asked, selecting a cigar from the box which
+had been pushed to his side. "I am sure I haven't any wish to
+inconvenience you."
+
+"I will be quite frank," Mr. Fentolin declared. "I do not dispute
+your right for a moment. On the other hand, my few hours daily down
+there have become a habit with me. I do not wish to give them up.
+Stay here with us, Mr. Hamel. You will be doing us a great kindness.
+My nephew and niece have too little congenial society. Make up your
+mind to give us a fortnight of your time, and I can assure you that
+we will do our best to make yours a pleasant stay."
+
+Hamel was a little taken aback.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin," he said, "I couldn't think of accepting your
+hospitality to such an extent. My idea in coming here was simply
+to fulfil an old promise to my father and to rough it at the Tower
+for a week or so, and when that was over, I don't suppose I should
+ever be likely to come back again. You had better let me carry out
+that plan, and afterwards the place shall be entirely at your
+disposal."
+
+"You don't quite understand," Mr. Fentolin persisted, a little
+irritably. "I sit there every morning. I want, for instance, to
+be there to-morrow morning, and the next morning, and the morning
+afterwards, to finish a little seascape I have commenced. Nowhere
+else will do. Call it a whim or what you will I have begun the
+picture, and I want to finish it."
+
+"Well, you can sit there all right," Hamel assured him. "I shall
+be out playing golf or fishing. I shall do nothing but sleep there."
+
+"And very uncomfortable you will be," Mr. Fentolin pointed out.
+"You have no servant, I understand, and there is no one in the
+village fit to look after you. Think of my thirty-nine empty rooms,
+my books here, my gardens, my motor-cars, my young people, entirely
+at your service. You can have a suite to yourself. You can
+disappear when you like. To all effects and purposes you will be
+the master of St. David's Hall. Be reasonable. Don't you think,
+now, that you can spend a fortnight more pleasantly under such
+circumstances than by playing the misanthrope down at the Tower?"
+
+"Please don't think," Hamel begged, "that I don't appreciate your
+hospitality. I should feel uncomfortable, however, if I paid you
+a visit of the length you have suggested. Come, I don't see," he
+added, "why my occupation of the Tower should interfere with you.
+I should be away from it by about nine or ten o'clock every morning.
+I should probably only sleep there. Can't you accept the use of
+it all the rest of the time? I can assure you that you will be
+welcome to come and go as though it were entirely your own."
+
+Mr. Fentolin had lit a cigarette and was watching the blue smoke
+curl upwards to the ceiling.
+
+"You're an obstinate man, Mr. Hamel," he sighed, "but I suppose
+you must have your own way. By-the-by, you would only need to use
+the up-stairs room and the sitting-room. You will not need the
+outhouse - rather more than an outhouse, though isn't it? I mean
+the shed which leads out from the kitchen, where the lifeboat used
+to be kept?"
+
+"I don't think I shall need that," Hamel admitted, a little
+hesitatingly.
+
+"To tell you the truth," Mr. Fentolin continued, "among my other
+hobbies I have done a little inventing. I work sometimes at a
+model there. It is foolish, perhaps, but I wish no one to see it.
+Do you mind if I keep the keys of the place?"
+
+"Not in the least," Hamel replied. "Tell me, what direction do your
+inventions take, Mr. Fentolin?
+
+"Before you go," Mr. Fentolin promised, "I will show you my little
+model at work. Until then we will not talk of it. Now come, be
+frank with me. Shall we exchange ideas for a little time? Will you
+talk of books? They are my daily friends. I have thousands of them,
+beloved companions on every side. Or will you talk of politics or
+travel? Or would you rather be frivolous with my niece and nephew?
+That, I think, is Esther playing."
+
+"To be quite frank," Hamel declared bluntly, "I should like to talk
+to your niece.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled as though amused. His amusement, however,
+was perfectly good-natured.
+
+"If you will open this door," he said, "you will see another one
+exactly opposite to you. That is the drawing-room. You will find
+Esther there. Before you go, will you pass me the Quarterly Review?
+Thank you."
+
+Hamel crossed the hail, opened the door of the room to which he
+had been directed, and made his way towards the piano. Esther was
+there, playing softly to herself with eyes half closed. He came
+and stood by her side, and she stopped abruptly. Her eyes
+questioned him. Then her fingers stole once more over the keys,
+more softly still.
+
+"I have just left your uncle," Hamel said. "He told me that I might
+come in here."
+
+"Yes?" she murmured.
+
+"He was very hospitable," Hamel continued. "He wanted me to remain
+here as a guest and not go to the Tower at all."
+
+"And you?"
+
+"I am going to the Tower," he said. "I am going there to-morrow
+or the day after."
+
+The music swelled beneath her fingers.
+
+"For how long?"
+
+"For a week or so. I am just giving your uncle time to clear out
+his belongings. I am leaving him the outhouse."
+
+"He asked you to leave him that?" she whispered.
+
+"Yes!
+
+"You are not going in there at all?"
+
+"Not at all."
+
+Again she played a little more loudly for a few moments. Then the
+music died away once more.
+
+"What reason did he give for keeping possession of that?"
+
+"Another bobby," Hamel replied. "He is an inventor, it seems. He
+has the model of something there; he would not tell me what."
+
+She shivered a little, and her music drifted away. She bent over
+the keys, her face hidden from him.
+
+"You will not go away just yet? "she asked softly. "You are going
+to stay for a few days, at any rate?"
+
+"Without a doubt," he assured her. "I am altogether my own master."
+
+"Thank God," she murmured.
+
+He leaned with his elbow against the top of the piano, looking down
+at her. Since dinnertime she had fastened a large red rose in the
+front of her gown.
+
+"Do you know that this is all rather mysterious?" he said calmly.
+
+"'What is mysterious?" she demanded.
+
+"The atmosphere of the place: your uncle's queer aversion to my
+having the Tower; your visitor upstairs, who fights with the
+servants while we are at dinner; your uncle himself, whose will
+seems to be law not only to you but to your brother, who must be
+of age, I should think, and who seems to have plenty of spirit."
+
+"We live here, both of us," she told him. "He is our guardian."
+
+"Naturally," Hamel replied, "and yet, it may have been my fancy, of
+course, but at dinnertime I seemed to get a queer impression.
+
+"Tell it me?" she insisted, her fingers breaking suddenly into a
+livelier melody. "Tell it me at once? You were there all the time.
+I could see you watch-ng. Tell me what you thought?"
+
+She had turned her head now, and her eyes were fixed upon his. They
+were large and soft, capable, he knew, of infinite expression. Yet
+at that moment the light that shone from them was simply one of fear,
+half curious, half shrinking.
+
+"My impression," he said, "was that both of you disliked and feared
+Mr. Fentolin, yet for some reason or other that you were his abject
+slaves."
+
+Her fingers seemed suddenly inspired with diabolical strength and
+energy. Strange chords crashed and broke beneath them. She played
+some unfamiliar music with tense and fierce energy. Suddenly she
+paused and rose to her feet.
+
+"Come out on to the terrace," she invited. "You are not afraid of
+cold?"
+
+He followed her without a word. She opened the French windows, and
+they stepped out on to the long, broad stone promenade. The night
+was dark, and there was little to be seen. The light was burning
+at the entrance to the waterway; a few lights were twinkling from
+the village. The soft moaning of the sea was distinctly audible.
+She moved to the edge of the palisading. He followed her closely.
+
+"You are right, Mr. Hamel," she said. "I think that I am more
+afraid of him than any woman ever was of any man in this world."
+
+"Then why do you live here?" he protested. "You must have other
+relations to whom you could go. And your brother - why doesn't
+he do something - go into one of the professions? He could surely
+leave easily enough?"
+
+"I will tell you a secret," she answered calmly. "Perhaps it will
+help you to understand. You know my uncle's condition. You know
+that it was the result of an accident?"
+
+"I have heard so," he replied gravely.
+
+She clutched at his arm.
+
+"Come," she said.
+
+Side by side they walked the entire length of the terrace. When
+they reached the corner, they were met with a fierce gust of wind.
+She battled along, and he followed her. They were looking inland
+now. There were no lights visible - nothing but dark, chaotic
+emptiness. From somewhere below him he could hear the wind in the
+tree-tops.
+
+"This way," she directed. "Be careful."
+
+They walked to the very edge of the palisading. It was scarcely
+more than a couple of feet high. She pointed downwards.
+
+"Can you see? " she whispered.
+
+By degrees his eyes faintly penetrated the darkness. It was as
+though they were looking down a precipice. The descent was perfectly
+sheer for nearly a hundred feet. At the bottom were the pine trees.
+
+"Come here again in the morning," she whispered. "You will see then.
+I brought you here to show you the place. It was here that the
+accident happened."
+
+"What accident?"
+
+"Mr. Fentolln's," she continued. "It was here that he went over.
+He was picked up with both his legs broken. They never thought that
+he would live."
+
+Hamel shivered a little. As his eyes grew accustomed to the
+darkness, he saw more distinctly than ever the sheer fall, the tops
+of the bending trees below.
+
+"What a horrible thing! "he exclaimed.
+
+"It was more horrible than you know," she continued, dropping her
+voice a little, almost whispering in his ear. "I do not know why
+I tell you this - you, a stranger - but if I do not tell some one,
+I think that the memory of it will drive me mad. It was no accident
+at all. Mr. Fentolin was thrown over!"
+
+"By whom?" he asked.
+
+She clung to his arm for a moment.
+
+"Ah, don't ask me!" she begged. "No one knows. My uncle gave out,
+as soon as he was conscious, that it was an accident."
+
+"That, at any rate, was fine of him," Hamel dedared.
+
+She shivered.
+
+"He was proud, at least, of our family name. Whatever credit he
+deserves for it, he must have. It was owing to that accident that
+we became his slaves: nothing but that - his absolute slaves, to
+wait upon him, if he would, hand and foot. You see, he has never
+been able to marry. His life was, of course, ruined. So the burden
+came to us. We took it up, little thinking what was in store for us.
+Five years ago we came here to live. Gerald wanted to go into the
+army; I wanted to travel with my mother. Gerald has done all the
+work secretly, but he has never been allowed to pass his examinations.
+I have never left England except to spend two years at the strictest
+boarding-school in Paris, to which I was taken and fetched away by
+one of his creatures. We live here, with the shadow of this thing
+always with us. We are his puppets. If we hesitate to do his
+bidding, he reminds us. So far, we have been his creatures, body
+and soul. Whether it will go on, I cannot say - oh, I cannot say!
+It is bad for us, but - there is mother, too. He makes her life a
+perfect hell!"
+
+A roar of wind came booming once more across the marshes, bending
+the trees which grew so thickly beneath them and which ascended
+precipitately to the back of the house. The French windows behind
+rattled. She looked around nervously.
+
+"I am afraid of him all the time," she murmured. "He seems to
+overhear everything - he or his creatures. Listen!"
+
+They were silent for several moments. He whispered in her ear so
+closely that through the darkness he could, see the fire in her
+eyes.
+
+"You are telling me half," he said. "Tell me everything. Who
+threw your uncle over the parapet?
+
+She stood by his side, motionless and trembling.
+
+"It was the passion of a moment," she said at last, speaking
+hoarsely. "I cannot tell you. Listen! Listen!"
+
+"There is no one near," Hamel assured her. "It is the wind which
+shakes the windows. I wish that you would tell me everything. I
+would like to be your friend. Believe me, I have that desire,
+really. There are so many things which I do not understand. That
+it is dull here for you, of course, is natural, but there is
+something more than that. You seem always to fear something. Your
+uncle is a selfish man, naturally, although to look at him he seems
+to have the disposition of an angel. But beyond that, is there
+anything of which you are afraid? You seem all the time to live
+in fear."
+
+She suddenly clutched his hand. There was nothing of affection in
+her touch, and yet he felt a thrill of delight.
+
+"There are strange things which happen here," she whispered, "things
+which neither Gerald nor I understand. Yet they terrify us. I
+think that very soon the end will come. Neither of us can stand
+it very much longer. We have no friends. Somehow or other, he
+seems to manage to keep us always isolated."
+
+"I shall not go away from here," Hamel said firmly, "at present.
+Mind, I am not at all sure that, living this solitary life as you
+do, you have not become a little over-nervous; that you have not
+exaggerated the fear of some things. To me your uncle seems
+merely quixotic and egregiously selfish. However that may be, I
+am going to remain." She clutched once, more at his arm, her
+finger was upraised. They listened together. From somewhere
+behind them came the clear, low wailing of a Violin.
+
+"It is Mr. Fentolin," she whispered. "Please come in; let us go
+in at once. He only plays when he is excited. I am afraid! Oh,
+I am afraid that something is going to happen!"
+
+She was already round the corner and on her way to the main terrace.
+He followed her closely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+"Let us follow the example of all great golfers," Hamel said. "Let
+us for this morning, at any rate, imagine that your whole world is
+encompassed within these eighteen holes. We have been sent here in
+a moment of good humour by your tyrant uncle. The sun shines, and
+the wind is from the west. Why not?"
+
+"That is all very well for you," she retorted, smiling, "but I have
+topped my drive."
+
+"Purely an incident," he assured her. "The vicissitudes of the game
+do not enter into the question. I have driven a ball far above my
+usual form, but I am not gloating over it. I prefer to remember
+only that I am going to spend the next two hours with you."
+
+She played her shot, and they walked for a little way together.
+She was suddenly silent.
+
+"Do you know," she said finally, just a little gravely, "I am not
+at all used to speeches of this sort."
+
+"Then you ought to be," he declared. "Nothing but the lonely life
+you have been living has kept you from hearing them continually."
+
+She laughed a little at the impotence of her rebuff and paused for
+a moment to make her next shot. Hame1, standing a little on one
+side, watched her appraisingly. Her short, grey tweed skirt was
+obviously the handiwork of an accomplished tailor. Her grey
+stockings and suede shoes were immaculate and showed a care for her
+appearance which pleased him. Her swing, too, revealed a grace,
+the grace of long arms and a supple body, at which previously he
+had only guessed. The sunshine seemed to have brought out a copper
+tinge from her abundant brown hair.
+
+"Do you know," he remarked, "I think I am beginning to like your
+uncle. Great idea of his, sending us off here directly after
+breakfast."
+
+Her face darkened for a moment, and he realised his error. The
+same thought, indeed, had been in both their minds. Mr. Fentolin's
+courteous suggestion had been offered to them almost in the shape
+of a command. It was scarcely possible to escape from the
+reflection that he had desired to rid himself of their presence for
+the morning.
+
+"Of course," he went on, "I knew that these links were good - quite
+famous, aren't they?"
+
+"I have played on so few others," she told him. "I learned my golf
+here with King, the professional."
+
+He took off his cap and handed it to his caddy. He himself was
+beginning already to look younger. The long blue waves came
+rippling up the creeks. The salt wind, soft with sunshine, blew
+in their faces. The marshes on the landward side were mauve with
+lavender blossom, In the distance, the red-tiled cottages nestled
+deep among a background of green trees and rising fields.
+
+"This indeed is a land of peace," he declared. "If I hadn't to
+give you quite so many strokes, I should be really enjoying myself."
+
+"You don't play like a man who has been living abroad for a great
+many years," she remarked. " Tell me about some of the places you
+have visited?"
+
+"Don't let us talk seriously," he begged. "I'll tell you of them
+but let it be later on. This morning I feel that the spring air
+is getting into my head. I have an absurd desire to talk nonsense."
+
+"So far," she admitted, "you haven't been altogether unsuccessful."
+
+"If you are alluding," he replied, "to the personal remarks I was
+emboldened to make on my way here, I can only say that they were
+excused by their truthfulness."
+
+"I am not at all sure that you have known me long enough to tell
+me what colours suit me," she demurred.
+
+"Then what will you say," he enquired, "if I admire the angle of
+that quill in your hat?"
+
+"Don't do it," she laughed. "If you continue like this, I may have
+to go home."
+
+"You have sent the car away," he reminded her cheerfully. "You
+would simply have to sit upon the balcony and reflect upon your
+wasted morning."
+
+"I decline to talk upon the putting green," she said. "It puts me
+off. If you will stand perfectly quiet and say nothing, I will
+play the like."
+
+They moved off presently to the next teeing ground.
+
+"I don't believe this nonsense is good for our golf," she said.
+
+"It is immensely good for us as human beings," he protested.
+
+They had played the ninth hole and turned for home. On their right
+now was a shimmering stretch of wet sand and a thin line of sea, in
+the distance. The tide, receding, had left little islands of virgin
+sand, grass tufted, the home of countless sea-gulls. A brown-sailed
+fishing boat was racing for the narrow entrance to the tidal way.
+
+"I am beginning to understand what there is about this coast which
+fascinated my father so," he remarked.
+
+"Are you?" she answered gravely. "Years ago I used to love it, but
+not now."
+
+He tried to change the subject, but the gloom had settled upon her
+face once more.
+
+"You don't know what it is like," she went on, as they walked side
+by side after their balls, "to live day and night in fear, with no
+one to talk to - no one, that is to say, who is not under the same
+shadow. Even the voices of the wind and the sea, and the screaming
+of the birds, seem to bring always an evil message. There is
+nothing kindly or hopeful even in the sunshine. At night, when the
+tide comes thundering in as it does so often at this time of the
+year, one is afraid. There is so much to make one afraid!"
+
+She had turned pale again, notwithstanding the sunshine and the
+freshening wind. He laid his hand lightly upon her arm. She
+suffered his touch without appearing to notice it.
+
+"Ah, you mustn't talk like that!" he pleaded. "Do you know what
+you make me feel like?"
+
+She came back from the world of her own unhappy imaginings.
+
+"Really, I forgot myself," she declared, with a little smile.
+"Never mind, it does one good sometimes. One up, are you?
+Henceforth, then, golf - all the rigour of the game, mind."
+
+He fell in with her mood, and their conversation touched only upon
+the game. On the last green he suffered defeat and acknowledged
+it with a little grimace.
+
+"If I might say so, Miss Fentolin," he protested, "you are a little
+too good for your handicap. I used to play a very reasonable
+scratch myself, but I can't give you the strokes."
+
+She smiled.
+
+"Doubtless your long absence abroad," she began slowly, "has
+affected your game."
+
+"I was round in eighty-one," he grumbled.
+
+"You must have travelled in many countries," she continued, "where
+golf was an impossibility."
+
+"Naturally," he admitted. "Let us stay and have lunch and try
+again."
+
+She shook her head with a little sigh of regret.
+
+"You see, the car is waiting," she pointed out. "We are expected
+home. I shan't be a minute putting my clubs away."
+
+They sped swiftly along the level road towards St. David's Hall.
+Far in the distance they saw it, built upon that strange hill,
+with the sunlight flashing in its windows. He looked at it long
+and curiously.
+
+"I think," he said, "that yours is the most extraordinarily
+situated house I have ever seen. Fancy a gigantic mound like that
+in the midst of an absolutely flat marsh."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"There is no other house quite like it in England," she said. "I
+suppose it is really a wonderful place. Have you looked at the
+pictures?"
+
+"Not carefully," he told her.
+
+"You must before you leave," she insisted. "Mr. Fentolin is a great
+judge, and so was his father."
+
+Their road curved a little to the sea, and at its last bend they
+were close to the pebbly ridge on which the Tower was built. He
+touched the electric bell and stopped the car.
+
+"Do let us walk along and have a look at my queer possession once
+more," he begged. "Luncheon, you told me, is not till half-past
+one, and it is a quarter to now."
+
+She hesitated for a moment and then assented. They left the car
+and walked along the little track, bordered with white posts, which
+led on to the ridge. To their right was the village, separated
+from them only by one level stretch of meadowland; in the background,
+the hall. They turned along the raised dike just inside the pebbly
+beach, and she showed her companion the narrow waterway up to the
+village. At its entrance was a tall iron upright, with a ladder
+attached and a great lamp at the top.
+
+"That is to show them the way in at night, isn't it?" he asked.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Yes," she told him. "Mr. Fentolin had it placed there. And yet,"
+she went on, "curiously enough, since it was erected, there have
+been more wrecks than ever."
+
+"It doesn't seem a dangerous beach," he remarked.
+
+She pointed to a spot about fifty yards from the Tower. It was the
+spot to which the woman whom he had met on the day of his arrival
+had pointed.
+
+"You can't see them," she said; "they are always out of sight, even
+when the tide is at the lowest - but there are some hideous sunken
+rocks there. 'The Daggers,' they call them. One or two fishing
+boats have been lost on them, trying to make the village. When Mr.
+Fentolin put up the lamp, every one thought that it would be quite
+safe to try and get in at night. This winter, though, there have
+been three wrecks which no one could understand. It must be
+something in the currents, or a sort of optical illusion, because
+in the last shipwreck one man was saved, and he swore that at the
+time they struck the rock, they were headed straight for the light."
+
+They had reached the Tower now. Hamel became a little absorbed.
+They walked around it, and he tried the front door. He found, as
+he had expected, that it opened readily. He looked around him for
+several moments.
+
+"Your uncle has been here this morning," he remarked quietly.
+
+"Very likely."
+
+"That outhouse," he continued, "must be quite a large place. Have
+you any idea what it is he works upon there?"
+
+"None," she answered.
+
+He looked around him once more.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin has been preparing for my coming, he observed. "I
+see that he has moved a few of his personal things."
+
+She made no reply, only she shivered a little as she stepped back
+into the sunshine.
+
+"I don't believe you like my little domicile," he remarked, as they
+started off homeward.
+
+"I don't," she admitted curtly.
+
+"In the train," he reminded her, "you seemed rather to discourage
+my coming here. Yet last night, after dinner -"
+
+"I was wrong," she interrupted. "I should have said nothing, and
+yet I couldn't help it. I don't suppose it will make any difference."
+
+"Make any difference to what?"
+
+
+"I cannot tell you," she confessed. "Only I have a strange antipathy
+to the place. I don't like it. My uncle sometimes shuts himself up
+here for quite a long time. We have an idea, Gerald and I, that
+things happen here sometimes which no one knows of. When he comes
+back, he is moody and ill-tempered, or else half mad with excitement.
+He isn't always the amiable creature whom you have met. He has the
+face of an angel, but there are times -"
+
+"Well, don't let's talk about him," Hamel begged, as her voice
+faltered. "Now that I am going to stay in the neighbourhood for a
+few days, you must please remember that it is partly your
+responsibility. You are not going to shut yourself up, are you?
+You'll come and play golf again?"
+
+"If he will let me," she promised.
+
+"I think he will let you, right enough," Hamel observed. "Between
+you and me, I rather think he hates having me down at the Tower at
+all. He will encourage anything that takes me away, even as far as
+the Golf Club."
+
+They were approaching the Hall now. She was looking once more as
+she had looked last night. She had lost her colour, her walk was
+no longer buoyant. She had the air of a prisoner who, after a brief
+spell of liberty, enters once more the place of his confinement.
+Gerald came out to meet them as they climbed the stone steps which
+led on to the terrace. He glanced behind as he greeted them, and
+then almost stealthily took a telegram from his pocket.
+
+"This came for you," he remarked, handing it to Hamel. "I met the
+boy bringing it out of the office."
+
+Hamel tore it open, with a word of thanks. Gerald stood in front
+of him as he read.
+
+"If you wouldn't mind putting it away at once," he asked, a little
+uncomfortably. "You see, the telegraph office is in the place, and
+my uncle has a queer rule that every telegram is brought to him
+before it is delivered."
+
+Hamel did not speak for a moment. He was looking at the few words
+scrawled across the pink sheet with a heavy black pencil:
+
+ "Make every enquiry in your neighbourhood
+ for an American, John P. Dunster, entrusted
+ with message of great importance, addressed to
+ Von Dusenberg, The Hague. Is believed to
+ have been in railway accident near Wymondham
+ and to have been taken from inn by young man
+ in motor-car. Suggest that he is being im-
+ properly detained."
+
+Hamel crumpled up the telegram and thrust it into his pocket.
+
+"By-the-by," he asked, as they ascended the steps, "what did you
+say the name of this poor fellow was who is lying ill up-stairs?"
+
+Gerald hesitated for a moment. Then he answered as though a species
+of recklessness had seized him.
+
+"He called himself Mr. John P. Dunster."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+Mr. Fentolin, having succeeded in getting rid of his niece and his
+somewhat embarrassing guest for at least two hours, was seated in
+his study, planning out a somewhat strenuous morning, when his
+privacy was invaded by Doctor Sarson.
+
+"Our guest," the latter announced, in his usual cold and measured
+tones, "has sent me to request that you will favour him with an
+interview."
+
+Mr. Fentolin laid his pen deliberately down.
+
+"So soon," he murmured. "Very well, Sarson, I am at his service.
+ Say that I will come at once."
+
+Mr. Fentolin lost no time in paying this suggested visit. Mr. John
+P. Dunster, shaved and clothed, was seated in an easy-chair drawn
+up to the window of his room, smoking what he was forced to confess
+was a very excellent cigar. He turned his head as the door opened,
+and Mr. Fentolin waved his hand pleasantly.
+
+"Really," he declared, "this is most agreeable. I had an idea, Mr.
+Dunster, that I should find you a reasonable person. Men of your
+eminence in their profession usually are."
+
+Mr. Dunster looked at the speaker curiously.
+
+"And what might my profession be, Mr. Fentolin?" he asked. "You
+seem to know a great deal about me."
+
+"It is true," Mr. Fentolin admitted. "I do know a great deal."
+
+Mr. Dunster knocked the ash from his cigar.
+
+"Well," he said, "I have been the hearer of several important
+communications from my side of the Atlantic to England and to the
+Continent, and I have always known that there was a certain amount
+of risk in the business. Once I had an exceedingly narrow shave,"
+he continued reminiscently, "but this is the first time I have ever
+been dead up against it, and I don't mind confessing that you've
+fairly got me puzzled. Who the mischief are you, Mr. Fentolin,
+and what are you interfering about?"
+
+Mr. Fentolinn smiled queerly.
+
+"I am what you see," he replied. "I am one of those unfortunate
+human beings who, by reason of their physical misfortunes, are cut
+off from the world of actual life. I have been compelled to seek
+distraction in strange quarters. I have wealth - great wealth I
+suppose I should say; an inordinate curiosity, a talent for intrigue.
+As to the direction in which I carry on my intrigues, or even as to
+the direct interests which I study, that is a matter, Mr. Dunster,
+upon which I shall not gratify your curiosity nor anybody else's.
+But, you see, I am admitting freely that it does interest me to
+interfere in great affairs."
+
+"But how on earth did you get to know about me," Mr. Dunster asked,
+"and my errand? You couldn't possibly have got me here in an
+ordinary way. It was an entire fluke."
+
+"There, you speak with some show of reason. I have a nephew whom
+you have met, who is devoted to me."
+
+"Mr. Gerald Fentolin," Mr. Dunster remarked drily.
+
+"Precisely," Mr. Fentolin declared. "Well, I admit frankly the
+truth of what you say. Your - shall we say capture, was by way of
+being a gigantic fluke. My nephew's instructions simply were to
+travel down by the train to Harwich with you, to endeavour to make
+your acquaintance, to follow you on to your destination, and, if
+any chance to do so occurred, to relieve you of your pocket-book.
+That, however, I never ventured to expect. What really happened
+was, as you have yourself suggested, almost in the nature of a
+miracle. My nephew showed himself to be possessed of gifts which
+were a revelation to me. He not only succeeded in travelling with
+you by the special train, but after its wreck he was clever enough
+to bring you here, instead of delivering you over to the mercies
+of a village doctor. I really cannot find words to express my
+appreciation of my nephew's conduct."
+
+"I could," Mr. Dunster muttered, "very easily!"
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed gently.
+
+"Perhaps our points of view might differ."
+
+"We have spent a very agreeable few minutes in explanations," Mr.
+Dunster continued. "Would it be asking too much if I now suggest
+that we remove the buttons from our foils?"
+
+"Why not?" Mr. Fentolin assented smoothly. "Your first question
+to yourself, under these circumstances, would naturally be: 'What
+does Mr. Fentolin want with me?' I will answer that question for
+you. All that I ask - it is really very little - is the word
+agreed upon."
+
+Mr. Dunster held his cigar a little way off and looked steadfastly
+at his host for a moment. So you have interpreted my cipher?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin spread out the palms of his hands in a delicate gesture.
+
+"My dear Mr. Dunster," he said, "one of the simplest, I think, that
+was ever strung together. I am somewhat of an authority upon
+ciphers."
+
+"I gather," Mr. Dunster went on, although his cigar was burning
+itself out, "that you have broken the seal of my dispatches?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin closed his eyes as though he had heard a discord.
+
+"Nothing so clumsy as that, I hope," he murmured gently. "I will
+not insult a person of your experience and intelligence by
+enumerating the various ways in which the seal of a dispatch may
+be liquefied. It is quite true that I have read with much pleasure
+the letter which you are carrying from a certain group of very
+distinguished men to a certain person now in The Hague. The letter,
+however, is replaced in its envelope; the seal is still there. You
+need have no fears whatever concerning it. All that I require is
+that one word from you."
+
+"And if I give you that one word?" Mr. Dunster asked.
+
+"If you give it me, as I think you will," Mr. Fentolin replied
+suavely, "I shall then telegraph to my agent, or rather I should
+say to a dear friend of mine who lives at The Hague, and that
+single word will be cabled by him from The Hague to New York."
+
+"And in that case," Mr. Dunster enquired, "what would become of me?"
+
+"You would give us the great pleasure of your company here for a
+very brief visit," Mr. Fentolin answered. "We should, I can assure
+you, do our very best to entertain you."
+
+"And the dispatch which I am carrying to The Hague?"
+
+"Would remain here with you."
+
+Mr. Dunster knocked the ash from his cigar. Without being a man
+of great parts, he was a shrewd person, possessed of an abundant
+stock of common sense. He applied himself, for a few moments, to
+a consideration of this affair, without arriving at any satisfactory
+conclusion.
+
+"Come, Mr. Fentolin," he said at last, "you must really forgive me,
+but I can't see what you're driving at. You are an Englishman, are
+you not?"
+
+"I am an Englishman," Mr. Fentolin confessed "or rather," he added,
+with ghastly humour, "I am half an Englishman."
+
+"You are, I am sure," Mr. Dunster continued, "a person of
+intelligence, a well-read person, a person of perceptions. Surely
+you can see and appreciate the danger with which your country is
+threatened?"
+
+"With regard to political affairs," Mr. Fentolin admitted, "I
+consider myself unusually well posted - in fact, the study of the
+diplomatic methods of the various great Powers is rather a hobby
+of mine."
+
+"Yet," Mr. Dunster persisted, "you do not wish this letter delivered
+to that little conference in The Hague, which you must be aware is
+now sitting practically to determine the fate of your nation?"
+
+"I do not wish," Mr. Fentolin replied, "I do not intend, that that
+letter shall be delivered. Why do you worry about my point of view?
+I may have a dozen reasons. I may believe that it will be good for
+my country to suffer a little chastisement."
+
+"Or you may," Mr. Dunster suggested, glancing keenly at his host,
+"be the paid agent of some foreign Power."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head.
+
+"My means," he pointed out, "should place me above such suspicion.
+My income, I really believe, is rather more than fifty thousand
+pounds a year. I should not enter into these adventures, which
+naturally are not entirely dissociated from a certain amount of risk,
+for the purposes of financial gain."
+
+Mr. Dunster was still mystified.
+
+"Granted that you do so from pure love of adventure," he declared,
+"I still cannot see why you should range yourself on the side of
+your country's enemies.
+
+"In time," Mr. Fentolin observed, "even that may become clear to
+you. At present, well - just that word, if you please?"
+
+Mr. Dunster shook his head.
+
+"No," he decided, "I do not think so. I cannot make up my mind to
+tell you that word."
+
+Mr. Fentolin gave no sign of annoyance or even disappointment. He
+simply sighed. His eyes were full of a gentle sympathy, his face
+indicated a certain amount of concern.
+
+"You distress me," he declared. "Perhaps it is my fault. I have
+not made myself sufficiently clear. The knowledge of that word is
+a necessity to me. Without it I cannot complete my plans. Without
+it I very much fear, dear Mr. Dunster, that your sojourn among us
+may be longer than you have any idea of."
+
+Mr. Dunster laughed a little derisively.
+
+"We've passed those days," he remarked. "I've done my best to enter
+into the humour of this situation, but there are limits. You can't
+keep prisoners in English country houses, nowadays. There are a
+dozen ways of communicating with the outside world, and when that's
+once done, it seems to me that the position of Squire Fentolin of
+St. David's Hall might be a little peculiar."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled, very slightly, still very blandly.
+
+"Alas, my stalwart friend, I fear that you are by nature an optimist!
+I am not a betting man, but I am prepared to bet you a hundred pounds
+to one that you have made your last communication with the outside
+world until I say the word."
+
+Mr. Dunster was obviously plentifully supplied with either courage
+or bravado, for he only laughed.
+
+"Then you had better make up your mind at once, Mr. Fentolin, how
+soon that word is to be spoken, or you may lose your money," he
+remarked.
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat very quietly in his chair.
+
+"You mean, then," he asked, "that you do not intend to humour me in
+this little matter?"
+
+"I do not intend," Mr. Dunster assured him, "to part with that word
+to you or to any one else in the the world. When my message has
+been presented to the person to whom it has been addressed, when my
+trust is discharged, then and then only shall I send that cablegram.
+That moment can only arrive at the end of my journey."
+
+Mr. Fentolin leaned now a little forward in his chair. His face
+was still smooth and expressionless, but there was a queer sort of
+meaning in his words.
+
+"The end of your journey," he said grimly, "may be nearer than you
+think."
+
+"If I am not heard of in The Hague to-morrow at the latest," Mr.
+Dunster pointed out," remember that before many more hours have
+passed, I shall be searched for, even to the far corners of the
+earth."
+
+"Let me assure you," Mr. Fentolin promised serenely, "that though
+your friends search for you up in the skies or down in the bowels
+of the earth, they will not find you. My hiding-places are not as
+other people's."
+
+Mr. Dunster beat lightly with his square, blunt forefinger upon the
+table which stood by his side.
+
+"That's not the sort of talk I understand," he declared curtly.
+"Let us understand one another, if we can. What is to happen to me,
+if I refuse to give you that word?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin held his hand in front of his eyes, as though to shut
+out some unwelcome vision.
+
+"Dear me," he exclaimed, "how unpleasant Why should you force me
+to disclose my plans? Be content, dear Mr. Dunster, with the
+knowledge of this one fact: we cannot part with you. I have thought
+it over from every point of view, and I have come to that conclusion;
+always presuming," he went on, "that the knowledge of that little
+word of which we have spoken remains in its secret chamber of your
+memory."
+
+Mr. Dunster smoked in silence for a few minutes.
+
+"I am very comfortable here," he remarked.
+
+"You delight me," Mr. Fentolin murmured.
+
+"Your cook," Mr. Dunster continued, "has won my heartfelt
+appreciation. Your cigars and wines are fit for any nobleman.
+Perhaps, after all, this little rest is good for me."
+
+Mr. Fentolin listened attentively.
+
+"Do not forget," he said, "that there is always a limit fixed,
+whether it be one day, two days, or three days."
+
+"A limit to your complacence, I presume?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin assented.
+
+"Obviously, then," Mr. Dunster concluded, "you wish those who sent
+me to believe that my message has been delivered. Yet there I must
+confess that you puzzle me. What I cannot see is, to put it bluntly,
+where you come in. Any one of the countries represented at this
+little conference would only be the gainers by the miscarriage of
+my message, which is, without doubt, so far as they are concerned,
+of a distasteful nature. Your own country alone could be the
+sufferer. Now what interest in the world, then, is there left - what
+interest in the world can you possibly represent - which can be the
+gainer by your present action?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's eyes grew suddenly a little brighter. There was a
+light upon his face strange to witness,
+
+"The power which is to be the gainer," he said quietly, " is the
+power encompassed by these walls,"
+
+He touched his chest; his long, slim fingers were folded upon it.
+
+"When I meet a man whom I like," he continued softly, "I take him
+into my confidence. Picture me, if you will, as a kind of Puck.
+Haven't you heard that with the decay of the body comes sometimes
+a malignant growth in the brain; a Caliban-like desire for evil to
+fall upon the world; a desire to escape from the loneliness of
+suffering, the isolation of black misery?"
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster let his cigar burn out. He looked
+steadfastly at this strange little figure whose chair had
+imperceptibly moved a little nearer to his.
+
+"You know what the withholding of this message you carry may mean,"
+Mr. Fentolin proceeded. "You come here, bearing to Europe the word
+of a great people, a people whose voice is powerful enough even to
+still the gathering furies. I have read your ciphered message. It
+is what I feared. It is my will, mine - Miles Fentolin's - that
+that message be not delivered."
+
+"I wonder," Mr. Dunster muttered under his breath, "whether you are
+in earnest."
+
+"In your heart," Mr. Fentolin told him, "you know that I am. I can
+see the truth in your face. Now, for the first time, you begin to
+understand."
+
+"To a certain extent," Mr. Dunster admitted. "Where I am still in
+the dark, however, is why you should expect that I should become
+your confederate. It is true that by holding me up and obstructing
+my message, you may bring about the evil you seek, but unless that
+word is cabled back to New York, and my senders believe that my
+message has been delivered, there can be no certainty. What has
+been trusted to me as the safest means of transmission, might, in
+an emergency, be committed to a cable."
+
+"Excellent reasoning," Fentolin agreed. "For the very reasons you
+name that word will be given."
+
+Mr. Dunster's face was momentarily troubled. There was something in
+the still, cold emphasis of this man's voice which made him shiver.
+
+"Do you think," Mr. Fentolin went on, "that I spend a great fortune
+buying the secrets of the world, that I live from day to day with
+the risk of ignominious detection always hovering about me - do
+you think that I do this and am yet unprepared to run the final risks
+of life and death? Have you ever talked with a murderer, Mr. Dunster?
+Has curiosity ever taken you within the walls of Sing Sing? Have you
+sat within the cell of a doomed man and felt the thrill of his touch,
+of his close presence? Well, I will not ask you those questions. I
+will simply tell you that you are talking to one now."
+
+Mr. Dunster had forgotten his extinct cigar. He found it difficult
+to remove his eyes from Mr. Fentolin's face. He was half fascinated,
+half stirred with a vague, mysterious fear. Underneath these wild
+words ran always that hard note of truth.
+
+"You seem to be in earnest," he muttered.
+
+"I am," Mr. Fentolin assured him quietly. "I have more than once
+been instrumental in bringing about the death of those who have
+crossed my purposes. I plead guilty to the weakness of Nero.
+Suffering and death are things of joy to me. There!"
+
+"I am not sure," Mr. Dunster said slowly, "that I ought not to
+wring your neck."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled. His chair receded an inch or two. There was
+never a time when his expression had seemed more seraphic.
+
+"There is no emergency of that sort," he remarked," for which I am
+not prepared."
+
+His little revolver gleamed for a minute beneath his cuff. He
+backed his chair slowly and with wonderful skill towards the door.
+
+"We will fix the period of your probation, Mr. Dunster, at - say,
+twenty-four hours," he decided. "Please make yourself until then
+entirely at home. My cook, my cellar, my cigar cabinets, are at
+your disposal. If some happy impulse," he concluded, "should show
+you the only reasonable course by dinnertime, it would give me the
+utmost pleasure to have you join us at that meal. I can promise
+you a cheque beneath your plate which even you might think worth
+considering, wine in your glass which kings might sigh for, cigars
+by your side which even your Mr. Pierpont Morgan could not buy.
+Au revoir!"
+
+The door opened and closed. Mr. Dunster sat staring into the open
+space like a man still a little dazed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+The beautiful but somewhat austere front of St. David's Hall seemed,
+in a sense, transformed, as Hamel and his companion climbed the worn
+grey steps which led on to the broad sweep of terrace. Evidently
+visitors had recently arrived. A dark, rather good-looking woman,
+with pleasant round face and a ceaseless flow of conversation, was
+chattering away to Mr. Fentolin. By her side stood another woman who
+was a stranger to Hamel - thin, still elegant, with tired, worn face,
+and the shadow of something in her eyes which reminded him at once of
+Esther. She wore a large picture hat and carried a little Pomeranian
+dog under her arm. In the background, an insignificant-looking man
+with grey side-whiskers and spectacles was beaming upon everybody.
+Mr. Fentolin waved his hand and beckoned to Hamel and Esther as they
+somewhat hesitatingly approached.
+
+"This is one of my fortunate mornings, you see, Esther!" he exclaimed,
+smiling. "Lady Saxthorpe has brought her husband over to lunch. Lady
+Saxthorpe," he added, turning to the woman at his side, "let me present
+to you the son of one of the first men to realise the elusive beauty
+of our coast. This is Mr. Hamel, son of Peter Hamel, R.A. - the
+Countess of Saxthorpe."
+
+Lady Saxthorpe, who had been engaged in greeting
+Esther, held out her hand and smiled good-humour-
+edly at Hamel.
+
+"I know your father's work quite well," she declared, "and I don't
+wonder that you have made a pilgrimage here. They tell me that he
+painted nineteen pictures - pictures of importance, that is to say
+- within this little area of ten miles. Do you paint, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"Not at all," Hamel answered.
+
+"Our friend Hamel," Mr. Fentolin intervened, "woos other and sterner
+muses. He fights nature in distant countries, spans her gorges with
+iron bridges, stems the fury of her rivers, and carries to the
+boundary of the world that little twin line of metal which brings
+men like ants to the work-heaps of the universe. My dear Florence,"
+he added, suddenly turning to the woman at his other side, "for the
+moment I had forgotten. You have not met our guest yet. Hamel,
+this is my sister-in-law, Mrs. Seymour Fentolin."
+
+She held out her hand to him, unnaturally thin and white, covered
+with jewels. Again he saw something in her eyes which stirred him
+vaguely.
+
+"It is so nice that you are able to spend a few days: with us, Mr.
+Hamel," she said quietly. "I am sorry that I have been too
+indisposed to make your acquaintance earlier."
+
+"And, Mr. Fentolin continued, "you must know my young friend here,
+too. Mr. Hamel - Lord Saxthorpe."
+
+The latter shook hands heartily with the young man.
+
+"I knew your father quite well," he announced. "Queer thing, he
+used to hang out for months at a time at that little shanty on the
+beach there. Hardest work in the world to get him away. He came
+over to dine with us once or twice, but we saw scarcely anything
+of him. I hope his son will not prove so obdurate."
+
+"You are very kind," Hamel murmured.
+
+"Mr. Hamel came into these parts to claim his father's property,"
+Mr. Fentolin said. "However, I have persuaded him to spend a day
+or two up here before he transforms himself into a misanthrope.
+What of his golf, Esther, eh?"
+
+"Mr. Hamel plays very well, indeed," the girl replied.
+
+"Your niece was too good for me," Hamel confessed.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"The politeness of this younger generation," he remarked, "keeps
+the truth sometimes hidden from us. I perceive that I shall not
+be told who won. Lady Saxthorpe, you are fortunate indeed in the
+morning you have chosen for your visit. There is no sun in the
+world like an April sun, and no corner of the earth where it shines
+with such effect as here. Look steadily to the eastward of that
+second dike and you will see the pink light upon the sands, which
+baffled every one until our friend Hamel came and caught it on
+his canvas."
+
+"I do see it," Lady Saxthorpe murmured. "What eyes you have, Mr.
+Fentolin! What perception for colour!"
+
+"Dear lady," Mr. Fentolin said, "I am one of those who benefit by
+the law of compensations. On a morning like this I can spend hours
+merely feasting my eyes upon this prospect, and I can find, if not
+happiness, the next best thing. The world is full of beautiful
+places, but the strange part of it is that beauty has countless
+phases, and each phase differs in some subtle and unexplainable
+manner from all others. Look with me fixedly, dear Lady Saxthorpe.
+Look, indeed, with more than your eyes. Look at that flush of wild
+lavender, where it fades into the sands on one side, and strikes the
+emerald green of that wet seamoss on the other. Look at the liquid
+blue of that tongue of sea which creeps along its bed through the
+yellow sands, through the dark meadowland, which creeps and oozes
+and widens till in an hour's time it will have become a river. Look
+at my sand islands, virgin from the foot of man, the home of
+sea-gulls, the islands of a day. There may be other and more
+beautiful places. There is none quite like this."
+
+"I pity you no longer," Lady Saxthorpe asserted fervently. "The
+eyes of the artist are a finer possession than the limbs of the
+athlete."
+
+The butler announced luncheon, and they all trooped in. Hamel
+found himself next to Lady Saxthorpe.
+
+"Dear Mr. Fentolin has been so kind," she confided to him as they
+took their places. "I came in fear and trembling to ask for a very
+small cheque for my dear brother's diocese. My brother is a
+colonial bishop, you know. Can you imagine what Mr. Fentolin has
+given me?"
+
+Hamel wondered politely. Lady Saxthorpe continued with an air of
+triumph.
+
+"A thousand pounds! Just fancy that - a thousand pounds! And some
+people say he is so difficult," she went on, dropping her voice.
+"Mrs. Hungerford came all the way over from Norwich to beg for the
+infirmary there, and he gave her nothing."
+
+"What was his excuse? " Hamel asked.
+
+"I think he told her that it was against his principles to give to
+hospitals," Lady Saxthorpe replied. "He thinks that they should be
+supported out of the rates."
+
+"Some people have queer ideas of charity," Hamel remarked. "Now I
+am afraid that if I had been Mr. Fentolin, I would have given the
+thousand pounds willingly to a hospital, but not a penny to a
+mission."
+
+Mr. Fentolin looked suddenly down the table. He was some distance
+away, but his hearing was wonderful.
+
+"Ah, my dear Hamel," he said, "believe me, missions are very
+wonderful things. It is only from a very careful study of their
+results that I have brought myself to be a considerable supporter
+of those where I have some personal knowledge of the organisation.
+Hospitals, on the other hand, provide for the poor what they ought
+to be able to provide for themselves. The one thing to avoid in
+the giving away of money is pauperisation. What do you think,
+Florence?"
+
+His sister-in-law, who was seated at the other end of the table,
+looked across at him with a bright but stereotyped smile.
+
+"I agree with you, of course, Miles. I always agree with you. Mr.
+Fentolin has the knack of being right about most things," she
+continued, turning to Lord Saxthorpe. "His judgment is really
+wonderful."
+
+"Wish we could get him to come and sit on the bench sometimes, then,"
+Lord Saxthorpe remarked heartily. "Our neighbours in this part of
+the world are not overburdened with brains. By-the-by," he went on,
+"that reminds me. You haven't got such a thing as a mysterious
+invalid in the house, have you?"
+
+There was a moment's rather curious silence. Mr. Fentolin was
+sitting like a carved figure, with a glass of wine half raised to
+his lips. Gerald had broken off in the middle of a sentence and
+was staring at Lord Saxthorpe. Esther was sitting perfectly still,
+her face grave and calm, her eyes alone full of fear. Lord
+Saxthorpe was not an observant man and he continued, quite
+unconscious of the sensation which his question had aroused.
+
+"Sounds a silly thing to ask you, doesn't it? They're all full of
+it at Wells, though. I sat on the bench this morning and went into
+the police-station for a moment first. Seems they've got a long
+dispatch from Scotland Yard about a missing man who is supposed to
+be in this part of the world. He came down in a special train on
+Tuesday night - the night of the great flood - and his train was
+wrecked at Wymondham. After that he was taken on by some one in a
+motor-car. Colonel Renshaw wanted me to allude to the matter from
+the bench, but it seemed to me that it was an affair entirely for
+the police."
+
+As though suddenly realising the unexpected interest which his
+words had caused, Lord Saxthorpe brought his sentence to a
+conclusion and glanced enquiringly around the table.
+
+"A man could scarcely disappear in a civilised neighbourhood like
+this," Mr. Fentolin remarked quietly, "but there is a certain
+amount of coincidence about your question. May I ask whether it
+was altogether a haphazard one?"
+
+"Absolutely," Lord Saxthorpe declared. "The idea seems to be that
+the fellow was brought to one of the houses in the neighbourhood,
+and we were all rather chaffing one another this morning about it.
+Inspector Yardley - the stout fellow with the beard, you know - was
+just starting off in his dogcart to make enquiries round the
+neighbourhood. If any one in fiction wants a type of the ridiculous
+detective, there he is, ready-made."
+
+"The coincidence of your question," Mr. Fentolin said smoothly, "is
+certainly a strange one. The mysterious stranger is within our
+gates."
+
+Lady Saxthorpe, who had been out of the conversation for far too
+long, laid down her knife and fork.
+
+"My dear Mr. Fentolin!" she exclaimed. "My dear Mrs. Fentolin!
+This is really most exciting! Do tell us all about it at once. I
+thought that the man was supposed to have been decoyed away in a
+motor-car. Do you know his name and all about him?"
+
+"There are a few minor points," Mr. Fentolin murmured, "such as
+his religious convictions and his size in boots, which I could
+not swear about, but so far as regards his name and his occupation,
+I think I can gratify your curiosity. He is a Mr. John P. Dunster,
+and he appears to be the representative of an American firm of
+bankers, on his way to Germany to conclude a loan."
+
+"God bless my soul!" Lord Saxthorpe exclaimed wonderingly. "The
+fellow is actually here under this roof! But who brought him?
+How did he find his way?"
+
+"Better ask Gerald," Mr. Fentolin replied. "He is the abductor.
+It seems that they both missed the train from Liverpool Street,
+and Mr. Dunster invited Gerald to travel down in his special train.
+Very kind of him, but might have been very unlucky for Gerald.
+As you know, they got smashed up at Wymondham, and Gerald, feeling
+in a way responsible for him, brought him on here; quite properly,
+I think. Sarson has been looking after him, but I am afraid he has
+slight concussion of the brain."
+
+"I shall remember this all my life," Lord Saxthorpe declared
+solemnly, "as one of the most singular coincidences which has ever
+come within my personal knowledge. Perhaps after lunch, Mr.
+Fentolin, you will let some of your people telephone to the
+police-station at Wells? There really is an important enquiry
+respecting this man. I should not be surprised," he added,
+dropping his voice a little for the benefit of the servants,
+"to find that Scotland Yard needed him on their own account."
+
+"In that case," Mr. Fentolin remarked, "he is quite safe, for Sarson
+tells me there is no chance of his being able to travel, at any rate
+for twenty-four hours."
+
+Lady Saxthorpe shivered.
+
+"Aren't you afraid to have him in the house?" she asked, "a man who
+is really and actually wanted by Scotland Yard? When one considers
+that nothing ever happens here except an occasional shipwreck in
+the winter and a flower-show in the summer, it does sound positively
+thrilling. I wonder what he has done."
+
+They discussed the subject of Mr. Dunster's possible iniquities.
+Meanwhile, a young man carrying his hat in his hand had slipped in
+past the servants and was leaning over Mr. Fentolin's chair. He
+laid two or three sheets of paper upon the table and waited while
+his employer glanced them through and dismissed him with a little
+nod.
+
+"My wireless has been busy this morning," Mr. Fentolin remarked.
+"We seem to have collected about forty messages from different
+battleships and cruisers. There must be a whole squadron barely
+thirty miles out."
+
+"You don't really think," Lady Saxthorpe asked, "that there is any
+fear of war, do you, Mr. Fentolin?
+
+He answered her with a certain amount of gravity. "Who can tell?
+The papers this morning were bad. This conference at The Hague is
+still unexplained. France's attitude in the matter is especially
+mysterious."
+
+"I am a strong supporter of Lord Roberts," Lord Saxthorpe said,
+"and I believe in the vital necessity of some scheme for national
+service. At the same time, I find it hard to believe that a
+successful invasion of this country is within the bounds of
+possibility."
+
+"I quite agree with you, Lord Saxthorpe," Mr. Fentolin declared
+smoothly. "All the same, this Hague Conference is a most mysterious
+affair. The papers this morning are ominously silent about the
+fleet. From the tangle of messages we have picked up, I should say,
+without a doubt, that some form of mobilisation is going on in the
+North Sea. If Lady Saxthorpe thinks it warm enough, shall we take
+our coffee upon the terrace?"
+
+"The terrace, by all means," her ladyship assented, rising from her
+place. "What a wonderful man you are, Mr. Fentolin, with your
+wireless telegraphy, and your telegraph office in the house, and
+telephones. Does it really amuse you to be so modern?"
+
+"To a certain extent, yes," Mr. Fentolin sighed, as he guided his
+chair along the hall. "When my misfortune first came, I used to
+speculate a good deal upon the Stock Exchange. That was really the
+reason I went in for all these modern appliances."
+
+"And now?" she asked. "What use do you make of them now?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled quietly. He looked out sea-ward, beyond the
+sky-line, from whence had come to him, through the clouds, that
+tangle of messages.
+
+"I like to feel," he said, "that the turning wheel of life is not
+altogether out of earshot. I like to dabble just a little in the
+knowledge of these things."
+
+Lord Saxthorpe came strolling up to them.
+
+"You won't forget to telephone about this guest of yours?" he
+asked fussily.
+
+"It is already done," Mr. Fentolin assured him. "My dear sister,
+why so silent?"
+
+Mrs. Fentolin turned slowly towards him. She, too, had been
+standing with her eyes fixed upon the distant sea-line. Her face
+seemed suddenly to have aged, her forced vivacity to have departed.
+Her little Pomeranian rubbed against her feet in vain. Yet at the
+sound of Mr. Fentolin's voice, she seemed to come back to herself
+as though by magic.
+
+"I was looking where you were looking," she dedared lightly,
+"just trying to see a little way beyond. So silly, isn't it?
+Chow-Chow, you bad little dog, come and you shall have your dinner."
+
+She strolled off, humming a tune to herself. Lord Saxthorpe watched
+her with a shadow upon his plain, good-humoured face.
+
+"Somehow or other," he remarked quietly, "Mrs. Fentolin never seems
+to have got over the loss of her husband, does she? How long is it
+since he died?"
+
+"Eight years," Mr. Fentolin replied. "It was just six months after
+my own accident."
+
+"I am losing a great deal of sympathy for you, Mr. Fentolin," Lady
+Saxthorpe confessed, coming over to his side. "You have so many
+resources, there is so much in life which you can do. You paint,
+as we all know, exquisitely. They tell me that you play the violin
+like a master. You have unlimited time for reading, and they say
+that you are one of the greatest living authorities upon the
+politics of Europe. Your morning paper must bring you so much that
+is interesting."
+
+"It is true," Mr. Fentolin admitted, "that I have compensations
+which no one can guess at, compensations which appeal to me more as
+time steals on. And yet -"
+
+He stopped short.
+
+"And yet?" Lady Saxthorpe repeated interrogatively.
+
+Mr.. Fentolin was watching Gerald drive golf balls from the lawn
+beneath. He pointed downwards.
+
+"I was like that when I was his age," he said quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+Mr. Fentolin remained upon the terrace long after the departure of
+his guests. He had found a sunny corner out of the wind, and he sat
+there with a telescope by his side and a budget of newspapers upon
+his knee. On some pretext or another he had detained all the others
+of the household so that they formed a little court around him.
+Even Hamel, who had said something about a walk, had been induced
+to stop by an appealing glance from Esther. Mr. Fentolin was in one
+of his most loquacious moods. For some reason or other, the visit
+of the Saxthorpes seemed to have excited him. He talked continually,
+with the briefest pauses. Every now and then he gazed steadily
+across the marshes through his telescope.
+
+"Lord Saxthorpe," he remarked, "has, I must confess, greatly
+excited my curiosity as to the identity of our visitor. Such a
+harmless-looking person, he seems, to be causing such a commotion.
+Gerald, don't you feel your responsibility in the matter?"
+
+"Yes, sir, I do!" Gerald replied, with unexpected grimness. "I
+feel my responsibility deeply."
+
+Mr. Fentolin, who was holding the telescope to his eye, touched
+Hamel on the shoulder.
+
+"My young friend," he said, "your eyes are better than mine. You
+see the road there? Look along it, between the white posts, as far
+as you can. What do you make of that black speck?"
+
+Hamel held the telescope to his eye and steadied it upon the little
+tripod stand.
+
+"It looks like a horse and trap," he announced. "Good!" Mr.
+Fentolin declared. "It seemed so to me, but I was not sure. My eyes
+are weak this afternoon. How many people are in the trap?"
+
+"Two," Hamel answered. "I can see them distinctly now. One man is
+driving, another is sitting by his side. They are coming this way."
+
+Mr. Fentolin blew his whistle. Meekins appeared almost directly.
+His master whispered a word in his ear. The man at once departed.
+
+"Let me make use of your eyes once more," Mr. Fentolin begged.
+"About these two men in the trap, Mr. Hamel. Is one of them, by any
+chance, wearing a uniform?"
+
+"They both are," Hamel replied. "The man who is driving is wearing
+a peaked hat. He looks like a police inspector. The man by his side
+is an ordinary policeman."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed gently.
+
+"It is very interesting," he said. "Let us hope that we shall not
+see an arrest under my roof. I should feel it a reflection upon my
+hospitality. I trust, I sincerely trust, that this visit does not
+bode any harm to Mr. John P. Dunster."
+
+Gerald rose impatiently to his feet and swung across the terrace.
+Mr. Fentolin, however, called him back.
+
+"Gerald," he advised, "better not go away. The inspector may desire
+to ask you questions. You will have nothing to conceal. It was a
+natural and delightful impulse of yours to bring the man who had
+befriended you, and who was your companion in that disaster, straight
+to your own home for treatment and care. It was an admirable impulse,
+my boy. You have nothing to be ashamed of."
+
+"Shall I tell him, too -" Gerald began.
+
+"Be careful, Gerald."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's words seemed to be charged with a swift, rapier-like
+note. The boy broke off in his speech. He looked at Hamel and was
+silent.
+
+"Dear me," Mrs. Fentolin mumured, "I am sure there is no need for
+us to talk about this poor man as though anybody had done anything
+wrong in having him here. This, I suppose, must be the Inspector
+Yardley whom Lord Saxthorpe spoke of."
+
+"A very intelligent-looking officer, I am sure," Mr. Fentolin
+remarked. "Gerald, go and meet him, if you please. I should like
+to speak to him out here."
+
+The dog-cart had drawn up at the front door, and the inspector had
+already alighted. Gerald intervened as he was in the act of
+questioning the butler.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin would like to speak to you, inspector," he said, "if
+you will come this way."
+
+The inspector followed Gerald and saluted the little group solemnly.
+Mr. Fentolin held out his hand.
+
+"You got my telephone message, inspector?" he asked.
+
+"We have not received any message that I know of, sir," the inspector
+replied. "I have come over here in accordance with instructions
+received from headquarters - in fact from Scotland Yard."
+
+"Quite so," Mr. Fentolin assented. "You've come over, I presume,
+to make enquiries concerning Mr. John P. Dunster?"
+
+"That is the name of the gentleman, sir."
+
+"I only understood to-day from my friena Lord Saxthorpe," Mr.
+Fentolin continued, "that Mr. Dunster was being enquired about as
+though he had disappeared. My nephew brought him here after the
+railway accident at Wymondham, since when he has been under the
+care of my own physician. I trust that you have nothing serious
+against him?"
+
+"My first duty, sir," the inspector pronounced, "is to see the
+gentleman in question."
+
+"By all means," Mr. Fentolin agreed. "Gerald, will you take the
+inspector up to Mr. Dunster's rooms? Or stop, I will go myself."
+
+Mr. Fentolin started his chair and beckoned the inspector to follow
+him. Meekins, who was waiting inside the hall, escorted them by
+means of the lift to the second floor. They made their way to Mr.
+Dunster's room. Mr. Fentolin knocked softly at the door. It was
+opened by the nurse.
+
+"How is the patient?" Mr. Fentolin enquired.
+
+Doctor Sarson appeared from the interior of the room.
+
+"Still unconscious," he reported. "Otherwise, the symptoms are
+favourable. He is quite unfit," the doctor added, looking steadily
+at the inspector, "to be removed or questioned."
+
+"There is no idea of anything of the sort," Mr. Fentolin explained.
+"It is Inspector Yardley's duty to satisfy himself that Mr. Dunster
+is here. It is necessary for the inspector to see your patient, so
+that he can make his report at headquarters."
+
+Doctor Sarson bowed.
+
+"That is quite simple, sir," he said. "Please step in."
+
+They all entered the room, which was large and handsomely furnished.
+Through the open windows came a gentle current of fresh air. Mr.
+Dunster lay in the midst of all the luxury of fine linen sheets and
+embroidered pillow-cases. The inspector looked at him stolidly.
+
+"Is he asleep?" he asked.
+
+The doctor shook his head.
+
+"It is the third day of his concussion," he whispered. "He is still
+unconscious. He will remain in the same condition for another two
+days. After that he will begin to recover."
+
+Mr. Fentolin touched the inspector on the arm.
+
+"You see his clothing at the foot of the bed," he pointed out.
+"His linen is marked with his name. That is his dressing-case with
+his name painted on it."
+
+"I am quite satisfied, sir," the inspector announced. "I will not
+intrude any further."
+
+They left the room. Mr. Fentolin himself escorted the inspector
+into the library and ordered whisky and cigars.
+
+"I don't know whether I am unreasonably curious," Mr. Fentolin
+remarked, "but is it really true that you have had enquiries from
+Scotland Yard about the poor fellow up-stairs?"
+
+"We had a very important enquiry indeed, sir," the inspector replied.
+"I have instructions to telegraph all I have been able to discover,
+immediately."
+
+"Pardon my putting it plainly," Mr. Fentolin asked, "but is our
+friend a criminal?"
+
+"I wouldn't go so far as that, sir," the inspector answered. "I
+know of no charge against him. I don't know that I have the right
+to say so much," he added, sipping his whisky and soda, "but putting
+two and two together, I should rather come to the conclusion that he
+was a person of some political importance."
+
+"Not a criminal at all?"
+
+"Not as I know of," the inspector assented.
+"That isn't the way I read the enquiries at all."
+
+"You relieve me," Mr. Fentolin declared. "Now what about his
+possessions?"
+
+"There's a man coming down shortly from Scotland Yard," the
+inspector announced, a little gloomily. "My orders were to touch
+nothing, but to locate him."
+
+"Well, you've succeeded so far," Mr. Fentolin remarked. "Here he
+is, and here I think he will stay until some days after your friend
+from Scotland Yard can get here."
+
+"It does seem so, indeed," the inspector agreed. "To me he looks
+terrible ill. But there's one thing sure, he's having all the care
+and attention that's possible. And now, sir, I'll not intrude
+further upon your time. I'll just make my report, and you'll
+probably have a visit from the Scotland Yard man sometime within
+the next few days."
+
+Mr. Fentolin escorted the inspector to his dog-cart, shook hands
+with him, and watched him drive off. Only Mrs. Seymour Fentolin
+remained upon the terrace. He glided over to her side.
+
+"My dear florence," he asked, "where are the others?"
+
+"Mr. Hamel and Esther have gone for a walk," she answered. "Gerald
+has disappeared somewhere. Has anything - is everything all right?"
+
+"Naturally," Mr. Fentolin replied easily. "All that the inspector
+desired was to see Mr. Dunster. He has seen him. The poor fellow
+was unfortunately unconscious, but our friend will at least be able
+to report that he was in good hands and well cared for."
+
+"Unconscious," Mrs. Fentolin repeated. "I thought that he was
+better."
+
+"One is always subject to those slight relapses in an affair of
+concussion," Mr. Fentolin explained.
+
+Mrs. Fentolin laid down her work and leaned a little towards her
+brother-in-law. Her hand rested upon his. Her voice had fallen
+to a whisper.
+
+"Miles," she said, "forgive me, but are you sure that you are not
+getting a little out of your depth? Remember that there are some
+risks which are not worth while."
+
+"Quite true," he answered. "And there are some risks, my dear
+Florence, which are worth every drop of blood in a man's body, and
+every breath of life. The peace of Europe turns upon that man
+up-stairs. It is worth taking a little risk for, worth a little
+danger. I have made my plans, and I mean to carry them through.
+Tell me, when I was up-stairs, this fellow Hamel - was he talking
+confidentially to Gerald?"
+
+"Not particularly."
+
+"I am not sure that I trust him," Mr. Fentolin continued. "He had
+a telegram yesterday from a man in the Foreign Office, a telegram
+which I did not see. He took the trouble to walk three miles to
+send the reply to it from another office."
+
+"But after all," Mrs. Fentolinprotested, "you know who he is. You
+know that he is Peter Hamel's son. He had a definite purpose in
+coming here."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"Quite true," he admitted. "But for that, Mr. Hamel would have
+found a little trouble before now. As it is, he must be watched.
+If any one comes between me and the things for which I am scheming
+to-day, they will risk death."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin sighed. She was watching the figures of Esther and
+Hamel far away in the distance, picking their way across the last
+strip of marshland which lay between them and the sea.
+
+"Miles," she said earnestly, " you take advice from no one. You
+will go your own way, I know. And yet, it seems to me that life
+holds so many compensations for you without your taking these
+terrible risks. I am not thinking of any one else. I am not
+pleading to you for the sake of any one else. I am thinking
+only of yourself. I have had a sort of feeling ever since this
+man was brought into the house, that trouble would come of it. To
+me the trouble seems to be gathering even now."
+
+Mr. Fentolin laughed softly, a little contemptuously.
+
+"Presentiments," he scoffed, "are the excuses of cowards. Don't be
+afraid, Florence. Remember always that I look ahead. Do you think
+that I could stay here contented with what you call my compensations
+- my art, the study of beautiful things, the calm epicureanism of
+the sedate and simple life? You know very well that I could not do
+that. The craving for other things is in my heart and blood. The
+excitement which I cannot have in one way, I must find in another,
+and I think that before many nights have passed, I shall lie on my
+pillow and hear the guns roar, hear the footsteps of the great
+armies of the world moving into battle. It is for that I live,
+Florence."
+
+She took up her knitting again. Her eyes were fixed upon the
+sky-line. Twice she opened her lips, but twice no words came.
+
+"You understand?" he whispered. "You begin to understand, don't
+you?"
+
+She looked at him only for a moment and back at her work.
+
+"I suppose so," she sighed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+In the middle of that night Hamel sat up in bed, awakened with a
+sudden start by some sound, only the faintest echo of which remained
+in his consciousness. His nerves were tingling with a sense of
+excitement. He sat up in bed and listened. Suddenly it came again
+- a long, low moan of pain, stifled at the end as though repressed
+by some outside agency. He leaped from his bed, hurried on a few
+clothes, and stepped out on to the landing. The cry had seemed
+to him to come from the further end of the long corridor - in the
+direction, indeed, of the room where Mr. Dunster lay. He made his
+way there, walking on tiptoe, although his feet fell noiselessly
+upon the thick carpet. A single light was burning from a bracket
+in the wall, insufficient to illuminate the empty spaces, but enough
+to keep him from stumbling. The corridor towards the south end
+gradually widened, terminating in a splendid high window with
+stained glass, a broad seat, and a table. On the right, the end
+room was Mr. Dunster's apartment, and on the left a flight of
+stairs led to the floor above. Hamel stood quite still, listening.
+There was a light in the room, as he could see from under the door,
+but there was no sound of any one moving. Hamel listened intently,
+every sense strained. Then the sound of a stair creaking behind
+diverted his attention. He looked quickly around. Gerald was
+descending. The boy's face was white, and his eyes were filled
+with fear. Hamel stepped softly back from the door and met him at
+the foot of the stairs.
+
+"Did you hear that cry?" he whispered.
+
+Gerald nodded.
+
+"It woke me up. What do you suppose it was?" Hamel shook his head.
+
+"Some one in pain," he replied. "I don't understand it. It came
+from this room."
+
+"You know who sleeps there?" Gerald asked hoarsely.
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"A man with concussion of the brain doesn't cry out like that.
+Besides, did you hear the end of it? It sounded as though some one
+were choking him. Hush!"
+
+They had spoken only in bated breath, but the door of the room
+before which they were standing was suddenly opened. Meekins stood
+there, fully dressed, his dark, heavy face full of somber warning.
+He started a little as he saw the two whispering together. Gerald
+addressed him almost apologetically.
+
+"We both heard the same sound, Meekins. Is any one ill? It sounded
+like some one in pain."
+
+The man hesitated. Then from behind his shoulder came Mr.
+Fentolin's still, soft voice. There was a little click, and Meekins,
+as though obeying an unseen gesture, stepped back. Mr. Fentolin
+glided on to the threshold. He was still dressed. He propelled his
+chair a few yards down the corridor and beckoned them to approach.
+
+"I am so sorry," he said softly, "that you should have been
+disturbed, Mr. Hamel. We have been a little anxious about our
+mysterious guest. Doctor Sarson fetched me an hour ago. He
+discovered that it was necessary to perform a very slight operation,
+merely the extraction of a splinter of wood. It is all over now,
+and I think that he will do very well."
+
+Notwithstanding this very plausible explanation, Hamel was conscious
+of the remains of an uneasiness which he scarcely knew how to put
+into words.
+
+"It was a most distressing cry," he observed doubtfully, "a cry of
+fear as well as of pain."
+
+"Poor fellow!" Mr. Fentolin remarked compassionately. "I am afraid
+that for a moment or two he must have suffered acutely. Doctor
+Sarson is very clever, however, and there is no doubt that what
+he did was for the best. His opinion is that by to-morrow morning
+there will be a marvellous change. Good night, Mr. Hamel. I am
+quite sure that you will not be disturbed again."
+
+Hamel neither felt nor showed any disposition to depart.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin," he said, "I hope that you will not think that I am
+officious or in any way abusing your hospitality, but I cannot help
+suggesting that as Dr. Sarson is purely your household physician,
+the relatives of this man Dunster might be better satisfied if some
+second opinion were called in. Might I suggest that you telephone
+to Norwich for a surgeon?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin showed no signs of displeasure. He was silent for a
+moment, as though considering the matter.
+
+"I am not at all sure, Mr. Hamel, that you are not right," he
+admitted frankly. "I believe that the case is quite a simple one,
+but on the other hand it would perhaps be more satisfactory to have
+an outside opinion. If Mr. Dunster is not conscious in the morning,
+we will telephone to the Norwich Infirmary."
+
+"I think it would be advisable," Hamel agreed.
+
+"Good night!" Mr. Fentolin said once more. I am sorry that your
+rest has been disturbed."
+
+Hamel, however, still refused to take the hint. His eyes were fixed
+upon that closed door.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin," he asked, "have you any objection to my seeing Mr.
+Dunster?"
+
+There was a moment's intense silence. A sudden light had burned in
+Mr. Fentolin's eyes. His fingers gripped the side of his chair.
+Yet when he spoke there were no signs of anger in his tone. It was
+a marvellous effort of self-control.
+
+"There is no reason, Mr. Hamel," he said, "why your curiosity should
+not be gratified. Knock softly at the door, Gerald."
+
+The boy obeyed. In a moment or two Doctor Sarson appeared on the
+threshold.
+
+"Our guest, Mr. Hamel," Mr. Fentolin explained in a whisper, "has
+been awakened by this poor fellow's cry. He would like to see him
+for a moment."
+
+Doctor Sarson opened the door. They all passed in on tiptoe. The
+doctor led the way towards the bed upon which Mr. Dunster was lying,
+quite still. His head was bandaged, and his eyes closed. His face
+was ghastly. Gerald gave vent to a little muttered exclamation.
+Mr. Fentolin turned to him. quickly.
+
+"Gerald!"
+
+The boy stood still, trembling, speechless. Mr. Fentolin's eyes
+were riveted upon him. The doctor was standing, still and dark, a
+motionless image.
+
+"Is he asleep?" Hamel asked.
+
+"He is under the influence of a mild anaesthetic," Doctor Sarson
+explained. "He is doing very well. His case is quite simple. By
+to-morrow morning he will be able to sit up and walk about if he
+wishes to."
+
+Hamel looked steadily at the figure upon the bed. Mr. Dunster's
+breathing was regular, and his eyes were closed, but his colour was
+ghastly.
+
+"He doesn't look like getting up for a good many days to come,"
+Hamel observed.
+
+The doctor led the way towards the door.
+
+"The man has a fine constitution," he said. "I feel sure that if
+you wish you will be able to talk to him to-morrow."
+
+They separated outside in the passage. Mr. Fentolin bade his guest
+a somewhat restrained good night, and Gerald mounted the staircase
+to his room. Hamel, however, had scarcely reached his door before
+Gerald reappeared. He had descended the stair-case at the other
+end of the corridor. He stood for a moment looking down the passage.
+The doors were all closed. Even the light had been extinguished.
+
+"May I come in for a moment, please?" he whispered.
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"With pleasure! Come in and have a cigarette if you will. I shan't
+feel like sleep for some time."
+
+They entered the room, and Gerald threw himself into an easy-chair
+near the window. Hamel wheeled up another chair and produced a box
+of cigarettes.
+
+"Queer thing your dropping across that fellow in the way you did,"
+he remarked. "Just shows how one may disappear from the world
+altogether, and no one be a bit the wiser."
+
+The boy was sitting with folded arms. His expression was one of
+deep gloom.
+
+"I only wish I'd never brought him here," he muttered. "I ought
+to have known better."
+
+Hamel raised his eyebrows. "Isn't he as well off here as anywhere
+else?"
+
+"Do you think that he is?" Gerald demanded, looking across at Hamel.
+
+There was a brief silence.
+
+"We can scarcely do your uncle the injustice," Hamel remarked, "of
+imagining that he can possibly have any reason or any desire to deal
+with that man except as a guest."
+
+"Do you really believe that?" Gerald asked.
+
+Hamel rose to his feet.
+
+"Look here, young man," he said, "this is getting serious. You and
+I are at cross-purposes. If you like, you shall have the truth
+from me."
+
+"Go on."
+
+"I was warned about your uncle before I came down into this part of
+the world," Hamel continued quietly. "I was told that he is a
+dangerous conspirator, a man who sticks at nothing to gain his ends,
+a person altogether out of place in these days. It sounds
+melodramatic, but I had it straight from a friend. Since I have
+been here, I have had a telegram - you brought it to me yourself
+- asking for information about this man Dunster. It was I who wired
+to London that he was here. It was through me that Scotland Yard
+communicated with the police station at Wells, through me that a
+man is to be sent down from London. I didn't come here as a spy
+- don't think that; I was coming here, anyhow. On the other hand,
+I believe that your uncle is playing a dangerous game. I am going
+to have Mr. John P. Dunster put in charge of a Norwich physician
+to-morrow."
+
+"Thank God!" the boy murmured.
+
+"Look here," Hamel continued, "what are you doing in this business,
+anyway? You are old enough to know your own mind and to go your
+own way."
+
+"You say that because you don't know," Gerald declared bitterly.
+
+"In a sense I don't," Hamel admitted, "and yet your sister hinted
+to me only this afternoon that you and she -"
+
+"Oh, I know what she told you!" the boy interrupted. "We've worn
+the chains for the last eight years. They are breaking her.
+They've broken my mother. Sometimes I think they are breaking me.
+But, you know, there comes a time - there comes a time when one
+can't go on. I've seen some strange things here, some that I've
+half understood, some that I haven't understood at all. I've closed
+my eyes. I've kept my promise. I've done his bidding, where ever
+it has led me. But you know there is a time - there is a limit to
+all things. I can't go on. I spied on this man Dunster. I brought
+him here. It is I who am responsible for anything that may happen to
+him. It's the last time!"
+
+Gerald's face was white with pain. Hamel laid his hand upon his
+shoulder.
+
+"My boy," he said, "there are worse things in the world than
+breaking a promise. When you gave it, the conditions which were
+existing at the time made it, perhaps, a right and reasonable
+undertaking, but sometimes the whole of the conditions under which
+a promise was given, change. Then one must have courage enough to
+be false even to one's word."
+
+"Have you talked to my sister like that?" Gerald asked eagerly.
+
+"I have and I will again," Hamel declared. "To-morrow morning I
+leave this house, but before I go I mean to have the affair of this
+man Dunster cleared up. Your uncle will be very angry with me,
+without a doubt. I don't care. But I do want you to trust me, if
+you will, and your sister. I should like to be your friend."
+
+"God knows we need one!" the boy said simply. "Good night!"
+
+Once more the house was quiet. Hamel pushed his window wide open
+and looked out into the night. The air was absolutely still, there
+was no wind. The only sound was the falling of the low waves upon
+the stony beach and the faint scrunching of the pebbles drawn back
+by the ebb. He looked along the row of windows, all dark and silent
+now. A rush of pleasant fancies suddenly chased away the grim
+depression of the last few minutes. Out of all this sordidness and
+mystery there remained at least something in life for him to do. A
+certain aimlessnessn of purpose which had troubled him during the
+last few months had disappeared. He had found an object in life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+"To-day," Hamel declared, as he stood at the sideboard the following
+morning at breakfast-time and helped himself to bacon and eggs, "I
+am positively going to begin reading. I have a case full of books
+down at the Tower which I haven't unpacked yet."
+
+Esther made a little grimace.
+
+"Look at the sunshine," she said. "There isn't a breath of wind,
+either. I think to-day that I could play from the men's tees."
+
+Hamel sighed as he returned to his place.
+
+"My good intentions are already half dissipated," he admitted.
+
+She laughed.
+
+"How can we attack the other half?" she asked.
+
+Gerald, who was also on his way to the sideboard, suddenly stopped.
+
+"Hullo!" he exclaimed, looking out of the window. "Who's going
+away this morning, I wonder? There's the Rolls-Royce at the door."
+
+Hamel, too, rose once more to his feet. The two exchanged swift
+glances. Moved by a common thought, they both started for the door,
+only to find it suddenly opened before them. Mr. Fentolin glided
+into the room.
+
+"Uncle!" Gerald exclaimed.
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced keenly around the room.
+
+"Good morning, everybody," he said. "My appearance at this hour of
+the morning naturally surprises you. As a matter of fact, I have
+been up for quite a long time. Esther dear, give me some coffee,
+will you, and be sure that it is hot. If any of you want to say
+good-by to Mr. John P. Dunster, you'd better hurry out."
+
+"You mean that he is going?" Hamel asked incredulously.
+
+"He is going," Mr. Fentolin admitted. "I wash my hands of the man.
+He has given us an infinite amount of trouble, has monopolised
+Doctor Sarson when he ought to have been attending upon me - a
+little more hot milk, if you please, Esther - and now, although he
+really is not fit to leave his room, he insists upon hurrying off
+to keep an appointment somewhere on the Continent. The little
+operation we spoke of last night was successful, as Doctor Sarson
+prophesied, and Mr. Dunster was quite conscious and able to sit up
+early this morning. We telephoned at six o'clock to Norwich for a
+surgeon, who is now on his way over here, but he will not wait even
+to see him. What can you do with a man so obstinate!"
+
+Neither Hamel nor Gerald had resumed their places. The former,
+after a moment's hesitation, turned towards the door.
+
+"I think," he said, "that I should like to see the last of Mr.
+Dunster."
+
+"Pray do," Mr. Fentolin begged. "I have said good-by to him myself,
+and all that I hope is that next time you offer a wayfarer the
+hospitality of St. David's Hall, Gerald, he may be a more tractable
+person. This morning I shall give myself a treat. I shall eat an
+old-fashioned English breakfast. Close the door after you, if you
+please, Gerald."
+
+Hamel, with Gerald by his side, hurried out into the hall. Just
+as they crossed the threshold they saw Mr. Dunster, wrapped from
+head to foot in his long ulster, a soft hat upon his head and one
+of Mr. Fentolin's cigars in his mouth, step from the bottom
+stair into the hall and make his way with somewhat uncertain
+footsteps towards the front door. Doctor Sarson walked on one
+side, and Meekins held him by the arm. He glanced towards Gerald
+and his companion and waved the hand which held his cigar.
+
+"So long, my young friend!" he exclaimed. You see, I've got them
+to let me make a start. Next time we go about the country in a
+saloon car together, I hope we'll have better luck. Say, but I'm
+groggy about the knees!"
+
+"You'd better save your breath," Doctor Sarson advised him grimly.
+"You haven't any to spare now, and you'll want more than you have
+before you get to the end of your journey. Carefully down the
+steps, mind."
+
+They helped him into the car. Hamel and Gerald stood under the
+great stone portico, watching.
+
+"Well, I'm jiggered!" the boy exclaimed, under his breath.
+
+Hamel was watching the proceedings with a puzzled frown. To his
+surprise, neither Doctor Sarson nor Meekins were accompanying the
+departing man.
+
+"He's off, right enough," Hamel declared, as the car glided away.
+"Do you understand it? I don't."
+
+Gerald did not speak for several moments. His eyes were still fixed
+upon the back of the disappearing car. Then he turned towards Hamel.
+
+"There isn't much," he said softly, "that Mr. Fentolin doesn't know.
+If that detective was really on his way here, there wasn't any
+chance of keeping Mr. Dunster to himself. You see, the whole story
+is common property. And yet, there's something about the affair
+that bothers me."
+
+"And me," Hamel admitted, watching the car until it became a speck
+in the distance.
+
+"He was fairly well cornered," Gerald concluded, as they made their
+way back to the dining-room, "but it isn't like him to let go of
+anything so easily."
+
+"So you've seen the last of our guest," Mr. Fentolin remarked, as
+amel and Gerald re-entered the dining-room. "A queer fellow - almost
+a new type to me. Dogged and industrious, I should think. He hadn't
+the least right to travel, you know, and I think so long as we had
+taken the trouble to telephone to Norwich, he might have waited to
+see the physician. Sarson was very angry about it, but what can you
+do with these fellows who are never ill? They scarcely know what
+physical disability means. Well, Mr. Hamel, and how are you goin
+to amuse yourself to-day?"
+
+"I had thought of commencing some reading I brought with me," Hamel
+replied, "but Miss Esther has challenged me to another game of golf."
+
+"Excellent!" Mr. Fentolin declared. "It is very kind of you indeed,
+Mr. Hamel. It is always a matter of regret for me that society in
+these parts is so restricted. My nephew and niece have little
+opportunity for enjoying themselves. Play golf with Mr. Hamel, by
+all means, my dear child," he continued, turning to his niece. "Make
+the most of this glorious spring weather. And what about you, Gerald?
+What are you doing to-day?"
+
+"I haven't made up my mind yet, sir," the boy replied.
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"Always that lack of initiative," he remarked. "A lack of initiative
+is one of your worst faults, I am afraid, dear Gerald."
+
+The boy looked up quickly. For a moment it seemed as though he were
+about to make a fierce reply. He met Mr. Fentolin's steady gaze,
+however, and the words died away upon his lips.
+
+"I rather thought," he said, "of going into Norwich, if you could
+spare me. Captain Holt has asked me to lunch at the Barracks."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head gently.
+
+"It is most unfortunate," he declared. "I have a commission for
+you later in the day."
+
+Gerald continued his breakfast in silence. He bent over his plate
+so that his face was almost invisible. Mr. Fentolin was peeling a
+peach. A servant entered the room.
+
+"Lieutenant Godfrey, sir," he announced.
+
+They all looked up. A trim, clean-shaven, hard-featured young man
+in naval uniform was standing upon the threshold. He bowed to
+Esther.
+
+"Very sorry to intrude, sir, at this hour of the morning," he said
+briskly. "Lieutenant Godfrey, my name. I am flag lieutenant of
+the Britannia. You can't see her, but she's not fifty miles off at
+this minute. I landed at Sheringham this morning, hired a car and
+made the best of my way here. Message from the Admiral, sir."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled genially.
+
+"We are delighted to see you, Lieutenant Godfrey," he said. "Have
+some breakfast."
+
+"You are very good, sir," the officer answered. "Business first.
+I'll breakfast afterwards, with pleasure, if I may. The Admiral's
+compliments, and he would take it as a favour if you would haul
+down your wireless for a few days."
+
+"Had down my wireless," Mr. Fentolin repeated slowly.
+
+"We are doing a lot of manoeuvring within range of you, and likely
+to do a bit more," the young man explained. "You are catching up
+our messages all the time. Of course, we know they're quite safe
+with you, but things get about. As yours is only a private
+installation, we'd like you, if you don't mind, sir, to shut up
+shop for a few days."
+
+Mr. Fentolin seemed puzzled.
+
+"But, my dear sir," he protested, "we are not at war, are we?"
+
+"Not yet," the young officer replied, "but God knows when we shall
+be! We are under sealed or ders, anyway, and we don't want any
+risk of our plans leaking out. That's why we want your wireless
+disconnected."
+
+"You need say no more," Mr. Fentolin assured him. "The matter is
+already arranged. Esther, let me present Lieutenant Godfrey - my
+niece, Miss Fentolin; Mr. Gerald Fentolin, my nephew; Mr. Hamel, a
+guest. See that Lieutenant Godfrey has some breakfast, Gerald. I
+will go myself and see my Marconi operator."
+
+"Awfully good of you, sir," the young man declared, "and I am sure
+we are very sorry to trouble you. In a week or two's time you can
+go into business again as much as you like. It's only while we
+are fiddling around here that the Admiral's jumpy about things.
+May my man have a cup of coffee, sir? I'd like to be on the way
+back in a quarter of an hour."
+
+Mr. Fentolin halted his chair by the side of the bell, and rang it.
+
+"Pray make use of my house as your own, sir," he said gravely.
+"From what you leave unsaid, I gather that things are more serious
+than the papers would have us believe. Under those circumstances,
+I need not assure you that any help we can render is entirely yours."
+
+Mr. Fentolin left the room. Lieutenant Godfrey was already
+attacking his breakfast. Gerald leaned towards him eagerly.
+
+"Is there really going to be war?" he demanded.
+
+"Ask those chaps at The Hague," Lieutenant Godfrey answered.
+"Doing their best to freeze us out, or something. All I know is,
+if there's going to be fighting, we are ready for them. By-the-by,
+what have you got wireless telegraphy for here, anyway?"
+
+"It's a fad of my uncle's," Gerald replied. "Since his accident he
+amuses himself in all sorts of queer ways."
+
+Lieutenant Godfrey nodded.
+
+"Poor fellow!" he said. "I heard he was a cripple, or something
+of the sort. Forgive my asking, but - you people are English,
+aren't you?"
+
+"Rather!" Gerald answered. "The Fentolins have lived here for
+hundreds of years. Why do you ask that?"
+
+Lieutenant Godfrey hesitated. He looked, for the moment, scarcely
+at his ease.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," he replied. "The old man was very anxious I
+should find out. You see, a lot of information seems to have got
+over on the other side, and we couldn't think where it had leaked
+out, except through your wireless. However, that isn't likely, of
+course, unless you've got one of these beastly Germans in your
+receiving-room. Now if I can borrow a cigarette, a cigar, or a
+pipe of tobacco - any mortal thing to smoke - I'll be off, if I may.
+The old man turned me out at an unearthly hour this morning, and in
+Sheringham all the shops were closed. Steady on, young fellow," he
+laughed, as Gerald filled his pockets with cigarettes. "Well, here's
+good morning to you, Miss Fentolin. Good morning, sir. How long
+ought it to take me to get to Sheringham?"
+
+"About forty minutes," Gerald told him, "if your car's any good at
+all."
+
+"It isn't much," was the somewhat dubious reply. "However, we'll
+shove along. You in the Service?" he enquired, as they walked down
+the hall together.
+
+"Hope I shall be before long," Gerald answered. I'm going into the
+army, though."
+
+"Have to hurry up, won't you?"
+
+Gerald sighed.
+
+"It's a little difficult for me. Here's your car. Good luck to you!"
+
+"My excuses to Mr. Fentolin," Lieutenant Godfrey shouted, "and many
+thanks."
+
+He jumped into the automobile and was soon on his way back. Gerald
+watched him until he was nearly out of sight. On the knoll, two of
+the wireless operators were already at work. Mr. Fentolin sat in
+his chair below, watching. The blue sparks were flashing. A message
+was just being delivered. Presently Mr. Fentolin turned his chair,
+and with Meekins by his side, made his way back to the house. He
+passed along the ball and into his study. Gerald, who was on his
+way to the dining-room, heard the ring of the telephone bell and the
+call for the trunk special line. He hesitated for a moment. Then
+he made his way slowly down towards the study and stood outside the
+door, listening. In a moment he heard Mr. Fentolin's clear voice,
+very low yet very penetrating.
+
+"The Mediterranean Fleet will be forty-seven hours before it comes
+together," was the message he heard. "The Channel Fleet will
+manoeuvre off Sheerness, waiting for it. The North Sea Fleet is
+seventeen units under nominal strength."
+
+Gerald turned the handle of the door slowly and entered. Mr.
+Fentolin was just replacing the receiver on its stand. He looked
+up at his nephew, and his eyebrows came together.
+
+"What do you mean by this?" he demanded. "Don't you know that I
+allow no one in here when I am telephoning on the private wire?"
+
+Gerald closed the door behind him and summoned up all his courage.
+
+"It is because I have heard what you were saying over the telephone
+that I am here," he declared. "I want to know to whom you were
+sending that message which you have intercepted outside."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat for a moment in his chair with immovable face.
+Then he pointed to the door, which Gerald had left open behind him.
+
+"Close that door, Gerald."
+
+The boy obeyed. Mr. Fentolin waited until he had turned around
+again.
+
+"Come and stand over here by the side of the table," he directed.
+
+Gerald came without hesitation. He stood before his uncle with
+folded arms. There was something else besides sullenness in his
+face this morning, something which Mr. Fentolin was quick to
+recognise.
+
+"I do not quite understand the nature of your question, Gerald,"
+Mr. Fentolin began. "It is unlike you. You do not seem yourself.
+Is there anything in particular the matter?"
+
+"Only this," Gerald answered firmly. "I don't understand why this
+naval fellow should come here and ask you to close up your wireless
+because secrets have been leaking out, and a few moments afterwards
+you should be picking up a message and telephoning to London
+information which was surely meant to be private. That's all.
+I've come to ask you about it."
+
+"You heard the message, then?"
+
+"I did."
+
+"You listened - at the keyhole?"
+
+"I listened outside," Gerald assented doggedly. "I am glad I
+listened. Do you mind answering my question?
+
+"Do I mind!" Mr. Fentolin repeated softly. "Really, Gerald, your
+politeness, your consideration, your good manners, astound me. I
+am positively deprived of the power of speech."
+
+"I'll wait here till it comes to you again, then," the boy declared
+bluntly. "I've waited on you hand and foot, done dirty work for
+you, put up with your ill-humours and your tyranny, and never
+grumbled. But there is a limit! You've made a poor sort of
+creature of me, but even the worm turns, you know. When it comes
+to giving away secrets about the movements of our navy at a time
+when we are almost at war, I strike."
+
+"Melodramatic, almost dramatic, but, alas! so inaccurate," Mr.
+Fentolin sighed. "Is this a fit of the heroics, boy, or what has
+come over you? Have you by any chance - forgotten?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's voice seemed suddenly to have grown in volume. His
+eyes dilated, he himself seemed to have grown in size. Gerald
+stepped a little back. He was trembling, but his expression had
+not changed.
+
+"No, I haven't forgotten. There's a great debt we are doing our
+best to pay, but there's such a thing as asking top much, there's
+such a thing as drawing the cords to snapping point. I'm speaking
+for Esther and mother as well as myself. We have been your slaves;
+in a way I suppose we are willing to go on being your slaves. It's
+the burden that Fate has placed around our necks, and we'll go
+through with it. All I want to point out is that there are limits,
+and it seems to me that we are up against them now."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded. He had the air of a man who wishes to be
+reasonable.
+
+"You are very young, my boy," he said, "very young indeed. Perhaps
+that is my fault for not having let you see more of the world. You
+have got some very queer ideas into your head. A little too much
+novel reading lately, eh? I might treat you differently. I might
+laugh at you and send you out of the room. I won't. I'll tell you
+what you ask. I'll explain what you find so mysterious. The person
+to whom I have been speaking is my stockbroker."
+
+"Your stockbroker!" Gerald exclaimed.
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"Mr. Bayliss," he continued, "of the firm of Bayliss, Hundercombe
+& Dunn, Throgmorton Court. Mr. Bayliss is a man of keen
+perceptions. He understands exactly the effect of certain classes
+of news upon the market. The message which I have just sent to him
+is practically common property. It will be in the Daily Mail
+to-morrow morning. The only thing is that I have sent it to him
+just a few minutes sooner than any one else can get it. There is a
+good deal of value in that, Gerald. I do not mind telling you that
+I have made a large fortune through studying the political situation
+and securing advance information upon matters of this sort. That
+fortune some day will probably be yours. It will be you who will
+benefit. Meanwhile, I am enriching myself and doing no one any harm."
+
+"But how do you know," Gerald persisted, "that this message would
+ever have found its way to the Press? It was simply a message from
+one battleship to another. It was not intended to be picked up on
+land. There is no other installation but ours that could have picked
+it up. Besides, it was in code. I know that you have the code, but
+the others haven't."
+
+Mr. Fentolin yawned slightly.
+
+"Ingenious, my dear Gerald, but inaccurate. You do not know that
+the message was in code, and in any case it was liable to be picked
+up by any steamer within the circle. You really do treat me, my boy,
+rather as though I were a weird, mischief-making person with a
+talent for intrigue and crime of every sort. Look at your suspicions
+last night. I believe that you and Mr. Hamel had quite made up your
+minds that I meant evil things for Mr. John P. Dunster. Well, I had
+my chance. You saw him depart."
+
+"What about his papers?"
+
+"I will admit," Mr. Fentolin replied, "that I read his papers. They
+were of no great consequence, however, and he has taken them away
+with him. Mr. Dunster. as a matter of fact, turned out to be
+rather a mare's-nest. Now, come, since you are here, finish
+everything you have to say to me. I am not angry. I am willing to
+listen quite reasonably."
+
+Gerald shook his head.
+
+"Oh, I can't!" he declared bitterly. "You always get the best of it.
+I'll only ask you one more question. Are you having the wireless
+hauled down?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin pointed out of the window. Gerald followed his finger.
+Three men were at work upon the towering spars.
+
+"You see," Mr. Fentolin continued tolerantly, "that I am keeping my
+word to Lieutenant Godfrey. You are suffering from a little too
+much imagination, I am afraid. It is really quite a good fault.
+By-the-by, how do you get on with our friend Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"Very well," the boy replied. "I haven't seen much of him."
+
+"He and Esther are together a great deal, eh?" Mr. Fentolin asked
+quickly.
+
+"They seem to be quite friendly."
+
+"It isn't Mr. Hamel, by any chance, who has been putting these
+ideas into your head?"
+
+"No one has been putting any ideas into my head," Gerald answered
+hotly. "It's simply what I've seen and overheard. It's simply
+what I feel around, the whole atmosphere of the place, the whole
+atmosphere you seem to create around you with these brutes Sarson
+and Meekins; and those white-faced, smooth-tongued Marconi men of
+yours, who can't talk decent English; and the post-office man, who
+can't look you in the face; and Miss Price, who looks as though
+she were one of the creatures, too, of your torture chamber.
+That's all."
+
+Mr. Fentolin waited until he had finished. Then be waved him away.
+
+"Go and take a long walk, Gerald," he advised. "Fresh air is what
+you need, fresh air and a little vigorous exercise. Run along now
+and send Miss Price to me."
+
+Gerald overtook Hamel upon the stairs.
+
+"By this time," the latter remarked, "I suppose that our friend
+Mr. Dunster is upon the sea."
+
+Gerald nodded silently. They passed along the corridor. The door
+of the room which Mr. Dunster had occupied was ajar. As though by
+common consent, they both stopped and looked in. The windows were
+all wide open, the bed freshly made. The nurse was busy collecting
+some medicine bottles and fragments of lint. She looked at them in
+surprise.
+
+"Mr. Dunster has left, sir," she told them.
+
+"We saw him go," Gerald replied.
+
+"Rather a quick recovery, wasn't it, nurse?" Hamel asked.
+
+"It wasn't a recovery at all, sir," the woman declared sharply.
+"He'd no right to have been taken away. It's my opinion Doctor
+Sarson ought to be ashamed of himself to have permitted it."
+
+"They couldn't exactly make a prison of the place, could they?"
+Hamel pointed out. "The man, after all, was only a guest."
+
+"That's as it may be, sir," the nurse replied. "All the same, those
+that won't obey their doctors aren't fit to be allowed about alone.
+That's the way I look at it."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin was passing along the corridor as they issued from
+the room. She started a little as she saw them.
+
+"What have you two been doing in there?" she asked quickly.
+
+"We were just passing," Hamel explained. "We stopped for a moment
+to speak to the nurse."
+
+"Mr. Dunster has gone," she said. "You saw him go, Gerald. You
+saw him, too, didn't you, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"I certainly did," Hamel admitted.
+
+Mrs. Fentolin pointed to the great north window near which they
+were standing, through which the clear sunlight streamed a little
+pitilessly upon her worn face and mass of dyed hair.
+
+"You ought neither of you to be indoors for a minute on a morning
+like this," she declared. "Esther is waiting for you in the car,
+I think, Mr. Hamel."
+
+Gerald passed on up the stairs to his room, but Hamel lingered.
+A curious impulse of pity towards his hostess stirred him. The
+morning sunlight seemed to have suddenly revealed the tragedy of
+her life. She stood there, a tired, worn woman, with the burden
+heavy upon her shoulders.
+
+"Why not come out with Miss Fentolin and me? he suggested. "We
+could lunch at the Golf Club, out on the balcony. I wish you
+would. Can't you manage it?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Thank you very much," she said. "Mr. Fentolin does not like
+to be left."
+
+Something in the finality of her words seemed to him curiously
+eloquent of her state of mind. She did not move on. She seemed,
+indeed, to have the air of one anxious to say more. In that
+ruthless light, the advantages of her elegant clothes and
+graceful carriage were suddenly stripped away from her. She was
+the abject wreck of a beautiful woman, wizened, prematurely aged.
+Nothing remained but the eyes, which seemed somehow to have their
+message for him.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin is a little peculiar, you know," she went on, her
+voice shaking slightly with the effort she was making to keep it
+low. "He allows Esther so little liberty, she sees so few young
+people of her own age. I do not know why he allows you to be with
+her so much. Be careful, Mr. Hamel."
+
+Her voice seemed suddenly to vibrate with a curious note of
+suppressed fear. Almost as she finished her speech, she passed on.
+Her little gesture bade him remain silent. As she went up the
+stairs, she began to hum scraps of a little French air.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+Hamel sliced his ball at the ninth, and after waiting for a few
+minutes patiently, Esther came to help him look for it. He was
+standing down on the sands, a little apart from the two caddies
+who were beating out various tufts of long grass.
+
+"Where did it go?" she asked.
+
+"I have no idea," he admitted.
+
+"Why don't you help look for it?"
+
+"Searching for balls," he insisted, "is a caddy's occupation. Both
+the caddies are now busy. Let us sit down here. These sand hummocks
+are delightful. It is perfectly sheltered, and the sun is in our
+faces. Golf is an overrated pastime. Let us sit and watch that
+little streak of blue find its way up between the white posts."
+
+She hesitated for a moment.
+
+"We shall lose our place."
+
+"There is no one behind."
+
+She sank on to the little knoll of sand to which he had pointed,
+with a resigned sigh.
+
+"You really are a queer person," she declared. "You have been
+playing golf this morning as though your very life depended upon it.
+You have scarcely missed a shot or spoken a word. And now, all of
+a sudden, you want to sit on a sand hummock and watch the tide."
+
+"I have been silent," he told her, "because I have been thinking."
+
+"That may be truthful," she remarked, "but you wouldn't call it
+polite, would you?"
+
+"The subject of my thoughts is my excuse. I have been thinking of
+you."
+
+For a single moment her eyes seemed to have caught something of that
+sympathetic light with which he was regarding her. Then she looked
+away.
+
+"Was it my mashie shots you were worrying about?" she asked.
+
+"It was not," he replied simply. "It was you - you yourself."
+
+She laughed, not altogether naturally.
+
+"How flattering!" she murmured. "By-the-by, you are rather a
+downright person, aren't you, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"So much so," he admitted, "that I am going to tell you one or two
+things now. I am going to be very frank indeed."
+
+She sat suddenly quite still. Her face was turned from him, but
+for the first time since he had known her there was a slight
+undertone of colour in her cheeks.
+
+"A week ago," he said, "I hadn't the faintest idea of coming into
+Norfolk. I knew about this little shanty of my father's, but I
+had forgotten all about it. I came as the result of a conversation
+I had with a friend who is in the Foreign Office."
+
+She looked at him with startled eyes.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked quickly. "You are Mr. Hamel, aren't
+you?"
+
+"Certainly," he replied. "Not only am I Richard Hamel, mining
+engineer, but I really have all that reading to do I have spoken
+about, and I really was looking for a quiet spot to do it in. It
+is true that I had this part of the world in my mind, but I do not
+think that I should ever have really decided to come here if it
+had not been for my friend in London. He was very interested
+indeed directly I mentioned St. David's Tower. Would you like to
+know what he told me?"
+
+"Yes! Go on, please."
+
+"He told me a little of the history of your uncle, Mr. Fentolin,
+and what he did not tell me at the time, he has since supplemented.
+I suppose," he added, hesitatingly, "that you yourself -"
+
+"Please go on. Please speak as though I knew nothing."
+
+"Well, then," Hamel continued, "he told me that your uncle was at
+one time in the Foreign Office himself. He seemed to have a most
+brilliant career before him when suddenly there was a terrible
+scandal. A political secret - I don't know what it was - had leaked
+out. There were rumours that it had been acquired for a large sum
+of money by a foreign Power. Mr. Fentolin retired to Norfolk,
+pending an investigation. It was just as that time that he met with
+his terrible accident, and the matter was dropped."
+
+"Go on, please," she murmured.
+
+"My friend went on to say that during the last few years Mr. Fentolin
+has once again become an object of some suspicion to the head of our
+Secret Service Department. For a long time they have known that he
+was employing agents abroad, and that he was showing the liveliest
+interest in underground politics. They believed that it was a mere
+hobby, born of his useless condition, a taste ministered to, without
+doubt, by the occupation of his earlier life. Once or twice lately
+they have had reason to change their minds. You know, I dare say,
+in what a terribly disturbed state European affairs are just now.
+Well, my friend had an idea that Mr. Fentolin was showing an
+extraordinary amount of interest in a certain conference which we
+understand is to take place at The Hague. He begged me to come down,
+and to watch your uncle while I was down here, and report to him
+anything that seemed to me noteworthy. Since then I have had a
+message from him concerning the American whom you entertained - Mr.
+John P. Dunster. It appears that he was the bearer of very important
+dispatches for the Continent."
+
+"But he has gone," she said quickly. "Nothing happened to him,
+after all. He went away without a word of complaint. We all saw
+him."
+
+"That is quite true," Hamel admitted. "Mr. Dunster has certainly
+gone. It is rather a coincidence, however, that he should have
+taken his departure just as the enquiries concerning his whereabouts
+had reached such a stage that it had become quite impossible to keep
+him concealed any longer."
+
+She turned a little in her place and looked at him steadfastly.
+
+"Mr. Hamel," she said, "tell me - what of your mission? You have
+had an opportunity of studying my uncle. You have even lived under
+his roof. Tell me what you think."
+
+His face was troubled.
+
+"Miss Fentolin," he said, "I will tell you frankly that up to now
+I have not succeeded in solving the problem of your uncle's
+character. To me personally he has been most courteous. He lives
+apparently a studious and an unselfish life. I have heard him even
+spoken of as a philanthropist. And yet you three - you, your mother,
+and your brother, who are nearest to him, who live in his house and
+under his protection, have the air of passing your days in mortal
+fear of him."
+
+"Mr. Hamel," she exclaimed nervously, "you don't believe that! He
+is always very kind."
+
+"Apparently," Hamel observed drily. "And yet you must remember that
+you, too, are afraid of him. I need not remind you of our
+conversations, but there the truth is. You praise his virtues and
+his charities, you pity him, and yet you go about with a load of
+fear, and - forgive me - of secret terror in your heart, you and
+Gerald, too. As for your mother -"
+
+"Don't!" she interrupted suddenly. "Why do you bring me here to
+talk like this? You cannot alter things. Nothing can be altered."
+
+"Can't it!" he replied. "Well, I will tell you the real reason of
+my having brought you here and of my having made this confession.
+I brought you here because I could not bear to go on living, if not
+under your roof, at any rate in the neighbourhood, without telling
+you the truth. Now you know it. I am here to watch Mr. Fentolin.
+I am going on watching him. You can put him on his guard, if you
+like; I shan't complain. Or you can -"
+
+He paused so long that she looked at him. He moved a little closer
+to her, his fingers suddenly gripped her hand.
+
+"Or you can marry me and come away from it all," he concluded
+quietly. "Forgive me, please - I mean it."
+
+For a moment the startled light in her eyes was followed by a
+delicious softness. Her lips were parted, she leaned a little
+towards him. Then suddenly she seemed to remember. She rose with
+swift alertness to her feet.
+
+"I think," she said, "that we had better play golf."
+
+"But I have asked you to marry me," he protested, as he scrambled up.
+
+"Your caddy has found your ball a long time ago," she pointed out,
+walking swiftly on ahead.
+
+He played his shot and caught her up.
+
+"Miss Fentolin - Esther," he pleaded eagerly, "do you think that I
+am not in earnest? Because I am. I mean it. Even if I have only
+known you for a few days, it has been enough. I think that I knew
+it was coming from the moment that you stepped into my railway
+carriage."
+
+"You knew that what was coming?" she asked, raising her eyes
+suddenly.
+
+"That I should care for you."
+
+"It's the first time you've told me she reminded him, with a queer
+little smile. "Oh, forgive me, please! I didn't mean to say that.
+I don't want to have you tell me so. It's all too ridiculous and
+impossible."
+
+"Is it? And why?"
+
+"I have only known you for three days."
+
+"We can make up for that."
+
+"But I don't - care about you. I have never thought of any one in
+that way. It is absurd," she went on.
+
+"You'll have to, sometime or other," he declared. "I'll take you
+travelling with me, show you the world, new worlds, unnamed rivers,
+untrodden mountains. Or do you want to go and see where the little
+brown people live among the mimosa and the cherry blossoms? I'll
+take you so far away that this place and this life will seem like
+a dream."
+
+Her breath caught a little.
+
+"Don't, please," she begged. "You know very well - or rather you
+don't know, perhaps, but I must tell you - that I couldn't. I am
+here, tied and bound, and I can't escape."
+
+"Ah! dear, don't believe it," he went on earnestly. "There isn't
+any bond so strong that I won't break it for you, no knot I won't
+untie, if you give me the right."
+
+They were climbing slowly on to the tee. He stepped forward and
+pulled her up. Her hand was cold. Her eyes were raised to his,
+very softly yet almost pleadingly.
+
+"Please don't say anything more," she begged. "I can't - quite bear
+it just now. You know, you must remember - there is my mother. Do
+you think that I could leave her to struggle alone?"
+
+His caddy, who had teed the ball, and who had regarded the
+proceedings with a moderately tolerant air, felt called upon at last
+to interfere.
+
+"We'd best get on," he remarked, pointing to two figures in the
+distance, "or they'll say we've cut in."
+
+Hamel smote his ball far and true. On a more moderate scale she
+followed his example. They descended the steps together.
+
+"Love-making isn't going to spoil our golf," he whispered, smiling,
+as he touched her fingers once more.
+
+She looked at him almost shyly.
+
+"Is this love-making?" she asked.
+
+They walked together from the eighteenth green towards the
+club-house. A curious silence seemed suddenly to have enveloped
+them. Hamel was conscious of a strange exhilaration, a queer
+upheaval of ideas, an excitement which nothing in his previous
+life had yet been able to yield him. The wonder of it amazed him,
+kept him silent. It was not until they reached the steps, indeed,
+that he spoke.
+
+"On our way home -" he began.
+
+She seemed suddenly to have stiffened. He looked at her, surprised.
+She was standing quite still, her hand gripping the post, her eyes
+fixed upon the waiting motor-car. The delicate softness had gone
+from her face. Once more that look of partly veiled suffering was
+there, suffering mingled with fear.
+
+"Look!" she whispered, under her breath. "Look! It is Mr. Fentolin!
+He has come for us himself; he is there in the car."
+
+Mr. Fentolin, a strange little figure lying back among the cushions
+of the great Daimler, raised his hat and waved it to them.
+
+"Come along, children," he cried. "You see, I am here to fetch you
+myself. The sunshine has tempted me. What a heavenly morning!
+Come and sit by my side, Esther, and fight your battle all over
+again. That is one of the joys of golf, isn't it?" he asked,
+turning to Hamel. "You need not be afraid of boring me. To-day
+is one of my bright days. I suppose that it is the sunshine and
+the warm wind. On the way here we passed some fields. I could
+swear that I smelt violets. Where are you going, Esther?
+
+"To take my clubs to my locker and pay my caddy," she replied.
+
+"Mr. Hamel will do that for you," Mr. Fentolin declared. "Come and
+take your seat by my side, and let us wait for him. I am tired of
+being alone."
+
+She gave up her clubs reluctantly. All the life seemed to have gone
+from her face.
+
+"Why didn't mother come with you?" she asked simply.
+
+"To tell you the truth, dear Esther," he answered, "when I started,
+I had a fancy to be alone. I think - in fact I am sure - that your
+mother wanted to come. The sunshine, too, was tempting her. Perhaps
+it was selfish of me not to bring her, but then, there is a great
+deal to be forgiven me, isn't there, Esther?"
+
+"A great deal," she echoed, looking steadily ahead of her.
+
+"I came," he went on, "because it occurred to me that, after all,
+I had my duties as your guardian, dear Esther. I am not sure that
+we can permit flirtations, you know. Let me see, how old are you?"
+
+"Twenty-one," she replied.
+
+"In a magazine I was reading the other day," he continued, "I was
+interested to observe that the modern idea as regards marriage is
+a changed one. A woman, they say, should not marry until she
+is twenty-seven or twenty-eight - a very excellent idea. I think
+we agree, do we not, on that, Esther?"
+
+"I don't know," she replied. "I have never thought about the
+matter."
+
+"Then," he went on, "we will make up our minds to agree.
+Twenty-seven or twenty-eight, let us say. A very excellent age!
+A girl should know her own mind by then. And meanwhile, dear Esther,
+would it be wise, I wonder, to see a little less of our friend Mr.
+Hamel? He leaves us to-day, I think. He is very obstinate about
+that. If he were staying still in the house, well, it might be
+different. But if he persists in leaving us, you will not forget,
+dear, that association with a guest is one thing; association with
+a young man living out of the house is another. A great deal less
+of Mr. Hamel I think that we must see."
+
+She made no reply whatever. Hamel was coming now towards them.
+
+"Really a very personable young man," Mr. Fentolin remarked,
+studying him through his eyeglass. "Is it my fancy, I wonder, as
+an observant person, or is he just a little - just a little taken
+with you, Esther? A pity if it is so - a great pity."
+
+She said nothing, but her hand which rested upon the rug was
+trembling a little.
+
+"If you have an opportunity," Mr. Fentolin suggested, dropping his
+voice, "you might very delicately, you know - girls are so clever
+at that sort of thing-convey my views to Mr. Hamel as regards his
+leaving us and its effect upon your companionship. You understand
+me, I am sure?"
+
+For the first time she turned her head towards him.
+
+"I understand," she said, "that you have some particular reason for
+not wishing Mr. Hamel to leave St. David's Hall."
+
+He smiled benignly.
+
+"You do my hospitable impulses full justice, dear Esther," he
+declared. "Sometimes I think that you understand me almost as well
+as your dear mother. If, by any chance, Mr. Hamel should change
+his mind as to taking up his residence at the Tower, I think you
+would not find me in any sense of the word an obdurate or exacting
+guardian. Come along, Mr. Hamel. That seat opposite to us is quite
+comfortable. You see, I resign myself to the inevitable. I have
+come to fetch golfers home to luncheon, and I compose myself to
+listen. Which of you will begin the epic of missed putts and
+brassey shots which failed by a foot to carry?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+Hamel sat alone upon the terrace, his afternoon coffee on a small
+table in front of him. His eyes were fixed upon a black speck at
+the end of the level roadway which led to the Tower. Only a few
+minutes before, Mr. Fentolin, in his little carriage, bad shot out
+from the passage beneath the terrace, on his way to the Tower.
+Behind him came Meekins, bending over his bicycle. Hamel watched
+them both with thoughtful eyes. There were several little incidents
+in connection with their expedition which he scarcely understood.
+
+Then there came at last the sound for which he had been listening,
+the rustle of a skirt along the terraced way. Hamel turned quickly
+around, half rising to his feet, and concealing his disappointment
+with difficulty. It was Mrs. Seymour Fentolin who stood there, a
+little dog under each arm; a large hat, gay with flowers, upon her
+head. She wore patent shoes with high heels, and white silk
+stockings. She had, indeed, the air of being dressed for luncheon
+at a fashionable restaurant. As she stooped to set the dogs down,
+a strong waft of perfume was shaken from her clothes.
+
+"Are you entirely deserted, Mr. Hamel?" she asked.
+
+"I am," he replied. "Miss Esther went, I think, to look for you.
+My host," he added, pointing to the black speck in the distance,
+"begged me to defer my occupation of the Tower for an hour or so,
+and has gone down there to collect some of his trifles."
+
+Her eyes followed his outstretched hand. She seemed to him to
+shiver for a moment.
+
+"You really mean, then, that you are going to leave us?" she asked,
+accepting the chair which he had drawn up close to his.
+
+He smiled.
+
+"Well, I scarcely came on a visit to St. David's Hall, did I?" he
+reminded her. "It has been delightfully hospitable of Mr. Fentolin
+to have insisted upon my staying on here for these few days, but I
+could not possibly inflict myself upon you all for an unlimited
+period."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin sat quite still for a time. In absolute repose, if
+one could forget her mass of unnaturally golden hair, the forced
+and constant smile, the too liberal use of rouge and powder, the
+nervous motions of her head, it was easily to be realised that
+there were still neglected attractions about her face and figure.
+Only, in these moments of repose, an intense and ageing weariness
+seemed to have crept into her eyes and face. It was as though she
+had dropped the mask of incessant gaiety and permitted a glimpse of
+her real self to steal to the surface.
+
+"Mr. Hamel," she said quietly, "I dare say that even during these
+few days you have realised that Mr. Fentolin is a very peculiar man."
+
+"I have certainly observed - eccentricities," Hamel assented.
+
+"My life, and the lives of my two children," she went on, "is devoted
+to the task of ministering to his happiness."
+
+"Isn't that rather a heavy sacrifice?" he asked. Mrs. Seymour
+Fentolin looked down the long, narrow way along which Mr. Fentolin
+had passed. He was out of sight now, inside the Tower. Somehow
+or other, the thought seemed to give her courage and dignity. She
+spoke differently, without nervousness or hurry.
+
+"To you, Mr. Hamel," she said, "it may seem so. We who make it know
+of its necessity."
+
+He bowed his head. It was not a subject for him to discuss with her.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin has whims," she went on, "violent whims. We all try
+to humour him. He has his own ideas about Gerald's bringing up.
+I do not agree with them, but we submit. Esther, too, suffers,
+perhaps to a less extent. As for me," - her voice broke a little -"
+Mr. Fentolin likes people around him who are always cheerful. He
+prefers even a certain style - of dress. I, too, have to do my
+little share."
+
+Hamel's face grew darker.
+
+"Has it ever occurred to you," he demanded, "that Mr. Fentolin is a
+tyrant?"
+
+She closed her eyes for a moment.
+
+"There are reasons," she declared, "why I cannot discuss that with
+you. He has these strong fancies, and it is our task in life to
+humour them. He has one now with regard to the Tower, with regard
+to you. You are, of course, your own master. You can do as you
+choose, and you will do as you choose. Neither I nor my children
+have any claim upon your consideration. But, Mr. Hamel, you have
+been so kind that I feel moved to tell you this. It would make it
+very much easier for all of us if you would give up this scheme of
+yours, if you would stay on here instead of going to reside at the
+Tower."
+
+Hamel threw away his cigarette. He was deeply interested.
+
+"Mrs. Fentolin," he said, "I am glad to have you speak so plainly.
+Let me answer you in the same spirit. I am leaving this house
+mainly because I have conceived certain suspicions with regard to
+Mr. Fentolin. I do not like him, I do not trust him, I do not
+believe in him. Therefore, I mean to remove myself from the burden
+of his hospitality. There are reasons," he went on, "why I do not
+wish to leave the neighbourhood altogether. There are certain
+investigations which I wish to make. That is why I have decided to
+go to the Tower."
+
+"Miles was right, then!" she cried suddenly. "You are here to spy
+upon him!"
+
+He turned towards her swiftly.
+
+"To spy upon him, Mrs. Fentolin? For what reason? Why? Is he a
+criminal, then?"
+
+She opened her lips and closed them again. There was a slight frown
+upon her forehead. It was obvious that the word had unintentionally
+escaped her.
+
+"I only know what it is that he called you, what he suspects you of
+being," she explained. "Mr. Fentolin is very clever, and he is
+generally at work upon something. We do not enquire into the
+purpose of his labours. The only thing I know is that he suspects
+you of wanting to steal one of his secrets."
+
+"Secrets? But what secrets has he?" Hamel demanded. "Is he an
+inventor?"
+
+"You ask me idle questions," she sighed. "We have gone, perhaps,
+a little further than I intended. I came to plead with you for all
+our sakes, if I could, to make things more comfortable by remaining
+here instead of insisting upon your claim to the Tower."
+
+"Mrs. Fentolin," Hamel said firmly. "I like to do what I can to
+please and benefit my friends, especially those who have been kind
+to me. I will be quite frank with you. There is nothing you could
+ask me which I would not do for your daughter's sake - if I were
+convinced that it was for her good."
+
+Mrs. Seymour Fentolin seemed to be trembling a little. Her hands
+were crossed upon her bosom.
+
+"You have known her for so short a time," she murmured.
+
+Hamel smiled confidently.
+
+"I will not weary you," he said, "with the usual trite remarks. I
+will simply tell you that the time has been long enough. I love
+your daughter."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin sat quite still. Only in her eyes, fixed steadily
+seawards, there was the light of something new, as though some new
+thought was stirring in her brain. Her lips moved, although the
+sound which came was almost inaudible.
+
+"Why not?" she murmured, as though arguing with some unseen critic
+of her thoughts. "Why not?"
+
+"I am not a rich man," Hamel went on, "but I am fairly well off.
+I could afford to be married at once, and I should like -
+
+She turned suddenly upon him and gripped his wrist.
+
+"Listen," she interrupted, "you are a traveller, are you not? You
+have been to distant countries, where white people go seldom;
+inaccessible countries, where even the arm of the law seldom reaches.
+Couldn't you take her away there, take her right away, travel so fast
+that nothing could catch you, and hide - hide for a little time?"
+
+Hamel stared at his companion, for a moment, blankly. Her attitude
+was so unexpected, her questioning so fierce.
+
+"My dear Mrs. Fentolin," he began -
+
+She suddenly relaxed her grip of his arm. Something of the old
+hopelessness was settling down upon her face. Her hands fell into
+her lap.
+
+"No," she interrupted, "I forgot! I mustn't talk like that. She,
+too, is part of the sacrifice."
+
+"Part of the sacrifice," Hamel repeated, frowning. "Is she, indeed!
+I don't know what sacrifice you mean, but Esther is the girl whom
+sooner or later, somehow or other, I am going to make my wife, and
+when she is my wife, I shall see to it that she isn't afraid of
+Miles Fentolin or of any other man breathing."
+
+A gleam of hopefulness shone through the stony misery of the woman's
+face.
+
+"Does Esther care?" she asked softly.
+
+"How can I tell? I can only hope so. If she doesn't yet, she shall
+some day. I suppose," he added, with a sigh, "it is rather too soon
+yet to expect that she should. If it is necessary, I can Wait."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin's eyes were once more fixed upon the Tower. The sun
+had caught the top of the telephone wire and played around it till
+it seemed like a long, thin shaft of silver.
+
+"If you go down there," she said, "Esther will not be allowed to
+see you at all. Mr. Fentolin has decided to take it as a personal
+affront. You will be ostracised from here."
+
+"Shall I?" he answered. "Well, it won't be for long, at any rate.
+And as to not seeing Esther, you must remember that I come from
+outside this little domain, and I see nothing more in Mr. Fentolin
+than a bad-tempered, mischievous, tyrannical old invalid, who is
+fortunately prevented by his infirmities from doing as much mischief
+as he might. I am not afraid of your brother-in-law, or of the
+bully he takes about with him, and I am going to see your daughter
+somehow or other, and I am going to marry her before very long."
+
+She thrust out her hand suddenly and grasped his. The fingers were
+very thin, almost bony, and covered with rings. Their grip was
+feverish and he felt them tremble.
+
+"You are a brave man, Mr. Hamel," she declared speaking in a low,
+quick undertone. "Perhaps you are right. The shadow isn't over
+your head. You haven't lived in the terror of it. You may find a
+way. God grant it!"
+
+She wrung his fingers and rose to her feet. Her voice suddenly
+changed into another key. Hamel knew instinctively that she wished
+him to understand that their conversation was over.
+
+"Chow-Chow," she cried, "come along, dear, we must have our walk.
+Come along, Koto; come along, little dogs."
+
+Hamel strolled down the terrace steps and wandered for a time in
+the gardens behind the house. Here, in the shelter of the great
+building, he found himself suddenly in an atmosphere of springtime.
+There were beds of crocuses and hyacinths, fragrant clumps of
+violets, borders of snowdrops, masses of primroses and early
+anemones. He slowly climbed one or two steep paths until he reached
+a sort of plateau, level with the top of the house. The flowers
+here grew more sparsely, the track of the salt wind lay like a
+withering band across the flower-beds. The garden below was like a
+little oasis of colour and perfume. Arrived at the bordering red
+brick wall, he turned around and looked along the narrow road which
+led to the sea. There was no sign of Mr. Fentolin's return. Then
+to his left he saw a gate open and heard the clamour of dogs.
+Esther appeared, walking swiftly towards the little stretch of road
+which led to the village. He hurried after her.
+
+"Unsociable person!" he exclaimed, as he caught her up. "Didn't
+you know that I was longing for a walk?"
+
+"How should I read your thoughts?" she answered. "Besides, a few
+minutes ago I saw you on the terrace, talking to mother. I am only
+going as far as the village."
+
+"May I come?" he asked. "I have business there myself."
+
+She laughed.
+
+"There are nine cottages, three farmhouses, and a general shop in
+St. David's," she remarked. "Also about fifteen fishermen's
+cottages dotted about the marsh. Your business, I presume, is with
+the general shop?"
+
+He shook his head, falling into step with her.
+
+"What I want," he explained, "is to find a woman to come in and
+look after me at the Tower. Your servant who valets me has given
+me two names.
+
+Something of the lightness faded from her face.
+
+"So you have quite made up your mind to leave us?" she asked slowly.
+"Mother wasn't able to persuade you to stay?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"She was very kind," he said, "but there are really grave reasons
+why I feel that I must not accept Mr. Fentolin's hospitality any
+longer. I had," he went on, "a very interesting talk with your
+mother."
+
+She turned quickly towards him. The slightest possible tinge of
+additional colour was in her cheeks. She was walking on the top
+of a green bank, with the wind blowing her skirts around her. The
+turn of her head was a little diffident, almost shy. Her eyes were
+asking him questions. At that moment she seemed to him, with her
+slim body, her gently parted lips and soft, tremulous eyes, almost
+like a child. He drew a little nearer to her.
+
+"I told your mother," he continued, "all that I have told you, and
+more. I told her, dear, that I cared for you, that I wanted you to
+be my wife."
+
+She was caught in a little gust of wind. Both her hands went up to
+her hat; her face was hidden. She stepped down from the bank.
+
+"You shouldn't have done that," she said quietly.
+
+"Why not?" he demanded. "It was the truth."
+
+He stooped forward, intent upon looking into her face. The mystic
+softness was still in her eyes, but her general expression was
+inscrutable. It seemed to him that there was fear there.
+
+"What did mother say?" she whispered.
+
+"Nothing discouraging," he replied. "I don't think she minded at
+all. I have decided, if you give me permission, to go and talk to
+Mr. Fentolin this evening."
+
+She shook her head very emphatically.
+
+"Don't! " she implored. " Don't! Don't give him another whip to
+lash us with. Keep silent. Let me just have the memory for a few
+days all to myself."
+
+Her words came to him like numb things. There was little expression
+in them, and yet he felt that somehow they meant so much.
+
+"Esther dear," he said, "I shall do just as you ask me. At the
+same time, please listen. I think that you are all absurdly
+frightened of Mr. Fentolin. Living here alone with him, you have
+all grown under his dominance to an unreasonable extent. Because
+of his horrible infirmity, you have let yourselves become his
+slaves. There are limits to this sort of thing, Esther. I come
+here as a stranger, and I see nothing more in Mr. Fentolin than
+a very selfish, irritable, domineering, and capricious old man.
+Humour him, by all means. I am willing to do the same myself.
+But when it comes to the great things in life, neither he nor any
+living person is going to keep from me the woman I love."
+
+She walked by his side in silence. Her breath was coming a little
+quicker, her fingers lay passive in his. Then for a moment he felt
+the grip of them almost burn into his flesh. Still she said nothing.
+
+"I want your permission, dear," he went on, "to go to him. I
+suppose he calls himself your guardian. If he says no, you are of
+age. I just want you to believe that I am strong enough to put my
+arms, around you and to carry you away to my own world and keep you
+there, although an army of Mr. Fentolin's creatures followed us."
+
+She turned, and he saw the great transformation. Her face was
+brilliant, her eyes shone with wonderful things.
+
+"Please," she begged, "will you say or do nothing at all for a
+little time, until I tell you when? I want just a few days peace.
+You have said such beautiful things to me that I want them to lie
+there in my thoughts, in my heart, undisturbed, for just a littl
+time. You see, we are at the village now. I am going to call at
+this third cottage. While I am inside, you can go and make what
+enquiries you like. Come and knock at the door for me when you are
+ready."
+
+"And we will walk back together?"
+
+"We will walk back together," she promised him.
+
+"I will take you home another way. I will take you over what they
+call the Common, and come down behind the Hall into the gardens.
+
+She dismissed him with a little smile. He strolled along the
+village street and plunged into the mysterious recesses of the
+one tiny shop.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+Hamel met Kinsley shortly before one o'clock the following afternoon,
+in the lounge of the Royal Hotel at Norwich.
+
+"You got my wire, then?" the latter asked, as he held out his hand.
+"I had it sent by special messenger from Wells."
+
+"It arrived directly after breakfast," Hamel replied. "It wasn't
+the easiest matter to get here, even then, for there are only about
+two trains a day, and I didn't want to borrow a car from Mr.
+Fentolin."
+
+"Quite right," Kinsley agreed. "I wanted you to come absolutely on
+your own. Let's get into the coffee-room and have some lunch now.
+I want to catch the afternoon train hack to town."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you've come all the way down here to talk
+to me for half an hour or so?" Hamel demanded, as they took their
+places at a table.
+
+"All the way from town," Kinsley assented, "and up to the eyes in
+work we are, too. Dick, what do you think of Miles Fentolin?"
+
+"Hanged if I know!" Hamel answered, with a sigh.
+
+"Nothing definite to tell us, then?" Nothing!"
+
+"What about Mr. John P. Dunster?"
+
+"He left yesterday morning," Hamel said. "I saw him go. He looked
+very shaky. I understood that Mr. Fentolin sent him to Yarmouth."
+
+"Did Mr. Fentolin know that there was an enquiry on foot about this
+man's disappearance?" Kinsley asked.
+
+"Certainly. I heard Lord Saxthorpe tell him that the police had
+received orders to scour the country for him, and that they were
+coming to St. David's Hall."
+
+Kinsley, for a moment, was singularly and eloquently profane.
+
+"That's why Mr. Fentolin let him go, then. If Saxthorpe had only
+held his tongue, or if those infernal police hadn't got chattering
+with the magistrates, we might have made a coup. As it is, the
+game's up. Mr. Dunster left for Yarmouth, you say, yesterday
+morning?"
+
+"I saw him go myself. He looked very shaky and ill, but he was
+able to smoke a big cigar and walk down-stairs leaning on the
+doctor's arm."
+
+"I don't doubt," Kinsley remarked, "but that you saw what you say
+you saw. At the same time, you may be surprised to hear that Mr.
+Dunster has disappeared again."
+
+"Disappeared again?" Hamel muttered.
+
+"It looks very much," Kinsley continued, "as though your friend
+Miles Fentolin has been playing with him like a cat with a mouse.
+He has been obliged to turn him out of one hiding-place, and he has
+simply transferred him to another."
+
+Hamel looked doubtful.
+
+"Mr. Dunster left quite alone in the car," he said. "He was on his
+guard too, for Mr. Fentolin and he had had words. 1 really can't
+see how it was possible for him to have got into any more trouble."
+
+"Where is he, then?" Kinsley demanded. "Come, I will let you a
+little further into our confidence. We have reason to believe that
+he carries with him a written message which is practically the only
+chance we have of avoiding disaster during the next few days. That
+written message is addressed to the delegates at The Hague, who are
+now sitting. Nothing had been heard of Dunster or the document he
+carries. No word has come from him of any sort since he left St.
+David's Hall."
+
+"Have you tried to trace him from there?" Hamel asked.
+
+"Trace him?" Kinsley repeated. "By heavens, you don't seem to
+understand, Dick, the immense, the extraordinary importance of this
+man to us! The cleverest detective in England spent yesterday
+under your nose at St. David's Hall. There are a dozen others
+working upon the job as hard as they can. All the reports confirm
+what you say - that Dunster left St. David's Hall at half-past nine
+yesterday morning, and he certainly arrived in Yarmouth at a little
+before twelve. From there he seems, however, to have completely
+disappeared. The car went back to St. David's Hall empty; the man
+only stayed long enough in Yarmouth, in fact, to have his dinner.
+We cannot find a single smack owner who was approached in any way
+for the hire of a boat. Yarmouth has been ransacked in vain. He
+certainly has not arrived at The Hague or we should have heard news
+at once. As a last resource, I ran down here to see you on the
+chance of your having picked up any information."
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"You seem to know a good deal more than I do, already," he said.
+
+"What do you think of Mr. Fentolin? You have stayed in his house.
+You have had an opportunity of studying him."
+
+"So far as my impressions go," Hamel replied, "everything which you
+have suggested might very well be true. I think that either out of
+sheer love of mischief, or from some subtler motive, he is capable
+of anything. Every one in the place, except one poor woman, seems
+to look upon him as a sort of supernatural being. He gives money
+away to worthless people with both hands. Yet I share your opinion
+of him. I believe that he is a creature without conscience or morals.
+I have sat at his table and shivered when he has smiled."
+
+"Are you staying at St. David's Hall now?"
+
+"I left yesterday."
+
+"Where are you now, then?"
+
+"I am at St. David's Tower - the little place I told you of that
+belonged to my father - but I don't know whether I shall be able to
+stop there. Mr. Fentolin, for some reason or other, very much
+resented my leaving the Hall and was very annoyed at my insisting
+upon claiming the Tower. When I went down to the village to get
+some one to come up and look after me, there wasn't a woman there
+who would come. It didn't matter what I offered, they were all the
+same. They all muttered some excuse or other, and seemed only
+anxious to show me out. At the village shop they seemed to hate
+to serve me with anything. It was all I could do to get a packet
+of tobacco yesterday afternoon. You would really think that I was
+the most unpopular person who ever lived, and it can only be because
+of Mr. Fentolin's influence."
+
+"Mr. Fentolin evidently doesn't like to have you in the locality,"
+Kinsley remarked thoughtfully.
+
+"He was all right so long as I was at St. David's Hall," Hamel
+observed.
+
+"What's this little place like - St. David's Tower, you call it?"
+Kinsley asked.
+
+"Just a little stone building actually on the beach," Hamel
+explained. "There is a large shed which Mr. Fentolin keeps locked
+up, and the habitable portion consists just of a bedroom and
+sitting-room. From what I can see, Mr. Fentolin has been making
+a sort of hobby of the place. There is telephonic communication
+with the house, and he seems to have used the sitting-room as a
+sort of studio. He paints sea pictures and really paints them
+ery well."
+
+A man came into the coffee-room, made some enquiry of the waiter
+and went out again. Hamel stared at him in a puzzled manner. For
+the moment he could only remember that the face was familiar. Then
+he suddenly gave vent to a little exclamation.
+
+"Any one would think that I had been followed," he remarked. "The
+man who has just looked into the room is one of Mr. Fentolin's
+parasites or bodyguards, or whatever you call them."
+
+"You probably have," Kinsley agreed. "What post does he hold in
+the household?"
+
+"I have no idea," Hamel replied. "I saw him the first day I arrived
+and not since. Sort of secretary, I should think."
+
+"He is a queer-looking fellow, anyway," Kinsley muttered. "Look
+out, Dick. Here he comes back again."
+
+Mr. Ryan approached the table a little diffidently.
+
+"I hope you will forgive the liberty, sir," he said to Hamel. "You
+remember me, I trust - Mr. Ryan. I am the librarian at St. David's
+Hall."
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"I thought I'd seen you there."
+
+"I was wondering," the man continued, "whether you had a car of Mr.
+Fentolin's in Norwich to-day, and if so, whether I might beg a seat
+back in case you were returning before the five o'clock train? I
+came in early this morning to go through some manuscripts at a
+second-hand bookseller's here, and I have unfortunately missed the
+train back."
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"I came in by train myself, or I would have given you a lift back,
+with pleasure," he said.
+
+Mr. Ryan expressed his thanks briefly and left the room. Kinsley
+watched him from over the top of a newspaper.
+
+"So that is one of Mr. Fentolin's creatures, too," he remarked.
+"Keeping his eye on you in Norwich, eh? Tell me, Dick, by-the-by,
+how do you get on with the rest of Mr. Fentolin's household, and
+exactly of whom does it consist?"
+
+"There is his sister-in-law," Hamel replied, "Mrs. Seymour Fentolin.
+She is a strange, tired-looking woman who seems to stand in mortal
+fear of Mr. Fentolin. She is always overdressed and never natural,
+but it seems to me that nearly everything she does is done to suit
+his whims, or at his instigation."
+
+Kinsley nodded thoughtfully.
+
+"I remember Seymour Fentolin he said; "a really fine fellow he was.
+Well, who else?"
+
+"Just the nephew and niece. The boy is half sullen, half
+discontented, yet he, too, seems to obey his uncle blindly. The
+three of them seem to be his slaves. It's a thing you can't live
+in the house without noticing."
+
+"It seems to be a cheerful sort of household," Kinsley observed.
+"You read the papers, I suppose, Dick?" he asked, after a moment's
+pause.
+
+"On and off, the last few days. I seem to have been busy doing all
+sorts of things."
+
+"Well, I'll tell you something," Kinsley continued. "The whole of
+our available fleet is engaged in carrying out what they call a
+demonstration in the North Sea. They have patrol boats out in every
+direction, and only the short distance wireless signals are being
+used. Everything, of course, is in code, yet we know this for a
+fact: a good deal of private information passing between the Admiral
+and his commanders was known in Germany three hours after the signals
+themselves had been given. It is suspected - more than suspected,
+in fact - that these messages were picked up by Mr. Fentolin's
+wireless installation."
+
+"I don't suppose he could help receiving them," Hamel remarked.
+
+"He could help decoding them and sending them through to Germany,
+though," Kinsley retorted grimly. "The worst of it is, he has a
+private telephone wire in his house to London. If he isn't up
+to mischief, what does he need all these things for - private
+telegraph line, private telephone, private wireless? We have given
+the postmaster a hint to have the telegraph office moved down into
+the village, but I don't know that that will help us much."
+
+"So far as regards the wireless," Hamel said, "I rather believe
+that it is temporarily dismantled. We had a sailor-man over, the
+morning before yesterday, to complain of his messages having been
+picked up. Mr. Fentolin promised at once to put his installation
+out of work for a time."
+
+"He has done plenty of mischief with it already," Kinsley groaned.
+"However, it was Dunster I came down to make enquiries about. I
+couldn't help hoping that you might have been able to put us on the
+right track."
+
+Hamel sighed.
+
+"I know nothing beyond what I have told you."
+
+"How did he look when he went away?"
+
+"Very ill indeed," Hamel declared. "I afterwards saw the nurse who
+had been attending him, and she admitted that he was not fit to
+travel. I should say the probabilities are that he is laid up again
+somewhere."
+
+"Did you actually speak to him?"
+
+"Just a word or two."
+
+"And you saw him go off in the car?"
+
+"Gerald Fentolin and I both saw him and wished him good-by."
+
+Kinsley glanced at the clock and rose to his feet. "Walk down to
+the station with me," he suggested. "I needn't tell you, I am sure,"
+he went on, as they left the hotel a few minutes later, "that if
+anything does turn up, or if you get the glimmering of an idea,
+you'll let me know? We've a small army looking for the fellow, but
+it does seem as though he had disappeared off the face of the earth.
+If he doesn't turn up before the end of the Conference, we are done."
+
+"Tell me," Hamel asked, after they had walked for some distance in
+silence, "exactly why is our fleet demonstrating to such an extent?"
+
+"That Conference I have spoken of," Kinsley replied, "which is being
+held at The Hague, is being held, we know, purposely to discuss
+certain matters in which we are interested. It is meeting for their
+discussion without any invitation having been sent to this country.
+There is only one reply possible to such a course. It is there in
+the North Sea. But unfortunately -"
+
+Kinsley paused. His tone and his expression had alike become
+gloomier.
+
+"Go on," Hamel begged.
+
+"Our reply, after all, is a miserable affair," Kinsley concluded.
+"You remember the outcry over the withdrawal of our Mediterranean
+Fleet? Now you see its sequel. We haven't a ship worth a snap of
+the fingers from Gibraltar to Suez. If France deserts us, it's
+good-by to Malta, good-by to Egypt, good-by to India. It's the
+disruption of the British Empire. And all this," he wound up, as
+he paused before taking his seat in the railway carriage, "all this
+might even now be avoided if only we could lay our hands upon the
+message which that man Dunster was bringing from New York!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+Once more Hamel descended from the little train, and, turning away
+from St. David's Hall, made his way across the marshes, seawards.
+The sunshine of the last few days had departed. The twilight was
+made gloomy by a floating veil of white mist, which hung about in
+wet patches. Hamel turned up his coat collar as he walked and
+shivered a little. The thought of his solitary night and
+uncomfortable surroundings, after all the luxury of St. David's
+Hall, was scarcely inspiring. Yet, on the whole, he was splendidly
+cheerful. The glamour of a host of new sensations was upon him.
+There was a new love of living in his heart. He forgot the cold
+east wind which blew in his face, bringing with it little puffs
+of damp grey mist. He forgot the cheerlessness which he was about
+to face, the lonely night before him. For the first time in his
+life a woman reigned in his thoughts.
+
+It was not until he actually reached the very side of the Tower
+that he came back to earth. As he opened the door, he found a
+surprise in store for him. A fire was burning in the sitting-room,
+smoke was ascending from the kitchen chimney. The little round
+table was laid with a white cloth. There was a faint odour of
+cooking from the back premises. His lamp was lit, there were logs
+hissing and crackling upon the fire. As he stood there looking
+wonderingly about him, the door from the back was opened. Hannah
+Cox came quietly into the room.
+
+"What time would you like your dinner, sir ?" she enquired.
+
+Hamel stared at her.
+
+"Why, are you going to keep house for me, Mrs. Cox?" he asked.
+
+"If you please, sir. I heard that you had been in the village,
+looking for some one. I am sorry that I was away. There is no one
+else who would come to you."
+
+"So I discovered," he remarked, a little grimly.
+
+"No one else," she went on, "would come to you because of Mr.
+Fentolin. He does not wish to have you here. They love him so
+much in the village that he had only to breathe the word. It was
+enough."
+
+"Yet you are here," he reminded her.
+
+"I do not count," she answered. "I am outside all these things."
+
+Hamel gave a little sigh of satisfaction.
+
+"Well, I am glad you could come, anyhow. If you have something for
+dinner, I should like it in about half an hour."
+
+He climbed the narrow stairs which led to his bedroom. To his
+surprise, there were many things there for his comfort which he had
+forgotten to order - clean bed-linen, towels, even a curtain upon
+the window.
+
+"Where did you get all the linen up-stairs from, Mrs. Cox?" he
+asked her, when he descended. "The room was almost empty yesterday,
+and I forgot nearly all the things I meant to bring home from
+Norwich."
+
+"Mrs. Seymore Fentolin sent down a hamper for you," the woman
+replied, "with a message from Mr. Fentolin. He said that nothing
+among the oddments left by your father had been preserved, but
+that you were welcome to anything you desired, if you would let
+them know at the Hall."
+
+"It is very kind of both of them," Hamel said thoughtfully.
+
+The woman stood still for a moment, looking at him. Then she drew
+a step nearer.
+
+"Has Mr. Fentolin given you the key of the shed?" she asked, very
+quietly.
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"We don't need the place, do we?"
+
+"He did not give you the key?" she persisted.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin said that he had some things in there which he wished
+to keep locked up," he explained.
+
+She remained thoughtful for several moments. Then she turned away.
+
+"No," she said, "it was not likely he would not give you that key!"
+
+Hamel dined simply but comfortably. Mrs. Cox cleared away the
+things, brought him his coffee, and appeared a few minutes later,
+her shawl wrapped around her, ready for departure.
+
+"I shall be here at seven o'clock in the morning, sir," she
+announced.
+
+Hamel was a little startled. He withdrew the pip from his mouth
+and looked at her.
+
+"Why, of course," he remarked. "I'd forgotten. There is no place
+for you to stay here."
+
+"I shall go back to my brother's." she said.
+
+Hamel put some money upon the table.
+
+"Please get anything that is necessary," he directed. "I shall
+leave you to do the housekeeping for a few days."
+
+"Shall you be staying here long, sir?" she asked.
+
+"I am not sure," he replied.
+
+"I do not suppose," she said, "that you will stay for very long.
+I shall get only the things that you require from day to day. Good
+night, sir.
+
+She left the room. Hamel looked after her for a moment with a frown.
+In some indescribable way, the woman half impressed, half irritated
+him. She had always the air of keeping something in the background.
+He followed her out on to the little ridge of beach, a few minutes
+after she had left. The mist was still drifting about. Only a few
+yards away the sea rolled in, filling the air with dull thunder.
+The marshland was half obscured. St. David's Hall was invisible,
+but like strangely-hung lanterns in an empty space he saw the line
+of lights from the great house gleam through the obscurity. There
+was no sound save the sound of the sea. He shivered slightly. It
+was like an empty land, this.
+
+Then, moved by some instinct of curiosity, he made his way round to
+the closed door of the boat-house, only to find it, as he had
+expected, locked. He shook Lt slightly, without result. Then he
+strolled round to the back, entered his own little abode by the
+kitchen, and tried the other door which led into the boat-house.
+It was not only locked, but a staple had been put in, and it was
+fastened with a padlock of curious design which he did not remember
+to have seen there before. Again, half unconsciously, he listened,
+and again he found the silence oppressive. He went back to his
+room, brought out some of the books which it had been his intention
+to study, and sat and read over the fire.
+
+At ten o'clock he went to bed. As he threw open his window before
+undressing, it seemed to him that he could catch the sound of voices
+from the sea. He listened intently. A grey pall hung everywhere.
+To the left, with strange indistinctness, almost like something
+human struggling to assert itself, came the fitful flash from the
+light at the entrance to the tidal way. Once more he strained his
+ears. This time there was no doubt about it. He heard the sound
+of fishermen's voices. He heard one of them say distinctly:
+
+"Hard aport, Dave lad! That's Fentolin's light. Keep her out a bit.
+Steady, lad!"
+
+Through a rift in the mist, he caught a glimpse of the brown sail
+of a fishing-boat, dangerously near the land. He watched it alter
+its course slightly and pass on. Then again there was silence. He
+undressed slowly and went to bed.
+
+Later on he woke with a start and sat up in bed, listening intently,
+listening for he knew not what. Except for the backward scream of
+the pebbles, dragged down every few seconds by the receding waves,
+an unbroken silence seemed to prevail. He struck a match and looked
+at his watch. It was exactly three o'clock. He got out of bed. He
+was a man in perfect health, ignorant of the meaning of nerves, a
+man of proved courage. Yet he was conscious that his pulses were
+beating with absurd rapidity. A new feeling seemed to possess him.
+He could almost have declared that he was afraid. What sound had
+awakened him? He had no idea, yet he seemed to have a distinct and
+absolute conviction that it had been a real sound and no dream.
+He drew aside the curtains and looked out of the window. The mist
+now seemed to have become almost a fog, to have closed in upon sea
+and land. There was nothing whatever to be seen. As he stood there
+for a moment, listening, his face became moist with the drifting
+vapour. Suddenly upon the beach he saw what at first he imagined
+must be an optical illusion - a long shaft of light, invisible in
+itself except that it seemed to slightly change the density of the
+mist. He threw on an overcoat over his pyjamas, thrust on his
+slippers, and taking up his own electric torch, hastily descended
+the stairs. He opened the front door and stepped out on to the
+beach. He stood in the very place where the light had seemed to
+be, and looked inland. There was no sign of any human person, not
+a sound except the falling of the sea upon the pebbly beach. He
+raised his voice and called out. Somehow or other, speech seemed
+to be a relief.
+
+"Hullo!"
+
+There was no response. He tried again.
+
+"Is any one there?"
+
+Still no answer. He watched the veiled light from the harbour
+appear and disappear. It threw no shadow of illumination upon the
+spot to which he had gazed from his window. One window at St.
+David's Hall was illuminated. The rest of the place was wrapped
+now in darkness. He walked up to the boat-house. The door was
+still locked. There was no sign that any one had been there.
+Reluctantly at last he re-entered the Tower and made his way
+up-stairs.
+
+"Confound that fellow Kinsley!" he muttered, as he threw off his
+overcoat. "All his silly suggestions and melodramatic ideas have
+given me a fit of nerves. I am going to bed, and I am going to
+sleep. That couldn't have been a light I saw at all. I couldn't
+have heard anything. I am going to sleep."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+Hamel awoke to find his room filled with sunshine and a soft wind
+blowing in through the open window. There was a pleasant odour of
+coffee floating up from the kitchen. He looked at his watch - it
+was past eight o'clock. The sea was glittering and bespangled with
+sunlight. He found among his scanty belongings a bathing suit, and,
+wrapped in his overcoat, hurried down-stairs.
+
+"Breakfast in half an hour, Mrs. Cox," he called out.
+
+She stood at the door, watching him as he stepped across the pebbles
+and plunged in. For a few moments he swam. Then he turned over on
+his back. The sunlight was gleaming from every window of St. David's
+Hall. He even fancied that upon the terrace he could see a
+white-clad figure looking towards him. He turned over and swam once
+more. From her place in the doorway Mrs. Cox called out to him.
+
+"Mind the Dagger Rocks, sir!"
+
+He waved his hand. The splendid exhilaration of the salt water
+seemed to give him unlimited courage. He dived, but the woman's
+cry of fear soon recalled him. Presently he swam to shore and
+hurried up the beach. Mrs. Cox, with a sigh of relief, disappeared
+into the kitchen.
+
+"Those rocks on your nerves again, Mrs. Cox?" he asked,
+good-humouredly, as he took his place at the breakfast table a
+quarter of an hour later.
+
+"It's only us who live here, sir," she answered, "who know how
+terrible they are. There s one - it comes up like my hand - a long
+spike. A boat once struck upon that, and it's as though it'd been
+sawn through the middle."
+
+"I must have a look at them some day," he declared. "I am going to
+work this morning, Mrs. Cox. Lunch at one o'clock."
+
+He took rugs and established himself with a pile of books at the
+back of a grassy knoll, sheltered from the wind, with the sea almost
+at his feet. He sharpened his pencil and numbered the page of his
+notebook. Then he looked up towards the Hall garden and found
+himself dreaming. The sunshine was delicious, and a gentle optimism
+seemed to steal over him.
+
+"I am a fool!" he murmured to himself. "I am catching some part of
+these people's folly. Mr. Fentolin is only an ordinary, crotchety
+invalid with queer tastes. On the big things he is probably like
+other men. I shall go to him this morning.
+
+A sea-gull screamed over his head. Little, brown sailed
+fishing-boats came gliding down the harbourway. A pleasant,
+sensuous joyfulness seemed part of the spirit of the day. Hamel
+stretched himself out upon the dry sand.
+
+"Work be hanged!" he exclaimed.
+
+A soft voice answered him almost in his ear, a voice which was
+becoming very familiar.
+
+"A most admirable sentiment, my young friend, which you seem to be
+doing your best to live up to. Not a line written, I see."
+
+He sat up upon his rug. Mr. Fentolin, in his little carriage, was
+there by his side. Behind was the faithful Meekins, with an easel
+under his arm.
+
+"I trust that your first night in your new abode has been a pleasant
+one?" Mr. Fentolin asked.
+
+"I slept quite well, thanks," Hamel replied. "Glad to see you're
+going to paint."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head gloomily.
+
+"It is, alas!" he declared, "one of my weaknesses. I can work only
+in solitude. I came down on the chance that the fine weather might
+have tempted you over to the Golf Club. As it is, I shall return."
+
+"I am awfully sorry," Hamel said. "Can't I go out of sight
+somewhere?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"I will not ask your pardon for my absurd humours," he continued,
+a little sadly. "Their existence, however, I cannot deny. I
+will wait."
+
+"It seems a pity for you to do that," Hamel remarked. "You see,
+I might stay here for some time."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's face darkened. He looked at the young man with a
+sort of pensive wrath.
+
+"If," the latter went on, "you say 'yes' to something I am going
+to ask you, I might even stay - in the neighbourhood - for longer
+still."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat quite motionless in his chair; his eyes were
+fixed upon Hamel.
+
+"What is it that you are going to ask me?" be demanded.
+
+"I want to marry your niece.
+
+Mr. Fentolin looked at the young man in mild surprise.
+
+"A sudden decision on your part, Mr. Hamel?" he murmured.
+
+"Not at all," Hamel assured him. "I have been ten years looking
+for her."
+
+"And the young lady?" Mr. Fentolin enquired. "What does she say?"
+
+"I believe, sir," Hamel replied, "that she would be willing."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"One is forced sometimes," he remarked regretfully, "to realise
+the selfishness of our young people. For many years one devotes
+oneself to providing them with all the comforts and luxuries of
+life. Then, in a single day, they turn around and give everything
+they have to give to a stranger. So you want to marry Esther?"
+
+"If you please."
+
+"She has a very moderate fortune."
+
+"She need have none at all," Hamel replied; "I have enough."
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced towards the house.
+
+"Then," he said, "I think you had better go and tell her so; in
+which case, I shall be able to paint."
+
+"I have your permission, then?" Hamel asked, rising to his feet
+eagerly.
+
+"Negatively," Mr. Fentolin agreed, "you have. I cannot refuse.
+Esther is of age; the thing is reasonable. I do not know whether
+she will be happy with you or not. A young man of your
+disposition who declines to study the whims of an unfortunate
+creature like myself is scarcely likely to be possessed of much
+sensibility. However, perhaps your views as to a solitary
+residence here will change with your engagement to my niece."
+
+Hamel did not reply for a moment. He was trying to ask himself
+why, even in the midst of this rush of anticipatory happiness, he
+should be conscious of a certain reluctance to leave the Tower - and
+Mr. Fentolin. He was looking longingly towards the Hall. Mr.
+Fentolin waved him away.
+
+"Go and make love," he ordered, "and leave me alone. We are both
+in pursuit of beauty - only our methods differ."
+
+Hamel hesitated no longer but walked up the narnow path with
+swift, buoyant footsteps. Everywhere he seemed to be surrounded
+by the glorious spring sunshine. It glittered in the little pools
+and creeks by his side. It drew a new colour from the dun-coloured
+marshes, the masses of emerald seaweed, the shimmering sands. It
+flashed in the long row of windows of the Hall. As he drew nearer,
+he could see the banks of yellow crocuses in the sloping gardens
+behind. There were odours of spring in the air. He ran lightly
+up the terrace steps. There was an easy-chair drawn into her
+favourite corner, and a book upon the table, but no sign of Esther.
+He hesitated for a moment, and then, retracing his steps along the
+terrace, entered the house by the front door, which stood wide
+open. There was no one in the hall, scarcely a sound about the
+place. A great clock ticked solemnly from the foot of the stairs.
+There was not even a servant in sight. Hamel wandered around, a
+ a loss what to do. He opened the door of the drawing-room and
+looked in. It was empty. He turned away, meaning to ring a bell.
+On his way across the hall he paused. A curiously suggestive
+sound reached him faintly from the end of one of the passages.
+It was the click of a typewriter.
+
+Hamel stood for a moment perfectly still. He had hurred up to
+the Hall, filled with the one selfish joy common to all mankind.
+He had had no thought save the thought of seeing Esther. The
+click of that machine brought him hack to the stern realities of
+life. He remembered his talk to Kinsley, his promise. On the
+hall table he could see from where he was standing the great
+headlines which announced the nation's anxiety. He was in the house
+of a suspected spy. The click of the typewriter was an accompaniment
+to his thought. He looked around once more and listened. Then he
+made his way quietly across the hail and down the long passage, at
+the end of which the room which Mr. Fentolin called his workroom
+was situated. He turned the handle of the door and entered, closing
+it immediately behind him. The woman who was typing paused with her
+fingers upon the keys. Her eyes met his coldly, without curiosity.
+She had paused in her work, but she took no other notice of his
+coming.
+
+"Has Mr. Fentolin sent you here?" she asked at last.
+
+He came over to the typewriter.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin has not sent me," he said slowly. "I am here on my
+own account. I dare say you will think that I am a lunatic to
+come to you like this. Nevertheless, please listen to me."
+
+Her fingers left the keys. She laid her hands upon the table in
+front of her. He drew a little nearer. She covered over the sheets
+of paper with which she was surrounded with a pad of blotting-paper.
+He pointed suddenly to them.
+
+"Why do you do that? " he demanded. "What is there in your work
+that you are afraid I might see?"
+
+She answered him without hesitation.
+
+"These are private papers of Mr. Fentolin's. No one has any
+business to see them. No one has any business to enter this room.
+Why are you here?"
+
+"I came to the Hall to find Miss Fentolin," he replied. "I heard
+the click of your typewriter. I came to you, I suppose I should
+say, on impulse."
+
+Her eyes rested upon his, filled with a cold and questioning light.
+
+"There's an impression up in London," Hamel went on, "that Mr.
+Fentolin has been intefering by means of his wireless in affairs
+which don't concern him, and giving away valuable information.
+This man Dunster's disappearance is as yet unexplained. I feel
+myself justified in making certain investigations, and among the
+first of them I should like you to tell me exactly the nature of
+the work for which Mr. Fentolin finds a secretary necessary?"
+
+She glanced towards the bell. He moved to the edge of the table
+as though to intercept her.
+
+"In any ordinary case," he continued, "I would not ask you to
+betray your employer's confidence. As things are, I think I am
+justified. You are English, are you not? You realise, I suppose,
+that the country is on the brink of war?"
+
+She looked at him from the depths of her still, lusterless eyes.
+
+"You must be a very foolish person," she remarked, "if you expect
+to obtain information in this manner."
+
+"Perhaps I am," he confessed, "but my folly has brought me to you,
+and you can give me the information if you will."
+
+"Where is Mr. Fentolin?" she asked.
+
+"Down at the Tower," he replied. "I left him there. He sent me
+up to see Miss Fentolin. I was looking for her when the click of
+your typewriter reminded me of other things."
+
+She turned composedly back to her work.
+
+"I think," she said, "that you had better go and find Miss Fentolin."
+
+"Don't talk nonsense! You can't think I have risked giving myself
+away to you for nothing? I mean to search this room, to read the
+papers which you are typing."
+
+She glanced around her a little contemptuously.
+
+"You are welcome," she assured him. "Pray proceed."
+
+They exchanged the glances of duelists. Her plain black frock was
+buttoned up to her throat. Her colourless face seemed set in exact
+and expressionless lines. Her eyes were like windows of glass. He
+felt only their scrutiny; nothing of the reason for it, or of the
+thoughts which stirred behind in her brain. There was nothing about
+her attitude which seemed in any way threatening, yet he had the
+feeling that in this interview it was she who possessed the upper
+hand.
+
+"You are a foolish person," she said calmly. "You are so foolish
+that you are not, in all probability, in the slightest degree
+dangerous. Believe me, ours is an unequal duel. There is a bell
+upon this table which has apparently escaped your notice. I sit
+with my finger upon the button - so. I have only to press it, and
+the servants will be here. I do not wish to press it. I do not
+desire that you should be, as you certainly would be, banished from
+this house."
+
+He was immensely puzzled. She had not resented his strange
+intrusion. She had accepted it, indeed, with curious equanimity.
+Her forefinger lingered still over the little ivory knob of the bell
+attached to her desk. He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"You have the advantage of me," he admitted, a little curtly. "All
+the same, I think I could possess myself of those sheets of paper,
+you know, before the bell was answered."
+
+"Would it be wise, I wonder, then, to ensure their safety?" she
+asked coolly.
+
+Her finger pressed the bell. He took a quick step forward. She
+held out her hand.
+
+"Stop!" she ordered. "These sheets will tell you nothing which you
+do not know already unless you are a fool. Never mind the bell.
+That is my affair. I am sending you away."
+
+He leaned a little towards her.
+
+"It wouldn't be possible to bribe you, I suppose?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I wonder you haven't tried that before. No, it would not - not
+with money, that is to say."
+
+"You'll tell Mr. Fentolin, I presume?" he asked quickly.
+
+"I have nothing to tell him," she replied. "Nothing has happened.
+Richards," she went on, as a servant entered the room, "Mr. Hamel
+is looking for Miss Fentolin. Will you see if you can find her?"
+
+The man's expression was full of polite regret.
+
+"Miss Fentolin went over to Legh Woods early this morning, sir,"
+he announced. "She is staying to lunch with Lady Saxthorpe."
+
+Hamel stood quite still for a moment. Then he turned to the window.
+In the far distance he could catch a glimpse of the Tower. Mr.
+Fentolin's chair had disappeared from the walk.
+
+"I am sorry," he said. "I must have made a mistake. I will hurry
+back."
+
+There were more questions which he was longing to ask, but the cold
+negativeness of her manner chilled him. She sat with her fingers
+poised over the keys, waiting for his departure. He turned and
+left the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+Mr. Fentolin, his carriage drawn up close to the beach, was painting
+steadily when Hamel stood once more by his side. His eyes moved
+only from the sea to the canvas. He never turned his head.
+
+"So your wooing has not prospered, my young friend," he remarked
+gently. "I am sorry. Is there anything I can do?"
+
+"Your niece has gone out to lunch," Hamel replied shortly.
+
+Mr. Fentolin stopped painting. His face was full of concern as he
+looked up at Hamel.
+
+"My dear sir," he exclaimed, "how can I apologise! Of course she
+has gone out to lunch. She has gone out to Lady Saxthorpe's. I
+remember the subject being discussed. I myself, in fact, was the
+instigator of her going. I owe you a thousand apologies, Mr. Hamel.
+Let me make what amends are possible for your useless journey.
+Dine with us to-night."
+
+"You are very kind."
+
+"A poor amends," Mr. Fentolin continued. "A morning like this was
+made for lovers. Sunshine and blue sky, a salt breeze flavoured
+just a little with that lavender, and a stroll through my spring
+gardens, where my hyacinths are like a field of purple and gold,
+a mantle of jewels upon the brown earth. Ah, well! One's thoughts
+will wander to the beautiful things of life. There were once women
+who loved me, Mr. Hamel."
+
+Hamel looked doubtfully at the strange little figure in the chair.
+Was this genuine, he wondered, a voluntary outburst, or was it some
+subtle attempt to incite sympathy? Mr. Fentolin seemed almost to
+have read his thought.
+
+"It is not for the sake of your pity that I say this," he continued.
+"Mine is only the passing across the line which age as well as
+infirmity makes inevitable. No one in the world who lives to grow
+old, and who has loved and felt the fire of it in his veins, can
+pass that line without sorrow, or look back without a pang. I am
+among a great army. Well, well, I shall paint no more to-day," he
+concluded abruptly.
+
+"Where is your servant? " Hamel asked.
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced around him carelessly.
+
+"He has wandered away out of sight. He knows well how necessary
+solitude is to me if once I take the brush between my fingers
+- solitude natural and entire, I mean. If any one is within a
+dozen yards of me I know it, even though I cannot see them.
+Meekins is wandering somewhere the other side of the Tower."
+
+"Shall I call him ?"
+
+"On no account," Mr. Fentolin begged. "Presently he will appear,
+in plenty of time. There is the morning to be passed - barely
+eleven o'clock, I think, now. I shall sit in my chair, and sink a
+little down, and dream of these beautiful lights, these rolling,
+foam-flecked waves, these patches of blue and shifting green. I
+can form them in my brain. I can make a picture there, even though
+my fingers refuse to move. You are not an aesthete, I think, Mr.
+Hamel? The study of beauty does not mean to you what it did to your
+father, and my father, and, in a smaller way to me."
+
+"Perhaps not," Hamel confessed. "I believe I feel these things
+somewhere, because they bring a queer sense of content with them.
+I am afraid, though, that my artistic perceptions are not so keen
+as some men's."
+
+Mr. Fentolin looked at him thoughtfully.
+
+"It is the physical life in your veins - too splendid to permit you
+abstract pleasures. Compensations again, you see - compensations.
+I wonder what the law is that governs these things. I have
+forgotten sometimes," he went on, "forgotten my own infirmities in
+the soft intoxication of a wonderful seascape. Only," he went on,
+his face a little grey, "it is the physical in life which triumphs.
+There are the hungry hours which nothing will satisfy."
+
+His head sank, his chin rested upon his chest. He had all the
+appearance now of a man who talks in bitter earnest. Yet Hamel
+wondered. He looked towards the Tower; there was no sign of Meekins.
+The sea-gulls went screaming above their heads. Mr. Fentolin never
+moved. His eyes seemed half closed. It was only when Hamel rose to
+his feet that he looked swiftly up.
+
+"Stay with me, I beg you, Mr. Hamel," he said. "I am in one of
+the moods when solitude, even for a moment, is dangerous. Do you
+know what I have sometimes thought to myself?"
+
+He pointed to the planked way which led down the steep, pebbly beach
+to the sea.
+
+"I have sometimes thought," he went on, "that it would be glorious
+to find a friend to stand by my side at the top of the planks, just
+there, when the tide was high, and to bid him loose my chair and to
+steer it myself, to steer it down the narrow path into the arms of
+the sea. The first touch of the salt waves, the last touch of life.
+Why not? One sleeps without fear."
+
+He lifted his head suddenly. Meekins had am peared, coming round
+from the back of the Tower. Instantly Mr. Fentolin's whole manner
+changed. He sat up in his chair.
+
+"It is arranged, then," he said. "You dine with us to-night. For
+the other matters of which you have spoken, well, let them rest in
+the hands of the gods. You are not very kind to me. I am not sure
+whether you would make Esther a good husband. I am not sure, even,
+that I like you. You take no pains to make yourself agreeable.
+Considering that your father was an artist, you seem to me rather a
+dull and uninspired young man. But who can tell? There may be
+things stirring beneath that torpid brain of yours of which no other
+person knows save yourself."
+
+The concentrated gaze of Mr. Fentolin's keen eyes was hard to meet,
+but Hamel came out of the ordeal without flinching.
+
+"At eight o'clock, Mr. Fentolin," he answered. "I can see that I
+must try to earn your better opinion.
+
+Hamel read steadily for the remainder of the morning. It was past
+one o'clock when he rose stiffly from his seat among the sand
+knolls and, strolling back to the Tower, opened the door and
+entered. The cloth was laid for luncheon in the little
+sitting-room, but there were no signs of Hannah Cox. He passed
+on into the kitchen and came to a sudden standstill. Once more
+the memory of his own work passed away from him. Once more he
+was back again among that queer, clouded tangle of strange
+suspicions, of thrilling, half-formed fears, which had assailed
+him at times ever since his arrival at St, David's. He stopped
+quite short. The words which rose to his lips died away. He
+felt the breathless, compelling need for silence and grew tense in
+the effort to make no sound.
+
+Hannah Cox was kneeling on the stone floor. Her ear was close to
+the crack of the door which led into the boat-house. Her face,
+half turned from it, was set in a strange, concentrated passion of
+listening; her lips were parted, her eyes half closed. She took
+no more notice of Hamel or his arrival than if he had been some
+useless piece of furniture. Every faculty seemed to be absorbed in
+that one intense effort of listening. There was no need of her
+out-stretched finger. Hamel fell in at once with a mood so mesmeric.
+ He, too, listened. The small clock which she had brought with her
+from the village ticked away upon the mantelpiece. The full sea
+fell with placid softness upon the high beach outside. Some slight
+noise of cooking came from the stove. Save for these things there
+was silence. Yet, for a space of time which Hamel could never have
+measured, they both listened. When at last the woman rose to her
+feet, Hamel, finding words at last, was surprised to find that his
+throat was dry.
+
+"What is it, Mrs. Cox?" he asked. "Why were you listening there?"
+
+Her face was absolutely expressionless. She was busying herself
+now with a small saucepan, and her back was turned towards him.
+
+"I spend my life, sir," she said, "listening and waiting. One
+never knows when the end may come."
+
+"But the boat-house," Hamel objected. "No one has been in there
+his morning, have they?"
+
+"Who can tell?" she answered. "He could go anywhere when he chose,
+or how he chose - through the keyhole, if he wanted."
+
+"But why listen?" Hamel persisted. "There is nothing in there now
+but some odds and ends of machinery."
+
+She turned from the fire and looked at him for a moment. Her eyes
+were colourless, her tone unemotional.
+
+"Maybe! There's no harm in listening."
+
+"Did you hear anything which made you want to listen?"
+
+"Who can tell?" she answered. "A woman who lives well-nigh alone,
+as I live, in a quiet place, hears things so often that other folk
+never listen to. There's always something in my ears, night or day.
+Sometimes I am not sure whether it's in this world or the other. It
+was like that with me just then. It was for that reason I listened.
+Your luncheon's ready, sir."
+
+Hamel walked thoughtfully back into his sitting-room. He seated
+himself before a spotless cloth and watched Hannah Cox spread out
+his well-cooked, cleanly-served meal.
+
+"If there's anything you want, sir," she said, "I shall hear you at
+a word. The kitchen door is open."
+
+"One moment, Mrs. Cox."
+
+She lingered there patiently, with the tray in her hand.
+
+"There was some sound," Hamel continued, "perhaps a real sound,
+perhaps a fancy, which made you go down on your knees in the kitchen.
+Tell me what it was."
+
+"The sound I always hear, sir," she answered quietly. "I hear it in
+the night, and I hear it when I stand by the sea and look out. I
+have heard it for so many years that who can tell whether it comes
+from this world or the other - the cry of men who die!"
+
+She passed out. Hamel looked after her, for a moment, like a man
+in a dream, In his fancy he could see her back again once more in
+the kitchen, kneeling on the stone floor,- listening!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+A cold twilight had fallen upon the land when Hamel left the Tower
+that evening and walked briskly along the foot-way to the Hall.
+Little patches of mist hung over the creeks, the sky was almost
+frosty. The lights from St. David's Hall shone like cheerful
+beacons before him. He hastened up the stone steps, crossed the
+terrace, and passed into the hall. A servant conducted him at once
+to the drawing-room. Mrs. Fentolin, in a pink evening dress, with
+a pink ornament in her hair, held out both her hands. In the
+background, Mr. Fentolin, in his queerly-cut evening clothes, sat
+with folded arms, leaning back in his carriage. He listened grimly
+to his sister-in-law as she stood with Hamel's hands in hers.
+
+"My dear Mr. Hamel!" she exclaimed. "How perfectly charming of you
+to come up and relieve a little our sad loneliness! Delightful, I
+call it, of you. I was just saying so to Miles."
+
+Hamel looked around the room. Already his heart was beginning to
+sink.
+
+"Miss Fentolin is well, I hope?" he asked.
+
+"Well, but a very naughty girl," her mother declared. "I let her
+go to Lady Saxthorpe's to lunch, and now we have had simply the
+firmest letter from Lady Saxthorpe. They insist upon keeping Esther
+to dine and sleep. I have had to send her evening clothes, but you
+can't tell, Mr. Hamel, how I miss her."
+
+
+Hamel's disappointment was a little too obvious to pass unnoticed.
+There was a shade of annoyance, too, in his face. Mr. Fentolin
+smoothly intervened.
+
+"Let us be quite candid with Mr. Hamel, dear Florence," he begged.
+"I have spoken to my sister-in-law and told her the substance of
+our conversation this morning," he proceeded, wheeling his chair
+nearer to Hamel. "She is thunderstruck. She wishes to reflect, to
+consider. Esther chanced to be away. We have encouraged her
+absence for a few more hours."
+
+"I hope, Mrs, Fentolin," Hamel said simply, " that you will give
+her to me. I am not a rich man, but I am fairly well off. I should
+be willing to live exactly where Esther wishes, and I would do my
+best to make her happy."
+
+Mrs, Fentolin opened her lips once and closed them again. She
+laughed a little - a high-pitched, semi-hysterical laugh. The hand
+which gripped her fan was straining so that the blue veins stood out
+almost like whipcord.
+
+"Esther is very young, Mr. Hamel. We must talk this over. You have
+known her for such a very short time."
+
+A servant announced dinner, and Hamel offered his arm to his hostess.
+
+"Is Gerald away, too?" he asked.
+
+"We do indeed owe you our apologies," Mr. Fentolin declared.
+"Gerald is spending a couple of days at the Dormy House at
+Brancaster - a golf arrangement made some time back."
+
+"He promised to play with me to-morrow," Hamel remarked thoughtfully.
+"He said nothing about going away."
+
+"I fear that like most young men of his age he has little memory,"
+Mr. Fentolin sighed. "However, he will be back to-morrow or the
+next day. I owe you my apologies, Mr. Hamel, for our lack of young
+people. We must do our best to entertain our guest, Florence. You
+must be at your best, dear. You must tell him some of those capital
+stories of yours."
+
+Mrs, Fentolin shivered for a moment. Hamel, as he handed her to her
+place, was struck by a strange look which she threw upon him, half
+furtive, full of pain. Her hand almost clung to his. She slipped a
+little, and he held her tightly. Then he was suchdenly conscious
+that something hard was being pressed into his palm. He drew his
+hand away at once.
+
+"You seem a little unsteady this evening, my dear Florence," Mr.
+Fentolin remarked, peering across the round table.
+
+She eyed him nonchalantly enough.
+
+"The floor is slippery," she said. "I was glad, for a moment, of
+Mr. Hamel's strong hand. Where are those dear puppies? Chow-Chow,"
+she went on, "come and sit by your mistress at once."
+
+Hamel's fingers inside his waistcoat pocket were smoothing out the
+crumpled piece of paper which she had passed to him. Soon he had
+it quite flat. Mrs, Fentolin, as though freed from some anxiety,
+chattered away gaily.
+
+"I don't know that I shall apologise to Mr. Hamel at all for the
+young people being away," she declared. "Just fancy what we have
+saved him from - a solitary meal served by Hannah Cox! Do you know
+that they say she is half-witted, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"So far, she has looked after me very well," Hamel observed.
+
+"Her intellect is defective," Mr. Fentolin remarked, "on one point
+only. The good woman is obsessed by the idea that her husband and
+sons are still calling to her from the Dagger Rocks. It is almost
+pitiful to meet her wandering about there on a stormy night. The
+seacoasts are full of these little village tragedies - real
+tragedies, too, however insignificant they may seem to us."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's tone was gently sympathetic. He changed the subject
+a moment or two later, however.
+
+"Nero fiddles to-night," he said, "while Rome burns. There are
+hundreds in our position, yet it certainly seems queer that we
+should be sitting here so quietly when the whole country is in such
+a state of excitement. I see the press this morning is preaching
+an immediate declaration of war."
+
+"Against whom?" Mrs, Fentolin asked.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"That does seem to be rather the trouble," he admitted. "Russia,
+Austria, Germany, Italy, and France are all assisting at a
+Conference to which no English representative has been bidden. In
+a sense, of course, that is equivalent to an act of hostility from
+all these countries towards England. The question is whether we
+have or have not a secret understanding with France, and if so, how
+far she will be bound by it. There is a rumour that when Monsieur
+Deschelles was asked formally whom he represented, that he replied
+- 'France and Great Britain.' There may be something in it. It is
+hard to see how any English statesman could have left unguarded the
+Mediterranean, with all that it means, trusting simply to the faith
+of a country with whom we have no binding agreement. On the other
+hand, there is the mobilisation of the fleet. If France is really
+faithful, one wonders if there was need for such an extreme step."
+
+"I am out of touch with political affairs," Hamel declared. "I have
+been away from England for so long."
+
+"I, on the other hand," Mr. Fentolin continued, his eyes glittering
+a little, "have made the study of the political situation in Europe
+my hobby for years. I have sent to me the leading newspapers of
+Berlin, Rome, Paris, St. Petersburg, and Vienna. For two hours
+every day I read them, side by side. It is curious sometimes to
+note the common understanding which seems to exist between the
+Powers not bound by any formal alliance. For years war seemed a
+very unlikely thing, and now," he added, leaning forward in his
+chair, "I pronounce it almost a certainty."
+
+Hamel looked at his host a little curiously. Mr. Fentolin's
+gentleness of expression seemed to have departed. His face was
+hard, his eyes agleam. He bad almost the look of a bird of prey.
+For some reason, the thought of war seemed to be a joy to him.
+Perhaps he read something of Hamel's wonder in his expression, for
+with a shrug of the shoulders he dismissed the subject.
+
+"Well," he concluded, "all these things lie on the knees of the gods.
+I dare say you wonder, Mr. Hamel, why a poor useless creature like
+myself should take the slightest interest in passing events? It is
+just the fascination of the looker-on. I want your opinion about
+that champagne. Florence dear, you must join us. We will drink to
+Mr. Hamel's health. We will perhaps couple that toast in our minds
+with the sentiment which I am sure is not very far from your
+thoughts, Florence."
+
+Hamel raised his glass and bowed to his host and hostess. He was
+not wholly at his ease. It seemed to him that he was being watched
+with a queer persistence by both of them. Mrs, Fentolin continued
+to talk and laugh with a gaiety which was too obviously forced. Mr.
+Fentolin posed for a while as the benevolent listener. He mildly
+applauded his sister-in-law's stories, and encouraged Hamel in the
+recital of some of his reminiscences. Suddenly the door was opened.
+Miss Price appeared. She walked smoothly across the room and stood
+by Mr. Fentolin's side. Stooping down, she whispered in his ear. He
+pushed his chair back a little from the table. His face was dark
+with anger.
+
+"I said not before ten to-night," he muttered.
+
+Again she spoke in his ear, so softly that the sound of her voice
+itself scarcely travelled even as far as where Hamel was sitting.
+Mr. Fentolin looked steadfastly for a moment at his sister-in-law
+and from her to Hamel. Then he backed his chair away front the
+table.
+
+"I shall have to ask to be excused for three minutes," he said.
+"I must speak upon the telephone. It is a call from some one who
+declares that they have important news."
+
+He turned the steering-wheel of his chair, and with Miss Price
+by his side passed across the dining-room, out of the Oasis of
+rose-shaded lights into the shadows, and through the open door.
+>From there he turned his head before he disappeared, as though to
+watch his guest. Mrs, Fentolin was busy fondling one of her dogs,
+which she had raised to her lap, and Hamel was watching her with a
+tolerant smile.
+
+"Koto, you little idiot, why can't you sit up like your sister?
+Was its tail in the way, then! Mr. Hamel," she whispered under her
+breath, so softly that he barely caught the words, although he was
+only a few feet away, "don't look at me. I feel as though we were
+being watched all the time. You can destroy that piece of paper in
+your pocket. All that it says is 'Leave here immediately after
+dinner>'"
+
+Hamel sipped his wine in a nonchalant fashion. His fingers had
+strayed over the silky coat of the little dog, which she had held
+out as though for his inspection.
+
+"How can I?" he asked. "What excuse can I make?"
+
+"Invent one," she insisted swiftly. "Leave here before ten o'clock.
+Don't let anything keep you. And destroy that piece of paper in
+your pocket, if you can - now."
+
+"But, Mrs, Fentolin -" he began.
+
+She caught up one of her absurd little pets and held it to her mouth.
+
+"Meekins is in the doorway," she whispered
+
+Don't argue with me, please. You are in danger you know nothing
+about. Pass me the cigarettes."
+
+She leaned back in her chair, smoking quickly. She held one of the
+dogs on her knee and talked rubbish to it. Hamel watched her,
+leaning back in his carved oak chair, and he found it hard to keep
+the pity from his eyes. The woman was playing a part, playing it
+with desperate and pitiful earnestness, a part which seemed the more
+tragical because of the soft splendour of their surroundings. From
+the shadowy walls, huge, dimly-seen pictures hung about them, a
+strange and yet impressive background. Their small round
+dining-table, with its rare cut glass, its perfect appointments, its
+bowls of pink roses, was like a spot of wonderful colour in the great
+room. Two men servants stood at the sideboard a few yards away, a
+triumph of negativeness. The butler, who had been absent for a
+moment, stood now silently waiting behind his master's place. Hamel
+was oppressed, during those few minutes of waiting, by a curious
+sense of unreality, as though he were taking part in some strange
+tableau. There was something unreal about his surroundings and his
+own presence there; something unreal in the atmosphere, charged as
+it seemed to be with some omen of impending happenings; something
+unreal in that whispered warning, those few hoarsely uttered words
+which had stolen to his hearing across the clusters of drooping
+roses; the absurd babble of the woman, who sat there with tragic
+things under the powder with which her face was daubed.
+
+"Koto must learn to sit upon his tail - like that. No, not another
+grape till he sits up. There, then!"
+
+She was leaning forward with a grape between her teeth, towards the
+tiny animal who was trying in vain to balance his absurdly shaped
+little body upon the tablecloth. Hamel, without looking around,
+knew quite well what was happening. Soon he heard the click of the
+chair. Mr. Fentolin was back in his place. His skin seemed paler
+and more parchment-like than ever. His eyes glittered.
+
+"It seems," he announced quietly, as he raised his wine-glass to his
+lips with the air of one needing support, "that we entertained an
+angel unawares here. This Mr. Dunster is lost for the second time.
+A very important personage he turns out to be."
+
+"You mean the American whom Gerald brought home after the accident?"
+Mrs, Fentolin asked carelessly.
+
+ Mr. Fentolin replied. "He insisted upon continuing his journey
+before he was strong enough. I warned him of what might happen.
+He has evidently been take ill somewhere. It seems that he was
+on his way to The Hague."
+
+"Do you mean that he has disappeared altogether this time?" Hamel
+asked.
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head.
+
+"No, he has found his way to The Hague safely enough. He is lying
+there at a hotel in the city, but he is unconscious. There is some
+talk about his having been robbed on the way. At any rate, they
+are tracing his movements backwards. We are to be honoured with a
+visit from one of Scotland Yard's detect,ives, to reconstruct his
+journey from here. Our quiet little corner of the world is becoming
+quite notorious. Florence dear, you are tired. I can see it in
+your eyes. Your headache continues, I am sure. We will not be
+selfish. Mr. Hamel and I are going to have a long evening in the
+library. Let me recommend a phenacetin and bed."
+
+She rose at once to her feet, with a dog under either arm.
+
+"I'll take the phenacetin," she promised, "but I hate going to bed
+early. Shall I see you again, I wonder, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"Not this evening, I fear," he answered. "I am going to ask Mr.
+Fentolin to excuse me early."
+
+She passed out of the room. Hamel escorted her as far as the door
+and then returned. Mr. Fentolin was sitting quite still in his
+chair. His eyes were fixed upon the tablecloth. He looked up
+quickly as Hamel resumed his seat.
+
+"You are not in earnest, I hope, Mr. Hamel," he said, "when you tell
+me that you must leave early? I have been anticipating a long
+evening. My library is filled with books on South America which I
+want to discuss with you."
+
+"Another evening, if you don't mind," Hamel begged. "To-night I
+must ask you to excuse my hurrying away."
+
+Mr. Fentolin looked up from underneath his eyelids. His glance was
+quick and penetrating.
+
+"Why this haste?"
+
+Hamel shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"To tell you the truth," he admitted, "I had an idea while I was
+reading an article on cantilever bridges this morning. I want to
+work it out."
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced behind him. The door of the dining-room was
+closed. The servants had disappeared. Meekins alone, looking more
+like a prize fighter than ever in his somber evening clothes, had
+taken the place of the butler behind his master's chair.
+
+ "We shall see," Mr. Fentolin said quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+Mr. Fentolin pointed to the little pile of books upon the table,
+the deep easy-chair, the green-shaded lamps, the decanter of wine.
+He had insisted upon a visit, however brief, to the library.
+
+"It is a student's appeal which I make to you, Mr. Hamel," he said,
+with a whimsical smile. "Here we are in my study, with the door
+closed, secure against interruption, a bright fire in the grate, a
+bowling and ever-increasing wind outside. Let us go together over
+the ground of your last wonderful expedition over the Andes. You
+will find that I am not altogether ignorant of your profession, or
+of those very interesting geological problems which you spoke of in
+connection with that marvellous railway scheme. We will discuss
+them side by side as sybarites, hang ourselves around with cigarette
+smoke, drink wine, and presently coffee. It is necessary, is it
+not, for many reasons, that we become better acquainted? You realise
+that, I am sure, and you will not persist in returning to your
+selfish solitude."
+
+Hamel's eyes were fixed a little longingly upon some of the volumes
+with which the table was covered.
+
+"You must not think me ungrateful or churlish, Mr. Fentolin," he
+begged. "I have a habit of keeping promises which I make to myself,
+and to-night I have made myself a promise that I will be back at
+the Tower by ten o'clock."
+
+"You are obdurate?" Mr. Fentolin asked softly.
+
+"I am afraid I am."
+
+Mr. Fentolin busied himself with the handle of his chair.
+
+"Tell me," he insisted, "is there any other person save yourself
+to whom you have given this mysterious promise?"
+
+"No one," Hamel replied promptly.
+
+"I am a person very sensitive to atmosphere," Mr. Fentolin continued
+slowly. "Since the unfortunate visit of this man Dunster, I seem to
+have been conscious of a certain suspicion, a little cloud of
+suspicion under which I seem to live and move, even among the members
+of my own household. My sister-in-law is nervous and hysterical;
+Gerald has been sullen and disobedient; Esther has avoided me. And
+now - well, I find even your attitude a little difficult to
+understand. What does it mean, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"I am not in the confidence of the different members of your family,"
+he answered. "So far as I, personally, am concerned -"
+
+"It pleases me sometimes," Mr. Fentolin interrupted, "to interfere
+to some extent in the affairs of the outside world. If I do so,
+that is my business. I do it for my own amusement. It is at no
+time a serious position which I take up. Have I by any chance, Mr.
+Hamel, become an object of suspicion to you?"
+
+"There are matters in which you are concerned," Hamel admitted,
+"which I do not understand, but I see no purpose in discussing them."
+
+Mr. Fentolin wheeled his chair round in a semicircle. He was now
+between the door and Hamel.
+
+"Weaker mortals than I, Mr. Hamel," he said calmly, "have wielded
+before now the powers of life and death. From my chair I can make
+the lightnings bite. Science has done away with the triumph of
+muscularity. Even as we are here together at this moment, Mr. Hamel,
+if we should disagree, it is I who am the preordained victor."
+
+Hamel saw the glitter in his hand. This was so end, then, of all
+doubt! He remained silent.
+
+"Suspicions which are, in a sense, absurd," Mr. Fentolin continued,
+"have grown until I find them obtrusive and obnoxious. What have I
+to do with Mr. John P. Dunster? I sent him out from my house. If
+he is lost or ill, the affair is not mine. Yet one by one those
+around me are falling away. I told you an hour ago that Gerald was
+at Brancaster. It is a lie. He has left this house, but no soul
+in it knows his destination."
+
+Hamel started.
+
+"You mean that he has run away?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"All that I can surmise is that he has followed Dunster," he
+proceeded. "He has an idea that in some way I robbed or injured
+the man. He has broken the bond of relationship between us. He
+has broken his solemn vow. He has run a grave and terrible risk."
+
+"What of Miss Esther?" Hamel asked quickly.
+
+"I have sent her away," Mr. Fentolin replied, "until we come to a
+clear understanding, you and I. You seem to be a harmless enough
+person, Mr. Hamel but appearances are sometimes deceptive. It has
+been suggested to me that you are a spy."
+
+"By whom?" Hamel demanded.
+
+"By those in whom I trust," Mr. Fentolin told him sternly. "You
+are a friend of Reginald Kinsley. You met him in Norwich the other
+day - secretly. Kinsley's chief is a member of the Government. He
+is one of those who will find eternal obloquy if The Hague
+Conference comes to a successful termination. For some strange
+reason, I am supposed to have robbed or harmed the one man in the
+world whose message might bring to nought that Conference. Are you
+here to watch me, Mr. Hamel? Are you one of those who believe that
+I am either in the pay of a foreign country, or that my harmless
+efforts to interest myself in great things are efforts inimical to
+this country; that I am, in short, a traitor?"
+
+"You must admit that many of your actions are incomprehensible,"
+Hamel replied slowly. "There are things here which I do not
+understand - which certainly require explanation."
+
+"Still, why do you make them your business? "Mr. Fentolin
+persisted. "If indeed the course which I steer is a harmless one,"
+he continued, with a strange new glitter in his eyes, "then you are
+an impertinent stranger to whom my doors cannot any longer be open.
+If you have taken advantage of my hospitality to spy upon me and my
+actions, if indeed you have a mission here, then you can carry it
+with you down into hell!"
+
+"I understand that you are threatening me?" Hamel murmured.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"Scarcely that, my young friend. I am not quite the obvious sort
+of villain who flourishes revolvers and lures his victims into
+secret chambers. These words to you are simply words of warning.
+I am not like other men, neither am I used to being crossed. When
+I am crossed, I am dangerous. Leave here, if you will, in safety,
+and mind your own affairs; but if you show one particle of
+curiosity as to mine, if you interfere in matters which concern me
+and me only, remember that you are encircled by powers which are
+entirely ruthless, absolutely omnipotent. You can walk back to the
+Tower to-night and remember that there isn't a step you take which
+might not be your last if I willed it, and never a soul the wiser.
+There's a very hungry little mother here who takes her victims and
+holds them tight. You can hear her calling to you now. Listen!"
+
+He held up his finger. The tide had turned, and through the
+half-open window came the low thunder of the waves.
+
+"You decline to share my evening," Mr. Fentolin concluded. "Let
+it be so. Go your own way, Hamel, only take care that your way does
+not cross mine."
+
+He backed his chair slowly and pressed the bell. Hamel felt himself
+dismissed. He passed out into the hall. The door of the
+drawing-room stood open, and he heard the sound of Mrs, Fentolin's
+thin voice singing some little French song. He hesitated and then
+stepped in. With one hand she beckoned him to her, continuing to
+play all the time. He stepped over to her side.
+
+"I come to make my adieux," he whispered, with a glance towards the
+door.
+
+"You are leaving, then?" she asked quickly.
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin is in a strange humour," she went on, a moment later,
+after she had struck the final chords of her song. "There are
+things going on around us which no one can understand. I think
+that one of his schemes has miscarried; he has gone too far. He
+suspects you; I cannot tell you why or how. If only you would go
+away!"
+
+"What about Esther?" he asked quietly.
+
+"You must leave her," she cried, with a little catch in her throat.
+"Gerald has broken away. Esther and I must carry still the burden."
+
+She motioned him to go. He touched her fingers for a moment.
+
+"Mrs, Fentolin," he said, "I have been a good many years making up
+my mind. Now that I have done so, I do not think that any one will
+keep Esther from me."
+
+She looked at him a little pitifully, a little wistfully. Then,
+with a shrug of the shoulders, she turned round to the piano and
+recommenced to play. Hamel took his coat and hat from a servant
+who was waiting in the hail and passed out into the night.
+
+He walked briskly until he reached the Tower. The wind had risen,
+but there was still enough light to help him on his way. The
+little building was in complete darkness. He opened the door and
+stepped into the sitting-room, lit the lamp, and, holding it over
+his head, went down the passage and into the kitchen. Then he gave
+a start. The lamp nearly slipped from his fingers. Kneeling on
+the stone floor, in very much the same attitude as he had found her
+earlier in the day, Hannah Cox was crouching patiently by the door
+which led into the boathouse, her face expressionless, her ear
+turned towards the crack. She was still listening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+Hamel set down the lamp upon the table. He glanced at the little
+clock upon the dresser; it was a quarter past ten. The woman had
+observed his entrance, although it seemed in no way to have
+discomposed her.
+
+"Do you know the time, Mrs. Cox?" he asked. "You ought to have been
+home hours ago. What are you doing there?"
+
+She rose to her feet. Her expression was one of dogged but patient
+humility.
+
+"I started for home before nine o'clock, sir," she told him, "but
+it was worse than ever to-night. All the way along by the sea I
+seemed to hear their voices, so I came back. I came back to listen.
+I have been listening for an hour."
+
+Hamel looked at her with a frown upon his forehead.
+
+"Mrs. Cox," he said, "I wish I could understand what it is that you
+have in your mind. Those are not real voices that you hear; you
+cannot believe that?"
+
+"Not real voices," she repeated, without the slightest expression in
+her tone.
+
+"Of course not! And tell me what connection you find between these
+fancies of yours and that room? Why do you come and listen here?
+
+"I do not know," she answered patiently.
+
+"You must have some reason," he persisted.
+
+"I have no reason," she assured him, "only some day I shall see
+behind these doors. Afterwards, I shall hear the voices no more."
+
+She was busy tying a shawl around her head. Hamel watched her,
+still puzzled. He could not get rid of the idea that there was
+some method behind her madness.
+
+"Tell me - I have found you listening here before. Have you ever
+heard anything suspicious?"
+
+"I have heard nothing yet," she admitted, "nothing that counts."
+
+"Come," he continued, "couldn't we clear this matter up sensibly?
+Do you believe that there is anybody in there? Do you believe the
+place is being used in any way for a wrong purpose? If so, we will
+insist upon having the keys from Mr. Fentolin. He cannet refuse.
+The place is mine.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin would not give you the keys, sir," she replied. "If
+he did, it would be useless."
+
+"Would you like me to break the door in?" Hamel asked.
+
+"You could not do it, sir," she told him, "not you nor anybody else.
+The door is thicker than my fist, of solid oak. It was a mechanic
+from New York who fitted the locks. I have heard it said in the
+village - Bill Hamas, the carpenter, declares that there are double
+doors. The workmen who were employed here were housed in a tent
+upon the beach and sent home the day they finished their job. They
+were never allowed in the village. They were foreigners, most of
+them. They came from nobody knows where, and when they had finished
+they disappeared. Why was that, sir? What is there inside which
+Mr. Fentolin needs to guard so carefully?"
+
+"Mr. Fentolin has invented something," Hamel explained. "He keeps
+the model in there. Inventors are very jealous of their work."
+
+She looked down upon the floor for a moment.
+
+"I shall be here at seven o'clock in the morning, sir. I will give
+you your breakfast at the usual time."
+
+Hamel opened the door for her.
+
+"Good night, Mrs. Cox," he said. "Would you like me to walk a
+little way with you? It's a lonely path to the village, and the
+dikes are full."
+
+"Thank you, no, sir," she replied. "It's a lonely way, right enough,
+but it isn't loneliness that frightens me. I am less afraid out
+with the winds and the darkness than under this roof. If I lose my
+way and wander all night upon the marsh, I'll be safer out there
+than you, sir.
+
+She passed away, and Hamel watched her disappear into the darkness.
+Then he dragged out a bowl of tobacco and filled a pipe. Although
+he was half ashamed of himself, he strolled back once more into the
+kitchen, and, drawing up a stool, he sat down just where he had
+discovered Hannah Cox, sat still and listened. No sound of any sort
+reached him. He sat there for ten minutes. Then he scrambled to
+his feet.
+
+"She is mad, of course!" he muttered.
+
+He mixed himself a whisky and soda, relit his pipe, which had gone
+out, and drew up an easy-chair to the fire which she had left him
+in the sitting-room. The wind had increased in violence, and the
+panes of his window rattled continually. He yawned and tried to
+fancy that he was sleepy. It was useless. He was compelled to
+admit the truth - that his nerves were all on edge. In a sense he
+was afraid. The thought of bed repelled him. He had not a single
+impulse towards repose. Outside, the wind all the time was
+gathering force. More than once his window was splashed with the
+spray carried on by the wind which followed the tide. He sat quite
+still and tried to think calmly, tried to piece together in his mind
+the sequence of events which had brought him to this part of the
+world and which had led to his remaining where he was, an undesired
+hanger-on at the threshold of Miles Fentolin. He had the feeling
+that to-night he had burned his boats. There was no longer any
+pretence of friendliness possible between him and this strange
+creature. Mr. Fentolin suspected him, realised that he himself was
+suspected. But of what? Hamel moved in his chair restlessly.
+Sometimes that gathering cloud of suspicion seemed to him grotesque.
+Of what real harm could he be capable, this little autocrat who from
+his chair seemed to exercise such a malign influence upon every one
+with whom he was brought into contact? Hamel sighed. The riddle
+was insoluble. With a sudden rush of warmer and more joyous
+feelings, he let the subject slip away from him. He closed his eyes
+and dreamed for a while. There was a new world before him, joys
+which only so short a time ago he had fancied had passed him by.
+
+He sat up in his chair with a start. The fire had become merely
+a handful of grey ashes, his limbs were numb and stiff. The lamp
+was flickering out. He had been dozing, how long he had no idea.
+Something had awakened him abruptly. There was a cold draught
+blowing through the room. He turned his head, his hands still
+gripping the sides of his chair. His heart gave a leap. The
+outer door was a few inches open, was being held open by some
+invisible force. There was some one there, some one on the point
+of entering stealthily. Even as he watched, the crack became a
+little wider. He sat with his eyes riveted upon that opening
+space. The unseen hand was still at work. Every instant he
+expected to see a face thrust forward. The sensation of absolute
+physical fear by which he was oppressed was a revelation to him.
+He found himself wishing almost feverishly that he was armed. The
+physical strength in which he had trusted seemed to him at that
+instant a valueless and impotent thing. There was a splash of
+spray or raindrops against the window and through the crack in
+the door. The lamp chimney hissed and spluttered and finally the
+light went out. The room was in sudden darkness. Hamel sprang
+then to his feet. Silence had become an intolerable thing. He
+felt the close presence of another human being creeping in upon
+him.
+
+"Who's there?" he cried. "Who's there, I say?"
+
+There was no direct answer, only the door was pushed a little
+further open. He had stepped close to it now. The sweep of the
+wind was upon his face, although in the black darkness he could
+see nothing. And then a sudden recollection flashed in upon him.
+>From his trousers pocket he snatched a little electric torch. In
+an instant his thumb had pressed the button. He turned it upon
+the door. The shivering white hand which held it open was plainly
+in view. It was the hand of a woman! He stepped swiftly forward.
+A dark figure almost fell into his arms.
+
+"Mrs, Fentolin!" he exclaimed, aghast.
+
+An hysterical cry, choked and subdued, broke from her lips. He
+half carried, half led her to his easy-chair. Suddenly steadied by
+the presence of this unlooked-for emergency, he closed the outside
+door and relit the lamp with firm fingers. Then he turned to face
+her, and his amazement at this strange visit became consternation.
+
+She was still in her dinner-gown of black satin, but it was soaked
+through with the rain and hung about her like a black shroud. She
+had lost one shoe, and there was a great hole in her silk stocking.
+Her hair was all disarranged; one of its numerous switches was
+hanging down over her ear. The rouge upon her cheeks had run down
+on to her neck. She sat there, looking at him out of her hollow
+eyes like some trapped animal. She was shaking with fear. It was
+fear, not faintness, which kept her silent.
+
+"Tell me, please, what is the matter?" he insisted, speaking as
+indifferently as he could. "Tell me at once what has happened?"
+
+She pointed to the door.
+
+"Lock it!" she implored.
+
+He turned down the latch and drew the bolt. The sound seemed to
+give her a little courage. Her fingers went to her throat for a
+moment.
+
+"Give me some water."
+
+He poured out some soda-water. She drank only o sip and put it down
+again. He began to be alarmed. She had the appearance of one who
+has suddenly lost her senses.
+
+"Please tell me just what has happened?" he begged. "If I can help
+in any way, you know I will. But you must tell me. Do you realise
+that it is three o'clock? I should have been in bed, only I went
+to sleep over the fire here."
+
+"I know," she answered. "It is just the wind that has taken away
+my breath. It was a hard struggle to get here. Listen - you are
+our friend, Mr. Hamel - Esther's and mine? Swear that you are our
+friend?"
+
+"Upon my honour, I am," he assured her. "You should know that."
+
+"For eight years," she went on, her voice clear enough now, although
+it seemed charged with a curious metallic vibration, "for eight
+years we've borne it, all three of us, slaves, bound hand and foot,
+lashed with his tongue, driven along the path of his desires. We
+have seen evil things. We have been on the point of rebellion, and
+he's come a little nearer and he's pointed back. He has taken me by
+the hand, and I have walked by the side of his chair, loathing it,
+loathing myself, out on to the terrace and down below, just where
+it happened. You know what happened there, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"You mean where Mr. Fentolin met with his accident."
+
+"It was no accident!" she cried, glancing for a moment around her.
+"It was no accident! It was my husband who took him up and threw
+him over the terrace, down below; my husband who tried to kill him;
+Esther's father - Gerald's father! Miles was in the Foreign Office
+then, and he did something disgraceful. He sold a secret to Austria.
+He was always a great gambler, and he was in debt. Seymour found
+out about it. He followed him down here. They met upon the terrace.
+I - I saw it!"
+
+He was silent for a moment.
+
+"No one has known the truth," he murmured.
+
+"No one has ever known," she assented, "and our broken lives have
+been the price. It was Miles himself who made the bargain. We - we
+can't go on, Mr. Hamel."
+
+"I begin to understand," Hamel said softly. "You suffer everything
+from Miles Fentolin because he kept the secret. Very well, that
+belongs to the past. Something has happened, something to-night,
+which has brought you here. Tell me about it?"
+
+Once more her voice began to shake.
+
+"We've seen - terrible things - horrible things," she faltered.
+"We've held our peace. Perhaps it's been nearly as bad before,
+but we've closed our eyes; we haven't wanted to know. Now - we
+can't help it. Mr. Hamel, Esther isn't at Lord Saxthorpe's.
+She never went there. They didn't ask her. And Dunster - the
+man Dunster -"
+
+"'Where is Esther?" Hamel interrupted suddenly.
+
+"Locked up away from you, locked up because she rebelled! "
+
+"And Dunster?"
+
+She shook her head. Her eyes were filled with horror.
+
+"But he left the Hall - I saw him!"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"It wasn't Dunster. It was the man Miles makes use of - Ryan, the
+librarian. He was once an actor."
+
+"Where is Dunster, then?" Hamel asked quickly. "What has become
+of him?"
+
+She opened her lips and closed them again, struggled to speak and
+failed. She sat there, breathing quickly, but silent. The power
+of speech had gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+Hamel, for the next few minutes, forgot everything else in his
+efforts to restore to consciousness his unexpected visitor. He
+rebuilt the fire, heated some water upon his spirit lamp, and forced
+some hot drink between the lips of the woman who was now almost in
+a state of collapse. Then he wrapped her round in his own ulster
+and drew her closer to the fire. He tried during those few moments
+to put away the memory of all that she had told him. Gradually she
+began to recover. She opened her eyes and drew a little sigh. She
+made no effort at speech, however. She simply lay and looked at
+him like some wounded animal. He came over to her side and chafed
+one of her cold hands.
+
+"Come," he said at last, "you begin to look more like yourself now.
+You are quite safe in here, and, for Esther's sake as well as your
+own, you know that I am your friend."
+
+She nodded, and her fingers gently pressed his.
+
+"I am sure of it," she murmured.
+
+"Now let us see where we are," he continued. "Tell me exactly why
+you risked so much by leaving St. David's Hall to-night and coming
+down here. Isn't there any chance that he might find out?"
+
+"I don't know," she answered. "It was Lucy Price who sent me. She
+came to my room just as I was undressing."
+
+"Lucy Price," he repeated. "The secretary?"
+
+"Yes! She told me that she had meant to come to you herself. She
+sent me instead. She thought it best. This man Dunster is being
+kept alive because there is something Miles wants him to tell him,
+and he won't. But to-night, if he is still alive, if he won't tell,
+they mean to make away with him. They are afraid."
+
+"Miss Price told you this?" Hamel asked gravely.
+
+Mrs, Fentolin nodded.
+
+"Yes! She said so. She knows - she knows everything. She has
+been like the rest of us. She, too, has suffered. She, too, has
+reached the breaking point. She loved him before the accident.
+She has been his slave ever since. Listen!"
+
+She suddenly clutched his arm. They were both silent. There was
+nothing to be heard but the wind. She leaned a little closer to
+him.
+
+"Lucy Price sent me here to-night because she was afraid that it
+was to-night they meant to take him from his hiding-place and kill
+him. The police have left off searching for Mr. Dunster in Yarmouth
+and at The Hague. There is a detective in the neighbourhood and
+another one on his way here. They are afraid to keep him alive any
+longer."
+
+"Where was Mr. Fentolin when you left?" Hamel asked.
+
+"I asked Lucy Price that," she replied. "When she came to my room,
+there were no signs of his leaving. She told me to come and tell
+you everything. Do you know where Mr. Dunster is?"
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+" Within a few yards of here," she went on. "He is in the
+boat-house, the place where Miles told you he kept a model of his
+invention. They brought him here the night before they put his
+clothes on Ryan and sent him off disguised as Mr. Dunster, in the
+car to Yarmouth."
+
+Hamel started up, but she clutched at his arm and pulled him back.
+"No," she cried, "you can't break in! There are double doors and
+a wonderful lock. The boat-house is yours; the building is yours.
+In the morning you must demand the keys - if he does not come
+to-night!"
+
+"And how are we to know," Hamel asked, "if he comes to-night?"
+
+"Go outside," she whispered. "Look towards St. David's Hall and
+tell me how many lights you can see."
+
+He drew back the bolt, unlatched the door, and stepped out into the
+darkness. The wind and the driving rain beat against his face. A
+cloud of spray enveloped and soaked him. Like lamps hung in the
+sky, the lights of St. David's Hall shone out through the black
+gulf. He counted them carefully; then he stepped back.
+
+"There are seven," he told her, closing the door with an effort.
+
+She counted upon her fingers.
+
+"I must come and see," she muttered. "I must be sure. Help me."
+
+He lifted her to her feet, and they staggered out together.
+
+"Look!" she went on, gripping his arm. "You see that row of lights?
+If anything happens, if Mr. Fentolin leaves the Hall to-night to
+come down here, a light will appear on the left in the far corner.
+We must watch for that light. We must watch -"
+
+The words, whispered hoarsely into. his ear, suddenly died away.
+Even as they stood there, far away from the other lights, another
+one shone suddenly out in the spot towards which she had pointed,
+and continued to burn steadily. He felt the woman who was clinging
+to his arm become suddenly a dead weight.
+
+"She was right!" Mrs. Pentolin moaned. "He is coming down to-night!
+He is preparing to leave now; perhaps he has already started! What
+shall we do? What shall we do?"
+
+Hamel was conscious of a gathering sense of excitement. He, too,
+looked at the signal which was flashing out its message towards them.
+Then he gripped his companion's arm and almost carried her back into
+the sitting-room.
+
+"Look here," he said firmly, "you can do nothing further. You have
+done your part and done it well. Stay where you are and wait. The
+rest belongs to me."
+
+"But what can you do?" she demanded, her voice shaking with fear.
+"Meekins will come with him, and Doctor Sarson, unless he is here
+already. What can you do against them? Meekins can break any
+ordinary man's back, and Mr. Fentolin will have a revolver."
+
+Hamel threw another log on to the fire and drew her chair closer
+to it.
+
+"Never mind about he declared cheerfully. "Mr. Fentolin is too
+clever to attempt violence, except as a last resource. He knows
+that I have friends in London who would need some explanation
+of my disappearance. Stay here and wait."
+
+She recognised the note of authority in his tone, and she bowed her
+head. Then she looked up at him; she was a changed woman.
+
+"Perhaps I have done ill to drag you into our troubles, Mr. Hamel,"
+she said, "and yet, I believe in you. I believe that you really
+care for Esther. If you can help us now, it will be for your
+happiness, too. You are a man. God bless you!"
+
+Hamel groped his way round the side of the Tower and took up a
+position at the extreme corner of the landward side of the building,
+within a yard of the closed doors. The light far out upon the left
+was still gleaming brightly, but two of the others in a line with
+it had disappeared. He flattened himself against the wall and
+waited, listening intently, his eyes straining through the darkness.
+Yet they were almost upon him before he had the slightest indication
+of their presence. A single gleam of light in the path, come and
+gone like a flash, the gleam of an electric torch directed
+momentarily towards the road, was his first indication that they
+were near. A moment or two later he heard the strange click, click
+of the little engine attached to Mr. Fentolin's chair. Hamel set
+his teeth and stepped a few inches further back. The darkness was
+so intense that they were actually within a yard or so of him before
+he could even dimly discern their shapes. There were three of them
+- Mr. Fentolin in his chair, Doctor Sarson, and Meekins. They
+paused for a moment while the latter produced a key. Hamel
+distinctly heard a slow, soft whisper from Doctor Sarson.
+
+"Shall I go round to the front and see that he is in bed?"
+
+"No need," Mr. Fentolin replied calmly. "It is nearly four o'clock.
+Better not to risk the sound of your footsteps upon the pebbles.
+Now!"
+
+The door swung noiselessly open. The darkness was so complete that
+even though Hamel could have touched them with an outstretched hand,
+their shapes were invisible. Hamel, who had formed no definite
+plans, had no time to hesitate. As the last one disappeared through
+the door, he, too, slipped in. He turned abruptly to the left and,
+holding his breath, stood against the wall. The door closed behind
+them. The gleam of the electric light flashed across the stone
+floor and rested for a moment upon a trapdoor, which Meekins had
+already stooped to lift. It fell back noiselessly upon rubber studs,
+and Meekins immediately slipped through it a ladder, on either side
+of which was a grooved stretch of board, evidently fashioned to
+allow Mr. Fentolin's carriage to pass down. Hamel held his breath.
+The moment for him was critical. If the light flashed once in his
+direction, he must be discovered. Both Meekins and Doctor Sarson,
+however, were intent upon the task of steering Mr. Fentolin's little
+carriage down below. They placed the wheels in the two grooves,
+and Meekins secured the carriage with a rope which he let run
+through his fingers. As soon as the little vehicle had apparently
+reached the bottom, he turned, thrust the electric torch in his
+pocket, and stepped lightly down the ladder. Doctor Sarson
+followed his example. They disappeared in perfect silence and left
+the door open. Presently a gleam of light came travelling up, from
+which Hamel knew that they had lit a lamp below. Very softly he
+crept across the floor, threw himself upon his stomach and peered
+down. Below him was a room, or rather a cellar, parts of which
+seemed to have been cut out of the solid rock. Immediately
+underneath was a plain iron bedstead, on which was lying stretched
+the figure of a man. In those first few moments Hamel failed
+altogether to recognise Mr. Dunster. He was thin and white, and
+he seemed to have shrunken; his face, with its coarse growth of
+beard, seemed like the face of an old man. Yet the eyes were open,
+eyes dull and heavy as though with pain. So far no word had been
+spoken, but at that moment Mr. Fentolin broke the silence.
+
+"My dear guest," he said, "I bring you our most sincere apologies.
+It has gone very much against the grain, I can assure you, to have
+neglected you for so long a time. It is entirely the fault of the
+very troublesome young man who occupies the other portion of this
+building. In the daytime his presence makes it exceedingly
+difficult for us to offer you those little attentions which you
+might naturally expect."
+
+The man upon the bed neither moved nor changed his position in any
+way. Nor did he speak. All power of initiative seemed to have
+deserted him. He lay quite still, his eyes fixed upon Mr. Fentolin.
+
+"There comes a time," the latter continued, "when every one of us
+is confronted with what might be described as the crisis of our
+lives. Yours has come, my guest, at precisely this moment. It is,
+if my watch tells me the truth, five and twenty minutes to four.
+It is the last day of April. The year you know. You have exactly
+one minute to decide whether you will live a short time longer, or
+whether you will on this last day of April, and before - say, a
+quarter to four, make that little journey the nature of which you
+and I have discussed more than once."
+
+Still the man upon the bed made no movement nor any reply. Mr.
+Fentolin sighed and beckoned to Doctor Sarson.
+
+"I am afraid," he whispered, "that that wonderful drug of yours,
+Doctor, has been even a little too far-reaching in its results. It
+has kept our friend so quiet that he has lost even the power of
+speech, perhaps even the desire to speak. A little restorative,
+I think - just a few drops."
+
+Doctor Sarson nodded silently. He drew from his pocket a little
+phial and poured into a wine-glass which stood on a table by the
+side of the bed, half a dozen drops of some ruby-coloured liquid,
+to which he added a tablespoonful of water. Then he leaned once
+more over the bed and poured the contents of the glass between the
+lips of the semi-conscious man.
+
+"Give him two minutes," he said calmly. "He will be able to speak
+then."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded and leaned back in his chair. He glanced around
+the room a little critically. There was a thick carpet upon the
+floor, a sofa piled with cushions in one corner, and several other
+articles of furniture. The walls, however, were uncovered and were
+stained with damp. A great pink fungus stood out within a few
+inches of the bed, a grim mixture of exquisite colouring and
+loathsome imperfections. The atmosphere was fetid. Meekins suddenly
+struck a match and lit some grains of powder in a saucer. A curious
+odour of incense stole through the place. Mr. Fentolin nodded
+appreciatively.
+
+"That is better," he declared. " Really, the atmosphere here is
+positively unpleasant. I am ashamed to think that our guest has
+had to put up with it so long. And yet," he went on, "I think we
+must call it his own fault. I trust that he will no longer be
+obstinate."
+
+The effect of the restorative began to show itself. The man on the
+bed moved restlessly. His eyes were no longer altogether
+expressionless. He was staring at Mr. Fentolin as one looks at some
+horrible vision. Mr. Fentolin smiled pleasantly.
+
+"Now you are looking more like your old self, my dear Mr. Dunster,"
+he remarked. "I don't think that I need repeat what I said when I
+first came, need I? You have just to utter that one word, and your
+little visit to us will be at an end."
+
+The man looked around at all of them. He raised himself a little
+on his elbow. For the first time, Hamel, crouching above,
+recognised any likeness to Mr. John P. Dunster.
+
+"I'll see you in hell first!"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's face momentarily darkened. He moved a little nearer
+to the man upon the bed.
+
+"Dunster," he said, "I am in grim earnest. Never mind arguments.
+Never mind why I am on the other side. They are restless about you
+in America. Unless I can cable that word to-morrow morning, they'll
+communicate direct with The Hague, and I shall have had my trouble
+for nothing. It is not my custom to put up with failure. Therefore,
+let me tell you that no single one of my threats has been
+exaggerated. My patience has reached its breaking point. Give me
+that word, or before four o'clock strikes, you will find yourself
+in a new chamber, among the corpses of those misguided fishermen,
+mariners of ancient days, and a few others. It's only a matter of
+fifty yards out to the great sea pit below the Dagger Rocks - I've
+spoken to you about it before, haven't I? So surely as I speak to
+you of it at this moment
+
+Mr. Fentolin's speech came to an abrupt termination. A convulsive
+movement of Meekins', an expression of blank amazement on the part
+of Doctor Sarson, had suddenly checked the words upon his lips. He
+turned his head quickly in the direction towards which they had been
+gazing, towards which in fact, at that moment, Meekins, with a low
+cry, had made a fruitless spring. The ladder down which they had
+descended was slowly disappearing. Meekins, with a jump, missed
+the last rung by only a few inches. Some unseen hand was drawing
+it up. Already the last few feet were vanishing in mid-air. Mr.
+Fentolin sat quite quiet and still. He looked through the trap-door
+and saw Hamel.
+
+"Most ingenious and, I must confess, most successful, my young
+friend!" he exclaimed pleasantly. "When you have made the ladder
+quite secure, perhaps you will be so good as to discuss this little
+matter with us?"
+
+There was no immediate reply. The eyes of all four men were turned
+now upon that empty space through which the ladder had finally
+disappeared. Mr. Fentolin's fingers disappeared within the pocket
+of his coat. Something very bright was glistening in his hand when
+he withdrew it.
+
+"Come and parley with us, Mr. Hamel," he begged. "You will not find
+us unreasonable."
+
+Hamel's voice came back in reply, but Hamel himself kept well away
+from the opening.
+
+"The conditions," he said, "are unpropitious. A little time for
+reflection will do you no harm."
+
+The trap-doors were suddenly closed. Mr. Fentolin's face, as he
+looked up, became diabolic.
+
+"We are trapped!" he muttered; "caught like rats in a hole!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+A gleam of day was in the sky as Hamel, with Mrs. Fentolin by his
+side, passed along the path which led from the Tower to St. David's
+Hall. Lights were still burning from its windows; the outline of
+the building itself was faintly defined against the sky. Behind
+him, across the sea, was that one straight line of grey merging
+into silver. The rain had ceased and the wind had dropped. On
+either side of them stretched the brimming creeks.
+
+"Can we get into the house without waking any one?" he asked.
+
+"Quite easily," she assured him. "The front door is never barred."
+
+She walked by his side, swiftly and with surprising vigour. In the
+still, grey light, her face was more ghastly than ever, but there
+was a new firmness about her mouth, a new decision in her tone.
+They reached the Hall without further speech, and she led the way
+to a small door on the eastern side, through which they entered
+noiselessly and passed along a little passage out into the hall.
+A couple of lights were still burning. The place seemed full of
+shadows.
+
+"What are you going to do now?" she whispered.
+
+"I want to ring up London on the telephone," he replied. "I know
+that there is a detective either in the neighbourhood or on his
+way here, but I shall tell my friend that he had better come down
+himself."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"I am going to release Esther," she said. "She is locked in her
+room. The telephone is in the study. I will come down there to
+you."
+
+She passed silently up the broad staircase. Hamel groped his way
+across the hail into the library. He turned on the small electric
+reading-lamp and drew up a chair to the side of the telephone. Even
+as he lifted the receiver to his ear, he looked around him half
+apprehensively. It seemed as though every moment he would hear the
+click of Mr. Fentolin's chair.
+
+He got the exchange at Norwich without difficulty, and a few minutes
+later a sleepy reply came from the number he had rung up in London.
+It was Kinsley's servant who answered.
+
+"I want to speak to Mr. Kinsley at once upon most important
+business," Hamel announced.
+
+"Very sorry, sir," the man replled. "Mr. Kinsley left town last
+night for the country."
+
+"Where has he gone?" Hamel demanded quickly. "You can tell me.
+You know who I am; I am Mr. Hamel."
+
+"Into Norfolk somewhere, sir. He went with several other gentlemen."
+
+"Is that Bullen?" Hamel asked.
+
+The man admitted the fact.
+
+"Can you tell me if any of the people with whom Mr. Kinsley left
+London were connected with the police?" he inquired.
+
+The man hesitated.
+
+"I believe so, sir," he admitted. "The gentlemen started in a
+motor-car and were going to drive all night."
+
+Hamel laid down the receiver. At any rate, he would not be left
+long with this responsibility upon him. He walked out into the hall.
+The house was still wrapped in deep silence. Then, from somewhere
+above him, coming down the stairs, he heard the rustle of a woman's
+gown. He looked up, and saw Miss Price, fully dressed, coming
+slowly towards him. She held up her finger and led the way back
+into the library. She was dressed as neatly as ever, but there
+was a queer light in her eyes.
+
+"I have seen Mrs. Seymour Fentolin," she said. "She tells me that
+you have left Mr. Fentolin and the others in the subterranean room
+of the Tower."
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"They have Dunster down there," he told her. "I followed them in;
+it seemed the best thing to do. I have a friend from London who is
+on his way down here now with some detective officers, to enquire
+into the matter of Dunster's disappearance."
+
+"Are you going to leave them where they are until these people
+arrive?" she asked.
+
+"I think so," he replied, after a moment's hesitation. "I don't
+seem to have had time to consider even what to do. The opportunity
+came, and I embraced it. There they are, and they won't dare to
+do any further harm to Dunster now. Mrs. Fentolin was down in my
+room, and I thought it best to bring her back first before I even
+parleyed with them again.
+
+" You must be careful," she advised slowly. The man Dunster has
+been drugged, he has lost some of his will; he may have lost some
+of his mental balance. Mr. Fentolin is clever. He will find a
+dozen ways to wriggle out of any charge that can be brought against
+him. You know what he has really done?"
+
+"I can guess."
+
+"He has kept back a document signed by the twelve men in America
+who control the whole of Wall Street, who control practically the
+money markets of the world. That document is a warning to Germany
+that they will have no war against England. Owing to Mr. Fentolin,
+it has not been delivered, and the Conference is sitting now. War
+may be declared at any moment."
+
+"But as a matter of common sense," Hamel asked, "why does Mr.
+Fentolin desire war?"
+
+"You do not understand Mr. Fentolin," she told him quietly. "He
+is not like other men. There are some who live almost entirely for
+the sake of making others happy, who find joy in seeing people
+content and satisfied. Mr. Fentolin is the reverse of this. He
+has but one craving in life: to see pain in others. To see a human
+being suffer is to him a debauch of happiness. A war which laid
+this country waste would fill him with a delight which you could
+never understand. There are no normal human beings like this. It
+is a disease in the man, a disease which came upon him after his
+accident."
+
+"Yet you have all been his slaves," Hamel said curiously.
+
+"We have all been his slaves," she admitted, "for different reasons.
+Before his accident came, Mr. Fentolin was my master and the only
+man in the world for me. After his accident, I think my feelings
+for him, if anything, grew stronger. I became his slave. I sold
+my conscience, my self-respect, everything in life worth having, to
+bring a smile to his lips, to help him through a single moment of
+his misery. And just lately the reaction has come. He has played
+with me just as he would sit and pull the legs out of a spider to
+watch its agony. I have been one of his favourite amusements. And
+even now, if he came into this room I think that I should be
+helpless. I should probably fall at his feet and pray for
+forgiveness."
+
+Hamel looked at her wonderingly.
+
+"I have come down to warn you," she went on. "It is possible that
+this is the beginning of the end, that his wonderful fortune will
+desert him, that his star has gone down. But remember that he has
+the brains and courage of genius. You think that you have him in
+a trap. Don't be surprised, when you go back, to find that he has
+turned the tables upon you."
+
+"Impossible!" Hamel declared. "I looked all round the place. There
+isn't a window or opening anywhere. The trap-door is in the middle
+of the ceiling and it is fifteen feet from the floor. It shuts
+with a spring."
+
+"It may be as you say," she observed. "It may be that he is safe.
+Remember, though, if you go near him, that he is desperate."
+
+"Do you know where Miss Fentolin is?" he interrupted.
+
+"She is with her mother," the woman replied, impatiently. "She is
+coming down. Tell me, what are you going to do with Mr. Fentolin?
+Nothing else matters."
+
+"I have a friend," Hamel answered, "who will see to that."
+
+"If you are relying upon the law," she said, "I think you will find
+that the law cannot touch him. Mr. Dunster was brought to the
+house in a perfectly natural manner. He was certainly injured, and
+injured in a railway accident. Doctor Sarson is a fully qualified
+surgeon, and he will declare that Mr. Dunster was unfit to travel.
+If necessary, they will have destroyed `the man's intelligence. If
+you think that you have him broken, let me warn you that you may be
+disappointed. Let me, if I may, give you one word of advice."
+
+"Please do," Hamel begged.
+
+She looked at him coldly. Her tone was still free from any sort of
+emotion.
+
+"You have taken up some sort of position here," she continued, "as
+a friend of Mrs. Seymour Fentolin, a friend of the family. Don't
+let them come back under the yoke. You know the secret of their
+bondage?"
+
+"I know it," he admitted.
+
+"They have been his slaves because their absolute obedience to his
+will was one of the conditions of his secrecy. He has drawn the
+cords too tight. Better let the truth be known, if needs be, than
+have their three lives broken. Don't let them go back under his
+governance. For me, I cannot tell. If he comes back, as he will
+come back, I may become his slave again, but let them break away.
+Listen - that is Mrs. Fentolin."
+
+She left him. Hamel followed her out into the hail. Esther and
+her mother were already at the foot of the stairs. He drew them
+into the study. Esther gave him her hands, but she was trembling
+in every limb.
+
+"I am terrified!" she whispered. "Every moment I think I can hear
+the click of that awful carriage. He will come back; I am sure he
+will come back!"
+
+"He may," Hamel answered sturdily, "but never to make you people
+his slaves again. You have done enough. You have earned your
+freedom."
+
+"I agree," Mrs. Fentolin said firmly. "We have gone on from
+sacrifice to sacrifice, until it has become a habit with us to
+consider him the master of our bodies and our souls. To-day,
+Esther, we have reached the breaking point. Not even for the sake
+of that message from the other side of the grave, not even to
+preserve his honour and his memory, can we do more."
+
+Hamel held up his finger. He opened the French windows, and they
+followed him out on to the terrace. The grey dawn had broken now
+over the sea. There were gleams of fitful sunshine on the marshes.
+Some distance away a large motor-car was coming rapidly along the
+road.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster, lying flat upon his little bed, watched with
+dilated eyes the disappearance of the ladder. Then he laughed. It
+was a queer sound - broken, spasmodic, devoid of any of the ordinary
+elements of humor - and yet it was a laugh. Mr. Fentolin turned his
+head towards his prisoner and nodded thoughtfully.
+
+"What a constitution, my friend!" he exclaimed, without any trace
+of disturbance in his voice. "And what a sense of humour! Strange
+that a trifling circumstance like this should affect it. Meekins,
+burn some more of the powder. The atmosphere down here may be
+salubrious, but I am unaccustomed to it."
+
+"Perhaps," Mr. Dunster said in a hollow tone, you will have some
+opportunity now of discovering with me what it is like."
+
+"That, too, is just possible," Mr. Fentolin admitted, blowing out
+a little volume of smoke from a cigarette which he had just lit,
+"but one never knows. We have friends, and our position, although,
+I must admit, a little ridiculous, is easily remedied. But how
+that mischief-making Mr. Hamel could have found his way into the
+boat-house does, I must confess, perplex me."
+
+"He must have been hanging around and followed us in when we came,"
+Meekins muttered. "Somehow, I fancied I felt some one near."
+
+"Our young friend," Mr. Fentolin continued, has, without doubt, an
+obvious turn of mind. He will send for his acquaintance in the
+Foreign Office; they will haul out Mr. Dunster here, and he will
+have a belated opportunity of delivering his message at The Hague."
+
+"You aren't going to murder me first, then?" Mr. Dunster grunted.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled at him benignly.
+
+"My dear and valued guest," he protested, "why so forbidding an
+idea? Let me assure you from the bottom of my heart that any bodily
+harm to you is the most unlikely thing in the world. You see,
+though you might not think it," he went on, "I love life. That is
+why I keep a doctor always by my side. That is why I insist upon
+his making a complete study of my constitution and treating me in
+every respect as though I were indeed an invalid. I am really only
+fifty-nine years old. It is my intention to live until I am
+eighty-nine. An offence against the law of the nature you indicate
+might interfere materially with my intentions."
+
+Mr. Dunster struggled for a moment for breath.
+
+"Look here," he said, "that's all right, but do you suppose you
+won't be punished for what you've done to me? You laid a
+deliberate plot to bring me to St. David's Hall; you've kept me
+locked up, dosed me with drugs, brought me down here at the dead
+of night, kept me a prisoner in a dungeon. Do you think you can do
+that for nothing? Do you think you won't have to suffer for it?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"My dear Mr. Dunster," he reminded him, you were in a railway
+accident, you know; there is no possible doubt about that. And the
+wound in your head is still there, in a very dangerous place. Men
+who have been in railway accidents, and who have a gaping wound
+very close to their brain, are subject to delusions. I have simply
+done my best to play the Good Samaritan. Your clothes and papers
+are all untouched. If my eminent physician had pronounced you
+ready to travel a week ago, you would certainly have been allowed
+to depart a week ago. Any interference in your movements has been
+entirely in the interests of your health."
+
+Mr. Dunster tried to sit up but found himself unable.
+
+"So you think they won't believe my story, eh?" he muttered. "Well,
+we shall see."
+
+Mr. Fentolin thoughtfully contemplated the burning end of his
+cigarette for a moment.
+
+"If I believed," he said, "that there was any chance of your
+statements being accepted, I am afraid I should be compelled, in
+all our interests, to ask Doctor Sarson to pursue just a step
+further that experiment into the anatomy of your brain with which
+he has already trifled."
+
+Mr. Dunster's face was suddenly ghastly. His reserve of strength
+seemed to ebb away. The memory of some horrible moment seemed to
+hold him in its clutches.
+
+"For God's sake, leave me alone!" he moaned. "Let me get away,
+that's all; let me crawl away!"
+
+"Ah!" Mr. Fentolin murmured. "That sounds much more reasonable.
+When you talk like that, my friend. I feel indeed that there is
+hope for you. Let us abandon this subject for the present. Have
+you solved the puzzle yet?" he asked Meekins.
+
+Meekins was standing below the closed trap-door. He had already
+dragged up a wooden case underneath and was piling it with various
+articles of furniture.
+
+"Not yet, sir," he replied. "When I have made this steadier, I
+am just going to see what pressure I can bring to bear on the
+trap-door."
+
+"I heard the bolts go," Doctor Sarson remarked uneasily.
+
+"In that case," Mr. Fentolin declared, "it will indeed be an
+interesting test of our friend Meekins' boasted strength. Meekins
+holds his place - a very desirable place, too - chiefly for two
+reasons: first his discretion and secondly his muscles. He has
+never before had a real opportunity of testing the latter. We
+shall see."
+
+Doctor Sarson came slowly and gravely to the bedside. He looked
+down upon his patient. Mr. Dunster shivered.
+
+"I am not sure, sir," he said very softly, "that Mr. Dunster, in
+his present state of mind, is a very safe person to be allowed his
+freedom. It is true that we have kept him here for his own sake,
+because of his fits of mental wandering. Our statements, however,
+may be doubted. An apparent return to sanity on his part may lend
+colour to his accusations, especially if permanent. Perhaps it
+would be as well to pursue that investigation a shade further. A
+touch more to the left and I do not think that Mr. Dunster will
+remember much in this world likely to affect us."
+
+Mr. Dunster's face was like marble. There were beads of perspiration
+upon his forehead, his eyes were filled with reminiscent horror. Mr.
+Fentolin bent over him with genuine interest.
+
+"What a picture he would make!" he murmured. "What a drama! Do you
+know, I am half inclined to agree with you, Sarson. The only trouble
+is that you have not your instruments here."
+
+"I could improvise something that would do the trick," the doctor
+said thoughtfully. "It really isn't a complicated affair. It
+seems to me that his story may gain credence from the very fact of
+our being discovered in this extraordinary place. To have moved
+him here was a mistake, sir."
+
+"Perhaps so," Mr. Fentolin admitted, with a sigh. "It was our
+young friend Mr. Hamel who was responsible for it. I fancied him
+arriving with a search warrant at any moment. We will bear in mind
+your suggestion for a few minutes. Let us watch Meekins. This
+promises to be interesting."
+
+By dint of piling together all the furniture in the place, the
+man was now able to reach the trap-door. He pressed upon it
+vigorously without even bending the wood. Mr. Fentolin smiled
+pleasantly.
+
+"Meekins," he said, "look at me."
+
+The man turned and faced his master. His aspect of dogged civility
+had never been more apparent.
+
+"Now listen," Mr. Fentolin went on. "I want to remind you of
+certain things, Meekins. We are among friends here - no secrecy,
+you understand, or anything of that sort. You need not be afraid!
+You know how you came to me? You remember that little affair of
+Anna Jayes in Hartlepool?"
+
+The face of the man was filled with terror. He began to tremble
+where he stood. Mr. Fentolin played for a moment with his collar,
+as though he found it tight.
+
+"Such a chance it was, my dear Meekins," Mr. Fentolin continued
+cheerfully, "which brought me that little scrap of knowledge
+concerning you. It has bought me through all these years a good
+deal of faithful service. I am not ungrateful, believe me. I
+intend to retain you for my body-servant and to keep my lips sealed,
+for a great many years to come. Now remember what I have said.
+When we leave this place, that little episode will steal back into
+a far corner of my mind. I shall, in short, forget it. If we are
+caught here and inconvenience follows, well, I cannot say. Do your
+best, Meekins. Do a little better than your best. You have the
+reputation of being a strong man. Let us see you justify it."
+
+The man took a long breath and returned to his task. His shoulders
+and arms were upon the door. He began to strain. He grew red in
+the face; the veins across his forehead stood out, blue, like
+tightly-drawn string. His complexion became purple. Through his
+open mouth his breath came in short pants. With every muscle of
+his body and neck he strained and strained. The woodwork gave a
+little, but it never even cracked. With a sob he suddenly almost
+collapsed. Mr. Fentolin looked at him, frowning.
+
+"Very good - very good, Meekins," he said, "but not quite good
+enough. You are a trifle out of practice, perhaps. Take your
+breath, take time. Remember that you have anotber chance. I am
+not angry with you, Meekins. I know there are many enterprises
+upon which one does not succeed the first time. Get your breath;
+there is no hurry. Next time you try, see that you succeed. It
+is very important, Meekins, for you as well as for us, that you
+succeed."
+
+The man turned doggedly back to his task. The eyes of the three
+men watched him - Mr. Dunster on the bed; Doctor Sarson, pale and
+gloomy, with something of fear in his dark eyes; and Mr. Fentolin
+himself, whose expression seemed to be one of purely benevolent and
+encouraging interest. Once more the face of the man became almost
+unrecognisable. There was a great crack, the trap-door had shifted.
+Meekins, with a little cry, reeled and sank backwards. Mr. Fentolin
+clapped his hands lightly.
+
+"Really, Meekins," he declared, "I do not know when I have enjoyed
+any performance so much. I feel as if I were back in the days of
+the Roman gladiators. I can see that you mean to succeed. You will
+succeed. You do not mean to end your days amid objectionable
+surroundings."
+
+With the air of a man temporarily mad, Meekins went back to his task.
+He was sobbing to himself now. His clothes had burst away from him.
+Suddenly there was a crash, the hinges of the trap-door had parted.
+With the blood streaming from a wound in his forehead, Meekins
+staggered back to his feet. Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"Excellent!" he pronounced. "Really excellent. With a little
+assistance from our friend Meekins, you, I am sure, Sarson, will
+now be able to climb up and let down the steps."
+
+Doctor Sarson stood by Mr. Fentolin's chair, and together they looked
+up through the fragments of the trap-door. Meekins was still
+breathing heavily. Suddenly they heard the sound of a sharp report,
+as of a door above being slammed.
+
+"Some one was in the boat-house when I broke the trap-door," Meekins
+muttered. "I heard them moving about."
+
+Mr. Fentolin frowned.
+
+"Then let us hurry," he said. "Sarson, what about your patient?"
+
+Mr. Dunster was lying upon his side, watching them. The doctor
+went over to the bedside and felt his pulse and head.
+
+"He will do for twelve hours," he pronounced. "If you think that
+other little operation -"
+
+He broke off and looked at Mr. Fentolin meaningly. The man on the
+bed shrank back, his eyes lit with horror. Mr. Fentolin smiled
+pleasantly.
+
+"I fear," he said, "that we must not stay for that just now. A
+little later on, perhaps, if it becomes necessary. Let us first
+attend to the business on hand."
+
+Meekins once more clambered on to the little heap of furniture.
+The doctor stood by his side for a moment. Then, with an effort,
+he was hoisted up until he could catch hold of the floor of the
+outhouse. Meekins gave one push, and he disappeared.
+
+"Any one up there?" Mr. Fentolin enquired, a shade of anxiety in
+his tone.
+
+"No one," the doctor reported.
+
+"Has anything been disturbed?"
+
+Doctor Sarson was some little time before he replied.
+
+"Yes," he said," some one seems to have been rummaging about."
+
+"Send down the steps quickly," Mr. Fentolin ordered. "I am beginning
+to find the atmosphere here unpleasant."
+
+There was a brief silence. Then they heard the sound of the ladder
+being dragged across the floor, and a moment or two later it was
+carefully lowered and placed in position. Mr. Fentolin passed the
+rope through the front of his carriage and was drawn up. From his
+bed Mr. Dunster watched them go. It was hard to tell whether he
+was relieved or disappointed.
+
+"Who has been in here?" Mr. Fentolin demanded, as he looked around
+the place.
+
+There was no reply. A grey twilight was struggling now through the
+high, dust-covered windows. Meekins, who had gone on towards the
+door, suddenly called out:
+
+"Some one has taken away the key! The door is locked on the other
+side!"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's frown was malign even for him.
+
+"Our dear friend, Mr. Hamel, I suppose," he muttered. "Another
+little debt we shall owe him! Try the other door."
+
+Meekins moved towards the partition. Suddenly he paused. Mr.
+Fentolin's hand was outstretched; he, too, was listening. Above
+the low thunder of the sea came another sound, a sound which at
+that moment they none of them probably understood. There was the
+steady crashing of feet upon the pebbles, a low murmur of voices.
+Mr. Fentolin for the first time showed symptoms of fear.
+
+"Try the other door quickly," he directed.
+
+Meekins came back, shaking his head. Outside, the noise seemed to
+be increasing. The door was suddenly thrown open. Hannah Cox stood
+outside in her plain black dress, her hair wind-tossed, her eyes
+aflame. She held the key in her fingers, and she looked in upon
+them. Her lips seemed to move, but she said nothing.
+
+"My good woman," Mr. Fentolin exclaimed, frowning, "are you the
+person who removed that key?"
+
+She laid her hand upon his chair. She took no no tice of the other
+two.
+
+"Come," she said, "there is something here I want you to listen to.
+Come!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+Mr. Fentolin, arrived outside on the stone front of the boat-house,
+pointed the wheel of his chair towards the Hall. Hannah Cox, who
+kept by his side, however, drew it gently towards the beach.
+
+"Down here," she directed softly. "Bring your chair down the
+plank-way, close to the water's edge."
+
+"My good woman," Mr. Fentolin exclaimed furiously, "I am not in the
+humour for this sort of thing! Lock up, Sarson, at once; I am in
+a hurry to get back."
+
+"But you will come just this little way," she continued, speaking
+without any change of tone. "You see, the others are waiting, too.
+I have been down to the village and fetched them up."
+
+Mr. Fentolin followed her outstretched finger and gave a sudden
+start. Standing at the edge of the sea were a dozen or twenty
+fishermen. They were all muttering together and looking at the top
+of the boat-house. As he realised the direction of their gaze, Mr.
+Fentolin's face underwent a strange transformation. He seemed to
+shrink in his chair. He was ghastly pale even to the lips. Slowly
+he turned his head. From a place in the roof of the boat-house
+a tall support had appeared. On the top was a swinging globe.
+
+"What have you to do with that?" he asked in a low tone.
+
+"I found it," she answered. "I felt that it was there. I have
+brought them up with me to see it. I think that they want to ask
+you some questions. But first, come and listen."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook her off. He looked around for Meekins.
+
+"Meekins, stand by my chair," he ordered sharply. "Turn round; I
+wish to go to the Hall. Drive this woman away."
+
+Meekins came hurrying up, but almost at the same moment half a dozen
+of the brown jerseyed fishermen detached themselves from the others.
+They formed a little bodyguard around the bath-chair.
+
+"What is the meaning of this?" Mr. Fentolin demanded, his voice
+shrill with anger. "Didn't you hear what I said? This woman annoys
+me. Send her away."
+
+Not one of the fishermen answered a word or made the slightest
+movement to obey him. One of them, a grey-bearded veteran, drew
+the chair a little further down the planked way across the pebbles.
+Hannah Cox kept close to its side. They came to a standstill only
+a few yards from where the waves were breaking. She lifted her hand.
+
+"Listen!" she cried. "Listen!"
+
+Mr. Fentolin turned helplessly around. The little group of
+fishermen had closed in upon Sarson and Meekins. The woman's hand
+was upon his shoulder; she pointed seaward to where a hissing line
+of white foam marked the spot where the topmost of the rocks were
+visible.
+
+"You wondered why I have spent so much of my time out here," she
+said quietly. "Now you will know. If you listen as I am listening,
+as I have listened for so many weary hours, so many weary years,
+you will hear them calling to me, David and John and Stephen.
+'The light!' Do you hear what they are crying? 'The light!
+Fentolin's light!' Look!"
+
+She forced him to look once more at the top of the boat-house.
+
+"They were right!" she proclaimed, her voice gaining in strength
+and intensity. "They were neither drunk nor reckless. They
+steered as straight as human hand could guide a tiller, for
+Fentolin's light! And there they are, calling and calling at the
+bottom of the sea - my three boys and my man. Do you know for whom
+they call?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin shrank back in his chair.
+
+"Take this woman away!" he ordered the fishermen. "Do you hear?
+Take her away; she is mad!"
+
+They looked towards him, but not one of them moved. Mr. Fentolin
+raised his whistle to his lips, and blew it.
+
+"Meekins!" he cried. "Where are you, Meekins?"
+
+He turned his head and saw at once that Meekins was powerless.
+Five or six of the fishermen had gathered around him. There were
+at least thirty of them about, sinewy, powerful men. The only
+person who moved towards Mr. Fentolin's carriage was Jacob, the
+coast guardsman.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin, sir," he said, "the lads have got your bully safe.
+It's a year and more that Hannah Cox has been about the village with
+some story about two lights on a stormy night. It's true what she
+says - that her man and boys lie drowned. There's William Green,
+besides, and a nephew of my own - John Kallender. And Philip Green
+- he was saved. He swore by all that was holy that he steered
+straight for the light when his boat struck, and that as he swam
+for shore, five minutes later, he saw the light reappear in another
+place. It's a strange story. What have you to say, sir, about
+that?"
+
+He pointed straight to the wire-encircled globe which towered on
+its slender support above the boat-house. Mr. Fentolin looked at
+it and looked back at the coast guardsman. The brain of a
+Machiavelli could scarcely have invented a plausible reply.
+
+"The light was never lit there," he said. "It was simply to help
+me in some electrical experiments."
+
+Then, for the first time in their lives, those who were looking on
+saw Mr. Fentolin apart from his carriage. Without any haste but
+with amazing strength, Hannah Cox leaned over, and, with her arms
+around his middle, lifted him sheer up into the air. She carried
+him, clasped in her arms, a weird, struggling object, to the clumsy
+boat that lay always at the top of the beach. She dropped him into
+the bottom, took her seat, and unshipped the oars. For one moment
+the coast guardsman hesitated; then he obeyed her look. He gave
+the boat a push which sent it grinding down the pebbles into the
+sea. The woman began to work at the oars. Every now and then she
+looked over her shoulder at that thin line of white surf which they
+were all the time approaching.
+
+"What are you doing, woman?" Mr. Fentolin demanded hoarsely.
+"Listen! It was an accident that your people were drowned. I'll
+give you an annuity. I'll make you rich for life - rich! Do you
+understand what that means?"
+
+"Aye!" she answered, looking down upon him as he lay doubled up at
+the bottom of the boat. "I know what it means to be rich - better
+than you, maybe. Not to let the gold and silver pieces fall through
+your fingers, or to live in a great house and be waited upon by
+servants who desert you in the hour of need. That isn't being rich.
+It's rich to feel the touch of the one you love, to see the faces
+around of those you've given birth to, to move on through the days
+and nights towards the end, with them around; not to know the chill
+loneliness of an empty life. I am a poor woman, Mr. Fentolin, and
+it's your hand that made me so, and not all the miracles that the
+Bible ever told of can make me rich again."
+
+"You are a fool!" he shrieked. "You can buy forgetfulness! The
+memory of everything passes."
+
+"I may be a fool," she retorted grimly, "and you the wise man; but
+this day we'll both know the truth."
+
+There was a little murmur from the shore, where the fishermen stood
+in a long line.
+
+"Bring him back, missus," Jacob called out. "You've scared him
+enough. Bring him back. We'll leave him to the law."
+
+They were close to the line of surf now; they had passed it, indeed,
+a little on the left, and the boat was drifting. She stood up,
+straight and stern, and her face, as she looked towards the land,
+was lit with the fire of the prophetess.
+
+"Aye," she cried, "we'll leave him to the law - to the law of God!"
+
+Then they saw her stoop down, and once more with that almost
+superhuman strength which seemed to belong to her for those few
+moments, she lifted the strange object who lay cowering there,
+high above her head. From the shore they realised what was going
+to happen, and a great shout arose. She stood on the side of the
+boat and jumped, holding her burden tightly in her arms. So they
+went down and disappeared.
+
+Half a dozen of the younger fishermen were in the water even before
+the grim spectacle was ended; another ran for a boat that was moored
+a little way down the beach. But from the first the search was
+useless. Only Jacob, who was a person afflicted with many
+superstitions, wiped the sweat from his forehead as he leaned over
+the bow of his boat and looked down into that fathomless space.
+
+"I heard her singing, her or her wraith," he swore afterwards.
+"I'll never forget the moment I looked down and down, and the water
+seemed to grow clearer, and I saw her walking there at the bottom
+among the rocks, with him over her back, singing as she went,
+looking everywhere for George and the boys!"
+
+But if indeed his eyes were touched with fire at that moment, no
+one else in the world saw anything more of Miles Fentolin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster removed the cigar from his teeth and gazed at
+the long white ash with the air of a connoisseur. He was stretched
+in a long chair, high up in the terraced gardens behind the Hall.
+At his feet were golden mats of yellow crocuses; long borders of
+hyacinths - pink and purple; beds of violets; a great lilac tree,
+with patches of blossom here and there forcing their way into a
+sunlit world. The sea was blue; the sheltered air where they sat
+was warm and perfumed. Mr. Dunster, who was occupying the position
+of a favoured guest, was feeling very much at home.
+
+"There is one thing," he remarked meditatively, "which I can't help
+thinking about you Britishers. You may deserve it or you may not,
+but you do have the most almighty luck."
+
+"Sheer envy," Hamel murmured. "We escape from our tight corners by
+forethought."
+
+"Not on your life, sir," Mr. Dunster declared vigorously. "A year
+or less ago you got a North Sea scare, and on the strength of a
+merely honourable understanding with your neighbour, you risk your
+country's very existence for the sake of adding half a dozen
+battleships to your North Sea Squadron. The day the last of those
+battleships passed through the Straits of Gibraltar, this little
+Conference was plotted. I tell you they meant to make history there.
+
+There was enough for everybody - India for Russia, a time-honoured
+dream, but why not? Alsace-Lorraine and perhaps Egypt, for France;
+Australia for Japan; China and South Africa for Germany. Why not?
+You may laugh at it on paper but I say again - why not?"
+
+"It didn't quite come off, sir," Gerald observed.
+
+"It didn't," Mr. Dunster admitted, "partly owing to you. There
+were only two things needed: France to consider her own big interests
+and to ignore an entente from which she gains nothing that was not
+assured to her under the new agreement, and the money. Strange,"
+Mr. Dunster continued, "how people forget that factor, and yet the
+man who was responsible for The Hague Conference knew it. We in
+the States are right outside all these little jealousies and wrangles
+that bring Europe, every now and then, right up to the gates of war,
+but I'm hanged if there is one of you dare pass through those gates
+without a hand on our money markets. It's a new word in history,
+that little document, news of which Mr. Gerald here took to The
+Hague, the word of the money kings of the world. There is something
+that almost nips your breath in the idea that a dozen men, descended
+from the Lord knows whom, stopped a war which would have altered the
+whole face of history."
+
+"There was never any proof," Hamel remarked, "that France would not
+have remained staunch to us."
+
+"Very likely not," Mr. Dunster agreed, "but, on the other hand, your
+country had never the right to put such a burden upon her honour.
+Remember that side by side with those other considerations, a great
+statesman's first duty is to the people over whom he watches, not to
+study the interests of other lands. However, it's finished. The
+Hague Conference is broken up. The official organs of the world
+allude to it, if at all, as an unimportant gathering called together
+to discuss certain frontier questions with which England had nothing
+to do. But the memory of it will live. A good cold douche for you
+people, I should say, and I hope you'll take warning by it. Whatever
+the attitude of America as a nation may be to these matters, the
+American people don't want to see the old country in trouble. Gee
+whiz! What's that?"
+
+There was a little cry from all of them. Only Hamel stood without
+sign of surprise, gazing downward with grim, set face. A dull roar,
+like the booming of a gun, flashes of fire, and a column of smoke
+- and all that was left of St. David's Tower was one tottering wall
+and a scattered mass of masonry.
+
+"I had an idea," Hamel said quietly, "that St. David's Tower was
+going to spoil the landscape for a good many years. My property,
+you know, and there's the end of it. I am sick of seeing people
+for the last few days come down and take photographs of it for
+every little rag that goes to press."
+
+Mr. Dunster pointed out to the line of surf beyond. "If only some
+hand," he remarked, "could plant dynamite below that streak of white,
+so that the sea could disgorge its dead! They tell me there's a
+Spanish galleon there, and a Dutch warship, besides a score or more
+of fishing-boats."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin shivered a little. She drew her cloak around her.
+Gerald, who had been watching her, sprang to his feet.
+
+"Come," he exclaimed, "we chose the gardens for our last afternoon
+here, to be out of the way of these places! We'll go round the hill."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin shook her head once more. Her face had recovered its
+serenity. She looked downward gravely but with no sign of fear.
+
+"There is nothing to terrify us there, Gerald," she declared. "The
+sea has gathered, and the sea will hold its own."
+
+Hamel held out his hand to Esther.
+
+"I have destroyed the only house in the world which I possess," he
+said. "Come and look for violets with me in the spinney, and let
+us talk of the houses we are going to build, and the dreams we
+shall dream in them."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Vanished Messenger by Oppenheim
+
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Vanished Messenger by Oppenheim
+#4 in our series by by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
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+The Vanished Messenger
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+by E. Phillips Oppenheim
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+April, 1999 [Etext #1699]
+[Date last updated: February 14, 2005]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Vanished Messenger by Oppenheim
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+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+This Etext prepared by an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer.
+
+
+
+
+The Vanished Messenger
+
+by E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+There were very few people upon Platform Number Twenty-one of
+Liverpool Street Station at a quarter to nine on the evening
+of April 2--possibly because the platform in question is one of
+the most remote and least used in the great terminus. The
+station-master, however, was there himself, with an inspector in
+attendance. A dark, thick-set man, wearing a long travelling
+ulster and a Homburg hat, and carrying in his hand a brown leather
+dressing-case, across which was painted in black letters the name
+MR. JOHN P. DUNSTER, was standing a few yards away, smoking a
+long cigar, and, to all appearance absorbed in studying the
+advertisements which decorated the grimy wall on the other side of
+the single track. A couple of porters were seated upon a barrow
+which contained one solitary portmanteau. There were no signs of
+other passengers, no other luggage. As a matter of fact, according
+to the time-table, no train was due to leave the station or to
+arrive at it, on this particular platform, for several hours.
+
+Down at the other end of the platform the wooden barrier was thrust
+back, and a porter with some luggage upon a barrow made his noisy
+approach. He was followed by a tall young man in a grey tweed suit
+and a straw hat on which were the colours of a famous cricket club.
+
+The inspector watched them curiously. "Lost his way, I should
+think," he observed.
+
+The station-master nodded. "It looks like the young man who missed
+the boat train," he remarked. "Perhaps he has come to beg a lift."
+
+The young man in question made steady progress up the platform.
+His hands were thrust deep into the pockets of his coat, and his
+forehead was contracted in a frown. As he approached more closely,
+he singled out Mr. John P. Dunster, and motioning his porter to wait,
+crossed to the edge of the track and addressed him.
+
+"Can I speak to you for a moment, sir?"
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster turned at once and faced his questioner. He
+did so without haste--with a certain deliberation, in fact--yet
+his eyes were suddenly bright and keen. He was neatly dressed,
+with the quiet precision which seems as a rule to characterise the
+travelling American. He was apparently of a little less than
+middle-age, clean-shaven, broad-shouldered, with every appearance
+of physical strength. He seemed like a man on wires, a man on the
+alert, likely to miss nothing.
+
+"Are you Mr. John P. Dunster?" the youth asked.
+
+"I carry my visiting-card in my hand, sir," the other replied,
+swinging his dressing-case around. "My name is John P. Dunster."
+
+The young man's expression was scarcely ingratiating. To a natural
+sullenness was added now the nervous distaste of one who approaches
+a disagreeable task.
+
+"I want, if I may, to ask you a favour," he continued. "If you don't
+feel like granting it, please say no and I'll be off at once. I am
+on my way to The Hague. I was to have gone by the boat train which
+left half an hour ago. I had taken a seat, and they assured me that
+the train would not leave for at least ten minutes, as the mails
+weren't in. I went down the platform to buy some papers and stood
+talking for a moment or two with a man whom I know. I suppose I
+must have been longer than I thought, or they must have been quicker
+than they expected with the mailbags. Anyhow, when I came back the
+train was moving. They would not let me jump in. I could have done
+it easily, but that fool of an inspector over there held me."
+
+"They are very strict in this country, I know."
+
+Mr. Dunster agreed, without change of expression.
+"Please go on."
+
+"I saw you arrive--just too late for the train. While I was
+swearing at the inspector, I heard you speak to the station-master.
+Since then I have made inquiries. I understand that you have
+ordered a special train to Harwich."
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster said nothing, only his keen, clear eyes seemed
+all the time to be questioning this gloomy-looking but apparently
+harmless young man.
+
+"I went to the station-master's office," the latter continued,
+"and tried to persuade them to let me ride in the guard's van of
+your special, but he made a stupid fuss about it, so I thought I'd
+better come to you. Can I beg a seat in your compartment, or
+anywhere in the train, as far as Harwich?"
+
+Mr. Dunster avoided, for the moment, a direct reply. He had the
+air of a man who, whether reasonably or unreasonably, disliked the
+request which had been made to him.
+
+"You are particularly anxious to cross to-night?" he asked.
+
+"I am," the youth admitted emphatically. "I never ought to have
+risked missing the train. I am due at The Hague to-morrow."
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster moved his position a little. The light from a
+rain-splashed gas lamp shone now full upon the face of his suppliant:
+a boy's face, which would have been pleasant and even handsome but
+for the discontented mouth, the lowering forehead, and a shadow in
+the eyes, as though, boy though he certainly was in years, he had
+already, at some time or another, looked upon the serious things of
+life. His nervousness, too, was almost grotesque. He had the air
+of disliking immensely this asking a favour from a stranger. Mr.
+Dunster appreciated all these things, but there were reasons which
+made him slow in granting the young man's request.
+
+"What is the nature of your pressing business at The Hague?" he asked.
+
+The youth hesitated.
+
+"I am afraid," he said grimly, "that you will not think it of much
+importance. I am on my way to play in a golf tournament there."
+
+"A golf tournament at The Hague!" Mr. Dunster repeated, in a
+slightly altered tone. "What is your name?"
+
+"Gerald Fentolin."
+
+Mr. Dunster stood quite still for a moment. He was possessed of a
+wonderful memory, and he was conscious at that moment of a subtle
+appeal to it. Fentolin! There was something in the name which
+seemed to him somehow associated with the things against which he
+was on guard. He stood with puzzled frown, reminiscent for several
+minutes, unsuccessful. Then he suddenly smiled, and moving
+underneath the gas lamp, shook open an evening paper which he had
+been carrying. He turned over the pages until he arrived at the
+sporting items. Here, in almost the first paragraph, he saw the
+name which had happened to catch his eye a moment or two before:
+
+ GOLF AT THE HAGUE
+
+ Among the entrants for the tournament which commences
+ to-morrow, are several well-known English players,
+ including Mr. Barwin, Mr. Parrott, Mr. Hillard and
+ Mr. Gerald Fentolin.
+
+Mr. Dunster folded up the newspaper and replaced it in his pocket.
+He turned towards the young man.
+
+"So you're a golfer, are you?"
+
+"I play a bit," was the somewhat indifferent reply.
+
+Mr. Dunster turned to another part of the paper and pointed to the
+great black head-lines.
+
+"Seems a queer thing for a young fellow like you to be worrying
+about games," he remarked. "I haven't been in this country more
+than a few hours, but I expected to find all the young men getting
+ready."
+
+"Getting ready for what?"
+
+"Why, to fight, of course," Mr. Dunster replied. "Seems pretty
+clear that there's an expeditionary force being fitted out,
+according to this evening's paper, somewhere up in the North Sea.
+The only Englishman I've spoken to on this side was willing to lay
+me odds that war would be declared within a week."
+
+The young man's lack of interest was curious.
+
+"I am not in the army," he said. "It really doesn't affect me."
+
+Mr. Dunster stared at him.
+
+"You'll forgive my curiosity," he said, "but say, is there nothing
+you could get into and fight if this thing came along?"
+
+"Nothing at all, that I know of," the youth replied coolly. "War
+is an affair which concerns only the military and naval part of two
+countries. The civil population--"
+
+"Plays golf, I suppose," Mr. Dunster interrupted. "Young man, I
+haven't been in England for some years, and you rather take my
+breath away. All the same, you can come along with me as far as
+Harwich."
+
+The young man showed signs of some satisfaction. "I am very much
+obliged to you, sir," he declared. "I promise you I won't be in
+the way."
+
+The station-master, who had been looking through a little pile of
+telegrams brought to him by a clerk from his office, now turned
+towards them. His expression was a little grave.
+
+"Your special will be backing down directly, sir," he announced,
+"but I am sorry to say that we hear very bad accounts of the line.
+They say that this is only the fag-end of the storm that we are
+getting here, and that it's been raging for nearly twenty-four
+hours on the east coast. I doubt whether the Harwich boat will be
+able to put off."
+
+"We must take our chance about that," Dunster remarked. "If the
+mail boat doesn't run, I presume there will be something else we
+can charter."
+
+The station-master looked the curiosity which he did not actually
+express in words.
+
+"Money will buy most things, nowadays, sir," he observed, "but if
+it isn't fit for our mail boat, it certainly isn't fit for anything
+else that can come into Harwich Harbour. However, you'll hear what
+they say when you get there."
+
+Mr. Dunster nodded and relapsed into a taciturnity which was
+obviously one of his peculiarities. The young man strolled down
+the platform, and catching up with the inspector, touched him on
+the shoulder.
+
+"Do you know who the fellow is?" he asked curiously. "It's awfully
+decent of him to let me go with him, but he didn't seem very keen
+about it."
+
+The inspector shook his head.
+
+"No idea, sir," he replied. "He drove up just two minutes after
+the train had gone, came straight into the office and ordered a
+special. Paid for it, too, in Bank of England notes before he
+went out. I fancy he's an American, and he gave his name as John
+P. Dunster."
+
+The young man paused to light a cigarette.
+
+"If he's an American, I suppose that accounts for it," he observed.
+"He must be in a precious hurry to get somewhere, though."
+
+"A night like this, too!" the inspector remarked, with a shiver.
+"I wouldn't leave London myself unless I had to. They say there's
+a tremendous storm blowing on the east coast. Here comes the train,
+sir--just one saloon and the guard's van."
+
+The little train backed slowly along the platform side. The
+engine was splashed with mud and soaking wet. The faces of the
+engine-driver and his companion shone from the dripping rain. The
+station-master held open the door of the saloon.
+
+"You've a rough journey before you, sir," he said. "You'll catch
+the boat all right, though--if it goes. The mail train was very
+heavy to-night. You should catch her up this side of Colchester."
+
+Mr. Dunster nodded.
+
+"I am taking this young gentleman with me," he announced shortly.
+"It seems that he, too, missed the train. I am much obliged to you,
+station-master, for your attention. Good night!"
+
+They were about to start when Mr. Dunster once more let down the
+window.
+
+"By the way," he said, "as it is such a wild night, you will oblige
+me very much if you will tell the engine-driver that there will be
+a five pound note for himself and his companion if we catch the
+mail. Inspector!"
+
+The inspector touched his hat. The station-master had turned
+discreetly away. He had been an inspector himself once, and
+sovereigns had been useful to him, too. Then the train glided from
+the platform side, plunged with a scream through a succession of
+black tunnels, and with rapidly increasing speed faced the storm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+The young man sat on one side of the saloon and Mr. John P. Dunster
+on the other. Although both of them were provided with a certain
+amount of railway literature, neither of them made any pretence at
+reading. The older man, with his feet upon the opposite seat and
+his arms folded, was looking pensively through the rain-splashed
+window-pane into the impenetrable darkness. The young man, although
+he could not ignore his companion's unsociable instincts, was
+fidgety.
+
+"There will be some floods out to-morrow," he remarked.
+
+Mr. Dunster turned his head and looked across the saloon. There
+was something in the deliberate manner of his doing so, and his
+hesitation before he spoke, which seemed intended to further impress
+upon the young man the fact that he was not disposed for conversation.
+
+"Very likely," was his sole reply.
+
+Gerald Fentolin sighed as though he regretted his companion's
+taciturnity and a few minutes later strolled to the farther end of
+the saloon. He spent some time trying to peer through the streaming
+window into the darkness. He chatted for a few minutes with the
+guard, who was, however, in a bad temper at having had to turn out
+and who found little to say. Then he took one of his golf clubs
+from the bag and indulged in several half swings. Finally he
+stretched himself out upon one of the seats and closed his eyes.
+
+"May as well try to get a nap," he yawned. "There won't be much
+chance on the steamer, if it blows like this."
+
+Mr. Dunster said nothing. His face was set, his eyes were looking
+somewhere beyond the confines of the saloon in which he was seated.
+So they travelled for over an hour. The young man seemed to be
+dozing in earnest when, with a succession of jerks, the train
+rapidly slackened speed. Mr. Dunster let down the window. The
+interior of the carriage was at once thrown into confusion. A
+couple of newspapers were caught up and whirled around, a torrent
+of rain beat in. Mr. Dunster rapidly closed the window and rang
+the bell. The guard came in after a moment or two. His clothes
+were shiny from the wet; raindrops hung from his beard.
+
+"What is the matter?" Mr. Dunster demanded. "Why are we waiting
+here?"
+
+"There's a block on the line somewhere," the man replied. "Can't
+tell where exactly. The signals are against us; that's all we
+know at present."
+
+They crawled on again in about ten minutes, stopped, and resumed
+their progress at an even slower rate. Mr. Dunster once more
+summoned the guard.
+
+"Why are we travelling like this?" he asked impatiently. "We shall
+never catch the boat."
+
+"We shall catch the boat all right if it runs, sir," the man assured
+him. "The mail is only a mile or two ahead of us; that's one reason
+why we have to go so slowly. Then the water is right over the line
+where we are now, and we can't get any news at all from the other
+side of Ipswich. If it goes on like this, some of the bridges will
+be down; that's what I'm afraid of."
+
+Mr. Dunster frowned. For the first time he showed some signs of
+uneasiness.
+
+"Perhaps," he muttered, half to himself, "a motor-car would have been
+better."
+
+"Not on your life," his young companion intervened. "All the roads
+to the coast here cross no end of small bridges--much weaker
+affairs than the railway bridges. I bet there are some of those
+down already. Besides, you wouldn't be able to see where you were
+going, on a night like this."
+
+"There appears to be a chance," Mr. Dunster remarked drily, "that
+you will have to scratch for your competition to-morrow."
+
+"Also," the young man observed, "that you will have taken this
+special train for nothing. I can't fancy the Harwich boat going
+out a night like this."
+
+Mr. Dunster relapsed into stony but anxious silence. The train
+continued its erratic progress, sometimes stopping altogether for
+a time, with whistle blowing repeatedly; sometimes creeping along
+the metals as though feeling its way to safety. At last, after a
+somewhat prolonged wait, the guard, whose hoarse voice they had
+heard on the platform of the small station in which they were
+standing, entered the carriage. With him came a gust of wind, once
+more sending the papers flying around the compartment. The rain
+dripped from his clothes on to the carpet. He had lost his hat,
+his hair was tossed with the wind, his face was bleeding from a
+slight wound on the temple.
+
+"The boat train's just ahead of us, sir," he announced. "She can't
+get on any better than we can. We've just heard that there's a
+bridge down on the line between Ipswich and Harwich."
+
+"What are we going to do, then?" Mr. Dunster demanded.
+
+"That's just what I've come to ask you, sir," the guard replied.
+"The mail's going slowly on as far as Ipswich. I fancy they'll
+lie by there until the morning. The best thing that I can see is,
+if you're agreeable, to take you back to London. We can very
+likely do that all right, if we start at once."
+
+Mr. Dunster, ignoring the man's suggestion, drew from one of the
+voluminous pockets of his ulster a small map. He spread it open
+upon the table before him and studied it attentively.
+
+"If I cannot get to Harwich," he asked, "is there any possibility
+of keeping straight on and reaching Yarmouth?"
+
+The guard hesitated.
+
+"We haven't heard anything about the line from Ipswich to Norwich,
+sir," he replied, "but we can't very well change our course without
+definite instructions."
+
+"Your definite instructions," Mr. Dunster reminded him drily, "were
+to take me to Harwich. You have been forced to depart from them.
+I see no harm in your adopting any suggestions I may have to make
+concerning our altered destination. I will pay the extra mileage,
+naturally."
+
+"How far did you wish to go, sir?" the guard enquired.
+
+"To Yarmouth," Mr. Dunster replied firmly. "If there are bridges
+down, and communication with Harwich is blocked, Yarmouth would
+suit me better than anywhere."
+
+The guard shook his head.
+
+"I couldn't go on that way, sir, without instructions."
+
+"Is there a telegraph office at this station?" Mr. Dunster inquired.
+
+"We can speak anywhere on the line," the guard replied.
+
+"Then wire to the station-master at Liverpool Street," Mr. Dunster
+instructed. "You can get a reply from him in the course of a few
+minutes. Explain the situation and tell him what my wishes are."
+
+The guard hesitated.
+
+"It's a goodish way from here to Norwich," he observed, "and for
+all we know--"
+
+"When we left Liverpool Street Station," Mr. Dunster interrupted,
+"I promised five pounds each to you, the engine-driver, and his mate.
+That five pounds shall be made twenty-five if you succeed in
+getting me to the coast. Do your best for me."
+
+The guard raised his hat and departed without another word.
+
+"It will probably suit you better," Mr. Dunster continued, turning
+to his companion, "to leave me at Ipswich and join the mail."
+
+The latter shook his head.
+
+"I don't see that there's any chance, anyway, of my getting over in
+time now," he remarked. "If you'll take me on with you as far as
+Norwich, I can go quietly home from there!"
+
+"You live in this part of the world, then?" Mr. Dunster asked.
+
+The young man assented. Again there was a certain amount of
+hesitation in his manner.
+
+"I live some distance the other side of Norwich," he said. "I don't
+want to sponge on you too much," he went on, "but if you're really
+going to stick it out and try and get there, I'd like to go on, too.
+I am afraid I can't offer to share the expense, but I'd work my
+passage if there was anything to be done."
+
+Mr. Dunster drummed for a moment upon the table with his fingers.
+All the time the young man had been speaking, his eyes had been
+studying his face. He turned now once more to his map.
+
+"It was my idea," he said, "to hire a steam trawler from Yarmouth.
+If I do so, you can, if you wish, accompany me so far as the port
+at which we may land in Holland. On the other hand, to be perfectly
+frank with you, I should prefer to go alone. There will be, no
+doubt, a certain amount of risk in crossing to-night. My own business
+is of importance. A golf tournament, however, is scarcely worth
+risking your life for, is it?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know about that!" the young man replied grimly. "I
+fancy I should rather like it. Let's see whether we can get on to
+Norwich, anyhow, shall we? We may find that there are bridges down
+on that line."
+
+They relapsed once more into silence. Presently the guard
+reappeared.
+
+"Instructions to take you on to Yarmouth, if possible, sir," he
+announced, "and to collect the mileage at our destination."
+
+"That will be quite satisfactory," Mr. Dunster agreed. "Let us be
+off, then, as soon as possible." Presently they crawled on. They
+passed the boat train in Ipswich Station, where they stayed for a
+few moments. Mr. Dunster bought wine and sandwiches, and his
+companion followed his example. Then they continued their journey.
+An hour or more passed; the storm showed no signs of abatement.
+Their speed now rarely exceeded ten or fifteen miles an hour. Mr.
+Dunster smoked all the time, occasionally rubbing the window-pane
+and trying to look out. Gerald Fentolin slept fitfully.
+
+"Have you any idea where we are?" Mr. Dunster asked once.
+
+The boy cautiously let down the window a little way. With the noise
+of the storm came another sound, to which he listened for a moment
+with puzzled face: a dull, rumbling sound like the falling of water.
+He closed the window, breathless.
+
+"I don't think we are far from Norwich. We passed Forncett, anyhow,
+some time ago."
+
+"Still raining?"
+
+"In torrents! I can't see a yard ahead of me. I bet we get some
+floods after this. I expect they are out now, if one could only see."
+
+They crept on. Suddenly, above the storm, they heard what sounded
+at first like the booming of a gun, and then a shrill whistle from
+some distance ahead. They felt the jerk as their brakes were hastily
+applied, the swaying of the little train, and then the crunching of
+earth beneath them, the roar of escaping steam as their engine
+ploughed its way on into the road bed.
+
+"Off the rails!" the boy cried, springing to his feet. "Hold on
+tightly, sir. I'd keep away from the window."
+
+The carriage swayed and rocked. Suddenly a telegraph post seemed
+to come crashing through the window and the polished mahogany panels.
+The young man escaped it by leaping to one side. It caught Mr.
+Dunster, who had just risen to his feet, upon the forehead. There
+was a crash all around of splitting glass, a further shock. They
+were both thrown off their feet. The light was suddenly extinguished.
+With the crashing of glass, the splitting of timber--a hideous,
+tearing sound--the wrecked saloon, dragging the engine half-way
+over with it, slipped down a low embankment and lay on its side,
+what remained of it, in a field of turnips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+As the young man staggered to his feet, he had somehow a sense of
+detachment, as though he were commencing a new life, or had suddenly
+come into a new existence. Yet his immediate surroundings were
+charged with ugly reminiscences. Through a great gap in the ruined
+side of the saloon the rain was tearing in. As he stood up, his
+head caught the fragments of the roof. He was able to push back
+the wreckage with ease and step out. For a moment he reeled, as he
+met the violence of the storm. Then, clutching hold of the side of
+the wreck, he steadied himself. A light was moving back and forth,
+close at hand. He cried out weakly: "Hullo!"
+
+A man carrying a lantern, bent double as he made his way against the
+wind, crawled up to them. He was a porter from the station close
+at hand.
+
+"My God!" he exclaimed. "Any one alive here?"
+
+"I'm all right," Gerald muttered, "at least, I suppose I am. What's
+it all--what's it all about? We've had an accident."
+
+The porter caught hold of a piece of the wreckage with which to
+steady himself.
+
+"Your train ran right into three feet of water," he answered. "The
+rails had gone--torn up. The telegraph line's down."
+
+"Why didn't you stop the train?"
+
+"We were doing all we could," the man retorted gloomily. "We weren't
+expecting anything else through to-night. We'd a man along the line
+with a lantern, but he's just been found blown over the embankment,
+with his head in a pool of water. Any one else in your carriage?"
+
+"One gentleman travelling with me," Gerald answered. "We'd better
+try to get him out. What about the guard and engine-driver?"
+
+"The engine-driver and stoker are both alive," the porter told him.
+"I came across them before I saw you. They're both knocked sort
+of sillylike, but they aren't much hurt. The guard's stone dead."
+
+"Where are we?"
+
+"A few hundred yards from Wymondham. Let's have a look for the
+other gentleman."
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster was lying quite still, his right leg doubled
+up, and a huge block of telegraph post, which the saloon had carried
+with it in its fall, still pressing against his forehead. He
+groaned as they dragged him out and laid him down upon a cushion
+in the shelter of the wreckage.
+
+"He's alive all right," the porter remarked. "There's a doctor on
+the way. Let's cover him up quick and wait."
+
+"Can't we carry him to shelter of some sort?" Gerald proposed.
+
+The man shook his head. Speech of any sort was difficult. Even
+with his lips close to the other's ears, he had almost to shout.
+
+"Couldn't be done," he replied. "It's all one can do to walk alone
+when you get out in the middle of the field, away from the shelter
+of the embankment here. There's bits of trees flying all down the
+lane. Never was such a night! Folks is fair afraid of the morning
+to see what's happened. There's a mill blown right over on its side
+in the next field, and the man in charge of it lying dead. This
+poor chap's bad enough."
+
+Gerald, on all fours, had crept back into the compartment. The
+bottle of wine was smashed into atoms. He came out, dragging the
+small dressing-case which his companion had kept on the table before
+him. One side of it was dented in, but the lock, which was of great
+strength, still held.
+
+"Perhaps there's a flask somewhere in this dressing-case," Gerald
+said. "Lend me a knife."
+
+Strong though it had been, the lock was already almost torn out
+from its foundation. They forced the spring and opened it. The
+porter turned his lantern on the widening space. Just as Gerald
+was raising the lid very slowly to save the contents from being
+scattered by the wind, the man turned his head to answer an
+approaching hail. Gerald raised the lid a little higher and
+suddenly closed it with a bang.
+
+"There's folks coming at last!" the porter exclaimed, turning around
+excitedly. "They've been a time and no mistake. The village isn't
+a quarter of a mile away. Did you find a flask, sir?"
+
+Gerald made no answer. The dressing-case once more was closed, and
+his hand pressed upon the lid. The porter turned the light upon his
+face and whistled softly.
+
+"You're about done yourself, sir," he remarked. "Hold up."
+
+He caught the young man in his arms. There was another roar in
+Gerald's ears besides the roar of the wind. He had never fainted
+in his life, but the feeling was upon him now--a deadly sickness,
+a swaying of the earth. The porter suddenly gave a little cry.
+
+"If I'm not a born idiot!" he exclaimed, drawing a bottle from the
+pocket of his coat with his disengaged hand. "There's whisky here.
+I was taking it home to the missis for her rheumatism. Now, then."
+
+He drew the cork from the bottle with his teeth and forced some of
+the liquid between the lips of the young man. The voices now were
+coming nearer and nearer. Gerald made a desperate effort.
+
+"I am all right," he declared. "Let's look after him."
+
+They groped their way towards the unconscious man, Gerald still
+gripping the dressing-case with both hands. There were no signs
+of any change in his condition, but he was still breathing heavily.
+Then they heard a shout behind, almost in their ears. The porter
+staggered to his feet.
+
+"It's all right now, sir!" he exclaimed. "They've brought blankets
+and a stretcher and brandy. Here's a doctor, sir."
+
+A powerful-looking man, hatless, and wrapped in a great ulster,
+moved towards them.
+
+"How many are there of you?" he asked, as he bent over Mr. Dunster.
+
+"Only we two," Gerald replied. "Is my friend badly hurt?"
+
+"Concussion," the doctor announced. "We'll take him to the village.
+What about you, young man? Your face is bleeding, I see."
+
+"Just a cut," Gerald faltered; "nothing else."
+
+"Lucky chap," the doctor remarked. "Let's get him to shelter of
+some sort. Come along. There's an inn at the corner of the lane
+there."
+
+They all staggered along, Gerald still clutching the dressing-case,
+and supported on the other side by an excited and somewhat
+incoherent villager.
+
+"Such a storm as never was," the latter volunteered. "The telegraph
+wires are all down for miles and miles. There won't be no trains
+running along this line come many a week, and as for trees--why,
+it's as though some one had been playing ninepins in Squire
+Fellowes's park. When the morning do come, for sure there will be
+things to be seen. This way, sir. Be careful of the gate."
+
+They staggered along down the lane, climbing once over a tree
+which lay across the lane and far into the adjoining field. Soon
+they were joined by more of the villagers, roused from their beds
+by rumours of terrible happenings. The little, single-storey,
+ivy-covered inn was all lit up and the door held firmly open. They
+passed through the narrow entrance and into the stone-flagged
+barroom, where the men laid down their stretcher. As many of the
+villagers as could crowd in filled the passage. Gerald sank into
+a chair. The sudden absence of wind was almost disconcerting. He
+felt himself once more in danger of fainting. He was only vaguely
+conscious of drinking hot milk, poured from a jug by a red-faced
+and sympathetic woman. Its restorative effect, however, was
+immediate and wonderful. The mist cleared from before his eyes,
+his brain began to work. Always in the background the horror and
+the shame were there, the shame which kept his hand pressed with
+unnatural strength upon the broken lock of that dressing-case.
+He sat a little apart from the others and listened. Above the
+confused murmur of voices he could hear the doctor's comment and
+brief orders, as he rose to his feet after examining the unconscious
+man.
+
+"An ordinary concussion," he declared. "I must get round and see
+the engine-driver now. They have got him in a shed by the embankment.
+I'll call in again later on. Let's have one more look at you,
+young man."
+
+He glanced at the cut on Gerald's forehead, noted the access of
+colour in his cheeks, and nodded.
+
+"Born to be hanged, you were," he pronounced. "You've had a
+marvellous escape. I'll be in again presently. No need to worry
+about your friend. He looks as though he'd got a mighty constitution.
+Light my lantern, Brown. Two of you had better come with me to the
+shed. It's no night for a man to be wandering about alone."
+
+He departed, and many of the villagers with him. The landlady sat
+down and began to weep.
+
+"Such a night! Such a night!" she exclaimed, wringing her hands.
+"And there's the doctor talks about putting the poor gentleman to
+bed! Why, the roof's off the back part of the house, and not a
+bedroom in the place but mine and John's, and the rain coming in
+there in torrents. Such a night! It's the judgment of the Lord
+upon us! That's what it is--the judgment of the Lord!"
+
+"Judgment of the fiddlesticks!" her husband growled. "Can't you
+light the fire, woman? What's the good of sitting there whining?"
+
+"Light the fire," she repeated bitterly, "and the chimney lying out
+in the road! Do you want to suffocate us all, or is the beer still
+in your head? It's your evil doings, Richard Budden, and others
+like you, that have brought this upon us. If Mr. Wembley would
+but come in and pray!"
+
+Her husband scoffed. He was dressed only in his shirt and trousers,
+his hair rough, his braces hanging down behind.
+
+"Come in and pray!" he repeated. "Not he! Not Mr. Wembley! He's
+safe tucked up in his bed, shivering with fear, I'll bet you. He's
+not getting his feet wet to save a body or lend a hand here. Souls
+are his job. You let the preacher alone, mother, and tell us what
+we're going to do with this gentleman."
+
+"The Lord only knows!" she cried, wringing her hands.
+
+"Can I hire a motor-car from anywhere near?" Gerald asked.
+
+"There's motor-cars, right enough," the innkeeper replied, "but not
+many as would be fools enough to take one out. You couldn't see
+the road, and I doubt if one of them plaguey things would stir in
+this storm."
+
+"Such nonsense as you talk, Richard Budden!" his wife exclaimed
+sharply. "It's twenty minutes past three of the clock, and there's
+light coming on us fast. If so be as the young gentleman knows
+folks round about here, or happens to live nigh, why shouldn't he
+take one of them motor-cars and get away to some decent place?
+It'll be better for the poor gentleman than lying here in a house
+smitten by the Lord."
+
+Gerald rose stiffly to his feet. An idea was forming in his brain.
+His eyes were bright. He looked at the body of John Dunster upon
+the floor, and felt once more in his pocket.
+
+"How far off is the garage?" he asked.
+
+"It's right across the way," the innkeeper replied, "a speculation
+of Neighbour Martin's, and a foolish one it do seem to me. He's two
+cars there, and one he lets to the Government for delivering the
+mails."
+
+Gerald felt in his pocket and produced a sovereign.
+
+"Give this," he said, "to any man you can find who will go across
+there and bring me a car--the most powerful they've got, if there's
+any difference. Tell them I'll pay well. This--my friend will be
+much better at home with me than in a strange place when he comes
+to his senses."
+
+"It's sound common sense," the woman declared. "Be off with you,
+Richard."
+
+The man was looking at the coin covetously, but his wife pushed him
+away.
+
+"It's not a sovereign you'll be taking from the gentleman for a
+little errand like that," she insisted sharply. "He shall pay us
+for what he's had when he goes, and welcome, and if so be that he's
+willing to make it a sovereign, to include the milk and the brandy
+and the confusion we've been put to this night, well and good. It's
+a heavy reckoning, maybe, but the night calls for it. We'll see
+about that afterwards. Get along with you, I say, Richard."
+
+"I'll be wet through," the man muttered.
+
+"And serve you right!" the woman exclaimed. "If there's a man in
+this village to-night whose clothes are dry, it's a thing for him
+to be ashamed of."
+
+The innkeeper reluctantly departed. They heard the roar of the
+wind as the door was opened and closed. The woman poured out another
+glass of milk and brought it to Gerald.
+
+"A godless man, mine," she said grimly. "If so happen as Mr. Wembley
+had come to these parts years ago, I'd have seen myself in my grave
+before I'd have married a publican. But it's too late now. We're
+mostly too late about the things that count in this world. So it's
+your friend that's been stricken down, young man. A well-living man,
+I hope?"
+
+Gerald shivered ever so slightly. He drank the milk, however. He
+felt that he might need his strength.
+
+"What train might you have been on?" the woman continued. "There's
+none due on this line that we knew of. David Bass, the
+station-master, was here but two hours ago and said he'd finished
+for the night, and praised the Lord for that. The goods trains
+had all been stopped at Ipswich, and the first passenger train was
+not due till six o'clock."
+
+Gerald shook his head with an affectation of weariness.
+
+"I don't know," he replied. "I don't remember anything about it.
+We were hours late, I think."
+
+The woman was looking down at the unconscious man. Gerald rose
+slowly to his feet and stood by her side. The face of Mr. John P.
+Dunster, even in unconsciousness, had something in it of strength
+and purpose. The shape of his head, the squareness of his jaws,
+the straightness of his thick lips, all seemed to speak of a hard
+and inflexible disposition. His hair was coal black, coarse, and
+without the slightest sprinkling of grey. He had the neck and
+throat of a fighter. But for that single, livid, blue mark across
+his forehead, he carried with him no signs of his accident. He was
+a little inclined to be stout. There was a heavy gold chain
+stretched across his waist-coat. From where he lay, the shining
+handle of his revolver protruded from his hip, pocket.
+
+"Sakes alive!" the woman muttered, as she looked down. "What does
+he carry a thing like that for--in a peaceful country, too!"
+
+"It was just an idea of his," Gerald answered. "We were going
+abroad in a day or two. He was always nervous. If you like, I'll
+take it away."
+
+He stooped down and withdrew it from the unconscious man's pocket.
+He started as he discovered that it was loaded in every chamber.
+
+"I can't bear the sight of them things," the woman declared. "It's
+the men of evil ways, who've no trust in the Lord, who need that
+sort of protection."
+
+They heard the door pushed open, the howl of wind down the passage,
+and the beating of rain upon the stone flags. Then it was softly
+closed again. The landlord staggered into the room, followed by a
+young man.
+
+"This 'ere is Mr. Martin's chaffer," he announced. "You can tell
+him what you want yerself."
+
+Gerald turned almost eagerly towards the newcomer.
+
+"I want to go to the other side of Holt," he said, "and get my
+friend--get this gentleman away from here--get him home, if
+possible. Can you take me?"
+
+The chauffeur looked doubtful.
+
+"I'm afraid of the roads, sir," he replied. "There's talk about
+many bridges down, and trees, and there's floods out everywhere.
+There's half a foot of water, even, across the village street now.
+I'm afraid we shouldn't get very far."
+
+"Look here," Gerald begged eagerly, "let's make a shot at it. I'll
+pay you double the hire of the car, and I'll be responsible for any
+damage. I want to get out of this beastly place. Let's get
+somewhere, at any rate, towards a civilised country. I'll see you
+don't lose anything. I'll give you a five pound note for yourself
+if we get as far as Holt."
+
+"I'm on," the young man agreed shortly. "It's an open car, you know."
+
+"It doesn't matter," Gerald replied. "I can stick it in front with
+you, and we can cover--him up in the tonneau."
+
+"You'll wait until the doctor comes back?" the landlord asked.
+
+"And why should they?" his wife interposed sharply. "Them doctors
+are all the same. He'll try and keep the poor gentleman here for
+the sake of a few extra guineas, and a miserable place for him to
+open his eyes upon, even if the rest of the roof holds, which for
+my part I'm beginning to doubt. They'd have to move him from here
+with the daylight, anyhow. He can't lie in the bar parlour all day,
+can he?"
+
+"It don't seem right, somehow," the man com plained doggedly. "The
+doctor didn't say anything about having him moved."
+
+"You get the car," Gerald ordered the young man. "I'll take the
+whole responsibility."
+
+The chauffeur silently left the room. Gerald put a couple of
+sovereigns upon the mantelpiece.
+
+"My friend is a man of somewhat peculiar temperament," he said
+quietly. "If he finds himself at home in a comfortable room when
+he comes to his senses, I am quite sure that he will have a better
+chance of recovery. He cannot possibly be made comfortable here,
+and he will feel the shock of what has happened all the more if he
+finds himself still in the neighbourhood when he opens his eyes.
+If there is any change in his condition, we can easily stop somewhere
+on the way."
+
+The woman pocketed the two sovereigns.
+
+"That's common sense, sir," she agreed heartily, "and I'm sure we
+are very much obliged to you. If we had a decent room, and a roof
+above it, you'd be heartily welcome, but as it is, this is no place
+for a sick man, and those that say different don't know what they
+are talking about. That's a real careful young man who's going to
+take you along in the motor-car. He'll get you there safe, if any
+one will."
+
+"What I say is," her husband protested sullenly, "that we ought to
+wait for the doctor's orders. I'm against seeing a poor body like
+that jolted across the country in an open motor-car, in his state.
+I'm not sure that it's for his good."
+
+"And what business is it of yours, I should like to know?" the woman
+demanded sharply. "You get up-stairs and begin moving the furniture
+from where the rain's coming sopping in. And if so be you can
+remember while you do it that this is a judgment that's come upon us,
+why, so much the better. We are evil-doers, all of us, though them
+as likes the easy ways generally manage to forget it."
+
+The man retreated silently. The woman sat down upon a stool and
+waited. Gerald sat opposite to her, the battered dressing-case
+upon his knees. Between them was stretched the body of the
+unconscious man.
+
+"Are you used to prayer, young sir?" the woman asked.
+
+Gerald shook his head, and the woman did not pursue the subject.
+Only once her eyes were half closed and her words drifted across
+the room.
+
+"The Lord have mercy on this man, a sinner!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+"My advice to you, sir, is to chuck it!"
+
+Gerald turned towards the chauffeur by whose side he was seated a
+little stiffly, for his limbs were numbed with the cold and
+exhaustion. The morning had broken with a grey and uncertain light.
+A vaporous veil of mist seemed to have taken the place of the
+darkness. Even from the top of the hill where the car had come to
+a standstill, there was little to be seen.
+
+"We must have come forty miles already," the chauffeur continued,
+"what with going out of our way all the time because of the broken
+bridges. I'm pretty well frozen through, and as for him," he added,
+jerking his thumb across his shoulder, "it seems to me you're taking
+a bit of a risk."
+
+"The doctor said he would remain in exactly the same condition for
+twenty-four hours," Gerald declared.
+
+"Yes, but he didn't say anything about shaking him up over forty
+miles of rough road," the other protested. "You'll excuse me, sir,"
+he continued, in a slightly changed tone; "it isn't my business, of
+course, but I'm fairly done. It don't seem reasonable to stick at
+it like this. There's Holt village not a mile away, and a comfortable
+inn and a fire waiting. I thought that was as far as you wanted to
+come. We might lie up there for a few hours, at any rate."
+
+His passenger slipped down from his place, and, lifting the rug,
+peered into the tonneau of the car, over which they had tied a hood.
+To all appearance, the condition of the man who lay there was
+unchanged. There was a slightly added blueness about the lips but
+his breathing was still perceptible. It seemed even a little
+stronger. Gerald resumed his seat.
+
+"It isn't worth while to stay at Holt," he said quietly. "We are
+scarcely seven miles from home now. Sit still for a few minutes
+and get your wind."
+
+"Only seven miles," the chauffeur repeated more cheerfully. "That's
+something, anyway."
+
+"And all downhill."
+
+"Towards the sea, then?"
+
+"Straight to the sea," Gerald told him. "The place we are making
+for is St. David's Hall, near Salthouse."
+
+The chauffeur seemed a little startled.
+
+"Why, that's Squire Fentolin's house!"
+
+Gerald nodded.
+
+"That is where we are going. You follow this road almost straight
+ahead."
+
+The chauffeur slipped in the clutch.
+
+"Oh, I know the way now, sir, right enough!" he exclaimed. "There's
+Salthouse marsh to cross, though. I don't know about that."
+
+"We shall manage that all right," Gerald declared. "We've more
+light now, too."
+
+They both looked around. During the last few minutes the late
+morning seemed to have forced its way through the clouds. They had
+a dim, phantasmagoric view of the stricken country: a watery plain,
+with here and there great patches of fields, submerged to the
+hedges, and houses standing out amidst the waste of waters like
+toy dwellings. There were whole plantations of uprooted trees.
+Close to the road, on their left, was a roofless house, and a
+family of children crying underneath a tarpaulin shelter. As they
+crept on, the wind came to them with a brackish flavour, salt with
+the sea. The chauffeur was gazing ahead doubtfully.
+
+"I don't like the look of the marsh," he grumbled. "Can't see the
+road at all. However, here goes."
+
+"Another half-hour," Gerald assured him encouragingly, "and we shall
+be at St. David's Hall. You can have as much rest as you like then."
+
+They were facing the wind now, and conversation became impossible.
+Twice they had to pull up sharp and make a considerable detour, once
+on account of a fallen tree which blocked the road, and another
+time because of the yawning gap where a bridge had fallen away.
+Gerald, however, knew every inch of the country they were in and
+was able to give the necessary directions. They began to meet farm
+wagons now, full of people who had been driven from their homes.
+Warnings and information as to the state of the roads were shouted
+to them continually. Presently they came to the last steep descent,
+and emerged from the devastated fragment of a wood almost on to the
+sea level. The chauffeur clapped on his brakes and stopped short.
+
+"My God!" he exclaimed. "Here's more trouble!"
+
+Gerald for a moment was speechless. They seemed to have come
+suddenly upon a huge plain of waters, an immense lake reaching as
+far as they could see on either side. The road before them stretched
+like a ribbon for the next three miles. Here and there it
+disappeared and reappeared again. In many places it was lapped by
+little waves. Everywhere the hedges were either altogether or half
+under water. In the distance was one farmhouse, only the roof of
+which was visible, and from which the inhabitants were clambering
+into a boat. And beyond, with scarcely a break save for the rising
+of one strangely-shaped hill, was the sea. Gerald pointed with his
+finger.
+
+"There's St. David's Hall," he said, "on the other side of the
+hill. The road seems all right."
+
+"Does it!" the chauffeur grunted. "It's under water more than half
+the way, and Heaven knows how deep it is at the sides! I'm not
+going to risk my life along there. I am going to take the car back
+to Holt."
+
+His hand was already upon the reverse lever, but Gerald gripped it.
+
+"Look here," he protested, "we haven't come all this way to turn back.
+You don't look like a coward."
+
+"I am not a coward, sir," was the quiet answer. "Neither am I a
+fool. I don't see any use in risking our lives and my master's
+motor-car, because you want to get home."
+
+"Naturally," Gerald answered calmly, "but remember this. I am
+responsible for your car--not you. Mr. Fentolin is my uncle."
+
+The chauffeur nodded shortly.
+
+"You're Mr. Gerald Fentolin, aren't you, sir?" he remarked. "I
+thought I recognised you."
+
+"I am," Gerald admitted. "We've had a rough journey, but it doesn't
+seem sense to turn back now, does it, with the house in sight?"
+
+"That's all very well, sir," the chauffeur objected doubtfully, "but
+I don't believe the road's even passable, and the floods seem to me
+to be rising."
+
+"Try it," the young man begged. "Look here, I don't want to bribe
+you, or anything of that sort. You know you're coming out of this
+well. It's a serious matter for me, and I shan't be likely to forget
+it. I want to take this gentleman to St. David's Hall and not to
+a hospital. You've brought me here so far like a man. Let's go
+through with it. If the worst comes to the worst, we can both swim,
+I suppose, and we are not likely to get out of our depth."
+
+The chauffeur moved his head backwards.
+
+"How about him?"
+
+"He must take his chance," Gerald replied. "He's all right where
+he is. The car won't upset and there are plenty of people who'll
+see if we get into trouble. Come, let's make a dash for it."
+
+The chauffeur thrust in his clutch and settled himself down. They
+glided off along that winding stretch of road. To its very edge,
+on either side of them, so close that they could almost touch it,
+came the water, water which stretched as far as they could see,
+swaying, waveless, sinister-looking. Even Gerald, after his first
+impulse of wonder, kept his eyes averted and fixed upon the road
+ahead. Soon they reached a place where the water met in front.
+There were only the rows of white palings on either side to guide
+them. The chauffeur muttered to himself as he changed to his first
+speed.
+
+"If the engine gets stopped," he said, "I don't know how we shall
+get out of this."
+
+They emerged on the other side. For some time they had a clear run.
+Then suddenly the driver clapped on his brakes.
+
+"My God!" he cried. "We can't get through that!"
+
+In front of them for more than a hundred yards the water seemed
+suddenly to have flowed across the road. Still a mile distant,
+perched on a ridge of that strangely-placed hill, was their
+destination.
+
+"It can't be done, sir!" the man groaned. "There isn't a car ever
+built could get through that. See, it's nearly up to the top of
+those posts. I must put her in the reverse and get back, even if
+we have to wait on the higher part of the road for a boat."
+
+He glanced behind, and a second cry broke from his lips. Gerald
+stood up in his place. Already the road which had been clear a
+few minutes before was hidden. The water was washing almost over
+the tops of the white posts behind them. Little waves were breaking
+against the summit of the raised bank.
+
+"We're cut off!" the chauffeur exclaimed. "What a fool I was to
+try this! There's the tide coming in as well!"
+
+Gerald sat down in his place.
+
+"Look here," he said, "we can't go back, whether we want to or not.
+It's much worse behind there than it is in front. There's only one
+chance. Go for it straight ahead in your first speed. It may not
+stop the engine. In any case, it will be worse presently. There's
+no use funking it. If the worst happens, we can sit in the car.
+The water won't be above our heads and there are some boats about.
+Blow your horn well first, in case there's any one within hearing,
+and then go for it."
+
+The chauffeur obeyed. They hissed and spluttered into the water.
+Soon all trace of the road was completely lost. They steered only
+by the tops of the white posts.
+
+"It's getting deeper," the man declared. "It's within an inch or
+two of the bonnet now. Hold on."
+
+A wave broke almost over them but the engine continued its beat.
+
+"If we stop now," he gasped, "we're done!"
+
+The engine began to knock.
+
+"Stick at it," Gerald cried, rising in his place a little. "Look,
+there's only one post lower than the last one that we passed. They
+get higher all the time, ahead. You can almost see the road in
+front there. Now, in with your gear again, and stick at it."
+
+Another wave broke, this time completely over them. They listened
+with strained ears--the engine continued to beat. They still moved
+slowly. Then there was a shock. The wheel had struck something in
+the road--a great stone or rock. The chauffeur thrust the car out
+of gear. The engine still beat. Gerald leaped from the car. The
+water was over his knees. He crossed in front of the bonnet and
+stooped down.
+
+"I've got it!" he exclaimed, tugging hard. "It's a stone."
+
+He moved it, rolled it on one side, and pushed at the wheel of the
+car as his companion put in the speed. They started again. He
+jumped back his place.
+
+"We've done it, all right!" he cried. "Don't you see? It's getting
+lower all the time."
+
+The chauffeur had lost his nerve. His cheeks were pale, his teeth
+were chattering. The engine, however, was still beating. Gradually
+the pressure of the water grew less. In front of them they caught
+a glimpse of the road. They drew up at the top of a little bridge
+over one of the dikes. Gerald uttered a brief exclamation of triumph.
+
+"We're safe!" he almost sobbed. "There's the road, straight ahead
+and round to the right. There's no more water anywhere near."
+
+They had left the main part of the flood behind them. There were
+still great pools in the side of the road, and huge masses of
+seaweed had been carried up and were lying in their track. There
+was no more water, however. At every moment they drew nearer to
+the strangely-shaped hill with its crown of trees.
+
+"The house is on the other side," Gerald pointed out. "We can go
+through the lodge gates at the back here. The ascent isn't so
+steep."
+
+They turned sharply to the right, along another stretch of straight
+road set with white posts, ending before a red brick lodge and a
+closed gate. They blew the horn and a gardener came out. He gazed
+at them in amazement.
+
+"It's all right," Gerald cried. "Let us through quickly, Foulds.
+We've a gentleman in behind who's ill."
+
+The man swung open the gate with a respectful salute. They made
+their way up a winding drive of considerable length, and at last
+they came to a broad, open space almost like a platform. On their
+left were the marshes, and beyond, the sea. Along their right
+stretched the long front of an Elizabethan mansion. They drew up
+in front of the hail door. Their coming had been observed, and
+servants were already waiting. Gerald sprang to the ground.
+
+"There's a gentleman in behind who's ill," he explained to the
+butler. "He has met with an accident on the way. Three or four
+of you had better carry him up to a bedroom--any one that is ready.
+And you, George," he added, turning to a boy, "get into the car and
+show this man the way round to the garage, and then take him to the
+servants' hall."
+
+Several of the servants hastened to do his bidding, and Gerald did
+his best to answer the eager but respectful stream of questions.
+And then, just as they were in the act of lifting the still
+unconscious man on to the floor of the hall, came a queer sound--a
+shrill, reverberating whistle. They all looked up the stairs.
+
+"The master is awake," Henderson, the butler, remarked, dropping
+his voice a little.
+
+Gerald nodded.
+
+"I will go to him at once," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+Accustomed though he was to the sight which he was about to face,
+Gerald shivered slightly as he opened the door of Mr. Fentolin's
+room. A strange sort of fear seemed to have crept into his bearing
+and expression, a fear of which there had been no traces whatever
+during those terrible hours through which he had passed--not even
+during that last reckless journey across the marshes. He walked
+with hesitating footsteps across the spacious and lofty room. He
+had the air of some frightened creature approaching his master.
+Yet all that was visible of the despot who ruled his whole
+household in deadly fear was the kindly and beautiful face of an
+elderly man, whose stunted limbs and body were mercifully concealed.
+He sat in a little carriage, with a rug drawn closely across his
+chest and up to his armpits. His beautifully shaped hands were
+exposed, and his face; nothing else. His hair was a silvery white;
+his complexion parchment-like, pallid, entirely colourless. His
+eyes were a soft shade of blue. His features were so finely cut
+and chiselled that they resembled some exquisite piece of statuary.
+He smiled as his nephew came slowly towards him. One might almost
+have fancied that the young man's abject state was a source of
+pleasure to him.
+
+"So you are back again, my dear Gerald. A pleasant surprise,
+indeed, but what is the meaning of it? And what of my little
+commission, eh?"
+
+The young man's face was dark and sullen. He spoke quickly but
+without any sign of eagerness or interest in the information he
+vouchsafed.
+
+"The storm has stopped all the trains," he said. "The boat did not
+cross last night, and in any case I couldn't have reached Harwich.
+As for your commission, I travelled down from London alone with the
+man you told me to spy upon. I could have stolen anything he had
+if I had been used to the work. As it was--I brought the man
+himself."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's delicate fingers played with the handle of his chair.
+The smile had passed from his lips. He looked at his nephew in
+gentle bewilderment.
+
+"My dear boy," he protested, "come, come, be careful what you are
+saying. You have brought the man himself! So far as my information
+goes, Mr. John P. Dunster is charged with a very important diplomatic
+commission. He is on his way to Cologne, and from what I know about
+the man, I think that it would require more than your persuasions to
+induce him to break off his journey. You do not really wish me to
+believe that you have brought him here as a guest?"
+
+"I was at Liverpool Street Station last night," Gerald declared.
+"I had no idea how to accost him, and as to stealing any of his
+belongings, I couldn't have done it. You must hear how fortune
+helped me, though. Mr. Dunster missed the train; so did I
+--purposely. He ordered a special. I asked permission to travel
+with him. I told him a lie as to how I had missed the train. I
+hated it, but it was necessary."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded approvingly.
+
+"My dear boy," he said, "to trifle with the truth is always
+unpleasant. Besides, you are a Fentolin, and our love of truth is
+proverbial. But there are times, you know, when for the good of
+others we must sacrifice our scruples. So you told Mr. Dunster a
+falsehood."
+
+"He let me travel with him," Gerald continued. "We were all night
+getting about half-way here. Then--you know about the storm, I
+suppose?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin spread out his hands.
+
+"Could one avoid the knowledge of it?" he asked. "Such a sight has
+never been seen."
+
+"We found we couldn't get to Harwich," Gerald went on. "They
+telegraphed to London and got permission to bring us to Yarmouth.
+We were on our way to Norwich, and the train ran off the line."
+
+"An accident?" Mr. Fentolin exclaimed.
+
+Gerald nodded.
+
+"Our train ran off the line and pitched down an embankment. Mr.
+Dunster has concussion of the brain. He and I were taken to a
+miserable little inn near Wymondham. From there I hired a motor-car
+and brought him here."
+
+"You hired a motor-car and brought him here," Mr. Fentolin repeated
+softly. "My dear boy--forgive me if I find this a little hard to
+understand. You say that you have brought him here. Had he nothing
+to say about it?"
+
+"He was unconscious when we picked him up," Gerald explained. "He
+is unconscious now. The doctor said he would remain so for at least
+twenty-four hours, and it didn't seem to me that the journey would
+do him any particular harm. The roof had been stripped off the inn
+where we were, and the place was quite uninhabitable, so we should
+have had to have moved him somewhere. We put him in the tonneau of
+the car and covered him up. They have carried him now into a
+bedroom, and Sarson is looking after him."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat quite silent. His eyes blinked once or twice, and
+there was a curious curve about his lips.
+
+"You have done well, my boy," he pronounced slowly. "Your scheme
+of bringing him here sounds a little primitive, but success
+justifies everything."
+
+Mr. Fentolin raised to his lips and blew softly a little gold
+whistle which hung from a chain attached to his waistcoat. Almost
+immediately the door opened. A man entered, dressed somberly in
+black, whose bearing and demeanour alike denoted the servant, but
+whose physique was the physique of a prize-fighter. He was scarcely
+more than five feet six in height, but his shoulders were
+extraordinarily broad. He had a short, bull neck and long, mighty
+arms. His face, with the heavy jaw and small eyes, was the face
+of the typical fighting man, yet his features seemed to have become
+disposed by habit into an expression of gentle, almost servile
+civility.
+
+"Meekins," Mr. Fentolin said, "a visitor has arrived. Do you happen
+to have noticed what luggage he brought?"
+
+"There is one small dressing-case, sir," the man replied; "nothing
+else that I have seen."
+
+"That is all we brought," Gerald interposed.
+
+"You will bring the dressing-case here at once," Mr. Fentolin
+directed, "and also my compliments to Doctor Sarson, and any
+pocket-book or papers which may help us to send a message to the
+gentleman's friends."
+
+Meekins closed the door and departed. Mr. Fentolin turned back
+towards his nephew.
+
+"My dear boy," he said, "tell me why you look as though there were
+ghosts flitting about the room? You are not ill, I trust?"
+
+"Tired, perhaps," Gerald answered shortly. "We were many hours in
+the car. I have had no sleep."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's face was full of kindly sympathy.
+
+"My dear fellow," he exclaimed, "I am selfish, indeed! I should not
+have kept you here for a moment. You had better go and lie down."
+
+"I'll go directly," Gerald promised. "Can I speak to you for one
+moment first?"
+
+"Speak to me," Mr. Fentolin repeated, a little wonderingly. "My
+dear Gerald, is there ever a moment when I am not wholly at your
+service?"
+
+"That fellow Dunster, on the platform, the first moment I spoke to
+him, made me feel like a cur," the boy said, with a sudden access
+of vigour in his tone. "I told him I was on my way to a golf
+tournament, and he pointed to the news about the war. Is it true,
+uncle, that we may be at war at any moment?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"A terrible reflection, my dear boy," he admitted softly, "but, alas!
+the finger of probability points that way."
+
+"Then what about me?" Gerald exclaimed. "I don't want to complain,
+but listen. You dragged me home from a public school before I could
+even join my cadet corps. You've kept me banging around here with
+a tutor. You wouldn't let me go to the university. You've stopped
+my entering either of the services. I am nineteen years old and
+useless. Do you know what I should do to-morrow if war broke out?
+Enlist! It's the only thing left for me."
+
+Mr. Fentolin was shocked.
+
+"My dear boy!" he exclaimed. "You must not talk like that! I am
+quite sure that it would break your mother's heart. Enlist, indeed!
+Nothing of the sort. You are part of the civilian population of
+the country."
+
+"Civilian population be d-d!" the boy suddenly cried, white with
+rage. "Uncle, forgive me, I have stood all I can bear. If you
+won't let me go in for the army--I could pass my exams to-morrow
+--I'm off. I'll enlist without waiting for the war. I can't bear
+this idle life any longer."
+
+Mr. Fentolin leaned a little forward in his chair.
+
+"Gerald!" he said softly.
+
+The boy turned his head, turned it unwillingly. He had the air of
+a caged animal obeying the word of his keeper. A certain savage
+uncouthness seemed to have fallen upon him during the last few
+minutes. There was something almost like a snarl in his expression.
+
+"Gerald!" Mr. Fentolin repeated.
+
+Then it was obvious that there was something between those two, some
+memory or some living thing, seldom, if ever, to be spoken of, and
+yet always present. The boy began to tremble.
+
+"You're a little overwrought, Gerald," Mr. Fentolin declared.
+"Sit quietly in my easy-chair for a few moments. Walt until I have
+examined Mr. Dunster's belongings. Ah! Meekins has been prompt,
+indeed."
+
+There was a stealthy tap at the door. Meekins entered with the
+small dressing-case in his hand. He brought it over to his master's
+chair. Mr. Fentolin pointed to the floor.
+
+"Open it there, Meekins," he directed. "I fancy that the pocket-book
+you are carrying will prove more interesting. We will just glance
+through the dressing-case first. Thank you. Yes, you can lay the
+things upon the floor. A man of Spartan-like life, I should imagine
+Mr. Dunster. A spare toothbrush, though, I am glad to see. Pyjamas
+of most unattractive pattern. And what a taste in shirts! Nothing
+but wearing apparel and singularly little of that, I fancy."
+
+The dressing-case was empty, its contents upon the floor. Mr.
+Fentolin held out his hand and took the pocket-book which Meekins
+had been carrying. It was an ordinary morocco affair, similar to
+those issued by American banking houses to enclose letters of credit.
+One side of it was filled with notes. Mr. Fentolin withdrew them
+and glanced them through.
+
+"Dear me!" he murmured. "No wonder our friend engages special
+trains! He travels like a prince, indeed. Two thousand pounds, or
+near it, in this little compartment. And here, I see, a letter, a
+sealed letter with no address."
+
+He held it out in front of him. It was a long commercial envelope
+of ordinary type, and although the flap was secured with a blob of
+sealing wax, there was no particular impression upon it.
+
+"We can match this envelope, I think," Mr. Fentolin said softly.
+"The seal we can copy. I think that, for the sake of others, we
+must discover the cause for this hurried journey on the part of Mr.
+John P. Dunster."
+
+With his long, delicate forefinger Mr. Fentolin slit the envelope
+and withdrew the single sheet of paper which it contained. There
+were a dozen lines of written matter, and what appeared to be a
+dozen signatures appended. Mr. Fentolin read it, at first with
+ordinary interest. Then a change came. The look of a man drawn
+out of himself, drawn out of all knowledge of his surroundings or
+his present state, stole into his face. Literally he became
+transfixed. The delicate fingers of his, left hand gripped the
+sides of his little carriage. His eyes shone as though those few
+written lines upon which they were riveted were indeed some message
+from an unknown, an unimagined world. Yet no word ever passed his
+lips. There came a time when the tension seemed a little relaxed.
+With fingers which still trembled, he folded up the sheet and
+replaced it in the envelope. He guarded it with both his hands and
+sat quite still. Neither Gerald nor his servant moved. Somehow,
+the sense of Mr. Fentolin's suppressed excitement seemed to have
+become communicated to them. It was a little tableau, broken at
+last by Mr. Fentolin himself.
+
+"I should like," he said, turning to Gerald, "to be alone. It may
+interest you to know that this document which Mr. Dunster has brought
+across the seas, and which I hold in my hands, is the most amazing
+message of modern times."
+
+Gerald rose to his feet.
+
+"What are you going to do about it?" he asked abruptly. "Do you
+want any one in from the telegraph room?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head slowly.
+
+"At present," he announced, "I am going to reflect. Meekins, my
+chair to the north window--so. I am going to sit here," he went
+on, "and I am going to look across the sea and reflect. A very
+fortunate storm, after all, I think, which kept Mr. John P. Dunster
+from the Harwich boat last night. Leave me, Gerald, for a time.
+Stand behind my chair, Meekins, and see that no one enters."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat in his chair, his hands still gripping the wonderful
+document, his eyes travelling over the ocean now flecked with
+sunlight. His eyes were fixed upon the horizon. He looked steadily
+eastward.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster opened his eyes upon strange surroundings. He
+found himself lying upon a bed deliciously soft, with lace-edged
+sheets and lavender-perfumed bed hangings. Through the discreetly
+opened upper window came a pleasant and ozone-laden breeze. The
+furniture in the room was mostly of an old-fashioned type, some of
+it of oak, curiously carved, and most of it surmounted with a coat
+of arms. The apartment was lofty and of almost palatial proportions.
+The whole atmosphere of the place breathed comfort and refinement.
+The only thing of which he did not wholly approve was the face of
+the nurse who rose silently to her feet at his murmured question:
+
+"Where am I?"
+
+She felt his forehead, altered a bandage for a moment, and took his
+wrist between her fingers.
+
+"You have been ill," she said. "There was a railway accident. You
+are to lie quite still and not say a word. I am going to fetch the
+doctor now. He wished to see you directly you spoke."
+
+Mr. Dunster dozed again for several moments. When he reopened his
+eyes, a man was standing by his bedside, a short man with a black
+beard and gold-rimmed glasses. Mr. Dunster, in this first stage of
+his convalescence, was perhaps difficult to please, for he did not
+like the look of the doctor, either.
+
+"Please tell me where I am?" he begged.
+
+"You have been in a railway accident," the doctor told him, "and
+you were brought here afterwards."
+
+"In a railway accident," Mr. Dunster repeated. "Ah, yes, I remember!
+I took a special to Harwich--I remember now. Where is my
+dressing-bag?"
+
+"It is here by the side of your bed."
+
+"And my pocket-book?"
+
+"It is on your dressing-table."
+
+"Have any of my things been looked at?"
+
+"Only so far as was necessary to discover your identity," the doctor
+assured him. "Don't talk too much. The nurse is bringing you some
+beef tea."
+
+"When," Mr. Dunster enquired, "shall I be able to continue my
+journey?"
+
+"That depends upon many things," the doctor replied.
+
+Mr. Dunster drank his beef tea and felt considerably stronger. His
+head still ached, but his memory was returning.
+
+"There was a young man in the carriage with me," he asked presently.
+"Mr. Gerald something or other I think he said his name was?"
+
+"Fentolin," the doctor said. "He is unhurt. This is his relative's
+house to which you have been brought."
+
+Mr. Dunster lay for a time with knitted brows. Once more the name
+of Fentolin seemed somehow familiar to him, seemed somehow to bring
+with it to his memory a note of warning. He looked around the room
+fretfully. He looked into the nurse's face, which he disliked
+exceedingly, and he looked at the doctor, whom he was beginning to
+detest.
+
+"Whose house exactly is this?" he demanded.
+
+"This is St. David's Hall--the home of Mr. Miles Fentolin," the
+doctor told him. "The young gentleman with whom you were travelling
+is his nephew."
+
+"Can I send a telegram?" Mr. Dunster asked, a little abruptly.
+
+"Without a doubt," the doctor replied. "Mr. Fentolin desired me to
+ask you if there was any one whom you would like to apprise of your
+safety."
+
+Again the man upon the bed lay quite still, with knitted brows.
+There was surely something familiar about that name. Was it his
+fevered fancy or was there also something a little sinister?
+
+The nurse, who had glided from the room, came back presently with
+some telegraph forms. Mr. Dunster held out his hand for them and
+then hesitated.
+
+"Can you tell me any date, Doctor, upon which I can rely upon
+leaving here?"
+
+"You will probably be well enough to travel on the third day from
+now," the doctor assured him.
+
+"The third day," Mr. Dunster muttered. "Very well."
+
+He wrote out three telegrams and passed them over.
+
+"One," he said, "is to New York, one to The Hague, and one to London.
+There was plenty of money in my pocket. Perhaps you will find it
+and pay for these."
+
+"Is there anything more," the doctor asked, "that can be done for
+your comfort?"
+
+"Nothing at present," Mr. Dunster replied. "My head aches now, but
+I think that I shall want to leave before three days are up. Are
+you the doctor in the neighbourhood?"
+
+Sarson shook his head.
+
+"I am physician to Mr. Fentolin's household," he answered quietly.
+"I live here. Mr. Fentolin is himself somewhat of an invalid and
+requires constant medical attention."
+
+Mr. Dunster contemplated the speaker steadfastly.
+
+"You will forgive me," he said. "I am an American and I am used to
+plain speech. I am quite unused to being attended by strange
+doctors. I understand that you are not in general practice now.
+Might I ask if you are fully qualified?"
+
+"I am an M.D. of London," the doctor replied. "You can make
+yourself quite easy as to my qualifications. It would not suit
+Mr. Fentolin's purpose to entrust himself to the care of any one
+without a reputation."
+
+He left the room, and Mr. Dunster closed his eyes. His slumbers,
+however, were not altogether peaceful ones. All the time there
+seemed to be a hammering inside his head, and from somewhere back
+in his obscured memory the name of Fentolin seemed to be continually
+asserting itself. From somewhere or other, the amazing sense which
+sometimes gives warning of danger to men of adventure, seemed to
+have opened its feelers. He rested because he was exhausted, but
+even in his sleep he was ill at ease.
+
+The doctor, with the telegrams in his hand, made his way down a
+splendid staircase, past the long picture gallery where masterpieces
+of Van Dyck and Rubens frowned and leered down upon him; descended
+the final stretch of broad oak stairs, crossed the hail, and entered
+his master's rooms. Mr. Fentolin was sitting before the open window,
+an easel in front of him, a palette in his left hand, painting with
+deft, swift touches.
+
+"Ah!" he exclaimed, without looking around, "it is my friend the
+doctor, my friend Sarson, M.D. of London, L.R.C.P. and all the
+rest of it. He brings with him the odour of the sick room. For a
+moment or two, just for a moment, dear friend, do not disturb me.
+Do not bring any alien thoughts into my brain. I am absorbed, you
+see--absorbed. It is a strange problem of colour, this."
+
+He was silent for several moments, glancing repeatedly out of the
+window and back to his canvas, painting all the time with swift and
+delicate precision.
+
+"Meekins, who stands behind my chair," Mr. Fentolin continued, "even
+Meekins is entranced. He has a soul, my friend Sarson, although you
+might not think it. He, too, sees sometimes the colour in the skies,
+the glitter upon the sands, the clear, sweet purity of those long
+stretches of virgin water. Meekins, I believe, has a soul, only he
+likes better to see these things grow under his master's touch than
+to wander about and solve their riddles for himself."
+
+The man remained perfectly immovable. Not a feature twitched. Yet
+it was a fact that, although he stood where Mr. Fentolin could not
+possibly observe him, he never removed his gaze from the canvas.
+
+"You see, my medical friend, that there has been a great tide in the
+night, following upon the flood? Even our small landmarks are
+shifted. Soon, in my little carriage, I shall ride down to the
+Tower. I shall sit there, and I shall watch the sea. I think that
+this evening, with the turn of the tide, the spray may reach even
+to my windows there. I shall paint again. There is always
+something fresh in the sea, you know--always something fresh in
+the sea. Like a human face--angry or pleased, sullen or joyful.
+Some people like to paint the sea at its calmest and most beautiful.
+Some people like to see happy faces around them. It is not every
+one who appreciates the other things. It is not quite like that
+with me, eh, Sarson?"
+
+His hand fell to his side. Momentarily he had finished his work.
+He turned around and eyed the doctor, who stood in taciturn silence.
+
+"Answer. Answer me," he insisted.
+
+The doctor's gloomy face seemed darker still.
+
+"You have spoken the truth, Mr. Fentolin," he admitted. "You are
+not one of the vulgar herd who love to consort with pleasure and
+happiness. You are one of those who understand the beauty of
+unhappiness--in others," he added, with faint emphasis.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled. His face became almost like the face of one
+of those angels of the great Italian master.
+
+"How well you know me!" he murmured. "My humble effort, Doctor
+--how do you like it?"
+
+The doctor bent over the canvas.
+
+"I know nothing about art," he said, a little roughly. "Your work
+seems to me clever--a little grotesque, perhaps; a little straining
+after the hard, plain things which threaten. Nothing of the
+idealist in your work, Mr. Fentolin."
+
+Mr. Fentolin studied the canvas himself for a moment.
+
+"A clever man, Sarson," he remarked coolly, "but no courtier. Never
+mind, my work pleases me. It gives me a passing sensation of
+happiness. Now, what about our patient?"
+
+"He recovers," the doctor pronounced. "From my short examination,
+I should say that he had the constitution of an ox. I have told
+him that he will be up in three days. As a matter of fact, he will
+be able, if he wants to, to walk out of the house to-morrow."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head.
+
+"We cannot spare him quite so soon," he declared. "We must avail
+ourselves of this wonderful chance afforded us by my brilliant young
+nephew. We must keep him with us for a little time. What is it
+that you have in your hands, Doctor? Telegrams, I think. Let me
+look at them."
+
+The doctor held them out. Mr. Fentolin took them eagerly between
+his thin, delicate fingers. Suddenly his face darkened, and became
+like the face of a spoilt and angry child.
+
+"Cipher!" he exclaimed furiously. "A cipher which he knows so well
+as to remember it, too! Never mind, it will be easy to decode. It
+will amuse me during the afternoon. Very good, Sarson. I will take
+charge of these."
+
+"You do not wish anything dispatched?"
+
+"Nothing at present," Mr. Fentolin sighed. "It will be well, I
+think, for the poor man to remain undisturbed by any communications
+from his friends. Is he restless at all?"
+
+"He wants to get on with his journey."
+
+"We shall see," Mr. Fentolin remarked. "Now feel my pulse, Sarson.
+How am I this morning?"
+
+The doctor held the thin wrist for a moment between his fingers,
+and let it go.
+
+"In perfect health, as usual," he announced grimly.
+
+"Ah, but you cannot be sure!" Mr. Fentolin protested. "My tongue,
+if you please."
+
+He put it out.
+
+"Excellent!"
+
+"We must make quite certain," Mr. Fentolin continued. "There are
+so many people who would miss me. My place in the world would not
+be easily filed. Undo my waistcoat, Sarson. Feel my heart, please.
+Feel carefully. I can see the end of your stethoscope in your
+pocket. Don't scamp it. I fancied this morning, when I was lying
+here alone, that there was something almost like a palpitation--a
+quicker beat. Be very careful, Sarson. Now."
+
+The doctor made his examination with impassive face. Then he
+stepped back.
+
+"There is no change in your condition, Mr. Fentolin," he announced.
+"The palpitation you spoke of is a mistake. You are in perfect
+health."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed gently.
+
+"Then," he said, "I will now amuse myself by a gentle ride down to
+the Tower. You are entirely satisfied, Sarson? You are keeping
+nothing back from me?"
+
+The doctor looked at him with grim, impassive face. "There is
+nothing to keep back," he declared. "You have the constitution of
+a cowboy. There is no reason why you should not live for another
+thirty years."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed, as though a weight had been removed from his
+heart.
+
+"I will now," he decided, reaching forward for the handle of his
+carriage, "go down to the Tower. It is just possible that a few
+days' seclusion might be good for our guest."
+
+The doctor turned silently away. There was no one there to see his
+expression as he walked towards the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+The two men who were supping together in the grillroom at the Cafe
+Milan were talking with a seriousness which seemed a little out of
+keeping with the rose-shaded lamps and the swaying music of the
+band from the distant restaurant. Their conversation had started
+some hours before in the club smoking-room and had continued
+intermittently throughout the evening. It had received a further
+stimulus when Richard Hamel, who had bought an Evening Standard on
+their way from the theatre a few minutes ago, came across a certain
+paragraph in it which he read aloud.
+
+"Hanged if I understand things over here, nowadays, Reggie!" he
+declared, laying the paper down. "Here's another Englishman
+imprisoned in Germany--this time at a place no one ever heard of
+before. I won't try to pronounce it. What does it all mean? It's
+all very well to shrug your shoulders, but when there are eighteen
+arrests within one week on a charge of espionage, there must be
+something up."
+
+For the first time Reginald Kinsley seemed inclined to discuss the
+subject seriously. He drew the paper towards him and read the
+little paragraph, word by word. Then he gave some further order to
+an attentive maitre d'hotel and glanced around to be sure that they
+were not overheard.
+
+"Look here, Dick, old chap," he said, "you are just back from abroad
+and you are not quite in the hang of things yet. Let me ask you a
+plain question. What do you think of us all?"
+
+"Think of you?" Hamel repeated, a little doubtfully. "Do you mean
+personally?"
+
+"Take it any way you like," Kinsley replied. "Look at me. Nine
+years ago we played cricket in the same eleven. I don't look much
+like cricket now, do I?"
+
+Hamel looked at his companion thoughtfully. For a man who was
+doubtless still young, Kinsley had certainly an aged appearance.
+The hair about his temples was grey; there were lines about his
+mouth and forehead. He had the air of one who lived in an
+atmosphere of anxiety.
+
+"To me," Hamel declared frankly, "you look worried. If I hadn't
+heard so much of the success of your political career and all the
+rest of it, I should have thought that things were going badly
+with you."
+
+"They've gone well enough with me personally," Kinsley admitted,
+"but I'm only one of many. Politics isn't the game it was. The
+Foreign Office especially is ageing its men fast these few years.
+We've been going through hell, Hamel, and we are up against it now,
+hard up against it."
+
+The slight smile passed from the lips of Hamel's sunburnt,
+good-natured face. He himself seemed to become infected with
+something of his companion's anxiety.
+
+"There's nothing seriously wrong, is there, Reggie?" he asked.
+
+"Dick," said Kinsley, with a sigh, "I am afraid there is. It's
+very seldom I talk as plainly as this to any, one but you are just
+the person one can unburden oneself to a little; and to tell you
+the truth, it's rather a relief. As you say, these eighteen arrests
+in one week do mean something. Half of the Englishmen who have been
+arrested are, to my certain knowledge, connected with our Secret
+Service, and they have been arrested, in many cases, where there are
+no fortifications worth speaking of within fifty miles, on one
+pretext or another. The fact of the matter is that things are going
+on in Germany, just at the present moment, the knowledge of which is
+of vital interest to us."
+
+"Then these arrests," Hamel remarked, "are really bona fide?"
+
+"Without a doubt," his companion agreed. "I only wonder there have
+not been more. I am telling you what is a pretty open secret when
+I tell you that there is a conference due to be held this week at
+some place or another on the continent--I don't know where, myself
+--which will have a very important bearing upon our future. We know
+just as much as that and not much more."
+
+"A conference between whom?" Hamel asked.
+
+Kinsley dropped his voice almost to a whisper.
+
+"We know," he replied, "that a very great man from Russia, a greater
+still from France, a minister from Austria, a statesman from Italy,
+and an envoy from Japan, have been invited to meet a German minister
+whose name I will not mention, even to you. The subject of their
+proposed discussion has never been breathed. One can only suspect.
+When I tell you that no one from this country was invited to the
+conference, I think you will be able, broadly speaking, to divine
+its purpose. The clouds have been gathering for a good many years,
+and we have only buried our heads a little deeper in the sands. We
+have had our chances and wilfully chucked them away. National
+Service or three more army corps four years ago would have brought
+us an alliance which would have meant absolute safety for twenty-one
+years. You know what happened. We have lived through many rumours
+and escaped, more narrowly than most people realise, a great many
+dangers, but there is every indication this time that the end is
+really coming."
+
+"And what will the end be?" Hamel enquired eagerly.
+
+Kinsley shrugged his shoulders and paused while their glasses were
+filled with wine.
+
+"It will be in the nature of a diplomatic coup," he said presently.
+"Of that much I feel sure. England will be forced into such a
+position that she will have no alternative left but to declare war.
+That, of course, will be the end of us. With our ridiculously
+small army and absolutely no sane scheme for home defence, we shall
+lose all that we have worth fighting for--our colonies--without
+being able to strike a blow. The thing is so ridiculously obvious.
+It has been admitted time after time by every sea lord and every
+commander-in-chief. We have listened to it, and that's all. Our
+fleet is needed under present conditions to protect our own shores.
+There isn't a single battleship which could be safely spared. Canada,
+Australia, New Zealand, Egypt, India, must take care of themselves.
+I wonder when a nation of the world ever played fast and loose with
+great possessions as we have done!"
+
+"This is a nice sort of thing to hear almost one's first night in
+England," Hamel remarked a little gloomily. "Tell me some more
+about this conference. Are you sure that your information is
+reliable?"
+
+"Our information is miserably scanty," Kinsley admitted. "Curiously
+enough, the man who must know most about the whole thing is an
+Englishman, one of the most curious mortals in the British Empire.
+A spy of his succeeded in learning more than any of our people, and
+without being arrested, too."
+
+"And who is this singular person?" Hamel asked.
+
+"A man of whom you, I suppose, never heard," Kinsley replied. "His
+name is Fentolin--Miles Fentolin--and he lives somewhere down in
+Norfolk. He is one of the strangest characters that ever lived,
+stranger than any effort of fiction I ever met with. He was in the
+Foreign Office once, and every one was predicting for him a brilliant
+career. Then there was an accident--let me see, it must have been
+some six or seven years ago--and he had to have both his legs
+amputated. No one knows exactly how the accident happened, and there
+was always a certain amount of mystery connected with it. Since then
+he has buried himself in the country. I don't think, in fact, that he
+ever moves outside his place; but somehow or other he has managed to
+keep in touch with all the political movements of the day."
+
+"Fentolin," Hamel repeated softly to himself. "Tell me, whereabouts
+does he live?"
+
+"Quite a wonderful place in Norfolk, I believe, somewhere near the
+sea. I've forgotten the name, for the moment. He has had wireless
+telegraphy installed; he has a telegraph office in the house,
+half-a-dozen private wires, and they say that he spends an immense
+amount of money keeping in touch with foreign politics. His excuse
+is that he speculates largely, as I dare say he does; but just
+lately," Kinsley went on more slowly, "he has been an object of
+anxiety to all of us. It was he who sent the first agent out to
+Germany, to try and discover at least where this conference was to
+be held. His man returned in safety, and he has one over there now
+who has not been arrested. We seem to have lost nearly all of ours."
+
+"Do you mean to say that this man Fentolin actually possesses
+information which the Government hasn't as to the intentions of
+foreign Powers?" Hamel asked.
+
+Kinsley nodded. There was a slight flush upon his pallid cheeks.
+
+"He not only has it, but he doesn't mean to part with it. A few
+hundred years ago, when the rulers of this country were men with
+blood in their veins, he'd have been given just one chance to tell
+all he knew, and hung as a traitor if he hesitated. We don't do
+that sort of thing nowadays. We rather go in for preserving
+traitors. We permit them even in our own House of Commons. However,
+I don't want to depress you and play the alarmist so soon after your
+return to London. I dare say the old country'll muddle along through
+our time."
+
+"Don't be foolish," Hamel begged. "There's no other subject of
+conversation could interest me half as much. Have you formed any
+idea yourself as to the nature of this conference?"
+
+"We all have an idea," Kinsley replied grimly; "India for Russia; a
+large slice of China for Japan, with probably Australia thrown in;
+Alsace-Lorraine for France's neutrality. There's bribery for you.
+What's to become of poor England then? Our friends are only human,
+after all, and it's merely a question of handing over to them
+sufficient spoil. They must consider themselves first: that's the
+first duty of their politicians towards their country."
+
+"You mean to say," Hamel asked, "that you seriously believe that a
+conference is on the point of being held at which France and Russia
+are to be invited to consider suggestions like this?"
+
+"I am afraid there's no doubt about it," Kinsley declared. "Their
+ambassadors in London profess to know nothing. That, of course,
+is their reasonable attitude, but there's no doubt whatever that
+the conference has been planned. I should say that to-night we are
+nearer war, if we can summon enough spirit to fight, than we have
+been since Fashoda."
+
+"Queer if I have returned just in time for the scrap," Hamel remarked
+thoughtfully. "I was in the Militia once, so I expect I can get a
+job, if there's any fighting."
+
+"I can get you a better job than fighting--one you can start on
+to-morrow, too," Kinsley announced abruptly, "that is if you really
+want to help?"
+
+"Of course I do," Hamel insisted. "I'm on for anything."
+
+"You say that you are entirely your own master for the next six
+months?"
+
+"Or as much longer as I like," Hamel assented. "No plans at all,
+except that I might drift round to the Norfolk coast and look up
+some of the places where the governor used to paint. There's a
+queer little house--St. David's Tower, I believe they call it
+--which really belongs to me. It was given to my father, or rather
+he bought it, from a man who I think must have been some relative
+of your friend. I feel sure the name was Fentolin."
+
+Reginald Kinsley set down his wine-glass.
+
+"Is your St. David's Tower anywhere near a place called Salthouse?"
+he asked reflectively.
+
+"That's the name of the village," Hamel admitted. "My father used
+to spend quite a lot of time in those parts, and painted at least a
+dozen pictures down there."
+
+"This is a coincidence," Reginald Kinsley declared, lighting a
+cigarette. "I think, if I were you, Dick, I'd go down and claim
+my property."
+
+"Tired of me already?" Hamel asked, smiling.
+
+Reginald Kinsley knocked the ash from his cigarette.
+
+"It isn't that. The fact is, that job I was speaking to you about
+was simply this. We want some one to go down to Salthouse--not
+exactly as a spy, you know, but some one who has his wits about him.
+We are all of us very curious about this man Fentolin. There are
+no end of rumours which I won't mention to you, for they might only
+put you off the scent. But the man seems to be always intriguing.
+It wouldn't matter so much if he were our friend, or if he were
+simply a financier, but to tell you the truth, we have cause to
+suspect him."
+
+"But he's an Englishman, surely?" Hamel asked. "The Fentolin who
+was my father's friend was just a very wealthy Norfolk squire--one
+of the best, from all I have heard."
+
+"Miles Fentolin is an Englishman," Kinsley admitted. "It is true,
+too, that he comes of a very ancient Norfolk family. It doesn't do,
+however, to build too much upon that. From all I can learn of him,
+he is a sort of Puck, a professional mischief-maker. I don't
+suppose there's anything an outsider could find out which would be
+really useful to us, but all the same, if I had the time, I should
+certainly go down to Norfolk myself."
+
+The conversation drifted away for a while. Mutual acquaintances
+entered, there were several introductions, and it was not until
+the two found themselves together in Kinsley's rooms for a few
+minutes before parting that they were alone again. Hamel returned
+then once more to the subject.
+
+"Reggie," he said, "if you think it would be of the slightest use,
+I'll go down to Salthouse to-morrow. I am rather keen on going
+there, anyway. I am absolutely fed up with life here already."
+
+"It's just what I want you to do," Kinsley said. "I am afraid
+Fentolin is a little too clever for you to get on the right side
+of him, but if you could only get an idea as to what his game is
+down there, it would be a great help. You see, the fellow can't
+have gone into all this sort of thing blindfold. We've lost
+several very useful agents abroad and two from New York who've
+gone into his pay. There must be a method in it somewhere. If
+it really ends with his financial operations--why, all right.
+That's very likely what it'll come to, but we should like to know.
+The merest hint would be useful."
+
+"I'll do my best," Hamel promised. "In any case, it will be just
+the few days' holiday I was looking forward to."
+
+Kinsley helped himself to whisky and soda and turned towards his
+friend.
+
+"Here's luck to you, Dick! Take care of yourself. All sorts of
+things may happen, you know. Old man Fentolin may take a fancy to
+you and tell you secrets that any statesman in Europe would be glad
+to hear. He may tell you why this conference is being held and
+what the result will be. You may be the first to hear of our coming
+fall. Well, here's to you, anyway! Drop me a line, if you've
+anything to report."
+
+"Cheero!" Hamel answered, as he set down his empty tumbler.
+"Astonishing how keen I feel about this little adventure. I'm
+perfectly sick of the humdrum life I have been leading the last
+week, and you do sort of take one back to the Arabian Nights, you
+know, Reggie. I am never quite sure whether to take you seriously
+or not."
+
+Kinsley smiled as he held his friend's hand for a moment.
+
+"Dick," he said earnestly, "if only you'd believe it, the adventures
+in the Arabian Nights were as nothing compared with the present-day
+drama of foreign politics. You see, we've learned to conceal things
+nowadays--to smooth them over, to play the part of ordinary citizens
+to the world while we tug at the underhand levers in our secret
+moments. Good night! Good luck!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Richard Hamel, although he certainly had not the appearance of a
+person afflicted with nerves, gave a slight start. For the last
+half-hour, during which time the train had made no stop, he had
+been alone in his compartment. Yet, to his surprise, he was
+suddenly aware that the seat opposite to him had been noiselessly
+taken by a girl whose eyes, also, were fixed with curious
+intentness upon the broad expanse of marshland and sands across
+which the train was slowly making its way. Hamel had spent a great
+many years abroad, and his first impulse was to speak with the
+unexpected stranger. He forgot for a moment that he was in England,
+travelling in a first-class carriage, and pointed with his left hand
+towards the sea.
+
+"Queer country this, isn't it?" he remarked pleasantly. "Do you
+know, I never heard you come in. It gave me quite a start when I
+found that I had a fellow-passenger."
+
+She looked at him with a certain amount of still surprise, a look
+which he returned just as steadfastly, because even in those few
+seconds he was conscious of that strange selective interest,
+certainly unaccounted for by his own impressions of her appearance.
+She seemed to him, at that first glance, very far indeed from being
+good-looking, according to any of the standards by which he had
+measured good looks. She was thin, too thin for his taste, and she
+carried herself with an aloofness to which he was unaccustomed.
+Her cheeks were quite pale, her hair of a soft shade of brown, her
+eyes grey and sad. She gave him altogether an impression of
+colourlessness, and he had been living in a land where colour and
+vitality meant much. Her speech, too, in its very restraint, fell
+strangely upon his ears.
+
+"I have been travelling in an uncomfortable compartment," she
+observed. "I happened to notice, when passing along the corridor,
+that yours was empty. In any case, I am getting out at the next
+station."
+
+"So am I," he replied, still cheerfully. "I suppose the next
+station is St. David's?"
+
+She made no answer, but so far as her expression counted for
+anything at all, she was a little surprised. Her eyes considered
+him for a moment. Hamel was tall, well over six feet, powerfully
+made, with good features, clear eyes, and complexion unusually
+sunburnt. He wore a flannel collar of unfamiliar shape, and his
+clothes, although they were neat enough, were of a pattern and cut
+obviously designed to afford the maximum of ease and comfort with
+the minimum regard to appearance. He wore, too, very thick boots,
+and his hands gave one the impression that they were seldom gloved.
+His voice was pleasant, and he had the easy self-confidence of a
+person sure of himself in the world. She put him down as a colonial
+--perhaps an American--but his rank in life mystified her.
+
+"This seems the queerest stretch of country," he went on; "long
+spits of sand jutting right out into the sea, dikes and creeks
+--miles and miles of them. Now, I wonder, is it low tide or high?
+Low, I should think, because of the sea-shine on the sand there."
+
+She glanced out of the window.
+
+"The tide," she told him, "is almost at its lowest."
+
+"You live in this neighbourhood, perhaps?" he enquired.
+
+"I do," she assented.
+
+"Sort of country one might get very fond of," he ventured.
+
+She glanced at him from the depths of her grey eyes.
+
+"Do you think so?" she rejoined coldly. "For my part, I hate it."
+
+He was surprised at the unexpected emphasis of her tone--the first
+time, indeed, that she had shown any signs of interest in the
+conversation.
+
+"Kind of dull I suppose you find it," he remarked pensively, looking
+out across the waste of lavender-grown marshes, sand hummocks piled
+with seaweed, and a far distant line of pebbled shore. "And yet, I
+don't know. I have lived by the sea a good deal, and however
+monotonous it may seem at first, there's always plenty of change,
+really. Tide and wind do such wonderful work."
+
+She, too, was looking out now towards the sea.
+
+"Oh, it isn't exactly that," she said quietly. "I am quite willing
+to admit what all the tourists and chance visitors call the
+fascination of these places. I happen to dislike them, that is all.
+Perhaps it is because I live here, because I see them day by day;
+perhaps because the sight of them and the thought of them have
+become woven into my life."
+
+She was talking half to herself. For a moment, even the knowledge
+of his presence had escaped her. Hamel, however, did not realise
+that fact. He welcomed her confidence as a sign of relaxation from
+the frigidity of her earlier demeanour.
+
+"That seems hard," he observed sympathetically. "It seems odd to
+hear you talk like that, too. Your life, surely, ought to be
+pleasant enough."
+
+She looked away from the sea into his face. Although the genuine
+interest which she saw there and the kindly expression of his eyes
+disarmed annoyance, she still stiffened slightly.
+
+"Why ought it?"
+
+The question was a little bewildering.
+
+"Why, because you are young and a girl," he replied. "It's natural
+to be cheerful, isn't it?"
+
+"Is it?" she answered listlessly. "I cannot tell. I have not had
+much experience."
+
+"How old are you?" he asked bluntly.
+
+This time it certainly seemed as though her reply would contain
+some rebuke for his curiosity. She glanced once more into his
+face, however, and the instinctive desire to administer that
+well-deserved snub passed away. He was so obviously interested,
+his question was asked so naturally, that its spice of
+impertinence was as though it had not existed.
+
+"I am twenty-one," she told him.
+
+"And how long have you lived here?"
+
+"Since I left boarding-school, four years ago."
+
+"Anywhere near where I am going to bury myself for a time, I wonder?"
+he went on.
+
+"That depends," she replied. "Our only neighbours are the
+Lorneybrookes of Market Burnham. Are you going there?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I've got a little shanty of my own," he explained, "quite close to
+St. David's Station. I've never even seen it yet."
+
+She vouchsafed some slight show of curiosity.
+
+"Where is this shanty, as you call it?" she asked him.
+
+"I really haven't the faintest idea," he replied. "I am looking
+for it now. All I can tell you is that it stands just out of reach
+of the full tides, on a piece of rock, dead on the beach and about
+a mile from the station. It was built originally for a coastguard
+station and meant to hold a lifeboat, but they found they could
+never launch the lifeboat when they had it, so the man to whom all
+the foreshore and most of the land around here belongs--a Mr.
+Fentolin, I believe--sold it to my father. I expect the place has
+tumbled to pieces by this time, but I thought I'd have a look at it."
+
+She was gazing at him steadfastly now, with parted lips.
+
+"What is your name?" she demanded.
+
+"Richard Hamel."
+
+"Hamel."
+
+She repeated it lingeringly. It seemed quite unfamiliar.
+
+"Was your father a great friend of Mr. Fentolin's, then?" she asked.
+
+"I believe so, in a sort of way," he answered. "My father was Hamel
+the artist, you know. They made him an R.A. some time before he
+died. He used to come out here and live in a tent. Then Mr.
+Fentolin let him use this place and finally sold it to him. My
+father used often to speak to me about it before he died."
+
+"Tell me," she enquired, "I do not know much about these matters,
+but have you any papers to prove that it was sold to your father
+and that you have the right to occupy it now when you choose?"
+
+He smiled.
+
+"Of course I have," he assured her. "As a matter of fact, as none
+of us have been here for so long, I thought I'd better bring the
+title-deed, or whatever they call it, along with me. It's with the
+rest of my traps at Norwich. Oh, the place belongs to me, right
+enough!" he went on, smiling. "Don't tell me that any one's pulled
+it down, or that it's disappeared from the face of the earth?"
+
+"No," she said, "it still remains there. When we are round the next
+curve, I think I can show it to you. But every one has forgotten,
+I think, that it doesn't belong to Mr. Fentolin still. He uses it
+himself very often."
+
+"What for?"
+
+She looked at her questioner quite steadfastly, quite quietly,
+speechlessly. A curious uneasiness crept into his thoughts. There
+were mysterious things in her face. He knew from that moment that
+she, too, directly or indirectly, was concerned with those strange
+happenings at which Kinsley had hinted. He knew that there were
+things which she was keeping from him now.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin uses one of the rooms as a studio. He likes to paint
+there and be near the sea," she explained. "But for the rest, I do
+not know. I never go near the place."
+
+"I am afraid," he remarked, after a few moments of silence, "that I
+shall be a little unpopular with Mr. Fentolin. Perhaps I ought to
+have written first, but then, of course, I had no idea that any one
+was making use of the place."
+
+"I do not understand," she said, "how you can possibly expect to
+come down like this and live there, without any preparation."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"You haven't any servants nor any furniture nor things to cook with."
+
+He laughed.
+
+"Oh! I am an old campaigner," he assured her. "I meant to pick up
+a few oddments in the village. I don't suppose I shall stay very
+long, anyhow, but I thought I'd like to have a look at the place.
+By-the-by, what sort of a man is Mr. Fentolin?"
+
+Again there was that curious expression in her eyes, an expression
+almost of secret terror, this time not wholly concealed. He could
+have sworn that her hands were cold.
+
+"He met with an accident many years ago," she said slowly. "Both
+his legs were amputated. He spends his life in a little carriage
+which he wheels about himself."
+
+"Poor fellow!" Hamel exclaimed, with a strong man's ready sympathy
+for suffering. "That is just as much as I have heard about him.
+Is he a decent sort of fellow in other ways? I suppose, anyhow,
+if he has really taken a fancy to my little shanty, I shall have
+to give it up."
+
+Then, as it seemed to him, for the first time real life leaped into
+her face. She leaned towards him. Her tone was half commanding,
+half imploring, her manner entirely confidential.
+
+"Don't!" she begged. "It is yours. Claim it. Live in it. Do
+anything you like with it, but take it away from Mr. Fentolin!"
+
+Hamel was speechless. He sat a little forward, a hand on either
+knee, his mouth ungracefully open, an expression of blank and
+utter bewilderment in his face. For the first time he began to
+have vague doubts concerning this young lady. Everything about
+her had been so strange: her quiet entrance into the carriage,
+her unusual manner of talking, and finally this last passionate,
+inexplicable appeal.
+
+"I am afraid," he said at last, "I don't quite understand. You
+say the poor fellow has taken a fancy to the place and likes being
+there. Well, it isn't much of a catch for me, anyway. I'm rather
+a wanderer, and I dare say I shan't be back in these parts again
+for years. Why shouldn't I let him have it if he wants it? It's
+no loss to me. I'm not a painter, you know, like my father."
+
+She seemed on the point of making a further appeal. Her lips, even,
+were parted, her head a little thrown back. And then she stopped.
+She said nothing. The silence lasted so long that he became almost
+embarrassed.
+
+"You will forgive me if I am a little dense, won't you?" he begged.
+"To tell you the truth," he went on, smiling, "I've got a sort of
+feeling that I'd like to do anything you ask me. Now won't you
+just explain a little more clearly what you mean, and I'll blow
+up the old place sky high, if it's any pleasure to you."
+
+She seemed suddenly to have reverted to her former self--the cold
+and colourless young woman who had first taken the seat opposite
+to his.
+
+"Mine was a very foolish request," she admitted quietly. "I am
+sorry that I ever made it. It was just an impulse, because the
+little building we were speaking of has been connected with one or
+two very disagreeable episodes. Nevertheless, it was foolish of
+me. How long did you think of staying there--that is," she added,
+with a faint smile, "providing that you find it possible to prove
+your claim and take up possession?"
+
+"Oh, just for a week or so," he answered lightly, "and as to
+regaining possession of it," he went on, a slightly pugnacious
+instinct stirring him, "I don't imagine that there'll be any
+difficulty about that."
+
+"Really!" she murmured.
+
+"Not that I want to make myself disagreeable," he continued, "but
+the Tower is mine, right enough, even if I have let it remain
+unoccupied for some time."
+
+She let down the window--a task in which he hastened to assist her.
+A rush of salt, cold air swept into the compartment. He sniffed it
+eagerly.
+
+"Wonderful!" he exclaimed.
+
+She stretched out a long arm and pointed. Away in the distance, on
+the summit of a line of pebbled shore, standing, as it seemed, sheer
+over the sea, was a little black speck.
+
+"That," she said, "is the Tower."
+
+He changed his position and leaned out of the window.
+
+"Well, it's a queer little place," he remarked. "It doesn't look
+worth quarrelling over, does it?"
+
+"And that," she went on, directing his attention to the hill, "is
+Mr. Fentolin's home, St. David's Hall."
+
+For several moments he made no remark at all. There was something
+curiously impressive in that sudden sweep up from the sea-line; the
+strange, miniature mountain standing in the middle of the marshes,
+with its tree-crowned background; and the long, weather-beaten front
+of the house turned bravely to the sea.
+
+"I never saw anything like it," he declared. "Why, it's barely a
+quarter of a mile from the sea, isn't it?"
+
+"A little more than that. It is a strangely situated abode, isn't
+it?"
+
+"Wonderful!" he agreed, with emphasis. "I must study the geological
+formation of that hill," he continued, with interest. "Why, it looks
+almost like an island now."
+
+"That is because of the floods," she told him. "Even at high tide
+the creeks never reach so far as the back there. All the water you
+see stretching away inland is flood water--the result of the storm,
+I suppose. This is where you get out," she concluded, rising to
+her feet.
+
+She turned away with the slightest nod. A maid was already
+awaiting her at the door of the compartment. Hamel was suddenly
+conscious of the fact that he disliked her going immensely.
+
+"We shall, perhaps, meet again during the next few days," he
+remarked.
+
+She half turned her head. Her expression was scarcely encouraging.
+
+"I hope," she said, "that you will not be disappointed in your
+quarters."
+
+Hamel followed her slowly on to the platform, saw her escorted to
+a very handsome motor-car by an obsequious station-master, and
+watched the former disappear down the stretch of straight road
+which led to the hill. Then, with a stick in one hand, and the
+handbag which was his sole luggage in the other, he left the
+station and turned seaward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Mr. Fentolin, surrounded by his satellites, was seated in his chair
+before the writing-table. There were present in the room most of
+the people important to him in his somewhat singular life. A few
+feet away, in characteristic attitude, stood Meekins. Doctor Sarson,
+with his hands behind him, was looking out of the window. At the
+further end of the table stood a confidential telegraph clerk, who
+was just departing with a little sheaf of messages. By his side,
+with a notebook in her hand, stood Mr. Fentolin's private secretary
+--a white-haired woman, with a strangely transparent skin and light
+brown eyes, dressed in somber black, a woman who might have been
+of any age from thirty to fifty. Behind her was a middle-aged man
+whose position in the household no one was quite sure about--a
+clean-shaven man whose name was Ryan, and who might very well have
+been once an actor or a clergyman. In the background stood
+Henderson, the perfect butler.
+
+"It is perhaps opportune," Mr. Fentolin said quietly, "that you
+all whom I trust should be present here together. I wish you to
+understand one thing. You have, I believe, in my employ learned
+the gift of silence. It is to be exercised with regard to a
+certain visitor brought here by my nephew, a visitor whom I regret
+to say is now lying seriously ill."
+
+There was absolute silence. Doctor Sarson alone turned from the
+window as though about to speak, but met Mr. Fentolin's eye and at
+once resumed his position.
+
+"I rely upon you all," Mr. Fentolin continued softly. "Henderson,
+you, perhaps, have the most difficult task, for you have the servants
+to control. Nevertheless, I rely upon you, also. If one word of
+this visitor's presence here leaks out even so far as the village,
+out they go, every one of them. I will not have a servant in the
+place who does not respect my wishes. You can give any reason you
+like for my orders. It is a whim. I have whims, and I choose to
+pay for them. You are all better paid than any man breathing could
+pay you. In return I ask only for your implicit obedience."
+
+He stretched out his hand and took a cigarette from a curiously
+carved ivory box which stood by his side. He tapped it gently upon
+the table and looked up.
+
+"I think, sir," Henderson said respectfully, "that I can answer for
+the servants. Being mostly foreigners, they see little or nothing
+of the village people."
+
+No one else made any remark. It was strange to see how dominated
+they all were by that queer little fragment of humanity, whose head
+scarcely reached a foot above the table before which he sat. They
+departed silently, almost abjectly, dismissed with a single wave of
+the hand. Mr. Fentolin beckoned his secretary to remain. She came
+a little nearer.
+
+"Sit down, Lucy," he ordered.
+
+She seated herself a few feet away from him. Mr. Fentolin watched
+her for several moments. He himself had his back to the light.
+The woman, on the other hand, was facing it. The windows were high,
+and the curtains were drawn back to their fullest extent. A cold
+stream of northern light fell upon her face. Mr. Fentolin gazed at
+her and nodded her head slightly.
+
+"My dear Lucy," he declared, "you are wonderful--a perfect cameo,
+a gem. To look at you now, with your delightful white hair and your
+flawless skin, one would never believe that you had ever spoken a
+single angry word, that you had ever felt the blood flow through
+your veins, or that your eyes had ever looked upon the gentle things
+of life."
+
+She looked at him, still without speech. The immobility of her
+face was indeed a marvellous thing. Mr. Fentolin's expression
+darkened.
+
+"Sometimes," he murmured softly, "I think that if I had strong
+fingers--really strong fingers, you know, Lucy--I should want to
+take you by the throat and hold you tighter and tighter, until your
+breath came fast, and your eyes came out from their shadows."
+
+She turned over a few pages of her notebook. To all appearance
+she had not heard a word.
+
+"To-day," she announced, "is the fourth of April. Shall I send out
+the various checks to those men in Paris, New York, Frankfort, St.
+Petersburg, and Tokio?"
+
+"You can send the checks," he told her. "Be sure that you draw
+them, as usual, upon the Credit Lyonaise and in the name you know
+of. Say to Lebonaitre of Paris that you consider his last reports
+faulty. No mention was made of Monsieur C's visit to the Russian
+Embassy, or of the supper party given to the Baron von Erlstein by
+a certain Russian gentleman. Warn him, if you please, that reports
+with such omissions are useless to me."
+
+She wrote a few words in her book.
+
+"You made a note of that?"
+
+She raised her head.
+
+"I do not make mistakes," she said.
+
+His eyebrows were drawn together. This was his work, he told
+himself, this magnificent physical subjection. Yet his
+inability to stir her sometimes maddened him.
+
+"You know who is in this house?" he asked. "You know the name of
+my unknown guest?"
+
+"I know nothing," she replied. "His presence does not interest me."
+
+"Supposing I desire you to know?" he persisted, leaning a little
+forward. "Supposing I tell you that it is your duty to know?"
+
+"Then," she said, "I should tell you that I believe him to be the
+special envoy from New York to The Hague, or whatever place on the
+Continent this coming conference is to be held at."
+
+"Right, woman!" Mr. Fentolin answered sharply. "Right! It is the
+special envoy. He has his mandate with him. I have them both--the
+man and his mandate. Can you guess what I am going to do with them?"
+
+"It is not difficult," she replied. "Your methods are scarcely
+original. His mandate to the flames, and his body to the sea!"
+
+She raised her eyes as she spoke and looked over Mr. Fentolin's
+shoulder, across the marshland to the grey stretch of ocean. Her
+eyes became fixed. It was not possible to say that they held any
+expression, and yet one felt that she saw beneath the grey waves,
+even to the rocks and caverns below.
+
+"It does not terrify you, then," he asked curiously, "to think that
+a man under this roof is about to die?"
+
+"Why should it?" she retorted. "Death does not frighten me--my
+own or anybody else's. Does it frighten you?"
+
+His face was suddenly livid, his eyes full of fierce anger. His
+lips twitched. He struck the table before him.
+
+"Beast of a woman!" he shouted. "You ghoul! How dare you! How
+dare you--"
+
+He stopped short. He passed his hand across his forehead. All the
+time the woman remained unmoved.
+
+"Do you know," he muttered, his voice still shaking a little, "that
+I believe sometimes I am afraid of you? How would you like to see
+me there, eh, down at the bottom of that hungry sea? You watch
+sometimes so fixedly. You'd miss me, wouldn't you? I am a good
+master, you know. I pay well. You've been with me a good many
+years. You were a different sort of woman when you first came."
+
+ "Yes," she admitted, "I was a different sort of woman."
+
+"You don't remember those days, I suppose," he went on, "the days
+when you had brown hair, when you used to carry roses about and
+sing to yourself while you beat your work out of that wretched
+typewriter?"
+
+"No," she answered, "I do not remember those days. They do not
+belong to me. It is some other woman you are thinking of."
+
+
+Their eyes met. Mr. Fentolin turned away first. He struck the
+bell at his elbow. She rose at once.
+
+"Be off!" he ordered. "When you look at me like that, you send
+shivers through me! You'll have to go; I can see you'll have to go.
+I can't keep you any longer. You are the only person on the face
+of the earth who dares to say things to me which make me think, the
+only person who doesn't shrink at the sound of my voice. You'll
+have to go. Send Sarson to me at once. You've upset me!"
+
+She listened to his words in expressionless silence. When he had
+finished, carrying her book in her hand, she very quietly moved
+towards the door. He watched her, leaning a little forward in his
+chair, his lips parted, his eyes threatening. She walked with
+steady, even footsteps. She carried herself with almost machine-like
+erectness; her skirts were noiseless. She had the trick of turning
+the handle of the door in perfect silence. He heard her calm voice
+in the hall.
+
+"Doctor Sarson is to go to Mr. Fentolin."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat quite still, feeling his own pulse.
+
+"That woman," he muttered to himself, "that--woman--some day I
+shouldn't be surprised if she really--"
+
+He paused. The doctor had entered the room.
+
+"I am upset, Sarson," he declared. "Come and feel my pulse quickly.
+That woman has upset me."
+
+"Miss Price?"
+
+"Miss Price, d-n it! Lucy--yes!"
+
+"It seems unlike her," the doctor remarked. "I have never heard her
+utter a useless syllable in my life."
+
+Mr. Fentolin held out his wrist.
+
+"It's what she doesn't say," he muttered.
+
+The doctor produced his watch. In less than a minute he put it
+away.
+
+"This is quite unnecessary," he pronounced. "Your pulse is
+wonderful."
+
+"Not hurried? No signs of palpitation?"
+
+"You have seven or eight footmen, all young men," Doctor Sarson
+replied drily. "I will wager that there isn't one of them has a
+pulse so vigorous as yours."
+
+Mr. Fentolin leaned a little back in his chair. An expression of
+satisfaction crept over his face.
+
+"You reassure me, my dear Sarson. That is excellent. What of our
+patient?"
+
+"There is no change."
+
+"I am afraid," Mr. Fentolin sighed, "that we shall have trouble
+with him. These strong people always give trouble."
+
+"It will be just the same in the long run," the doctor remarked,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+Mr. Fentolin held up his finger.
+
+"Listen! A motor-car, I believe?"
+
+"It is Miss Fentolin who is just arriving," the doctor announced.
+"I saw the car coming as I crossed the hall."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded gently.
+
+"Indeed?" he replied. "Indeed? So my dear niece has returned.
+Open the door, friend Sarson. Open the door, if you please. She
+will be anxious to see me. We must summon her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Mr. Fentolin raised to his lips the little gold whistle which hung
+from his neck and blew it. He seemed to devote very little effort
+to the operation, yet the strength of the note was wonderful. As
+the echoes died away, he let it fall by his side and waited with
+a pleased smile upon his lips. In a few seconds there was the
+hurried flutter of skirts and the sound of footsteps. The girl who
+had just completed her railway journey entered, followed by her
+brother. They were both a little out of breath, they both
+approached the chair without a smile, the girl in advance, with a
+certain expression of apprehension in her eyes. Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+He appeared to notice these things and regret them.
+
+"My child," he said, holding out his hands, "my dear Esther, welcome
+home again! I heard the car outside. I am grieved that you did not
+at once hurry to my side."
+
+"I have not been in the house two minutes," Esther replied, "and I
+haven't seen mother yet. Forgive me."
+
+She had come to a standstill a few yards away. She moved now very
+slowly towards the chair, with the air of one fulfilling a hateful
+task. The fingers which accepted his hands were extended almost
+hesitatingly. He drew her closer to him and held her there.
+
+"Your mother, my dear Esther, is, I regret to say, suffering from
+a slight indisposition," he remarked. "She has been confined to
+her room for the last few days. Just a trifling affair of the
+nerves; nothing more, Doctor Sarson assures me. But my dear child,"
+he went on, "your fingers are as cold as ice. You look at me so
+strangely, too. Alas! you have not the affectionate disposition
+of your dear mother. One would scarcely believe that we have been
+parted for more than a week."
+
+"For more than a week," she repeated, under her breath.
+
+"Stoop down, my dear. I must kiss your forehead--there! Now
+bring up a chair to my side. You seem frightened--alarmed. Have
+you ill news for me?"
+
+"I have no news," she answered, gradually recovering herself.
+
+"The gaieties of London, I fear," he protested gently, "have proved
+a little unsettling."
+
+"There were no gaieties for me," the girl replied bitterly. "Mrs.
+Sargent obeyed your orders very faithfully. I was not allowed to
+move out except with her."
+
+"My dear child, you would not go about London unchaperoned!"
+
+"There is a difference," she retorted, "between a chaperon and a
+jailer."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed. He shook his head slowly. He seemed pained.
+
+"I am not sure that you repay my care as it deserves, Esther," he
+declared. "There is something in your deportment which disappoints
+me. Never mind, your brother has made some atonement. I entrusted
+him with a little mission in which I am glad to say that he has
+been brilliantly successful."
+
+"I cannot say that I am glad to hear it," Esther replied quietly.
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat back in his chair. His long fingers played
+nervously together, he looked at her gravely.
+
+"My dear child," he exclaimed, in a tone of pained surprise, "your
+attitude distresses me!"
+
+"I cannot help it. I have told you what I think about Gerald and
+the life he is compelled to live here. I don't mind so much for
+myself, but for him I think it is abominable."
+
+"The same as ever," Mr. Fentolin sighed. "I fear that this little
+change has done you no good, dear niece."
+
+"Change!" she echoed. "It was only a change of prisons."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head slowly--a distressful gesture. Yet
+all the time he had somehow the air of a man secretly gratified.
+
+"You are beginning to depress me," he announced. "I think that
+you can go away. No, stop for just one moment. Stand there in
+the light. Dear me, how unfortunate! Who would have thought that
+so beautiful a mother could have so plain a daughter!"
+
+She stood quite still before him, her hands crossed in front of
+her, something of the look of the nun from whom the power of
+suffering has gone in her still, cold face and steadfast eyes.
+
+"Not a touch of colour," he continued meditatively, "a figure
+straight as my walking-stick. What a pity! And all the taste,
+nowadays, they tell me, is in the other direction. The lank
+damsels have gone completely out. We buried them with Oscar Wilde.
+Run along, my dear child. You do not amuse me. You can take Gerald
+with you, if you will. I have nothing to say to Gerald just now.
+He is in my good books. Is there anything I can do for you, Gerald?
+Your allowance, for instance--a trifling increase or an advance?
+I am in a generous humour."
+
+"Then grant me what I begged for the other day," the boy answered
+quickly. "Let me go to Sandhurst. I could enter my name next week
+for the examinations, and I could pass to-morrow."
+
+Mr. Fentolin tapped the table thoughtfully with his forefinger.
+
+"A little ungrateful, my dear boy," he declared, "a little ungrateful
+that, I think. Your confidence in yourself pleases me, though. You
+think you could pass your examinations?"
+
+"I did a set of papers last week," the boy replied. "On the given
+percentages I came out twelfth or better. Mr. Brown assured me
+that I could go in for them at any moment. He promised to write
+you about it before he left."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded gently.
+
+"Now I come to think of it, I did have a letter from Mr. Brown,"
+he remarked. "Rather an impertinence for a tutor, I thought it.
+He devoted three pages towards impressing upon me the necessity of
+your adopting some sort of a career."
+
+"He wrote because he thought it was his duty," the boy said doggedly.
+
+"So you want to be a soldier," Mr. Fentolin continued musingly.
+"Well, well, why not? Our picture galleries are full of them.
+There has been a Fentolin in every great battle for the last five
+hundred years. Sailors, too--plenty of them--and just a few
+diplomatists. Brave fellows! Not one, I fancy," he added, "like
+me--not one condemned to pass their days in a perambulator. You
+are a fine fellow, Gerald--a regular Fentolin. Getting on for
+six feet, aren't you?"
+
+"Six feet two, sir."
+
+"A very fine fellow," Mr. Fentolin repeated. "I am not so sure
+about the army, Gerald. You see, there are some people who say,
+like your American friend, that we are even now almost on the brink
+of war."
+
+"All the more reason for me to hurry," the boy begged.
+
+Mr. Fentolin closed his eyes.
+
+"Don't!" he insisted. "Have you ever stopped to think what war
+means--the war you speak of so lightly? The suffering, the misery
+of it! All the pageantry and music and heroism in front; and behind,
+a blackened world, a trail of writhing corpses, a world of weeping
+women for whom the sun shall never rise again. Ugh! An ugly thing
+war, Gerald. I am not sure that you are not better at home here.
+Why not practise golf a little more assiduously? I see from the
+local paper that you are still playing at two handicap. Now with
+your physique, I should have thought you would have been a scratch
+player long before now."
+
+"I play cricket, sir," the boy reminded him, a little impatiently,
+"and, after all, there are other things in the world besides games."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's long finger shot suddenly out. He was leaning a
+little from his chair. His expression of gentle immobility had
+passed away. His face was stern, almost stony.
+
+"You have spoken the truth, Gerald," he said. "There are other
+things in the world besides games. There is the real, the tragical
+side of life, the duties one takes up, the obligations of honour.
+You have not forgotten, young man, the burden you carry?"
+
+The boy was paler, but he had drawn himself to his full height.
+
+"I have not forgotten, sir," he answered bitterly. "Do I show any
+signs of forgetting? Haven't I done your bidding year by year?
+Aren't I here now to do it?"
+
+"Then do it!" Mr. Fentolin retorted sharply. "When I am ready for
+you to leave here, you shall leave. Until then, you are mine.
+Remember that. Ah! this is Doctor Sarson who comes, I believe.
+That must mean that it is five o'clock. Come in, Doctor. I am not
+engaged. You see, I am alone with my dear niece and nephew. We
+have been having a little pleasant conversation."
+
+Doctor Sarson bowed to Esther, who scarcely glanced at him. He
+remained in the background, quietly waiting.
+
+"A very delightful little conversation," Mr. Fentolin concluded.
+"I have been congratulating my nephew, Doctor, upon his wisdom in
+preferring the quiet country life down here to the wearisome routine
+of a profession. He escapes the embarrassing choice of a career by
+preferring to devote his life to my comfort. I shall not forget it.
+I shall not be ungrateful. I may have my faults, but I am not
+ungrateful. Run away now, both of you. Dear children you are, but
+one wearies, you know, of everything. I am going out. You see,
+the twilight is coming. The tide is changing. I am going down to
+meet the sea."
+
+His little carriage moved towards the door. The brother and sister
+passed out. Esther led Gerald into the great dining-room, and from
+there, through the open windows, out on to the terrace. She gripped
+his shoulder and pointed down to the Tower.
+
+"Something," she whispered in his ear, "is going to happen there."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+The little station at which Hamel alighted was like an oasis in the
+middle of a flat stretch of sand and marsh. It consisted only of
+a few raised planks and a rude shelter--built, indeed, for the
+convenience of St. David's Hall alone, for the nearest village was
+two miles away. The station-master, on his return from escorting
+the young lady to her car, stared at this other passenger in some
+surprise.
+
+"Which way to the sea?" Hamel asked.
+
+The man pointed to the white gates of the crossing.
+
+"You can take any of those paths you like, sir," he said. "If you
+want to get to Salthouse, though, you should have got out at the
+next station."
+
+"This will do for me," Hamel replied cheerfully.
+
+"Be careful of the dikes," the station-master advised him. "Some
+of them are pretty deep."
+
+Hamel nodded, and passing through the white gates, made his way by
+a raised cattle track towards the sea. On either side of him flowed
+a narrow dike filled with salt-water. Beyond stretched the flat
+marshland, its mossy turf leavened with cracks and creeks of all
+widths, filled also with sea-slime and sea-water. A slight grey
+mist rested upon the more distant parts of the wilderness which he
+was crossing, a mist which seemed to be blown in from the sea in
+little puffs, resting for a time upon the earth, and then drifting
+up and fading away like soap bubbles.
+
+More than once where the dikes had overflown he was compelled to
+change his course, but he arrived at last at the little ridge of
+pebbled beach bordering the sea. Straight ahead of him now was
+that strange-looking building towards which he had all the time
+been directing his footsteps. As he approached it, his forehead
+slightly contracted. There was ample confirmation before him of
+the truth of his fellow-passenger's words. The place, left to
+itself for so many years, without any attention from its actual
+owner, was neither deserted nor in ruins. Its solid grey stone
+walls were sea-stained and a trifle worn, but the arched wooden
+doors leading into the lifeboat shelter, which occupied one side
+of the building, had been newly painted, and in the front the window
+was hung with a curtain, now closely drawn, of some dark red
+material. The lock from the door had been removed altogether, and
+in its place was the aperture for a Yale latch-key. The last note
+of modernity was supplied by the telephone wire attached to the
+roof of the lifeboat shelter. He walked all round the building,
+seeking in vain for some other means of ingress. Then he stood for
+a few moments in front of the curtained window. He was a man of
+somewhat determined disposition, and he found himself vaguely
+irritated by the liberties which had been taken with his property.
+He hammered gently upon the framework with his fist, and the
+windows opened readily inwards, pushing back the curtain with them.
+He drew himself up on to the sill, and, squeezing himself through
+the opening, landed on his feet and looked around him, a little
+breathless.
+
+He found himself in a simply furnished man's sitting-room. An easel
+was standing close to the window. There were reams of drawing paper
+and several unfinished sketches leaning against the wall. There
+was a small oak table in the middle of the room; against the wall
+stood an exquisite chiffonier, on which were resting some cut-glass
+decanters and goblets. There was a Turkey carpet upon the floor
+which matched the curtains, but to his surprise there was not a
+single chair of any sort to be seen. The walls had been distempered
+and were hung with one or two engravings which, although he was no
+judge, he was quite sure were good. He wandered into the back room,
+where he found a stove, a tea-service upon a deal table, and several
+other cooking utensils, all spotlessly clean and of the most
+expensive description. The walls here were plainly whitewashed,
+and the floor was of hard stone. He then tried the door on the
+left, which led into the larger portion of the building--the shed
+in which the lifeboat had once been kept. Not only was the door
+locked, but he saw at once that the lock was modern, and the door
+itself was secured with heavy iron clamps. He returned to the
+sitting-room.
+
+"The girl with the grey eyes was right enough," he remarked to
+himself. "Mr. Fentolin has been making himself very much at home
+with my property."
+
+He withdrew the curtains, noticing, to his surprise, the heavy
+shutters which their folds had partly concealed. Then he made his
+way out along the passage to the front door, which from the inside
+he was able to open easily enough. Leaving it carefully ajar, he
+went out with the intention of making an examination of the outside
+of the place. Instead, however, he paused at the corner of the
+building with his face turned landwards. Exactly fronting him now,
+about three-quarters of a mile away, on the summit of that strange
+hill which stood out like a gigantic rock in the wilderness, was St.
+David's Hall. He looked at it steadily and with increasing
+admiration. Its long, red brick front with its masses of clustering
+chimneys, a little bare and weather-beaten, impressed him with a
+sense of dignity due as much to the purity of its architecture as
+the singularity of its situation. Behind--a wonderfully effective
+background--were the steep gardens from which, even in this
+uncertain light, he caught faint glimpses of colouring subdued from
+brilliancy by the twilight. These were encircled by a brick wall
+of great height, the whole of the southern portion of which was
+enclosed with glass. From the fragment of rock upon which he had
+seated himself, to the raised stone terrace in front of the house,
+was an absolutely straight path, beautifully kept like an avenue,
+with white posts on either side, and built up to a considerable
+height above the broad tidal way which ran for some distance by its
+side. It had almost the appearance of a racing track, and its
+state of preservation in the midst of the wilderness was little
+short of remarkable.
+
+"This," Hamel said to himself, as he slowly produced a pipe from
+his pocket and began to fill it with tobacco from a battered silver
+box, "is a queer fix. Looks rather like the inn for me!"
+
+"And who might you be, gentleman?"
+
+He turned abruptly around towards his unseen questioner. A woman
+was standing by the side of the rock upon which he was sitting, a
+woman from the village, apparently, who must have come with
+noiseless footsteps along the sandy way. She was dressed in rusty
+black, and in place of a hat she wore a black woolen scarf tied
+around her head and underneath her chin. Her face was lined, her
+hair of a deep brown plentifully besprinkled with grey. She had a
+curious habit of moving her lips, even when she was not speaking.
+She stood there smiling at him, but there was something about that
+smile and about her look which puzzled him.
+
+"I am just a visitor," he replied. "Who are you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I saw you come out of the Tower," she said, speaking with a strong
+local accent and yet with a certain unusual correctness, "in at the
+window and out of the door. You're a brave man."
+
+"Why brave?" he asked.
+
+She turned her head very slowly towards St. David's Hall. A gleam
+of sunshine had caught one of the windows, which shone like fire.
+She pointed toward it with her head.
+
+"He's looking at you," she muttered. "He don't like strangers
+poking around here, that I can tell you."
+
+"And who is he?" Hamel enquired.
+
+"Squire Fentolin," she answered, dropping her voice a little. "He's
+a very kind-hearted gentleman, Squire Fentolin, but he don't like
+strangers hanging around."
+
+"Well, I am not exactly a stranger, you see," Hamel remarked. "My
+father used to stay for months at a time in that little shanty there
+and paint pictures. It's a good many years ago."
+
+"I mind him," the woman said slowly. "His name was Hamel."
+
+"I am his son," Hamel announced.
+
+She pointed to the Hall. "Does he know that you are here?"
+
+Hamel shook his head. "Not yet. I have been abroad for so long."
+
+She suddenly relapsed into her curious habit. Her lips moved, but
+no words came. She had turned her head a little and was facing
+the sea.
+
+"Tell me," Hamel asked gently, "why do you come out here alone, so
+far from the village?"
+
+She pointed with her finger to where the waves were breaking in a
+thin line of white, about fifty yards from the beach.
+
+"It's the cemetery, that," she said, "the village cemetery, you
+know. I have three buried there: George, the eldest; James, the
+middle one; and David, the youngest. Three of them--that's why
+I come. I can't put flowers on their graves, but I can sit and
+watch and look through the sea, down among the rocks where their
+bodies are, and wonder."
+
+Hamel looked at her curiously. Her voice had grown lower and lower.
+
+"It's what you land folks don't believe, perhaps," she went on, "but
+it's true. It's only us who live near the sea who understand it.
+I am not an ignorant body, either. I was schoolmistress here before
+I married David Cox. They thought I'd done wrong to marry a
+fisherman, but I bore him brave sons, and I lived the life a woman
+craves for. No, I am not ignorant. I have fancies, perhaps--the
+Lord be praised for them!--and I tell you it's true. You look at
+a spot in the sea and you see nothing--a gleam of blue, a fleck of
+white foam, one day; a gleam of green with a black line, another;
+and a grey little sob, the next, perhaps. But you go on looking.
+You look day by day and hour by hour, and the chasms of the sea will
+open, and their voices will come to you. Listen!"
+
+She clutched his arm.
+
+"Couldn't you hear that?" she half whispered.
+
+"'The light!' It was David's voice! 'The light!'" Hamel was
+speechless. The woman's face was suddenly strangely transformed.
+Her mood, however, swiftly changed. She turned once more towards
+the hall.
+
+"You'll know him soon," she went on, "the kindest man in these
+parts, they say. It's not much that he gives away, but he's a kind
+heart. You see that great post at the entrance to the river there?"
+she went on, pointing to it. "He had that set up and a lamp hung
+from there. Fentolin's light, they call it. It was to save men's
+lives. It was burning, they say, the night I lost my lads.
+Fentolin's light!"
+
+"They were wrecked?" he asked her gently.
+
+"Wrecked," she answered. "Bad steering it must have been. James
+would steer, and they say that he drank a bit. Bad steering! Yes,
+you'll meet Squire Fentolin before long. He's queer to look at--a
+small body but a great, kind heart. A miserable life, his, but it
+will be made up to him. It will be made up to him!"
+
+She turned away. Her lips were moving all the time. She walked
+about a dozen steps, and then she returned.
+
+"You're Hamel's son, the painter," she said. "You'll be welcome
+down here. He'll have you to stay at the Hall--a brave place.
+Don't let him be too kind to you. Sometimes kindness hurts."
+
+She passed on, walking with a curious, shambling gait, and soon she
+disappeared on her way to the village. Hamel watched her for a
+moment and then turned his head towards St. David's Hall. He felt
+somehow that her abrupt departure was due to something which she
+had seen in that direction. He rose to his feet. His instinct had
+been a true one.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+From where Hamel stood a queer object came strangely into sight.
+Below the terrace of St. David's Hall--from a spot, in fact, at
+the base of the solid wall--it seemed as though a gate had been
+opened, and there came towards him what he at first took to be a
+tricycle. As it came nearer, it presented even a weirder
+appearance. Mr. Fentolin, in a black cape and black skull cap,
+sat a little forward in his electric carriage, with his hand upon
+the guiding lever. His head came scarcely above the back of the
+little vehicle, his hands and body were motionless. He seemed to
+be progressing without the slightest effort, personal or mechanical,
+as though he rode, in deed, in some ghostly vehicle. From the same
+place in the wall had issued, a moment or two later, a man upon a
+bicycle, who was also coming towards him. Hamel was scarcely
+conscious of this secondary figure. His eyes were fixed upon the
+strange personage now rapidly approaching him. There was something
+which seemed scarcely human in that shrunken fragment of body, the
+pale face with its waving white hair, the strange expression with
+which he was being regarded. The little vehicle came to a
+standstill only a few feet away. Mr. Fentolin leaned forward. His
+features had lost their delicately benevolent aspect; his words
+were minatory.
+
+"I am under the impression, sir," he said, "that I saw you with my
+glasses from the window attempting to force an entrance into that
+building."
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"I not only tried but I succeeded," he remarked. "I got in through
+the window."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's eyes glittered for a moment. Hamel, who had resumed
+his place upon the rock close at hand, had been mixed up during his
+lifetime in many wild escapades. Yet at that moment he had a sudden
+feeling that there were dangers in life which as yet he had not
+faced.
+
+"May I ask for your explanation or your excuse?"
+
+"You can call it an explanation or an excuse, whichever you like,"
+Hamel replied steadily, "but the fact is that this little building,
+which some one else seems to have appropriated, is mine. If I had
+not been a good-natured person, I should be engaged, at the present
+moment, in turning out its furniture on to the beach."
+
+"What is your name?" Mr. Fentolin asked suddenly.
+
+"My name is Hamel--Richard Hamel."
+
+For several moments there was silence. Mr. Fentolin was still
+leaning forward in his strange little vehicle. The colour seemed
+to have left even his lips. The hard glitter in his eyes had given
+place to an expression almost like fear. He looked at Richard
+Hamel as though he were some strange sea-monster come up from
+underneath the sands.
+
+"Richard Hamel," he repeated. "Do you mean that you are the son of
+Hamel, the R.A., who used to be in these parts so often? He was my
+brother's friend."
+
+"I am his son."
+
+"But his son was killed in the San Francisco earthquake. I saw his
+name in all the lists. It was copied into the local papers here."
+
+Hamel knocked the ashes from his pipe.
+
+"I take a lot of killing," he observed. "I was in that earthquake,
+right enough, and in the hospital afterwards, but it was a man named
+Hamel of Philadelphia who died."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat quite motionless for several moments. He seemed,
+if possible, to have shrunken into something smaller still. A few
+yards behind, Meekins had alighted from his bicycle and was standing
+waiting.
+
+"So you are Richard Hamel," Mr. Fentolin said at last very softly.
+"Welcome back to England, Richard Hamel! I knew your father
+slightly, although we were never very friendly."
+
+He stretched out his hand from underneath the coverlet of his little
+vehicle--a hand with long, white fingers, slim and white and
+shapely as a woman's. A single ring with a dull green stone was on
+his fourth finger. Hamel shook hands with him as he would have
+shaken hands with a woman. Afterwards he rubbed his fingers slowly
+together. There was something about the touch which worried him.
+
+"You have been making use of this little shanty, haven't you?" he
+asked bluntly.
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded. He was apparently beginning to recover
+himself.
+
+"You must remember," he explained suavely, "that it was built by my
+grandfather, and that we have had rights over the whole of the
+foreshore here from time immemorial. I know quite well that my
+brother gave it to your father--or rather he sold it to him for a
+nominal sum. I must tell you that it was a most complicated
+transaction. He had the greatest difficulty in getting any lawyer
+to draft the deed of sale. There were so many ancient rights and
+privileges which it was impossible to deal with. Even now there
+are grave doubts as to the validity of the transaction. When nothing
+was heard of you, and we all concluded that you were dead, I ventured
+to take back what I honestly believed to be my own. Owing," he
+continued slowly, "to my unfortunate affliction, I am obliged to
+depend for interest in my life upon various hobbies. This little
+place, queerly enough, has become one of them. I have furnished it,
+in a way; installed the telephone to the house, connected it with
+my electric plant, and I come down here when I want to be quite
+alone, and paint. I watch the sea--such a sea sometimes, such
+storms, such colour! You notice that ridge of sand out yonder? It
+forms a sort of natural breakwater. Even on the calmest day you
+can trace that white line of foam."
+
+"It is a strange coast," Hamel admitted.
+
+Mr. Fentolin pointed with his forefinger northwards.
+
+"Somewhere about there," he indicated, "is the entrance to the
+tidal river which flows up to the village of St. David's yonder.
+You see?"
+
+His finger traced its course until it came to a certain point near
+the beach, where a tall black pillar stood, surmounted by a globe.
+
+"I have had a light fixed there for the benefit or the fishermen,"
+he said, "a light which I work from my own dynamo. Between where
+we are sitting now and there--only a little way out to sea--is a
+jagged cluster of cruel rocks. You can see them if you care to swim
+out in calm weather. Fishermen who tried to come in by night were
+often trapped there and, in a rough sea, drowned. That is why I
+had that pillar of light built. On stormy nights it shows the exact
+entrance to the water causeway."
+
+"Very kind of you indeed," Hamel remarked, "very benevolent."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"So few people have any real feeling for sailors," he continued.
+"The fishermen around here are certainly rather a casual class. Do
+you know that there is scarcely one of them who can swim? There
+isn't one of them who isn't too lazy to learn even the simplest
+stroke. My brother used to say--dear Gerald--that it served them
+right if they were drowned. I have never been able to feel like
+that, Mr. Hamel. Life is such a wonderful thing. One night," he
+went on, dropping his voice and leaning a little forward in his
+carriage--"it was just before, or was it just after I had fixed
+that light--I was down here one dark winter night. There was a
+great north wind and a huge sea running. It was as black as pitch,
+but I heard a boat making for St. David's causeway strike on those
+rocks just hidden in front there. I heard those fishermen shriek
+as they went under. I heard their shouts for help, I heard their
+death cries. Very terrible, Mr. Hamel! Very terrible!"
+
+Hamel looked at the speaker curiously. Mr. Fentolin seemed
+absorbed in his subject. He had spoken with relish, as one who
+loves the things he speaks about. Quite unaccountably, Hamel
+found himself shivering.
+
+"It was their mother," Mr. Fentolin continued, leaning again a
+little forward in his chair, "their mother whom I saw pass along
+the beach just now--a widow, too, poor thing. She comes here
+often--a morbid taste. She spoke to you, I think?"
+
+"She spoke to me strangely," Hamel admitted. "She gave me the
+impression of a woman whose brain had been turned with grief."
+
+"Too true," Mr. Fentolin sighed. "The poor creature! I offered her
+a small pension, but she would have none of it. A superior woman
+in her way once, filled now with queer fancies," he went on, eyeing
+Hamel steadily,--"the very strangest fancies. She spends her life
+prowling about here. No one in the village even knows how she lives.
+Did she speak of me, by-the-by?"
+
+"She spoke of you as being a very kind-hearted man."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"The poor creature! Well, well, let us revert to the object of
+your coming here. Do you really wish to occupy this little shanty,
+Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"That was my idea," Hamel confessed. "I only came back from Mexico
+last month, and I very soon got fed up with life in town. I am
+going abroad again next year. Till then, I am rather at a loose
+end. My father was always very keen indeed about this place, and
+very anxious that I should come and stay here for a little time, so
+I made up my mind to run down. I've got some things waiting at
+Norwich. I thought I might hire a woman to look after me and spend
+a few weeks here. They tell me that the early spring is almost the
+best time for this coast."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded slowly. He moistened his lips for a moment.
+One might have imagined that he was anxious.
+
+"Mr. Hamel," he said softly, "you are quite right. It is the best
+time to visit this coast. But why make a hermit of yourself? You
+are a family friend. Come and stay with us at the Hall for as long
+as you like. It will give me the utmost pleasure to welcome you
+there," he went on earnestly, "and as for this little place, of what
+use is it to you? Let me buy it from you. You are a man of the
+world, I can see. You may be rich, yet money has a definite value.
+To me it has none. That little place, as it stands, is probably
+worth--say a hundred pounds. Your father gave, if I remember
+rightly, a five pound note for it. I will give you a thousand for
+it sooner than be disturbed."
+
+Hamel frowned slightly.
+
+"I could not possibly think," he said, "of selling what was
+practically a gift to my father. You are welcome to occupy the
+place during my absence in any way you wish. On the other hand, I
+do not think that I care to part with it altogether, and I should
+really like to spend just a day or so here. I am used to roughing
+it under all sorts of conditions--much more used to roughing it
+than I am to staying at country houses."
+
+Mr. Fentolin leaned a little out of his carriage. He reached the
+younger man's shoulder with his hand.
+
+"Ah! Mr. Hamel," he pleaded, "don't make up your mind too suddenly.
+Am I a little spoilt, I wonder? Well, you see what sort of a
+creature I am. I have to go through life as best I may, and people
+are kind to me. It is very seldom I am crossed. It is quite
+astonishing how often people let me have my own way. Do not make
+up your mind too suddenly. I have a niece and a nephew whom you
+must meet. There are some treasures, too, at St. David's Hall.
+Look at it. There isn't another house quite like it in England.
+It is worth looking over."
+
+"It is most impressive," Hamel agreed, "and wonderfully beautiful.
+It seems odd," he added, with a laugh, "that you should care about
+this little shanty here, with all the beautiful rooms you must have
+of your own."
+
+"It's Naboth's vineyard," Mr. Fentolin groaned. "Now, Mr. Hamel,
+you are going to be gracious, aren't you? Let us leave the question
+of your little habitation here alone for the present. Come back
+with me. My niece shall give you some tea, and you shall choose
+your room from forty. You can sleep in a haunted chamber, or a
+historical chamber, in Queen Elizabeth's room, a Victorian chamber,
+or a Louis Quinze room. All my people have spent their substance
+in furniture. Don't look at your bag. Clothes are unnecessary. I
+can supply you with everything. Or, if you prefer it, I can send a
+fast car into Norwich for your own things. Come and be my guest,
+please."
+
+Hamel hesitated. He had not the slightest desire to go to St.
+David's Hall, and though he strove to ignore it, he was conscious
+of an aversion of which he was heartily ashamed for this strange
+fragment of humanity. On the other hand, his mission, the actual
+mission which had brought him down to these parts, could certainly
+best be served by an entree into the Hall itself--and there was
+the girl, whom he felt sure belonged there. He had never for a
+moment been able to dismiss her from his thoughts. Her still, cold
+face, the delicate perfection of her clothes and figure, the grey
+eyes which had rested upon his so curiously, haunted him. He was
+desperately anxious to see her again. If he refused this invitation,
+if he rejected Mr. Fentolin's proffered friendship, it would be all
+the more difficult.
+
+"You are really very kind," he began hesitatingly--.
+
+"It is settled," Mr. Fentolin interrupted, "settled. Meekins, you
+can ride back again. I shall not paint to-day. Mr. Hamel, you
+will walk by my side, will you not? I can run my little machine
+quite slowly. You see, I have an electric battery. It needs
+charging often, but I have a dynamo of my own. You never saw a
+vehicle like this in all your travellings, did you?"
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"An electrical bath-chair," Mr. Fentolin continued. "Practice has
+made me remarkably skilful in its manipulation. You see, I can
+steer to an inch."
+
+He was already turning around. Hamel rose to his feet.
+
+"You are really very kind," he said. "I should like to come up and
+see the Hall, at any rate, but in the meantime, as we are here,
+could I just look over the inside of this little place? I found the
+large shed where the lifeboat used to be kept, locked up."
+
+Mr. Fentolin was manoeuvring his carriage. His back was towards
+Hamel.
+
+"By all means," he declared. "We will go in together. I have had
+the entrance widened so that I can ride straight into the
+sitting-room. But wait."
+
+He paused suddenly. He felt in all his pockets.
+
+"Dear me," he exclaimed, "I find that I have left the keys! We
+will come down a little later, if you do not mind, Mr. Hamel. Or
+to-morrow, perhaps. You will not mind? It is very careless of me,
+but seeing you about the place and imagining that you were an
+intruder, made me angry, and I started off in a hurry. Now walk by
+my side up to the house, please, and talk to me. It is so
+interesting for me to meet men," he went on, as they started along
+the straight path, "who do things in life; who go to foreign
+countries, meet strange people, and have new experiences. I have
+been a good many years like this, you know."
+
+"It is a great affliction," Hamel murmured sympathetically.
+
+"In my youth I was an athlete," Mr. Fentolin continued. "I played
+cricket for the Varsity and for my county. I hunted, too, and shot.
+I did all the things a man loves to do. I might still shoot, they
+tell me, but my strength has ebbed away. I am too weak to lift a
+gun, too weak even to handle a fishing-rod. I have just a few
+hobbies in life which keep me alive. Are you a politician, Mr.
+Hamel?"
+
+"Not in the least," Hamel replied. "I have been out of England too
+long to keep in touch with politics."
+
+"Naturally," Mr. Fentolin agreed. "It amuses me to follow the
+course of events. I have a good many friends in London and abroad
+who are kind to me, who keep me informed, send me odd bits of
+information not available for every one, and it amuses me to put
+these things together in my mind and to try and play the prophet.
+I was in the Foreign Office once, you know. I take up my paper
+every morning, and it is one of my chief interests to see how near
+my own speculations come to the truth. Just now for example, there
+are strange things doing on the Continent."
+
+"In America," Hamel remarked, "they affect to look upon England as
+a doomed Power."
+
+"Not altogether supine yet," Mr. Fentolin observed, "yet even this
+last generation has seen weakening. We have lost so much
+self-reliance. Perhaps it is having these grown-up children who we
+think can take care of us--Canada and Australia, and the others.
+However, we will not talk of politics. It bores you, I can see.
+We will try and find some other subject. Now tell me, don't you
+think this is ingenious?"
+
+They had reached the foot of the hill upon which the Hall was
+situated. In front of them, underneath the terrace, was a little
+iron gate, held open now by Meekins, who had gone on ahead and
+dismounted from his bicycle.
+
+"I have a subterranean way from here into the Hall," Mr. Fentolin
+explained. "Come with me. You will only have to stoop a little,
+and it may amuse you. You need not be afraid. There are electric
+lights every ten yards. I turn them on with this switch--see."
+
+Mr. Fentolin touched a button in the wall, and the place was at
+once brilliantly illuminated. A little row of lights from the
+ceiling and the walls stretched away as far as one could see. They
+passed through the iron gates, which shut behind them with a click.
+Stooping a little, Hamel was still able to walk by the side of the
+man in the chair. They traversed about a hundred yards of
+subterranean way. Here and there a fungus hung down from the wall,
+otherwise it was beautifully kept and dry. By and by, with a
+little turn, they came to an incline and another iron gate, held
+open for them by a footman. Mr. Fentolin sped up the last few feet
+into the great hail, which seemed more imposing than ever by reason
+of this unexpected entrance. Hamel, blinking a little, stepped to
+his side.
+
+"Welcome!" Mr. Fentolin cried gaily. "Welcome, my friend Mr. Hamel,
+to St. David's Hall!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+During the next half-hour, Hamel was introduced to luxuries to which,
+in a general way, he was entirely unaccustomed. One man-servant
+was busy preparing his bath in a room leading out of his sleeping
+apartment, while another brought him a choice of evening clothes and
+superintended his disrobing. Hamel, always observant, studied his
+surroundings with keen interest. He found himself in a queerly
+mixed atmosphere of luxurious modernity and stately antiquity. His
+four-poster, the huge couch at the foot of his bed, and all the
+furniture about the room, was of the Queen Anne period. The
+bathroom which communicated with his apartment was the latest
+triumph of the plumber's art--a room with floor and walls of white
+tiles, the bath itself a little sunken and twice the ordinary size.
+He dispensed so far as he could with the services of the men and
+descended, as soon as he was dressed, into the hall. Meekins was
+waiting at the bottom of the stairs, dressed now in somber black.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin will be glad if you will step into his room, sir," he
+announced, leading the way.
+
+Mr. Fentolin was seated in his chair, reading the Times in a corner
+of his library. Shaped blocks had been placed behind and in front
+of the wheels of his little vehicle, to prevent it from moving. A
+shaded reading-lamp stood on the table by his side. He did not at
+once look up, and Hamel glanced around with genuine admiration.
+The shelves which lined the walls and the winged cases which
+protruded into the room were filled with books. There was a large
+oak table with beautifully carved legs, piled with all sorts of
+modern reviews and magazines. A log fire was burning in the big
+oaken grate. The perfume from a great bowl of lavender seemed to
+mingle curiously yet pleasantly with the half musty odour of the
+old leather-bound volumes. The massive chimneypiece was of black
+oak, and above it were carved the arms of the House of Fentolin.
+The walls were oak-panelled to the ceiling.
+
+"Refreshed, I hope, by your bath and change, my dear visitor?" the
+head of the house remarked, as he laid down his paper. "Draw a
+chair up here and join me in a glass of vermouth. You need not be
+afraid of it. It comes to me from the maker as a special favour."
+
+Hamel accepted a quaintly-cut wine-glass full of the amber liquid.
+Mr. Fentolin sipped his with the air of a connoisseur.
+
+"This," he continued, "is one of our informal days. There is no
+one in the house save my sister-in-law, niece, and nephew, and a
+poor invalid gentleman who, I am sorry to say, is confined to his
+bed. My sister-in-law is also, I regret to say, indisposed. She
+desired me to present her excuses to you and say how greatly she
+is looking forward to making your acquaintance during the next few
+days."
+
+Hamel bowed.
+
+"It is very kind of Mrs. Fentolin," he murmured.
+
+"On these occasions," Mr. Fentolin continued, "we do not make use
+of a drawing-room. My niece will come in here presently. You are
+looking at my books, I see. Are you, by any chance, a bibliophile?
+I have a case of manuscripts here which might interest you."
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"Only in the abstract, I fear," he answered. "I have scarcely
+opened a serious book since I was at Oxford."
+
+"What was your year?" Mr. Fentolin asked.
+
+"Fourteen years ago I left Magdalen," Hamel replied. "I had made
+up my mind to be an engineer, and I went over to the Boston
+Institute of Technology."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded appreciatively.
+
+"A magnificent profession," he murmured. "A healthy one, too, I
+should judge from your appearance. You are a strong man, Mr. Hamel."
+
+"I have had reason to be," Hamel rejoined. "During nearly the whole
+of the time I have been abroad, I have been practically pioneering.
+Building railways in the far West, with gangs of Chinese and Italians
+and Hungarians and scarcely a foreman who isn't terrified of his job,
+isn't exactly drawing-room work."
+
+"You are going back there?" Mr. Fentolin asked, with interest.
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"I have no plans," he declared. "I have been fortunate enough, or
+shall I some day say unfortunate enough, I wonder, to have inherited
+a large legacy."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"Don't ever doubt your good fortune," he said earnestly. "The
+longer I live--and in my limited way I do see a good deal of life
+--the more I appreciate the fact that there isn't anything in this
+world that compares with the power of money. I distrust a poor man.
+He may mean to be honest, but he is at all times subject to
+temptation. Ah! here is my niece."
+
+Mr. Fentolin turned towards the door. Hamel rose at once to his
+feet. His surmise, then, had been correct. She was coming towards
+them very quietly. In her soft grey dinner-gown, her brown hair
+smoothly brushed back, a pearl necklace around her long, delicate
+neck, she seemed to him a very exquisite embodiment of those
+memories which he had been carrying about throughout the afternoon.
+
+"Here, Mr. Hamel," his host said, "is a member of my family who
+has been a deserter for a short time. This is Mr. Richard Hamel,
+Esther; my niece, Miss Esther Fentolin."
+
+She held out her hand with the faintest possible smile, which might
+have been of greeting or recognition.
+
+"I travelled for some distance in the train with Mr. Hamel this
+afternoon, I think," she remarked.
+
+"Indeed?" Mr. Fentolin exclaimed. "Dear me, that is very
+interesting--very interesting, indeed! Mr. Hamel, I am sure, did
+not tell you of his destination?"
+
+He watched them keenly. Hamel, though he scarcely understood, was
+quick to appreciate the possible significance of that tentative
+question.
+
+"We did not exchange confidences," he observed. "Miss Fentolin
+only changed into my carriage during the last few minutes of her
+journey. Besides," he continued, "to tell you the truth, my ideas
+as to my destination were a little hazy. To come and look for some
+queer sort of building by the side of the sea, which has been
+unoccupied for a dozen years or so, scarcely seems a reasonable
+quest, does it?"
+
+"Scarcely, indeed," Mr. Fentolin assented. "You may thank me, Mr.
+Hamel, for the fact that the place is not in ruins. My blatant
+trespassing has saved you from that, at least. After dinner we must
+talk further about the Tower. To tell you the truth, I have grown
+accustomed to the use of the little place."
+
+The sound of the dinner gong boomed through the house. A moment
+later Gerald entered, followed by a butler announcing dinner.
+
+"The only remaining member of my family," Mr. Fentolin remarked,
+indicating his nephew. "Gerald, you will be pleased, I know, to
+meet Mr. Hamel. Mr. Hamel has been a great traveller. Long before
+you can remember, his father used to paint wonderful pictures of
+this coast."
+
+Gerald shook hands with his visitor. His face, for a moment,
+lighted up. He was looking pale, though, and singularly sullen
+and dejected.
+
+"There are two of your father's pictures in the modern side of the
+gallery up-stairs," he remarked, a little diffidently. "They are
+great favourites with everybody here."
+
+They all went in to dinner together. Meekins, who had appeared
+silently, had glided unnoticed behind his master's chair and
+wheeled it across the hall.
+
+"A partie carree to-night," Mr. Fentolin declared. "I have a
+resident doctor here, a very delightful person, who often dines
+with us, but to-night I thought not. Five is an awkward number.
+I want to get to know you better, Mr. Hamel, and quickly. I
+want you, too, to make friends with my niece and nephew. Mr.
+Hamel's father," he went on, addressing the two latter, "and your
+father were great friends. By-the-by, have I told you both
+exactly why Mr. Hamel is a guest here to-night--why he came to
+these parts at all? No? Listen, then. He came to take possession
+of the Tower. The worst of it is that it belongs to him, too. His
+father bought it from your father more years ago than we should
+care to talk about. I have really been a trespasser all this time."
+
+They took their places at a small round table in the middle of the
+dining-room. The shaded lights thrown downwards upon the table
+seemed to leave most of the rest of the apartment in semi-darkness.
+The gloomy faces of the men and women whose pictures hung upon the
+walls were almost invisible. The servants themselves, standing a
+little outside the halo of light, were like shadows passing swiftly
+and noiselessly back and forth. At the far end of the room was an
+organ, and to the left a little balcony, built out as though for an
+orchestra. Hamel looked about him almost in wonderment. There was
+something curiously impressive in the size of the apartment and
+its emptiness.
+
+"A trespasser," Mr. Fentolin continued, as he took up the menu and
+criticised it through his horn-rimmed eyeglass, "that is what I
+have been, without a doubt."
+
+"But for your interest and consequent trespass," Hamel remarked, "I
+should probably have found the roof off and the whole place in ruins."
+
+"Instead of which you found the door locked against you," Mr.
+Fentolin pointed out. "Well, we shall see. I might, at any rate,
+have lost the opportunity of entertaining you here this evening.
+I am particularly glad to have an opportunity of making you known
+to my niece and nephew. I think you will agree with me that here
+are two young people who are highly to be commended. I cannot offer
+them a cheerful life here. There is little society, no gaiety, no
+sort of excitement. Yet they never leave me. They seem to have no
+other interest in life but to be always at my beck and call. A case,
+Mr. Hamel, of really touching devotion. If anything could reconcile
+me to my miserable condition, it would be the kindness and
+consideration of those by whom I am surrounded."
+
+Hamel murmured a few words of cordial agreement. Yet he found
+himself, in a sense, embarrassed. Gerald was looking down upon his
+plate and his face was hidden. Esther's features had suddenly
+become stony and expressionless. Hamel felt instinctively that
+something was wrong.
+
+"There are compensations," Mr. Fentolin continued, with the air of
+one enjoying speech, "which find their way into even the gloomiest
+of lives. As I lie on my back, hour after hour, I feel all the more
+conscious of this. The world is a school of compensations, Mr. Hamel.
+The interests--the mental interests, I mean--of unfortunate people
+like myself, come to possess in time a peculiar significance and to
+yield a peculiar pleasure. I have hobbies, Mr. Hamel. I frankly
+admit it. Without my hobbies, I shudder to think what might become
+of me. I might become a selfish, cruel, misanthropical person.
+Hobbies are indeed a great thing."
+
+The brother and sister sat still in stony silence. Hamel, looking
+across the little table with its glittering load of cut glass and
+silver and scarlet flowers, caught something in Esther's eyes, so
+rarely expressive of any emotion whatever, which puzzled him. He
+looked swiftly back at his host. Mr. Fentolin's face, at that
+moment, was like a beautiful cameo. His expression was one of
+gentle benevolence.
+
+"Let me be quite frank with you," Mr. Fentolin murmured. "My
+occupation of the Tower is one of these hobbies. I love to sit
+there within a few yards of the sea and watch the tide come in.
+I catch something of the spirit, I think, which caught your father,
+Mr. Hamel, and kept him a prisoner here. In my small way I, too,
+paint while I am down there, paint and dream. These things may not
+appeal to you, but you must remember that there are few things left
+to me in life, and that those, therefore, which I can make use of,
+are dear to me. Gerald, you are silent to-night. How is it that
+you say nothing?"
+
+"I am tired, sir," the boy answered quietly.
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded gravely.
+
+"It is inexcusable of me," he declared smoothly, "to have forgotten
+even for a moment. My nephew, Mr. Hamel," he went on, "had quite
+an exciting experience last night--or rather a series of
+experiences. He was first of all in a railway accident, and then,
+for the sake of a poor fellow who was with him and who was badly
+hurt, he motored back here in the grey hours of the morning and
+ran, they tell me, considerable risk of being drowned on the marshes.
+A very wonderful and praiseworthy adventure, I consider it. I trust
+that our friend up-stairs, when he recovers, will be properly
+grateful."
+
+Gerald rose to his feet precipitately. The service of dinner was
+almost concluded, and he muttered something which sounded like an
+excuse. Mr. Fentolin, however, stretched out his hand and motioned
+him to resume his seat.
+
+"My dear Gerald!" he exclaimed reprovingly. "You would leave us so
+abruptly? Before your sister, too! What will Mr. Hamel think of
+our country ways? Pray resume your seat."
+
+For a moment the boy stood quite still, then he slowly subsided into
+his chair. Mr. Fentolin passed around a decanter of wine which had
+been placed upon the table by the butler. The servants had now left
+the room.
+
+"You must excuse my nephew, if you please, Mr. Hamel," he begged.
+"Gerald has a boy's curious aversion to praise in any form. I am
+looking forward to hearing your verdict upon my port. The
+collection of wine and pictures was a hobby of my grandfather's, for
+which we, his descendants, can never be sufficiently grateful."
+
+Hamel praised his wine, as indeed he had every reason to, but for
+a few moments the smooth conversation of his host fell upon deaf
+ears. He looked from the boy's face, pale and wrinkled as though
+with some sort of suppressed pain, to the girl's still, stony
+expression. This was indeed a house of mysteries! There was
+something here incomprehensible, some thing about the relations of
+these three and their knowledge of one another, utterly baffling.
+It was the queerest household, surely, into which any stranger had
+ever been precipitated.
+
+"The planting of trees and the laying down of port are two virtues
+in our ancestors which have never been properly appreciated," Mr.
+Fentolin continued. "Let us, at any rate, free ourselves from the
+reproach of ingratitude so far as regards my grandfather--Gerald
+Fentolin--to whom I believe we are indebted for this wine. We
+will drink--"
+
+Mr. Fentolin broke off in the middle of his sentence. The august
+calm of the great house had been suddenly broken. From up-stairs
+came the tumult of raised voices, the slamming of a door, the
+falling of something heavy upon the floor. Mr. Fentolin listened
+with a grim change in his expression. His smile had departed, his
+lower lip was thrust out, his eyebrows met. He raised the little
+whistle which hung from his chain. At that moment, however, the
+door was opened. Doctor Sarson appeared.
+
+"I am sorry to disturb you, Mr. Fentolin," he said, "but our patient
+is becoming a little difficult. The concussion has left him, as I
+feared it might, in a state of nervous excitability. He insists
+upon an interview with you."
+
+Mr. Fentolin backed his little chair from the table. The doctor
+came over and laid his hand upon the handle.
+
+"You will, I am sure, excuse me for a few moments, Mr. Hamel,"
+his host begged. "My niece and nephew will do their best to
+entertain you. Now, Sarson, I am ready."
+
+Mr. Fentolin glided across the dim, empty spaces of the splendid
+apartment, followed by the doctor; a ghostly little procession it
+seemed. The door was closed behind them. For a few moments a
+curious silence ensued. Gerald remained tense and apparently
+suffering from some sort of suppressed emotion. Esther for the
+first time moved in her place. She leaned towards Hamel. Her lips
+were slowly parted, her eyes sought the door as though in terror.
+Her voice, although save for themselves there was no one else in
+the whole of that great apartment, had sunk to the lowest of
+whispers.
+
+"Are you a brave man, Mr. Hamel?" she asked.
+
+He was staggered but he answered her promptly.
+
+"I believe so."
+
+"Don't give up the Tower--just yet. That is what--he has brought
+you here for. He wants you to give it up and go back. Don't!"
+
+The earnestness of her words was unmistakable. Hamel felt the
+thrill of coming events.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Don't ask me," she begged. "Only if you are brave, if you have
+feeling for others, keep the Tower, if it be for only a week.
+Hush!"
+
+The door had been noiselessly opened. The doctor appeared and
+advanced to the table with a grave little bow.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin," he said, "has been kind enough to suggest that I
+take a glass of wine with you. My presence is not needed up-stairs.
+Mr. Hamel," he added, "I am glad, sir, to make your acquaintance.
+I have for a long time been a great admirer of your father's work."
+
+He took his place at the head of the table and, filling his glass,
+bowed towards Hamel. Once more Gerald and his sister relapsed
+almost automatically into an indifferent and cultivated silence.
+Hamel found civility towards the newcomer difficult. Unconsciously
+his attitude became that of the other two. He resented the
+intrusion. He found himself regarding the advent of Doctor Sarson
+as possessing some secondary significance. It was almost as though
+Mr. Fentolin preferred not to leave him alone with his niece and
+nephew.
+
+Nevertheless, his voice, when he spoke, was clear and
+firm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Mr. Fentolin, on leaving the dining-room, steered his chair with
+great precision through the open, wrought-iron doors of a small
+lift at the further end of the hall, which Doctor Sarson, who
+stepped in with him, promptly directed to the second floor. Here
+they made their way to the room in which Mr. Dunster was lying.
+Doctor Sarson opened the door and looked in. Almost immediately
+he stood at one side, out of sight of Mr. Dunster, and nodded to Mr.
+Fentolin.
+
+"If there is any trouble," he whispered, "send for me. I am better
+away, for the present. My presence only excites him."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"You are right," he said. "Go down into the dining-room. I am not
+sure about that fellow Hamel, and Gerald is in a queer temper. Stay
+with them. See that they are not alone."
+
+The doctor silently withdrew, and Mr. Fentolin promptly glided past
+him into the room. Mr. John P. Dunster, in his night clothes, was
+sitting on the side of the bed. Standing within a few feet of him,
+watching him all the time with the subtle intentness of a cat
+watching a mouse, stood Meekins. Mr. Dunster's head was still bound,
+although the bandage had slipped a little, apparently in some
+struggle. His face was chalklike, and he was breathing quickly.
+
+"So you've come at last!" he exclaimed, a little truculently. "Are
+you Mr. Fentolin?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin gravely admitted his identity. His eyes rested upon
+his guest with an air of tender interest. His face was almost
+beautiful.
+
+"You are the owner of this house--I am underneath your roof--is
+that so?"
+
+"This is certainly St. David's Hall," Mr. Fentolin replied. "It
+really appears as though your conclusions were correct."
+
+"Then will you tell me why I am kept a prisoner here?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's expression was for a moment clouded. He seemed hurt.
+
+"A prisoner," he repeated softly. "My dear Mr. Dunster, you have
+surely forgotten the circumstances which procured for me the pleasure
+of this visit; the condition in which you arrived here--only, after
+all, a very few hours ago?"
+
+"The circumstances," Mr. Dunster declared drily, "are to me still
+inexplicable. At Liverpool Street Station I was accosted by a
+young man who informed me that his name was Gerald Fentolin, and
+that he was on his way to The Hague to play in a golf tournament.
+His story seemed entirely probable, and I permitted him a seat in
+the special train I had chartered for Harwich. There was an accident
+and I received this blow to my head--only a trifling affair, after
+all. I come to my senses to find myself here. I do not know exactly
+what part of the world you call this, but from the fact that I can
+see the sea from my window, it must be some considerable distance
+from the scene of the accident. I find that my dressing-case has
+been opened, my pocket-book examined, and I am apparently a prisoner.
+I ask you, Mr. Fentolin, for an explanation."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled reassuringly.
+
+"My dear sir," he said, "my dear Mr. Dunster, I believe I may have
+the pleasure of calling you--your conclusions seem to me just a
+little melodramatic. My nephew--Gerald Fentolin--did what I
+consider the natural thing, under the circumstances. You had been
+courteous to him, and he repaid the obligation to the best of his
+ability. The accident to your train happened in a dreary part of
+the country, some thirty miles from here. My nephew adopted a
+course which I think, under the circumstances, was the natural and
+hospitable one. He brought you to his home. There was no hospital
+or town of any importance nearer."
+
+"Very well," Mr. Dunster decided. "I will accept your version of
+the affair. I will, then, up to this point acknowledge myself your
+debtor. But will you tell me why my dressing-case has been opened,
+my clothes removed, and a pocket-book containing papers of great
+importance to me has been tampered with?"
+
+"My dear Mr. Dunster," his host repelled calmly, "you surely cannot
+imagine that you are among thieves! Your dressing-case was opened
+and the contents of your pocket-book inspected with a view to
+ascertaining your address, or the names of some friends with whom
+we might communicate."
+
+"Am I to understand that they are to be restored to me, then?" Mr.
+Dunster demanded.
+
+"Without a doubt, yes!" Mr. Fentolin assured him. "You, however,
+are not fit for anything, at the present moment, but to return to
+your bed, from which I understand you rose rather suddenly a few
+minutes ago."
+
+"On the contrary," Mr. Dunster insisted, "I am feeling absolutely
+well enough to travel. I have an appointment on the Continent of
+great importance, as you may judge by the fact that at Liverpool
+Street I chartered a special train. I trust that nothing in my
+manner may have given you offence, but I am anxious to get through
+with the business which brought me over to this side of the water.
+I have sent for you to ask that my pocket-book, dressing-case, and
+clothes be at once restored to me, and that I be provided with
+the means of continuing my journey without a moment's further delay."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head very gently, very regretfully, but also
+firmly.
+
+"Mr. Dunster," he pleaded, "do be reasonable. Think of all you have
+been through. I can quite sympathise with you in your impatience,
+but I am forced to tell you that the doctor who has been attending
+you since the moment you were brought into this house has absolutely
+forbidden anything of the sort."
+
+Mr. Dunster seemed, for a moment, to struggle for composure.
+
+"I am an American citizen," he declared. "I am willing to listen
+to the advice of any physician, but so long as I take the risk, I
+am not bound to follow it.
+
+"In the present case I decline to follow it. I ask for facilities
+to leave this house at once."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"In your own interests," he said calmly, "they will not be granted
+to you."
+
+Mr. Dunster had spoken all the time like a man struggling to
+preserve his self-control. There were signs now that his will was
+ceasing to serve him. His eyes flashed fire, his voice was raised.
+
+"Will not be granted to me?" he repeated. "Do you mean to say,
+then, that I am to be kept here against my will?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin made no immediate reply. With the delicate fingers of
+his right hand he pushed back the hair from his forehead. He looked
+at his questioner soothingly, as one might look at a spoiled child.
+
+"Against my will?" Mr. Dunster repeated, raising his voice still
+higher. "Mr. Fentolin, if the truth must be told, I have heard of
+you before and been warned against you. I decline to accept any
+longer the hospitality of your roof. I insist upon leaving it.
+If you will not provide me with any means of doing so, I will walk."
+
+He made a motion as though to rise from the bed. Meekins' hand very
+gently closed upon his arm. One could judge that the grip was like
+a grip of iron.
+
+"Dear me," Mr. Fentolin said, "this is really very unreasonable of
+you! If you have heard of me, Mr. Dunster, you ought to understand
+that notwithstanding my unfortunate physical trouble, I am a person
+of consequence and position in this county. I am a magistrate,
+ex-high sheriff, and a great land-owner here. I think I may say
+without boasting that I represent one of the most ancient families
+in this country. Why, therefore, should you treat me as though it
+were to my interest to inveigle you under my roof and keep you there
+for some guilty purpose? Cannot you understand that it is for your
+own good I hesitate to part with you?"
+
+"I understand nothing of the sort," Mr. Dunster exclaimed angrily.
+"Let us bring this nonsense to an end. I want my clothes, and if
+you won't lend me a car or a trap, I'll walk to the nearest railway
+station."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head.
+
+"I am quite sure," he said, "that you are not in a position to
+travel. Even in the dining-room just now I heard a disturbance for
+which I was told that you were responsible."
+
+"I simply insisted upon having my clothes," Mr. Dunster explained.
+"Your servant refused to fetch them. Perhaps I lost my temper.
+If so, I am sorry. I am not used to being thwarted."
+
+"A few days' rest--" Mr. Fentolin began.
+
+"A few days' rest be hanged!" Mr. Dunster interrupted fiercely.
+"Listen, Mr. Fentolin," he added, with the air of one making a last
+effort to preserve his temper, "the mission with which I am charged
+is one of greater importance than you can imagine. So much depends
+upon it that my own life, if that is in danger, would be a mere
+trifle in comparison with the issues involved. If I am not allowed
+to continue upon my journey at once, the consequences may be more
+serious than I can tell you, to you and yours, to your own country.
+There!--I am telling you a great deal, but I want you to understand
+that I am in earnest. I have a mission which I must perform, and
+which I must perform quickly."
+
+"You are very mysterious," Mr. Fentolin murmured.
+
+"I will leave nothing to chance," Mr. Dunster continued. "Send
+this man who seems to have constituted himself my jailer out of
+earshot, and I will tell you even more."
+
+Mr. Fentolin turned to Meekins.
+
+"You can leave the room for a moment," he ordered. "Wait upon the
+threshold."
+
+Meekins very unwillingly turned to obey.
+
+"You will excuse me, sir," he objected doubtfully, "but I am not at
+all sure that he is safe."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled faintly.
+
+"You need have no fear, Meekins," he declared. "I am quite sure
+that you are mistaken. I think that Mr. Dunster is incapable of
+any act of violence towards a person in my unfortunate position.
+I am willing to trust myself with him--perfectly willing, Meekins."
+
+Meekins, with ponderous footsteps, left the room and closed the door
+behind him. Mr. Fentolin leaned a little forward in his chair. It
+seemed as though he were on springs. The fingers of his right hand
+had disappeared in the pocket of his black velvet dinner-coat. He
+was certainly prepared for all emergencies.
+
+"Now, Mr. Dunster," he said softly, "you can speak to me without
+reserve."
+
+Mr. Dunster dropped his voice. His tone became one of fierce
+eagerness.
+
+"Look here," he exclaimed, "I don't think you ought to force me to
+give myself away like this, but, after all, you are an Englishman,
+with a stake in your country, and I presume you don't want her to
+take a back seat for the next few generations. Listen here. It's
+to save your country that I want to get to The Hague without a
+second's delay. I tell you that if I don't get there, if the message
+I convey doesn't reach its destination, you may find an agreement
+signed between certain Powers which will mean the greatest diplomatic
+humiliation which Great Britain has ever known. Aye, and more than
+that!" Mr. Dunster continued. "It may be that the bogey you've been
+setting before yourself for all these years may trot out into life,
+and you may find St. David's Hall a barrack for German soldiers
+before many months have passed."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head in gentle disbelief.
+
+"You are speaking to one," he declared, "who knows more of the
+political situation than you imagine. In my younger days I was in
+the Foreign Office. Since my unfortunate accident I have preserved
+the keenest interest in politics. I tell you frankly that I do not
+believe you. As the Powers are grouped at present, I do not believe
+in the possibility of a successful invasion of this country."
+
+"Perhaps not," Mr. Dunster replied eagerly, "but the grouping of
+the Powers as it has existed during the last few years is on the
+eve of a great change. I cannot take you wholly into my confidence.
+I can only give you my word of honour as a friend to your country
+that the message I carry is her only salvation. Having told you as
+much as that, I do not think I am asking too much if I ask you for
+my clothes and dressing-case, and for the fastest motor-car you can
+furnish me with. I guess I can get from here to Yarmouth, and from
+there I can charter something which will take me to the other side."
+
+Mr. Fentolin raised the little gold whistle to his lips and blew it
+very softly. Meekins at once entered, closing the door behind him.
+He moved silently to the side of the man who had risen now from the
+bed, and who was standing with his hand grasping the post and his
+eyes fixed upon Mr. Fentolin, as though awaiting his answer.
+
+"Our conversation," the latter said calmly, "has reached a point,
+Mr. Dunster, at which I think we may leave it for the moment. You
+have told me some very surprising things. I perceive that you are
+a more interesting visitor even than I had thought."
+
+He raised his left hand, and Meekins, who seemed to have been
+waiting for some signal of the sort, suddenly, with a movement of
+his knee and right arm, flung Dunster hack upon the bed. The man
+opened his mouth to shout, but already, with lightning-like
+dexterity, his assailant had inserted a gag between his teeth.
+Treating his struggles as the struggles of a baby, Meekins next
+proceeded to secure his wrists with handcuffs. He then held his
+feet together while he quietly wound a coil of cord around them.
+Mr. Fentolin watched the proceedings from his chair with an air of
+pleased and critical interest.
+
+"Very well done, Meekins--very neatly done, indeed!" he exclaimed.
+"As I was saying, Mr. Dunster," he continued, turning his chair,
+"our conversation has reached a point at which I think we may
+safely leave it for a time. We will discuss these matters again.
+Your pretext of a political mission is, of course, an absurd one,
+but fortunately you have fallen into good hands. Take good care of
+Mr. Dunster, Meekins. I can see that he is a very important
+personage. We must be careful not to lose sight of him."
+
+Mr. Fentolin steered his chair to the door, opened it, and passed
+out. On the landing he blew his whistle; the lift almost immediately
+ascended. A moment or two later he glided into the dining-room. The
+three men were still seated around the table. A decanter of wine,
+almost empty, was before Doctor Sarson, whose pallid cheeks, however,
+were as yet unflushed.
+
+"At last, my dear guest," Mr. Fentolin exclaimed, turning to Hamel,
+"I am able to return to you. If you will drink no more wine, let
+us have our coffee in the library, you and I. I want to talk to
+you about the Tower."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+Mr. Fentolin led the way to a delightful little corner of his
+library, where before the open grate, recently piled with hissing
+logs, an easy chair had been drawn. He wheeled himself up to the
+other side of the hearthrug and leaned back with a little air of
+exhaustion. The butler, who seemed to have appeared unsummoned
+from somewhere among the shadows, served coffee and poured some
+old brandy into large and wonderfully thin glasses.
+
+"Why my house should be turned into an asylum to gratify the
+hospitable instincts of my young nephew, I cannot imagine," Mr.
+Fentolin grumbled. "A most extraordinary person, our visitor,
+I can assure you. Quite violent, too, he was at first."
+
+"Have you had any outside advice about his condition?" Hamel
+inquired.
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced across those few feet of space and looked at
+Hamel with swift suspicion.
+
+"Why should I?" he asked. "Doctor Sarson is fully qualified, and
+the case seems to present no unusual characteristics."
+
+Hamel sipped his brandy thoughtfully.
+
+"I don't know why I suggested it," he admitted. "I only thought
+that an outside doctor might help you to get rid of the fellow."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"After all," he said, "the matter is of no real consequence. Doctor
+Sarson assures me that we shall be able to send him on his way very
+shortly. In the meantime, Mr. Hamel, what about the Tower?"
+
+"What about it?" Hamel asked, selecting a cigar from the box which
+had been pushed to his side. "I am sure I haven't any wish to
+inconvenience you."
+
+"I will be quite frank," Mr. Fentolin declared. "I do not dispute
+your right for a moment. On the other hand, my few hours daily down
+there have become a habit with me. I do not wish to give them up.
+Stay here with us, Mr. Hamel. You will be doing us a great kindness.
+My nephew and niece have too little congenial society. Make up your
+mind to give us a fortnight of your time, and I can assure you that
+we will do our best to make yours a pleasant stay."
+
+Hamel was a little taken aback.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin," he said, "I couldn't think of accepting your
+hospitality to such an extent. My idea in coming here was simply
+to fulfil an old promise to my father and to rough it at the Tower
+for a week or so, and when that was over, I don't suppose I should
+ever be likely to come back again. You had better let me carry out
+that plan, and afterwards the place shall be entirely at your
+disposal."
+
+"You don't quite understand," Mr. Fentolin persisted, a little
+irritably. "I sit there every morning. I want, for instance, to
+be there to-morrow morning, and the next morning, and the morning
+afterwards, to finish a little seascape I have commenced. Nowhere
+else will do. Call it a whim or what you will I have begun the
+picture, and I want to finish it."
+
+"Well, you can sit there all right," Hamel assured him. "I shall
+be out playing golf or fishing. I shall do nothing but sleep there."
+
+"And very uncomfortable you will be," Mr. Fentolin pointed out.
+"You have no servant, I understand, and there is no one in the
+village fit to look after you. Think of my thirty-nine empty rooms,
+my books here, my gardens, my motor-cars, my young people, entirely
+at your service. You can have a suite to yourself. You can
+disappear when you like. To all effects and purposes you will be
+the master of St. David's Hall. Be reasonable. Don't you think,
+now, that you can spend a fortnight more pleasantly under such
+circumstances than by playing the misanthrope down at the Tower?"
+
+"Please don't think," Hamel begged, "that I don't appreciate your
+hospitality. I should feel uncomfortable, however, if I paid you
+a visit of the length you have suggested. Come, I don't see," he
+added, "why my occupation of the Tower should interfere with you.
+I should be away from it by about nine or ten o'clock every morning.
+I should probably only sleep there. Can't you accept the use of
+it all the rest of the time? I can assure you that you will be
+welcome to come and go as though it were entirely your own."
+
+Mr. Fentolin had lit a cigarette and was watching the blue smoke
+curl upwards to the ceiling.
+
+"You're an obstinate man, Mr. Hamel," he sighed, "but I suppose
+you must have your own way. By-the-by, you would only need to use
+the up-stairs room and the sitting-room. You will not need the
+outhouse--rather more than an outhouse, though isn't it? I mean
+the shed which leads out from the kitchen, where the lifeboat used
+to be kept?"
+
+"I don't think I shall need that," Hamel admitted, a little
+hesitatingly.
+
+"To tell you the truth," Mr. Fentolin continued, "among my other
+hobbies I have done a little inventing. I work sometimes at a
+model there. It is foolish, perhaps, but I wish no one to see it.
+Do you mind if I keep the keys of the place?"
+
+"Not in the least," Hamel replied. "Tell me, what direction do your
+inventions take, Mr. Fentolin?"
+
+"Before you go," Mr. Fentolin promised, "I will show you my little
+model at work. Until then we will not talk of it. Now come, be
+frank with me. Shall we exchange ideas for a little time? Will you
+talk of books? They are my daily friends. I have thousands of them,
+beloved companions on every side. Or will you talk of politics or
+travel? Or would you rather be frivolous with my niece and nephew?
+That, I think, is Esther playing."
+
+"To be quite frank," Hamel declared bluntly, "I should like to talk
+to your niece."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled as though amused. His amusement, however,
+was perfectly good-natured.
+
+"If you will open this door," he said, "you will see another one
+exactly opposite to you. That is the drawing-room. You will find
+Esther there. Before you go, will you pass me the Quarterly Review?
+Thank you."
+
+Hamel crossed the hail, opened the door of the room to which he
+had been directed, and made his way towards the piano. Esther was
+there, playing softly to herself with eyes half closed. He came
+and stood by her side, and she stopped abruptly. Her eyes
+questioned him. Then her fingers stole once more over the keys,
+more softly still.
+
+"I have just left your uncle," Hamel said. "He told me that I might
+come in here."
+
+"Yes?" she murmured.
+
+"He was very hospitable," Hamel continued. "He wanted me to remain
+here as a guest and not go to the Tower at all."
+
+"And you?"
+
+"I am going to the Tower," he said. "I am going there to-morrow
+or the day after."
+
+The music swelled beneath her fingers.
+
+"For how long?"
+
+"For a week or so. I am just giving your uncle time to clear out
+his belongings. I am leaving him the outhouse."
+
+"He asked you to leave him that?" she whispered.
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"You are not going in there at all?"
+
+"Not at all."
+
+Again she played a little more loudly for a few moments. Then the
+music died away once more.
+
+"What reason did he give for keeping possession of that?"
+
+"Another hobby," Hamel replied. "He is an inventor, it seems. He
+has the model of something there; he would not tell me what."
+
+She shivered a little, and her music drifted away. She bent over
+the keys, her face hidden from him.
+
+"You will not go away just yet?" she asked softly. "You are going
+to stay for a few days, at any rate?"
+
+"Without a doubt," he assured her. "I am altogether my own master."
+
+"Thank God," she murmured.
+
+He leaned with his elbow against the top of the piano, looking down
+at her. Since dinnertime she had fastened a large red rose in the
+front of her gown.
+
+"Do you know that this is all rather mysterious?" he said calmly.
+
+"What is mysterious?" she demanded.
+
+"The atmosphere of the place: your uncle's queer aversion to my
+having the Tower; your visitor up-stairs, who fights with the
+servants while we are at dinner; your uncle himself, whose will
+seems to be law not only to you but to your brother, who must be
+of age, I should think, and who seems to have plenty of spirit."
+
+"We live here, both of us," she told him. "He is our guardian."
+
+"Naturally," Hamel replied, "and yet, it may have been my fancy, of
+course, but at dinnertime I seemed to get a queer impression."
+
+"Tell it me?" she insisted, her fingers breaking suddenly into a
+livelier melody. "Tell it me at once? You were there all the time.
+I could see you watching. Tell me what you thought?"
+
+She had turned her head now, and her eyes were fixed upon his. They
+were large and soft, capable, he knew, of infinite expression. Yet
+at that moment the light that shone from them was simply one of fear,
+half curious, half shrinking.
+
+"My impression," he said, "was that both of you disliked and feared
+Mr. Fentolin, yet for some reason or other that you were his abject
+slaves."
+
+Her fingers seemed suddenly inspired with diabolical strength and
+energy. Strange chords crashed and broke beneath them. She played
+some unfamiliar music with tense and fierce energy. Suddenly she
+paused and rose to her feet.
+
+"Come out on to the terrace," she invited. "You are not afraid of
+cold?"
+
+He followed her without a word. She opened the French windows, and
+they stepped out on to the long, broad stone promenade. The night
+was dark, and there was little to be seen. The light was burning
+at the entrance to the waterway; a few lights were twinkling from
+the village. The soft moaning of the sea was distinctly audible.
+She moved to the edge of the palisading. He followed her closely.
+
+"You are right, Mr. Hamel," she said. "I think that I am more
+afraid of him than any woman ever was of any man in this world."
+
+"Then why do you live here?" he protested. "You must have other
+relations to whom you could go. And your brother--why doesn't
+he do something--go into one of the professions? He could surely
+leave easily enough?"
+
+"I will tell you a secret," she answered calmly. "Perhaps it will
+help you to understand. You know my uncle's condition. You know
+that it was the result of an accident?"
+
+"I have heard so," he replied gravely.
+
+She clutched at his arm.
+
+"Come," she said.
+
+Side by side they walked the entire length of the terrace. When
+they reached the corner, they were met with a fierce gust of wind.
+She battled along, and he followed her. They were looking inland
+now. There were no lights visible--nothing but dark, chaotic
+emptiness. From somewhere below him he could hear the wind in the
+tree-tops.
+
+"This way," she directed. "Be careful."
+
+They walked to the very edge of the palisading. It was scarcely
+more than a couple of feet high. She pointed downwards.
+
+"Can you see?" she whispered.
+
+By degrees his eyes faintly penetrated the darkness. It was as
+though they were looking down a precipice. The descent was perfectly
+sheer for nearly a hundred feet. At the bottom were the pine trees.
+
+"Come here again in the morning," she whispered. "You will see then.
+I brought you here to show you the place. It was here that the
+accident happened."
+
+"What accident?"
+
+"Mr. Fentolin's," she continued. "It was here that he went over.
+He was picked up with both his legs broken. They never thought that
+he would live."
+
+Hamel shivered a little. As his eyes grew accustomed to the
+darkness, he saw more distinctly than ever the sheer fall, the tops
+of the bending trees below.
+
+"What a horrible thing!" he exclaimed.
+
+"It was more horrible than you know," she continued, dropping her
+voice a little, almost whispering in his ear. "I do not know why
+I tell you this--you, a stranger--but if I do not tell some one,
+I think that the memory of it will drive me mad. It was no accident
+at all. Mr. Fentolin was thrown over!"
+
+"By whom?" he asked.
+
+She clung to his arm for a moment.
+
+"Ah, don't ask me!" she begged. "No one knows. My uncle gave out,
+as soon as he was conscious, that it was an accident."
+
+"That, at any rate, was fine of him," Hamel declared.
+
+She shivered.
+
+"He was proud, at least, of our family name. Whatever credit he
+deserves for it, he must have. It was owing to that accident that
+we became his slaves: nothing but that--his absolute slaves, to
+wait upon him, if he would, hand and foot. You see, he has never
+been able to marry. His life was, of course, ruined. So the burden
+came to us. We took it up, little thinking what was in store for us.
+Five years ago we came here to live. Gerald wanted to go into the
+army; I wanted to travel with my mother. Gerald has done all the
+work secretly, but he has never been allowed to pass his examinations.
+I have never left England except to spend two years at the strictest
+boarding-school in Paris, to which I was taken and fetched away by
+one of his creatures. We live here, with the shadow of this thing
+always with us. We are his puppets. If we hesitate to do his
+bidding, he reminds us. So far, we have been his creatures, body
+and soul. Whether it will go on, I cannot say--oh, I cannot say!
+It is bad for us, but--there is mother, too. He makes her life a
+perfect hell!"
+
+A roar of wind came booming once more across the marshes, bending
+the trees which grew so thickly beneath them and which ascended
+precipitately to the back of the house. The French windows behind
+rattled. She looked around nervously.
+
+"I am afraid of him all the time," she murmured. "He seems to
+overhear everything--he or his creatures. Listen!"
+
+They were silent for several moments. He whispered in her ear so
+closely that through the darkness he could, see the fire in her
+eyes.
+
+"You are telling me half," he said. "Tell me everything. Who
+threw your uncle over the parapet?"
+
+She stood by his side, motionless and trembling.
+
+"It was the passion of a moment," she said at last, speaking
+hoarsely. "I cannot tell you. Listen! Listen!"
+
+"There is no one near," Hamel assured her. "It is the wind which
+shakes the windows. I wish that you would tell me everything. I
+would like to be your friend. Believe me, I have that desire,
+really. There are so many things which I do not understand. That
+it is dull here for you, of course, is natural, but there is
+something more than that. You seem always to fear something. Your
+uncle is a selfish man, naturally, although to look at him he seems
+to have the disposition of an angel. But beyond that, is there
+anything of which you are afraid? You seem all the time to live
+in fear."
+
+She suddenly clutched his hand. There was nothing of affection in
+her touch, and yet he felt a thrill of delight.
+
+"There are strange things which happen here," she whispered, "things
+which neither Gerald nor I understand. Yet they terrify us. I
+think that very soon the end will come. Neither of us can stand
+it very much longer. We have no friends. Somehow or other, he
+seems to manage to keep us always isolated."
+
+"I shall not go away from here," Hamel said firmly, "at present.
+Mind, I am not at all sure that, living this solitary life as you
+do, you have not become a little over-nervous; that you have not
+exaggerated the fear of some things. To me your uncle seems
+merely quixotic and egregiously selfish. However that may be, I
+am going to remain." She clutched once, more at his arm, her
+finger was upraised. They listened together. From somewhere
+behind them came the clear, low wailing of a violin.
+
+"It is Mr. Fentolin," she whispered. "Please come in; let us go
+in at once. He only plays when he is excited. I am afraid! Oh,
+I am afraid that something is going to happen!"
+
+She was already round the corner and on her way to the main terrace.
+He followed her closely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+"Let us follow the example of all great golfers," Hamel said. "Let
+us for this morning, at any rate, imagine that your whole world is
+encompassed within these eighteen holes. We have been sent here in
+a moment of good humour by your tyrant uncle. The sun shines, and
+the wind is from the west. Why not?"
+
+"That is all very well for you," she retorted, smiling, "but I have
+topped my drive."
+
+"Purely an incident," he assured her. "The vicissitudes of the game
+do not enter into the question. I have driven a ball far above my
+usual form, but I am not gloating over it. I prefer to remember
+only that I am going to spend the next two hours with you."
+
+She played her shot, and they walked for a little way together.
+She was suddenly silent.
+
+"Do you know," she said finally, just a little gravely, "I am not
+at all used to speeches of this sort."
+
+"Then you ought to be," he declared. "Nothing but the lonely life
+you have been living has kept you from hearing them continually."
+
+She laughed a little at the impotence of her rebuff and paused for
+a moment to make her next shot. Hamel, standing a little on one
+side, watched her appraisingly. Her short, grey tweed skirt was
+obviously the handiwork of an accomplished tailor. Her grey
+stockings and suede shoes were immaculate and showed a care for her
+appearance which pleased him. Her swing, too, revealed a grace,
+the grace of long arms and a supple body, at which previously he
+had only guessed. The sunshine seemed to have brought out a copper
+tinge from her abundant brown hair.
+
+"Do you know," he remarked, "I think I am beginning to like your
+uncle. Great idea of his, sending us off here directly after
+breakfast."
+
+Her face darkened for a moment, and he realised his error. The
+same thought, indeed, had been in both their minds. Mr. Fentolin's
+courteous suggestion had been offered to them almost in the shape
+of a command. It was scarcely possible to escape from the
+reflection that he had desired to rid himself of their presence for
+the morning.
+
+"Of course," he went on, "I knew that these links were good--quite
+famous, aren't they?"
+
+"I have played on so few others," she told him. "I learned my golf
+here with King, the professional."
+
+He took off his cap and handed it to his caddy. He himself was
+beginning already to look younger. The long blue waves came
+rippling up the creeks. The salt wind, soft with sunshine, blew
+in their faces. The marshes on the landward side were mauve with
+lavender blossom. In the distance, the red-tiled cottages nestled
+deep among a background of green trees and rising fields.
+
+"This indeed is a land of peace," he declared. "If I hadn't to
+give you quite so many strokes, I should be really enjoying myself."
+
+"You don't play like a man who has been living abroad for a great
+many years," she remarked. "Tell me about some of the places you
+have visited?"
+
+"Don't let us talk seriously," he begged. "I'll tell you of them
+but let it be later on. This morning I feel that the spring air
+is getting into my head. I have an absurd desire to talk nonsense."
+
+"So far," she admitted, "you haven't been altogether unsuccessful."
+
+"If you are alluding," he replied, "to the personal remarks I was
+emboldened to make on my way here, I can only say that they were
+excused by their truthfulness."
+
+"I am not at all sure that you have known me long enough to tell
+me what colours suit me," she demurred.
+
+"Then what will you say," he enquired, "if I admire the angle of
+that quill in your hat?"
+
+"Don't do it," she laughed. "If you continue like this, I may have
+to go home."
+
+"You have sent the car away," he reminded her cheerfully. "You
+would simply have to sit upon the balcony and reflect upon your
+wasted morning."
+
+"I decline to talk upon the putting green," she said. "It puts me
+off. If you will stand perfectly quiet and say nothing, I will
+play the like."
+
+They moved off presently to the next teeing ground.
+
+"I don't believe this nonsense is good for our golf," she said.
+
+"It is immensely good for us as human beings," he protested.
+
+They had played the ninth hole and turned for home. On their right
+now was a shimmering stretch of wet sand and a thin line of sea, in
+the distance. The tide, receding, had left little islands of virgin
+sand, grass tufted, the home of countless sea-gulls. A brown-sailed
+fishing boat was racing for the narrow entrance to the tidal way.
+
+"I am beginning to understand what there is about this coast which
+fascinated my father so," he remarked.
+
+"Are you?" she answered gravely. "Years ago I used to love it, but
+not now."
+
+He tried to change the subject, but the gloom had settled upon her
+face once more.
+
+"You don't know what it is like," she went on, as they walked side
+by side after their balls, "to live day and night in fear, with no
+one to talk to--no one, that is to say, who is not under the same
+shadow. Even the voices of the wind and the sea, and the screaming
+of the birds, seem to bring always an evil message. There is
+nothing kindly or hopeful even in the sunshine. At night, when the
+tide comes thundering in as it does so often at this time of the
+year, one is afraid. There is so much to make one afraid!"
+
+She had turned pale again, notwithstanding the sunshine and the
+freshening wind. He laid his hand lightly upon her arm. She
+suffered his touch without appearing to notice it.
+
+"Ah, you mustn't talk like that!" he pleaded. "Do you know what
+you make me feel like?"
+
+She came back from the world of her own unhappy imaginings.
+
+"Really, I forgot myself," she declared, with a little smile.
+"Never mind, it does one good sometimes. One up, are you?
+Henceforth, then, golf--all the rigour of the game, mind."
+
+He fell in with her mood, and their conversation touched only upon
+the game. On the last green he suffered defeat and acknowledged
+it with a little grimace.
+
+"If I might say so, Miss Fentolin," he protested, "you are a little
+too good for your handicap. I used to play a very reasonable
+scratch myself, but I can't give you the strokes."
+
+She smiled.
+
+"Doubtless your long absence abroad," she began slowly, "has
+affected your game."
+
+"I was round in eighty-one," he grumbled.
+
+"You must have travelled in many countries," she continued, "where
+golf was an impossibility."
+
+"Naturally," he admitted. "Let us stay and have lunch and try
+again."
+
+She shook her head with a little sigh of regret.
+
+"You see, the car is waiting," she pointed out. "We are expected
+home. I shan't be a minute putting my clubs away."
+
+They sped swiftly along the level road towards St. David's Hall.
+Far in the distance they saw it, built upon that strange hill,
+with the sunlight flashing in its windows. He looked at it long
+and curiously.
+
+"I think," he said, "that yours is the most extraordinarily
+situated house I have ever seen. Fancy a gigantic mound like that
+in the midst of an absolutely flat marsh."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"There is no other house quite like it in England," she said. "I
+suppose it is really a wonderful place. Have you looked at the
+pictures?"
+
+"Not carefully," he told her.
+
+"You must before you leave," she insisted. "Mr. Fentolin is a great
+judge, and so was his father."
+
+Their road curved a little to the sea, and at its last bend they
+were close to the pebbly ridge on which the Tower was built. He
+touched the electric bell and stopped the car.
+
+"Do let us walk along and have a look at my queer possession once
+more," he begged. "Luncheon, you told me, is not till half-past
+one, and it is a quarter to now."
+
+She hesitated for a moment and then assented. They left the car
+and walked along the little track, bordered with white posts, which
+led on to the ridge. To their right was the village, separated
+from them only by one level stretch of meadowland; in the background,
+the hall. They turned along the raised dike just inside the pebbly
+beach, and she showed her companion the narrow waterway up to the
+village. At its entrance was a tall iron upright, with a ladder
+attached and a great lamp at the top.
+
+"That is to show them the way in at night, isn't it?" he asked.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Yes," she told him. "Mr. Fentolin had it placed there. And yet,"
+she went on, "curiously enough, since it was erected, there have
+been more wrecks than ever."
+
+"It doesn't seem a dangerous beach," he remarked.
+
+She pointed to a spot about fifty yards from the Tower. It was the
+spot to which the woman whom he had met on the day of his arrival
+had pointed.
+
+"You can't see them," she said; "they are always out of sight, even
+when the tide is at the lowest--but there are some hideous sunken
+rocks there. 'The Daggers,' they call them. One or two fishing
+boats have been lost on them, trying to make the village. When Mr.
+Fentolin put up the lamp, every one thought that it would be quite
+safe to try and get in at night. This winter, though, there have
+been three wrecks which no one could understand. It must be
+something in the currents, or a sort of optical illusion, because
+in the last shipwreck one man was saved, and he swore that at the
+time they struck the rock, they were headed straight for the light."
+
+They had reached the Tower now. Hamel became a little absorbed.
+They walked around it, and he tried the front door. He found, as
+he had expected, that it opened readily. He looked around him for
+several moments.
+
+"Your uncle has been here this morning," he remarked quietly.
+
+"Very likely."
+
+"That outhouse," he continued, "must be quite a large place. Have
+you any idea what it is he works upon there?"
+
+"None," she answered.
+
+He looked around him once more.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin has been preparing for my coming," he observed. "I
+see that he has moved a few of his personal things."
+
+She made no reply, only she shivered a little as she stepped back
+into the sunshine.
+
+"I don't believe you like my little domicile," he remarked, as they
+started off homeward.
+
+"I don't," she admitted curtly.
+
+"In the train," he reminded her, "you seemed rather to discourage
+my coming here. Yet last night, after dinner--"
+
+"I was wrong," she interrupted. "I should have said nothing, and
+yet I couldn't help it. I don't suppose it will make any difference."
+
+"Make any difference to what?"
+
+
+"I cannot tell you," she confessed. "Only I have a strange antipathy
+to the place. I don't like it. My uncle sometimes shuts himself up
+here for quite a long time. We have an idea, Gerald and I, that
+things happen here sometimes which no one knows of. When he comes
+back, he is moody and ill-tempered, or else half mad with excitement.
+He isn't always the amiable creature whom you have met. He has the
+face of an angel, but there are times--"
+
+"Well, don't let's talk about him," Hamel begged, as her voice
+faltered. "Now that I am going to stay in the neighbourhood for a
+few days, you must please remember that it is partly your
+responsibility. You are not going to shut yourself up, are you?
+You'll come and play golf again?"
+
+"If he will let me," she promised.
+
+"I think he will let you, right enough," Hamel observed. "Between
+you and me, I rather think he hates having me down at the Tower at
+all. He will encourage anything that takes me away, even as far as
+the Golf Club."
+
+They were approaching the Hall now. She was looking once more as
+she had looked last night. She had lost her colour, her walk was
+no longer buoyant. She had the air of a prisoner who, after a brief
+spell of liberty, enters once more the place of his confinement.
+Gerald came out to meet them as they climbed the stone steps which
+led on to the terrace. He glanced behind as he greeted them, and
+then almost stealthily took a telegram from his pocket.
+
+"This came for you," he remarked, handing it to Hamel. "I met the
+boy bringing it out of the office."
+
+Hamel tore it open, with a word of thanks. Gerald stood in front
+of him as he read.
+
+"If you wouldn't mind putting it away at once," he asked, a little
+uncomfortably. "You see, the telegraph office is in the place, and
+my uncle has a queer rule that every telegram is brought to him
+before it is delivered."
+
+Hamel did not speak for a moment. He was looking at the few words
+scrawled across the pink sheet with a heavy black pencil:
+
+ "Make every enquiry in your neighbourhood
+ for an American, John P. Dunster, entrusted
+ with message of great importance, addressed to
+ Von Dusenberg, The Hague. Is believed to
+ have been in railway accident near Wymondham
+ and to have been taken from inn by young man
+ in motor-car. Suggest that he is being
+ improperly detained."
+
+Hamel crumpled up the telegram and thrust it into his pocket.
+
+"By-the-by," he asked, as they ascended the steps, "what did you
+say the name of this poor fellow was who is lying ill up-stairs?"
+
+Gerald hesitated for a moment. Then he answered as though a species
+of recklessness had seized him.
+
+"He called himself Mr. John P. Dunster."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+Mr. Fentolin, having succeeded in getting rid of his niece and his
+somewhat embarrassing guest for at least two hours, was seated in
+his study, planning out a somewhat strenuous morning, when his
+privacy was invaded by Doctor Sarson.
+
+"Our guest," the latter announced, in his usual cold and measured
+tones, "has sent me to request that you will favour him with an
+interview."
+
+Mr. Fentolin laid his pen deliberately down.
+
+"So soon," he murmured. "Very well, Sarson, I am at his service.
+ Say that I will come at once."
+
+Mr. Fentolin lost no time in paying this suggested visit. Mr. John
+P. Dunster, shaved and clothed, was seated in an easy-chair drawn
+up to the window of his room, smoking what he was forced to confess
+was a very excellent cigar. He turned his head as the door opened,
+and Mr. Fentolin waved his hand pleasantly.
+
+"Really," he declared, "this is most agreeable. I had an idea, Mr.
+Dunster, that I should find you a reasonable person. Men of your
+eminence in their profession usually are."
+
+Mr. Dunster looked at the speaker curiously.
+
+"And what might my profession be, Mr. Fentolin?" he asked. "You
+seem to know a great deal about me."
+
+"It is true," Mr. Fentolin admitted. "I do know a great deal."
+
+Mr. Dunster knocked the ash from his cigar.
+
+"Well," he said, "I have been the hearer of several important
+communications from my side of the Atlantic to England and to the
+Continent, and I have always known that there was a certain amount
+of risk in the business. Once I had an exceedingly narrow shave,"
+he continued reminiscently, "but this is the first time I have ever
+been dead up against it, and I don't mind confessing that you've
+fairly got me puzzled. Who the mischief are you, Mr. Fentolin,
+and what are you interfering about?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled queerly.
+
+"I am what you see," he replied. "I am one of those unfortunate
+human beings who, by reason of their physical misfortunes, are cut
+off from the world of actual life. I have been compelled to seek
+distraction in strange quarters. I have wealth--great wealth I
+suppose I should say; an inordinate curiosity, a talent for intrigue.
+As to the direction in which I carry on my intrigues, or even as to
+the direct interests which I study, that is a matter, Mr. Dunster,
+upon which I shall not gratify your curiosity nor anybody else's.
+But, you see, I am admitting freely that it does interest me to
+interfere in great affairs."
+
+"But how on earth did you get to know about me," Mr. Dunster asked,
+"and my errand? You couldn't possibly have got me here in an
+ordinary way. It was an entire fluke."
+
+"There, you speak with some show of reason. I have a nephew whom
+you have met, who is devoted to me."
+
+"Mr. Gerald Fentolin," Mr. Dunster remarked drily.
+
+"Precisely," Mr. Fentolin declared. "Well, I admit frankly the
+truth of what you say. Your--shall we say capture, was by way of
+being a gigantic fluke. My nephew's instructions simply were to
+travel down by the train to Harwich with you, to endeavour to make
+your acquaintance, to follow you on to your destination, and, if
+any chance to do so occurred, to relieve you of your pocket-book.
+That, however, I never ventured to expect. What really happened
+was, as you have yourself suggested, almost in the nature of a
+miracle. My nephew showed himself to be possessed of gifts which
+were a revelation to me. He not only succeeded in travelling with
+you by the special train, but after its wreck he was clever enough
+to bring you here, instead of delivering you over to the mercies
+of a village doctor. I really cannot find words to express my
+appreciation of my nephew's conduct."
+
+"I could," Mr. Dunster muttered, "very easily!"
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed gently.
+
+"Perhaps our points of view might differ."
+
+"We have spent a very agreeable few minutes in explanations," Mr.
+Dunster continued. "Would it be asking too much if I now suggest
+that we remove the buttons from our foils?"
+
+"Why not?" Mr. Fentolin assented smoothly. "Your first question
+to yourself, under these circumstances, would naturally be: 'What
+does Mr. Fentolin want with me?' I will answer that question for
+you. All that I ask--it is really very little--is the word
+agreed upon."
+
+Mr. Dunster held his cigar a little way off and looked steadfastly
+at his host for a moment. "So you have interpreted my cipher?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin spread out the palms of his hands in a delicate gesture.
+
+"My dear Mr. Dunster," he said, "one of the simplest, I think, that
+was ever strung together. I am somewhat of an authority upon
+ciphers."
+
+"I gather," Mr. Dunster went on, although his cigar was burning
+itself out, "that you have broken the seal of my dispatches?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin closed his eyes as though he had heard a discord.
+
+"Nothing so clumsy as that, I hope," he murmured gently. "I will
+not insult a person of your experience and intelligence by
+enumerating the various ways in which the seal of a dispatch may
+be liquefied. It is quite true that I have read with much pleasure
+the letter which you are carrying from a certain group of very
+distinguished men to a certain person now in The Hague. The letter,
+however, is replaced in its envelope; the seal is still there. You
+need have no fears whatever concerning it. All that I require is
+that one word from you."
+
+"And if I give you that one word?" Mr. Dunster asked.
+
+"If you give it me, as I think you will," Mr. Fentolin replied
+suavely, "I shall then telegraph to my agent, or rather I should
+say to a dear friend of mine who lives at The Hague, and that
+single word will be cabled by him from The Hague to New York."
+
+"And in that case," Mr. Dunster enquired, "what would become of me?"
+
+"You would give us the great pleasure of your company here for a
+very brief visit," Mr. Fentolin answered. "We should, I can assure
+you, do our very best to entertain you."
+
+"And the dispatch which I am carrying to The Hague?"
+
+"Would remain here with you."
+
+Mr. Dunster knocked the ash from his cigar. Without being a man
+of great parts, he was a shrewd person, possessed of an abundant
+stock of common sense. He applied himself, for a few moments, to
+a consideration of this affair, without arriving at any satisfactory
+conclusion.
+
+"Come, Mr. Fentolin," he said at last, "you must really forgive me,
+but I can't see what you're driving at. You are an Englishman, are
+you not?"
+
+"I am an Englishman," Mr. Fentolin confessed "or rather," he added,
+with ghastly humour, "I am half an Englishman."
+
+"You are, I am sure," Mr. Dunster continued, "a person of
+intelligence, a well-read person, a person of perceptions. Surely
+you can see and appreciate the danger with which your country is
+threatened?"
+
+"With regard to political affairs," Mr. Fentolin admitted, "I
+consider myself unusually well posted--in fact, the study of the
+diplomatic methods of the various great Powers is rather a hobby
+of mine."
+
+"Yet," Mr. Dunster persisted, "you do not wish this letter delivered
+to that little conference in The Hague, which you must be aware is
+now sitting practically to determine the fate of your nation?"
+
+"I do not wish," Mr. Fentolin replied, "I do not intend, that that
+letter shall be delivered. Why do you worry about my point of view?
+I may have a dozen reasons. I may believe that it will be good for
+my country to suffer a little chastisement."
+
+"Or you may," Mr. Dunster suggested, glancing keenly at his host,
+"be the paid agent of some foreign Power."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head.
+
+"My means," he pointed out, "should place me above such suspicion.
+My income, I really believe, is rather more than fifty thousand
+pounds a year. I should not enter into these adventures, which
+naturally are not entirely dissociated from a certain amount of risk,
+for the purposes of financial gain."
+
+Mr. Dunster was still mystified.
+
+"Granted that you do so from pure love of adventure," he declared,
+"I still cannot see why you should range yourself on the side of
+your country's enemies.
+
+"In time," Mr. Fentolin observed, "even that may become clear to
+you. At present, well--just that word, if you please?"
+
+Mr. Dunster shook his head.
+
+"No," he decided, "I do not think so. I cannot make up my mind to
+tell you that word."
+
+Mr. Fentolin gave no sign of annoyance or even disappointment. He
+simply sighed. His eyes were full of a gentle sympathy, his face
+indicated a certain amount of concern.
+
+"You distress me," he declared. "Perhaps it is my fault. I have
+not made myself sufficiently clear. The knowledge of that word is
+a necessity to me. Without it I cannot complete my plans. Without
+it I very much fear, dear Mr. Dunster, that your sojourn among us
+may be longer than you have any idea of."
+
+Mr. Dunster laughed a little derisively.
+
+"We've passed those days," he remarked. "I've done my best to enter
+into the humour of this situation, but there are limits. You can't
+keep prisoners in English country houses, nowadays. There are a
+dozen ways of communicating with the outside world, and when that's
+once done, it seems to me that the position of Squire Fentolin of
+St. David's Hall might be a little peculiar."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled, very slightly, still very blandly.
+
+"Alas, my stalwart friend, I fear that you are by nature an optimist!
+I am not a betting man, but I am prepared to bet you a hundred pounds
+to one that you have made your last communication with the outside
+world until I say the word."
+
+Mr. Dunster was obviously plentifully supplied with either courage
+or bravado, for he only laughed.
+
+"Then you had better make up your mind at once, Mr. Fentolin, how
+soon that word is to be spoken, or you may lose your money," he
+remarked.
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat very quietly in his chair.
+
+"You mean, then," he asked, "that you do not intend to humour me in
+this little matter?"
+
+"I do not intend," Mr. Dunster assured him, "to part with that word
+to you or to any one else in the the world. When my message has
+been presented to the person to whom it has been addressed, when my
+trust is discharged, then and then only shall I send that cablegram.
+That moment can only arrive at the end of my journey."
+
+Mr. Fentolin leaned now a little forward in his chair. His face
+was still smooth and expressionless, but there was a queer sort of
+meaning in his words.
+
+"The end of your journey," he said grimly, "may be nearer than you
+think."
+
+"If I am not heard of in The Hague to-morrow at the latest," Mr.
+Dunster pointed out, "remember that before many more hours have
+passed, I shall be searched for, even to the far corners of the
+earth."
+
+"Let me assure you," Mr. Fentolin promised serenely, "that though
+your friends search for you up in the skies or down in the bowels
+of the earth, they will not find you. My hiding-places are not as
+other people's."
+
+Mr. Dunster beat lightly with his square, blunt forefinger upon the
+table which stood by his side.
+
+"That's not the sort of talk I understand," he declared curtly.
+"Let us understand one another, if we can. What is to happen to me,
+if I refuse to give you that word?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin held his hand in front of his eyes, as though to shut
+out some unwelcome vision.
+
+"Dear me," he exclaimed, "how unpleasant! Why should you force me
+to disclose my plans? Be content, dear Mr. Dunster, with the
+knowledge of this one fact: we cannot part with you. I have thought
+it over from every point of view, and I have come to that conclusion;
+always presuming," he went on, "that the knowledge of that little
+word of which we have spoken remains in its secret chamber of your
+memory."
+
+Mr. Dunster smoked in silence for a few minutes.
+
+"I am very comfortable here," he remarked.
+
+"You delight me," Mr. Fentolin murmured.
+
+"Your cook," Mr. Dunster continued, "has won my heartfelt
+appreciation. Your cigars and wines are fit for any nobleman.
+Perhaps, after all, this little rest is good for me."
+
+Mr. Fentolin listened attentively.
+
+"Do not forget," he said, "that there is always a limit fixed,
+whether it be one day, two days, or three days."
+
+"A limit to your complacence, I presume?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin assented.
+
+"Obviously, then," Mr. Dunster concluded, "you wish those who sent
+me to believe that my message has been delivered. Yet there I must
+confess that you puzzle me. What I cannot see is, to put it bluntly,
+where you come in. Any one of the countries represented at this
+little conference would only be the gainers by the miscarriage of
+my message, which is, without doubt, so far as they are concerned,
+of a distasteful nature. Your own country alone could be the
+sufferer. Now what interest in the world, then, is there left--what
+interest in the world can you possibly represent--which can be the
+gainer by your present action?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's eyes grew suddenly a little brighter. There was a
+light upon his face strange to witness.
+
+"The power which is to be the gainer," he said quietly, "is the
+power encompassed by these walls,"
+
+He touched his chest; his long, slim fingers were folded upon it.
+
+"When I meet a man whom I like," he continued softly, "I take him
+into my confidence. Picture me, if you will, as a kind of Puck.
+Haven't you heard that with the decay of the body comes sometimes
+a malignant growth in the brain; a Caliban-like desire for evil to
+fall upon the world; a desire to escape from the loneliness of
+suffering, the isolation of black misery?"
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster let his cigar burn out. He looked
+steadfastly at this strange little figure whose chair had
+imperceptibly moved a little nearer to his.
+
+"You know what the withholding of this message you carry may mean,"
+Mr. Fentolin proceeded. "You come here, bearing to Europe the word
+of a great people, a people whose voice is powerful enough even to
+still the gathering furies. I have read your ciphered message. It
+is what I feared. It is my will, mine--Miles Fentolin's--that
+that message be not delivered."
+
+"I wonder," Mr. Dunster muttered under his breath, "whether you are
+in earnest."
+
+"In your heart," Mr. Fentolin told him, "you know that I am. I can
+see the truth in your face. Now, for the first time, you begin to
+understand."
+
+"To a certain extent," Mr. Dunster admitted. "Where I am still in
+the dark, however, is why you should expect that I should become
+your confederate. It is true that by holding me up and obstructing
+my message, you may bring about the evil you seek, but unless that
+word is cabled back to New York, and my senders believe that my
+message has been delivered, there can be no certainty. What has
+been trusted to me as the safest means of transmission, might, in
+an emergency, be committed to a cable."
+
+"Excellent reasoning," Fentolin agreed. "For the very reasons you
+name that word will be given."
+
+Mr. Dunster's face was momentarily troubled. There was something in
+the still, cold emphasis of this man's voice which made him shiver.
+
+"Do you think," Mr. Fentolin went on, "that I spend a great fortune
+buying the secrets of the world, that I live from day to day with
+the risk of ignominious detection always hovering about me--do
+you think that I do this and am yet unprepared to run the final risks
+of life and death? Have you ever talked with a murderer, Mr. Dunster?
+Has curiosity ever taken you within the walls of Sing Sing? Have you
+sat within the cell of a doomed man and felt the thrill of his touch,
+of his close presence? Well, I will not ask you those questions. I
+will simply tell you that you are talking to one now."
+
+Mr. Dunster had forgotten his extinct cigar. He found it difficult
+to remove his eyes from Mr. Fentolin's face. He was half fascinated,
+half stirred with a vague, mysterious fear. Underneath these wild
+words ran always that hard note of truth.
+
+"You seem to be in earnest," he muttered.
+
+"I am," Mr. Fentolin assured him quietly. "I have more than once
+been instrumental in bringing about the death of those who have
+crossed my purposes. I plead guilty to the weakness of Nero.
+Suffering and death are things of joy to me. There!"
+
+"I am not sure," Mr. Dunster said slowly, "that I ought not to
+wring your neck."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled. His chair receded an inch or two. There was
+never a time when his expression had seemed more seraphic.
+
+"There is no emergency of that sort," he remarked, "for which I am
+not prepared."
+
+His little revolver gleamed for a minute beneath his cuff. He
+backed his chair slowly and with wonderful skill towards the door.
+
+"We will fix the period of your probation, Mr. Dunster, at--say,
+twenty-four hours," he decided. "Please make yourself until then
+entirely at home. My cook, my cellar, my cigar cabinets, are at
+your disposal. If some happy impulse," he concluded, "should show
+you the only reasonable course by dinnertime, it would give me the
+utmost pleasure to have you join us at that meal. I can promise
+you a cheque beneath your plate which even you might think worth
+considering, wine in your glass which kings might sigh for, cigars
+by your side which even your Mr. Pierpont Morgan could not buy.
+Au revoir!"
+
+The door opened and closed. Mr. Dunster sat staring into the open
+space like a man still a little dazed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+The beautiful but somewhat austere front of St. David's Hall seemed,
+in a sense, transformed, as Hamel and his companion climbed the worn
+grey steps which led on to the broad sweep of terrace. Evidently
+visitors had recently arrived. A dark, rather good-looking woman,
+with pleasant round face and a ceaseless flow of conversation, was
+chattering away to Mr. Fentolin. By her side stood another woman who
+was a stranger to Hamel--thin, still elegant, with tired, worn face,
+and the shadow of something in her eyes which reminded him at once of
+Esther. She wore a large picture hat and carried a little Pomeranian
+dog under her arm. In the background, an insignificant-looking man
+with grey side-whiskers and spectacles was beaming upon everybody.
+Mr. Fentolin waved his hand and beckoned to Hamel and Esther as they
+somewhat hesitatingly approached.
+
+"This is one of my fortunate mornings, you see, Esther!" he exclaimed,
+smiling. "Lady Saxthorpe has brought her husband over to lunch. Lady
+Saxthorpe," he added, turning to the woman at his side, "let me present
+to you the son of one of the first men to realise the elusive beauty
+of our coast. This is Mr. Hamel, son of Peter Hamel, R.A.--the
+Countess of Saxthorpe."
+
+Lady Saxthorpe, who had been engaged in greeting
+Esther, held out her hand and smiled good-humouredly at Hamel.
+
+"I know your father's work quite well," she declared, "and I don't
+wonder that you have made a pilgrimage here. They tell me that he
+painted nineteen pictures--pictures of importance, that is to say
+--within this little area of ten miles. Do you paint, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"Not at all," Hamel answered.
+
+"Our friend Hamel," Mr. Fentolin intervened, "woos other and sterner
+muses. He fights nature in distant countries, spans her gorges with
+iron bridges, stems the fury of her rivers, and carries to the
+boundary of the world that little twin line of metal which brings
+men like ants to the work-heaps of the universe. My dear Florence,"
+he added, suddenly turning to the woman at his other side, "for the
+moment I had forgotten. You have not met our guest yet. Hamel,
+this is my sister-in-law, Mrs. Seymour Fentolin."
+
+She held out her hand to him, unnaturally thin and white, covered
+with jewels. Again he saw something in her eyes which stirred him
+vaguely.
+
+"It is so nice that you are able to spend a few days with us, Mr.
+Hamel," she said quietly. "I am sorry that I have been too
+indisposed to make your acquaintance earlier."
+
+"And," Mr. Fentolin continued, "you must know my young friend here,
+too. Mr. Hamel--Lord Saxthorpe."
+
+The latter shook hands heartily with the young man.
+
+"I knew your father quite well," he announced. "Queer thing, he
+used to hang out for months at a time at that little shanty on the
+beach there. Hardest work in the world to get him away. He came
+over to dine with us once or twice, but we saw scarcely anything
+of him. I hope his son will not prove so obdurate."
+
+"You are very kind," Hamel murmured.
+
+"Mr. Hamel came into these parts to claim his father's property,"
+Mr. Fentolin said. "However, I have persuaded him to spend a day
+or two up here before he transforms himself into a misanthrope.
+What of his golf, Esther, eh?"
+
+"Mr. Hamel plays very well, indeed," the girl replied.
+
+"Your niece was too good for me," Hamel confessed.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"The politeness of this younger generation," he remarked, "keeps
+the truth sometimes hidden from us. I perceive that I shall not
+be told who won. Lady Saxthorpe, you are fortunate indeed in the
+morning you have chosen for your visit. There is no sun in the
+world like an April sun, and no corner of the earth where it shines
+with such effect as here. Look steadily to the eastward of that
+second dike and you will see the pink light upon the sands, which
+baffled every one until our friend Hamel came and caught it on
+his canvas."
+
+"I do see it," Lady Saxthorpe murmured. "What eyes you have, Mr.
+Fentolin! What perception for colour!"
+
+"Dear lady," Mr. Fentolin said, "I am one of those who benefit by
+the law of compensations. On a morning like this I can spend hours
+merely feasting my eyes upon this prospect, and I can find, if not
+happiness, the next best thing. The world is full of beautiful
+places, but the strange part of it is that beauty has countless
+phases, and each phase differs in some subtle and unexplainable
+manner from all others. Look with me fixedly, dear Lady Saxthorpe.
+Look, indeed, with more than your eyes. Look at that flush of wild
+lavender, where it fades into the sands on one side, and strikes the
+emerald green of that wet seamoss on the other. Look at the liquid
+blue of that tongue of sea which creeps along its bed through the
+yellow sands, through the dark meadowland, which creeps and oozes
+and widens till in an hour's time it will have become a river. Look
+at my sand islands, virgin from the foot of man, the home of
+sea-gulls, the islands of a day. There may be other and more
+beautiful places. There is none quite like this."
+
+"I pity you no longer," Lady Saxthorpe asserted fervently. "The
+eyes of the artist are a finer possession than the limbs of the
+athlete."
+
+The butler announced luncheon, and they all trooped in. Hamel
+found himself next to Lady Saxthorpe.
+
+"Dear Mr. Fentolin has been so kind," she confided to him as they
+took their places. "I came in fear and trembling to ask for a very
+small cheque for my dear brother's diocese. My brother is a
+colonial bishop, you know. Can you imagine what Mr. Fentolin has
+given me?"
+
+Hamel wondered politely. Lady Saxthorpe continued with an air of
+triumph.
+
+"A thousand pounds! Just fancy that--a thousand pounds! And some
+people say he is so difficult," she went on, dropping her voice.
+"Mrs. Hungerford came all the way over from Norwich to beg for the
+infirmary there, and he gave her nothing."
+
+"What was his excuse?" Hamel asked.
+
+"I think he told her that it was against his principles to give to
+hospitals," Lady Saxthorpe replied. "He thinks that they should be
+supported out of the rates."
+
+"Some people have queer ideas of charity," Hamel remarked. "Now I
+am afraid that if I had been Mr. Fentolin, I would have given the
+thousand pounds willingly to a hospital, but not a penny to a
+mission."
+
+Mr. Fentolin looked suddenly down the table. He was some distance
+away, but his hearing was wonderful.
+
+"Ah, my dear Hamel," he said, "believe me, missions are very
+wonderful things. It is only from a very careful study of their
+results that I have brought myself to be a considerable supporter
+of those where I have some personal knowledge of the organisation.
+Hospitals, on the other hand, provide for the poor what they ought
+to be able to provide for themselves. The one thing to avoid in
+the giving away of money is pauperisation. What do you think,
+Florence?"
+
+His sister-in-law, who was seated at the other end of the table,
+looked across at him with a bright but stereotyped smile.
+
+"I agree with you, of course, Miles. I always agree with you. Mr.
+Fentolin has the knack of being right about most things," she
+continued, turning to Lord Saxthorpe. "His judgment is really
+wonderful."
+
+"Wish we could get him to come and sit on the bench sometimes, then,"
+Lord Saxthorpe remarked heartily. "Our neighbours in this part of
+the world are not overburdened with brains. By-the-by," he went on,
+"that reminds me. You haven't got such a thing as a mysterious
+invalid in the house, have you?"
+
+There was a moment's rather curious silence. Mr. Fentolin was
+sitting like a carved figure, with a glass of wine half raised to
+his lips. Gerald had broken off in the middle of a sentence and
+was staring at Lord Saxthorpe. Esther was sitting perfectly still,
+her face grave and calm, her eyes alone full of fear. Lord
+Saxthorpe was not an observant man and he continued, quite
+unconscious of the sensation which his question had aroused.
+
+"Sounds a silly thing to ask you, doesn't it? They're all full of
+it at Wells, though. I sat on the bench this morning and went into
+the police-station for a moment first. Seems they've got a long
+dispatch from Scotland Yard about a missing man who is supposed to
+be in this part of the world. He came down in a special train on
+Tuesday night--the night of the great flood--and his train was
+wrecked at Wymondham. After that he was taken on by some one in a
+motor-car. Colonel Renshaw wanted me to allude to the matter from
+the bench, but it seemed to me that it was an affair entirely for
+the police."
+
+As though suddenly realising the unexpected interest which his
+words had caused, Lord Saxthorpe brought his sentence to a
+conclusion and glanced enquiringly around the table.
+
+"A man could scarcely disappear in a civilised neighbourhood like
+this," Mr. Fentolin remarked quietly, "but there is a certain
+amount of coincidence about your question. May I ask whether it
+was altogether a haphazard one?"
+
+"Absolutely," Lord Saxthorpe declared. "The idea seems to be that
+the fellow was brought to one of the houses in the neighbourhood,
+and we were all rather chaffing one another this morning about it.
+Inspector Yardley--the stout fellow with the beard, you know--was
+just starting off in his dog-cart to make enquiries round the
+neighbourhood. If any one in fiction wants a type of the ridiculous
+detective, there he is, ready-made."
+
+"The coincidence of your question," Mr. Fentolin said smoothly, "is
+certainly a strange one. The mysterious stranger is within our
+gates."
+
+Lady Saxthorpe, who had been out of the conversation for far too
+long, laid down her knife and fork.
+
+"My dear Mr. Fentolin!" she exclaimed. "My dear Mrs. Fentolin!
+This is really most exciting! Do tell us all about it at once. I
+thought that the man was supposed to have been decoyed away in a
+motor-car. Do you know his name and all about him?"
+
+"There are a few minor points," Mr. Fentolin murmured, "such as
+his religious convictions and his size in boots, which I could
+not swear about, but so far as regards his name and his occupation,
+I think I can gratify your curiosity. He is a Mr. John P. Dunster,
+and he appears to be the representative of an American firm of
+bankers, on his way to Germany to conclude a loan."
+
+"God bless my soul!" Lord Saxthorpe exclaimed wonderingly. "The
+fellow is actually here under this roof! But who brought him?
+How did he find his way?"
+
+"Better ask Gerald," Mr. Fentolin replied. "He is the abductor.
+It seems that they both missed the train from Liverpool Street,
+and Mr. Dunster invited Gerald to travel down in his special train.
+Very kind of him, but might have been very unlucky for Gerald.
+As you know, they got smashed up at Wymondham, and Gerald, feeling
+in a way responsible for him, brought him on here; quite properly,
+I think. Sarson has been looking after him, but I am afraid he has
+slight concussion of the brain."
+
+"I shall remember this all my life," Lord Saxthorpe declared
+solemnly, "as one of the most singular coincidences which has ever
+come within my personal knowledge. Perhaps after lunch, Mr.
+Fentolin, you will let some of your people telephone to the
+police-station at Wells? There really is an important enquiry
+respecting this man. I should not be surprised," he added,
+dropping his voice a little for the benefit of the servants,
+"to find that Scotland Yard needed him on their own account."
+
+"In that case," Mr. Fentolin remarked, "he is quite safe, for Sarson
+tells me there is no chance of his being able to travel, at any rate
+for twenty-four hours."
+
+Lady Saxthorpe shivered.
+
+"Aren't you afraid to have him in the house?" she asked, "a man who
+is really and actually wanted by Scotland Yard? When one considers
+that nothing ever happens here except an occasional shipwreck in
+the winter and a flower-show in the summer, it does sound positively
+thrilling. I wonder what he has done."
+
+They discussed the subject of Mr. Dunster's possible iniquities.
+Meanwhile, a young man carrying his hat in his hand had slipped in
+past the servants and was leaning over Mr. Fentolin's chair. He
+laid two or three sheets of paper upon the table and waited while
+his employer glanced them through and dismissed him with a little
+nod.
+
+"My wireless has been busy this morning," Mr. Fentolin remarked.
+"We seem to have collected about forty messages from different
+battleships and cruisers. There must be a whole squadron barely
+thirty miles out."
+
+"You don't really think," Lady Saxthorpe asked, "that there is any
+fear of war, do you, Mr. Fentolin?"
+
+He answered her with a certain amount of gravity. "Who can tell?
+The papers this morning were bad. This conference at The Hague is
+still unexplained. France's attitude in the matter is especially
+mysterious."
+
+"I am a strong supporter of Lord Roberts," Lord Saxthorpe said,
+"and I believe in the vital necessity of some scheme for national
+service. At the same time, I find it hard to believe that a
+successful invasion of this country is within the bounds of
+possibility."
+
+"I quite agree with you, Lord Saxthorpe," Mr. Fentolin declared
+smoothly. "All the same, this Hague Conference is a most mysterious
+affair. The papers this morning are ominously silent about the
+fleet. From the tangle of messages we have picked up, I should say,
+without a doubt, that some form of mobilisation is going on in the
+North Sea. If Lady Saxthorpe thinks it warm enough, shall we take
+our coffee upon the terrace?"
+
+"The terrace, by all means," her ladyship assented, rising from her
+place. "What a wonderful man you are, Mr. Fentolin, with your
+wireless telegraphy, and your telegraph office in the house, and
+telephones. Does it really amuse you to be so modern?"
+
+"To a certain extent, yes," Mr. Fentolin sighed, as he guided his
+chair along the hall. "When my misfortune first came, I used to
+speculate a good deal upon the Stock Exchange. That was really the
+reason I went in for all these modern appliances."
+
+"And now?" she asked. "What use do you make of them now?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled quietly. He looked out sea-ward, beyond the
+sky-line, from whence had come to him, through the clouds, that
+tangle of messages.
+
+"I like to feel," he said, "that the turning wheel of life is not
+altogether out of earshot. I like to dabble just a little in the
+knowledge of these things."
+
+Lord Saxthorpe came strolling up to them.
+
+"You won't forget to telephone about this guest of yours?" he
+asked fussily.
+
+"It is already done," Mr. Fentolin assured him. "My dear sister,
+why so silent?"
+
+Mrs. Fentolin turned slowly towards him. She, too, had been
+standing with her eyes fixed upon the distant sea-line. Her face
+seemed suddenly to have aged, her forced vivacity to have departed.
+Her little Pomeranian rubbed against her feet in vain. Yet at the
+sound of Mr. Fentolin's voice, she seemed to come back to herself
+as though by magic.
+
+"I was looking where you were looking," she declared lightly,
+"just trying to see a little way beyond. So silly, isn't it?
+Chow-Chow, you bad little dog, come and you shall have your dinner."
+
+She strolled off, humming a tune to herself. Lord Saxthorpe watched
+her with a shadow upon his plain, good-humoured face.
+
+"Somehow or other," he remarked quietly, "Mrs. Fentolin never seems
+to have got over the loss of her husband, does she? How long is it
+since he died?"
+
+"Eight years," Mr. Fentolin replied. "It was just six months after
+my own accident."
+
+"I am losing a great deal of sympathy for you, Mr. Fentolin," Lady
+Saxthorpe confessed, coming over to his side. "You have so many
+resources, there is so much in life which you can do. You paint,
+as we all know, exquisitely. They tell me that you play the violin
+like a master. You have unlimited time for reading, and they say
+that you are one of the greatest living authorities upon the
+politics of Europe. Your morning paper must bring you so much that
+is interesting."
+
+"It is true," Mr. Fentolin admitted, "that I have compensations
+which no one can guess at, compensations which appeal to me more as
+time steals on. And yet--"
+
+He stopped short.
+
+"And yet?" Lady Saxthorpe repeated interrogatively.
+
+Mr. Fentolin was watching Gerald drive golf balls from the lawn
+beneath. He pointed downwards.
+
+"I was like that when I was his age," he said quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+Mr. Fentolin remained upon the terrace long after the departure of
+his guests. He had found a sunny corner out of the wind, and he sat
+there with a telescope by his side and a budget of newspapers upon
+his knee. On some pretext or another he had detained all the others
+of the household so that they formed a little court around him.
+Even Hamel, who had said something about a walk, had been induced
+to stop by an appealing glance from Esther. Mr. Fentolin was in one
+of his most loquacious moods. For some reason or other, the visit
+of the Saxthorpes seemed to have excited him. He talked continually,
+with the briefest pauses. Every now and then he gazed steadily
+across the marshes through his telescope.
+
+"Lord Saxthorpe," he remarked, "has, I must confess, greatly
+excited my curiosity as to the identity of our visitor. Such a
+harmless-looking person, he seems, to be causing such a commotion.
+Gerald, don't you feel your responsibility in the matter?"
+
+"Yes, sir, I do!" Gerald replied, with unexpected grimness. "I
+feel my responsibility deeply."
+
+Mr. Fentolin, who was holding the telescope to his eye, touched
+Hamel on the shoulder.
+
+"My young friend," he said, "your eyes are better than mine. You
+see the road there? Look along it, between the white posts, as far
+as you can. What do you make of that black speck?"
+
+Hamel held the telescope to his eye and steadied it upon the little
+tripod stand.
+
+"It looks like a horse and trap," he announced. "Good!" Mr.
+Fentolin declared. "It seemed so to me, but I was not sure. My eyes
+are weak this afternoon. How many people are in the trap?"
+
+"Two," Hamel answered. "I can see them distinctly now. One man is
+driving, another is sitting by his side. They are coming this way."
+
+Mr. Fentolin blew his whistle. Meekins appeared almost directly.
+His master whispered a word in his ear. The man at once departed.
+
+"Let me make use of your eyes once more," Mr. Fentolin begged.
+"About these two men in the trap, Mr. Hamel. Is one of them, by any
+chance, wearing a uniform?"
+
+"They both are," Hamel replied. "The man who is driving is wearing
+a peaked hat. He looks like a police inspector. The man by his side
+is an ordinary policeman."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed gently.
+
+"It is very interesting," he said. "Let us hope that we shall not
+see an arrest under my roof. I should feel it a reflection upon my
+hospitality. I trust, I sincerely trust, that this visit does not
+bode any harm to Mr. John P. Dunster."
+
+Gerald rose impatiently to his feet and swung across the terrace.
+Mr. Fentolin, however, called him back.
+
+"Gerald," he advised, "better not go away. The inspector may desire
+to ask you questions. You will have nothing to conceal. It was a
+natural and delightful impulse of yours to bring the man who had
+befriended you, and who was your companion in that disaster, straight
+to your own home for treatment and care. It was an admirable impulse,
+my boy. You have nothing to be ashamed of."
+
+"Shall I tell him, too--" Gerald began.
+
+"Be careful, Gerald."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's words seemed to be charged with a swift, rapier-like
+note. The boy broke off in his speech. He looked at Hamel and was
+silent.
+
+"Dear me," Mrs. Fentolin murmured, "I am sure there is no need for
+us to talk about this poor man as though anybody had done anything
+wrong in having him here. This, I suppose, must be the Inspector
+Yardley whom Lord Saxthorpe spoke of."
+
+"A very intelligent-looking officer, I am sure," Mr. Fentolin
+remarked. "Gerald, go and meet him, if you please. I should like
+to speak to him out here."
+
+The dog-cart had drawn up at the front door, and the inspector had
+already alighted. Gerald intervened as he was in the act of
+questioning the butler.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin would like to speak to you, inspector," he said, "if
+you will come this way."
+
+The inspector followed Gerald and saluted the little group solemnly.
+Mr. Fentolin held out his hand.
+
+"You got my telephone message, inspector?" he asked.
+
+"We have not received any message that I know of, sir," the inspector
+replied. "I have come over here in accordance with instructions
+received from headquarters--in fact from Scotland Yard."
+
+"Quite so," Mr. Fentolin assented. "You've come over, I presume,
+to make enquiries concerning Mr. John P. Dunster?"
+
+"That is the name of the gentleman, sir."
+
+"I only understood to-day from my friend Lord Saxthorpe," Mr.
+Fentolin continued, "that Mr. Dunster was being enquired about as
+though he had disappeared. My nephew brought him here after the
+railway accident at Wymondham, since when he has been under the
+care of my own physician. I trust that you have nothing serious
+against him?"
+
+"My first duty, sir," the inspector pronounced, "is to see the
+gentleman in question."
+
+"By all means," Mr. Fentolin agreed. "Gerald, will you take the
+inspector up to Mr. Dunster's rooms? Or stop, I will go myself."
+
+Mr. Fentolin started his chair and beckoned the inspector to follow
+him. Meekins, who was waiting inside the hall, escorted them by
+means of the lift to the second floor. They made their way to Mr.
+Dunster's room. Mr. Fentolin knocked softly at the door. It was
+opened by the nurse.
+
+"How is the patient?" Mr. Fentolin enquired.
+
+Doctor Sarson appeared from the interior of the room.
+
+"Still unconscious," he reported. "Otherwise, the symptoms are
+favourable. He is quite unfit," the doctor added, looking steadily
+at the inspector, "to be removed or questioned."
+
+"There is no idea of anything of the sort," Mr. Fentolin explained.
+"It is Inspector Yardley's duty to satisfy himself that Mr. Dunster
+is here. It is necessary for the inspector to see your patient, so
+that he can make his report at headquarters."
+
+Doctor Sarson bowed.
+
+"That is quite simple, sir," he said. "Please step in."
+
+They all entered the room, which was large and handsomely furnished.
+Through the open windows came a gentle current of fresh air. Mr.
+Dunster lay in the midst of all the luxury of fine linen sheets and
+embroidered pillow-cases. The inspector looked at him stolidly.
+
+"Is he asleep?" he asked.
+
+The doctor shook his head.
+
+"It is the third day of his concussion," he whispered. "He is still
+unconscious. He will remain in the same condition for another two
+days. After that he will begin to recover."
+
+Mr. Fentolin touched the inspector on the arm.
+
+"You see his clothing at the foot of the bed," he pointed out.
+"His linen is marked with his name. That is his dressing-case with
+his name painted on it."
+
+"I am quite satisfied, sir," the inspector announced. "I will not
+intrude any further."
+
+They left the room. Mr. Fentolin himself escorted the inspector
+into the library and ordered whisky and cigars.
+
+"I don't know whether I am unreasonably curious," Mr. Fentolin
+remarked, "but is it really true that you have had enquiries from
+Scotland Yard about the poor fellow up-stairs?"
+
+"We had a very important enquiry indeed, sir," the inspector replied.
+"I have instructions to telegraph all I have been able to discover,
+immediately."
+
+"Pardon my putting it plainly," Mr. Fentolin asked, "but is our
+friend a criminal?"
+
+"I wouldn't go so far as that, sir," the inspector answered. "I
+know of no charge against him. I don't know that I have the right
+to say so much," he added, sipping his whisky and soda, "but putting
+two and two together, I should rather come to the conclusion that he
+was a person of some political importance."
+
+"Not a criminal at all?"
+
+"Not as I know of," the inspector assented.
+"That isn't the way I read the enquiries at all."
+
+"You relieve me," Mr. Fentolin declared. "Now what about his
+possessions?"
+
+"There's a man coming down shortly from Scotland Yard," the
+inspector announced, a little gloomily. "My orders were to touch
+nothing, but to locate him."
+
+"Well, you've succeeded so far," Mr. Fentolin remarked. "Here he
+is, and here I think he will stay until some days after your friend
+from Scotland Yard can get here."
+
+"It does seem so, indeed," the inspector agreed. "To me he looks
+terrible ill. But there's one thing sure, he's having all the care
+and attention that's possible. And now, sir, I'll not intrude
+further upon your time. I'll just make my report, and you'll
+probably have a visit from the Scotland Yard man sometime within
+the next few days."
+
+Mr. Fentolin escorted the inspector to his dog-cart, shook hands
+with him, and watched him drive off. Only Mrs. Seymour Fentolin
+remained upon the terrace. He glided over to her side.
+
+"My dear Florence," he asked, "where are the others?"
+
+"Mr. Hamel and Esther have gone for a walk," she answered. "Gerald
+has disappeared somewhere. Has anything--is everything all right?"
+
+"Naturally," Mr. Fentolin replied easily. "All that the inspector
+desired was to see Mr. Dunster. He has seen him. The poor fellow
+was unfortunately unconscious, but our friend will at least be able
+to report that he was in good hands and well cared for."
+
+"Unconscious," Mrs. Fentolin repeated. "I thought that he was
+better."
+
+"One is always subject to those slight relapses in an affair of
+concussion," Mr. Fentolin explained.
+
+Mrs. Fentolin laid down her work and leaned a little towards her
+brother-in-law. Her hand rested upon his. Her voice had fallen
+to a whisper.
+
+"Miles," she said, "forgive me, but are you sure that you are not
+getting a little out of your depth? Remember that there are some
+risks which are not worth while."
+
+"Quite true," he answered. "And there are some risks, my dear
+Florence, which are worth every drop of blood in a man's body, and
+every breath of life. The peace of Europe turns upon that man
+up-stairs. It is worth taking a little risk for, worth a little
+danger. I have made my plans, and I mean to carry them through.
+Tell me, when I was up-stairs, this fellow Hamel--was he talking
+confidentially to Gerald?"
+
+"Not particularly."
+
+"I am not sure that I trust him," Mr. Fentolin continued. "He had
+a telegram yesterday from a man in the Foreign Office, a telegram
+which I did not see. He took the trouble to walk three miles to
+send the reply to it from another office."
+
+"But after all," Mrs. Fentolin protested, "you know who he is. You
+know that he is Peter Hamel's son. He had a definite purpose in
+coming here."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"Quite true," he admitted. "But for that, Mr. Hamel would have
+found a little trouble before now. As it is, he must be watched.
+If any one comes between me and the things for which I am scheming
+to-day, they will risk death."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin sighed. She was watching the figures of Esther and
+Hamel far away in the distance, picking their way across the last
+strip of marshland which lay between them and the sea.
+
+"Miles," she said earnestly, "you take advice from no one. You
+will go your own way, I know. And yet, it seems to me that life
+holds so many compensations for you without your taking these
+terrible risks. I am not thinking of any one else. I am not
+pleading to you for the sake of any one else. I am thinking
+only of yourself. I have had a sort of feeling ever since this
+man was brought into the house, that trouble would come of it. To
+me the trouble seems to be gathering even now."
+
+Mr. Fentolin laughed softly, a little contemptuously.
+
+"Presentiments," he scoffed, "are the excuses of cowards. Don't be
+afraid, Florence. Remember always that I look ahead. Do you think
+that I could stay here contented with what you call my compensations
+--my art, the study of beautiful things, the calm epicureanism of
+the sedate and simple life? You know very well that I could not do
+that. The craving for other things is in my heart and blood. The
+excitement which I cannot have in one way, I must find in another,
+and I think that before many nights have passed, I shall lie on my
+pillow and hear the guns roar, hear the footsteps of the great
+armies of the world moving into battle. It is for that I live,
+Florence."
+
+She took up her knitting again. Her eyes were fixed upon the
+sky-line. Twice she opened her lips, but twice no words came.
+
+"You understand?" he whispered. "You begin to understand, don't
+you?"
+
+She looked at him only for a moment and back at her work.
+
+"I suppose so," she sighed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+In the middle of that night Hamel sat up in bed, awakened with a
+sudden start by some sound, only the faintest echo of which remained
+in his consciousness. His nerves were tingling with a sense of
+excitement. He sat up in bed and listened. Suddenly it came again
+--a long, low moan of pain, stifled at the end as though repressed
+by some outside agency. He leaped from his bed, hurried on a few
+clothes, and stepped out on to the landing. The cry had seemed
+to him to come from the further end of the long corridor--in the
+direction, indeed, of the room where Mr. Dunster lay. He made his
+way there, walking on tiptoe, although his feet fell noiselessly
+upon the thick carpet. A single light was burning from a bracket
+in the wall, insufficient to illuminate the empty spaces, but enough
+to keep him from stumbling. The corridor towards the south end
+gradually widened, terminating in a splendid high window with
+stained glass, a broad seat, and a table. On the right, the end
+room was Mr. Dunster's apartment, and on the left a flight of
+stairs led to the floor above. Hamel stood quite still, listening.
+There was a light in the room, as he could see from under the door,
+but there was no sound of any one moving. Hamel listened intently,
+every sense strained. Then the sound of a stair creaking behind
+diverted his attention. He looked quickly around. Gerald was
+descending. The boy's face was white, and his eyes were filled
+with fear. Hamel stepped softly back from the door and met him at
+the foot of the stairs.
+
+"Did you hear that cry?" he whispered.
+
+Gerald nodded.
+
+"It woke me up. What do you suppose it was?" Hamel shook his head.
+
+"Some one in pain," he replied. "I don't understand it. It came
+from this room."
+
+"You know who sleeps there?" Gerald asked hoarsely.
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"A man with concussion of the brain doesn't cry out like that.
+Besides, did you hear the end of it? It sounded as though some one
+were choking him. Hush!"
+
+They had spoken only in bated breath, but the door of the room
+before which they were standing was suddenly opened. Meekins stood
+there, fully dressed, his dark, heavy face full of somber warning.
+He started a little as he saw the two whispering together. Gerald
+addressed him almost apologetically.
+
+"We both heard the same sound, Meekins. Is any one ill? It sounded
+like some one in pain."
+
+The man hesitated. Then from behind his shoulder came Mr.
+Fentolin's still, soft voice. There was a little click, and Meekins,
+as though obeying an unseen gesture, stepped back. Mr. Fentolin
+glided on to the threshold. He was still dressed. He propelled his
+chair a few yards down the corridor and beckoned them to approach.
+
+"I am so sorry," he said softly, "that you should have been
+disturbed, Mr. Hamel. We have been a little anxious about our
+mysterious guest. Doctor Sarson fetched me an hour ago. He
+discovered that it was necessary to perform a very slight operation,
+merely the extraction of a splinter of wood. It is all over now,
+and I think that he will do very well."
+
+Notwithstanding this very plausible explanation, Hamel was conscious
+of the remains of an uneasiness which he scarcely knew how to put
+into words.
+
+"It was a most distressing cry," he observed doubtfully, "a cry of
+fear as well as of pain."
+
+"Poor fellow!" Mr. Fentolin remarked compassionately. "I am afraid
+that for a moment or two he must have suffered acutely. Doctor
+Sarson is very clever, however, and there is no doubt that what
+he did was for the best. His opinion is that by to-morrow morning
+there will be a marvellous change. Good night, Mr. Hamel. I am
+quite sure that you will not be disturbed again."
+
+Hamel neither felt nor showed any disposition to depart.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin," he said, "I hope that you will not think that I am
+officious or in any way abusing your hospitality, but I cannot help
+suggesting that as Dr. Sarson is purely your household physician,
+the relatives of this man Dunster might be better satisfied if some
+second opinion were called in. Might I suggest that you telephone
+to Norwich for a surgeon?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin showed no signs of displeasure. He was silent for a
+moment, as though considering the matter.
+
+"I am not at all sure, Mr. Hamel, that you are not right," he
+admitted frankly. "I believe that the case is quite a simple one,
+but on the other hand it would perhaps be more satisfactory to have
+an outside opinion. If Mr. Dunster is not conscious in the morning,
+we will telephone to the Norwich Infirmary."
+
+"I think it would be advisable," Hamel agreed.
+
+"Good night!" Mr. Fentolin said once more. "I am sorry that your
+rest has been disturbed."
+
+Hamel, however, still refused to take the hint. His eyes were fixed
+upon that closed door.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin," he asked, "have you any objection to my seeing Mr.
+Dunster?"
+
+There was a moment's intense silence. A sudden light had burned in
+Mr. Fentolin's eyes. His fingers gripped the side of his chair.
+Yet when he spoke there were no signs of anger in his tone. It was
+a marvellous effort of self-control.
+
+"There is no reason, Mr. Hamel," he said, "why your curiosity should
+not be gratified. Knock softly at the door, Gerald."
+
+The boy obeyed. In a moment or two Doctor Sarson appeared on the
+threshold.
+
+"Our guest, Mr. Hamel," Mr. Fentolin explained in a whisper, "has
+been awakened by this poor fellow's cry. He would like to see him
+for a moment."
+
+Doctor Sarson opened the door. They all passed in on tiptoe. The
+doctor led the way towards the bed upon which Mr. Dunster was lying,
+quite still. His head was bandaged, and his eyes closed. His face
+was ghastly. Gerald gave vent to a little muttered exclamation.
+Mr. Fentolin turned to him quickly.
+
+"Gerald!"
+
+The boy stood still, trembling, speechless. Mr. Fentolin's eyes
+were riveted upon him. The doctor was standing, still and dark, a
+motionless image.
+
+"Is he asleep?" Hamel asked.
+
+"He is under the influence of a mild anaesthetic," Doctor Sarson
+explained. "He is doing very well. His case is quite simple. By
+to-morrow morning he will be able to sit up and walk about if he
+wishes to."
+
+Hamel looked steadily at the figure upon the bed. Mr. Dunster's
+breathing was regular, and his eyes were closed, but his colour was
+ghastly.
+
+"He doesn't look like getting up for a good many days to come,"
+Hamel observed.
+
+The doctor led the way towards the door.
+
+"The man has a fine constitution," he said. "I feel sure that if
+you wish you will be able to talk to him to-morrow."
+
+They separated outside in the passage. Mr. Fentolin bade his guest
+a somewhat restrained good night, and Gerald mounted the staircase
+to his room. Hamel, however, had scarcely reached his door before
+Gerald reappeared. He had descended the stair-case at the other
+end of the corridor. He stood for a moment looking down the passage.
+The doors were all closed. Even the light had been extinguished.
+
+"May I come in for a moment, please?" he whispered.
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"With pleasure! Come in and have a cigarette if you will. I shan't
+feel like sleep for some time."
+
+They entered the room, and Gerald threw himself into an easy-chair
+near the window. Hamel wheeled up another chair and produced a box
+of cigarettes.
+
+"Queer thing your dropping across that fellow in the way you did,"
+he remarked. "Just shows how one may disappear from the world
+altogether, and no one be a bit the wiser."
+
+The boy was sitting with folded arms. His expression was one of
+deep gloom.
+
+"I only wish I'd never brought him here," he muttered. "I ought
+to have known better."
+
+Hamel raised his eyebrows. "Isn't he as well off here as anywhere
+else?"
+
+"Do you think that he is?" Gerald demanded, looking across at Hamel.
+
+There was a brief silence.
+
+"We can scarcely do your uncle the injustice," Hamel remarked, "of
+imagining that he can possibly have any reason or any desire to deal
+with that man except as a guest."
+
+"Do you really believe that?" Gerald asked.
+
+Hamel rose to his feet.
+
+"Look here, young man," he said, "this is getting serious. You and
+I are at cross-purposes. If you like, you shall have the truth
+from me."
+
+"Go on."
+
+"I was warned about your uncle before I came down into this part of
+the world," Hamel continued quietly. "I was told that he is a
+dangerous conspirator, a man who sticks at nothing to gain his ends,
+a person altogether out of place in these days. It sounds
+melodramatic, but I had it straight from a friend. Since I have
+been here, I have had a telegram--you brought it to me yourself
+--asking for information about this man Dunster. It was I who wired
+to London that he was here. It was through me that Scotland Yard
+communicated with the police station at Wells, through me that a
+man is to be sent down from London. I didn't come here as a spy
+--don't think that; I was coming here, anyhow. On the other hand,
+I believe that your uncle is playing a dangerous game. I am going
+to have Mr. John P. Dunster put in charge of a Norwich physician
+to-morrow."
+
+"Thank God!" the boy murmured.
+
+"Look here," Hamel continued, "what are you doing in this business,
+anyway? You are old enough to know your own mind and to go your
+own way."
+
+"You say that because you don't know," Gerald declared bitterly.
+
+"In a sense I don't," Hamel admitted, "and yet your sister hinted
+to me only this afternoon that you and she--"
+
+"Oh, I know what she told you!" the boy interrupted. "We've worn
+the chains for the last eight years. They are breaking her.
+They've broken my mother. Sometimes I think they are breaking me.
+But, you know, there comes a time--there comes a time when one
+can't go on. I've seen some strange things here, some that I've
+half understood, some that I haven't understood at all. I've closed
+my eyes. I've kept my promise. I've done his bidding, where ever
+it has led me. But you know there is a time--there is a limit to
+all things. I can't go on. I spied on this man Dunster. I brought
+him here. It is I who am responsible for anything that may happen to
+him. It's the last time!"
+
+Gerald's face was white with pain. Hamel laid his hand upon his
+shoulder.
+
+"My boy," he said, "there are worse things in the world than
+breaking a promise. When you gave it, the conditions which were
+existing at the time made it, perhaps, a right and reasonable
+undertaking, but sometimes the whole of the conditions under which
+a promise was given, change. Then one must have courage enough to
+be false even to one's word."
+
+"Have you talked to my sister like that?" Gerald asked eagerly.
+
+"I have and I will again," Hamel declared. "To-morrow morning I
+leave this house, but before I go I mean to have the affair of this
+man Dunster cleared up. Your uncle will be very angry with me,
+without a doubt. I don't care. But I do want you to trust me, if
+you will, and your sister. I should like to be your friend."
+
+"God knows we need one!" the boy said simply. "Good night!"
+
+Once more the house was quiet. Hamel pushed his window wide open
+and looked out into the night. The air was absolutely still, there
+was no wind. The only sound was the falling of the low waves upon
+the stony beach and the faint scrunching of the pebbles drawn back
+by the ebb. He looked along the row of windows, all dark and silent
+now. A rush of pleasant fancies suddenly chased away the grim
+depression of the last few minutes. Out of all this sordidness and
+mystery there remained at least something in life for him to do. A
+certain aimlessness of purpose which had troubled him during the
+last few months had disappeared. He had found an object in life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+"To-day," Hamel declared, as he stood at the sideboard the following
+morning at breakfast-time and helped himself to bacon and eggs, "I
+am positively going to begin reading. I have a case full of books
+down at the Tower which I haven't unpacked yet."
+
+Esther made a little grimace.
+
+"Look at the sunshine," she said. "There isn't a breath of wind,
+either. I think to-day that I could play from the men's tees."
+
+Hamel sighed as he returned to his place.
+
+"My good intentions are already half dissipated," he admitted.
+
+She laughed.
+
+"How can we attack the other half?" she asked.
+
+Gerald, who was also on his way to the sideboard, suddenly stopped.
+
+"Hullo!" he exclaimed, looking out of the window. "Who's going
+away this morning, I wonder? There's the Rolls-Royce at the door."
+
+Hamel, too, rose once more to his feet. The two exchanged swift
+glances. Moved by a common thought, they both started for the door,
+only to find it suddenly opened before them. Mr. Fentolin glided
+into the room.
+
+"Uncle!" Gerald exclaimed.
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced keenly around the room.
+
+"Good morning, everybody," he said. "My appearance at this hour of
+the morning naturally surprises you. As a matter of fact, I have
+been up for quite a long time. Esther dear, give me some coffee,
+will you, and be sure that it is hot. If any of you want to say
+good-by to Mr. John P. Dunster, you'd better hurry out."
+
+"You mean that he is going?" Hamel asked incredulously.
+
+"He is going," Mr. Fentolin admitted. "I wash my hands of the man.
+He has given us an infinite amount of trouble, has monopolised
+Doctor Sarson when he ought to have been attending upon me--a
+little more hot milk, if you please, Esther--and now, although he
+really is not fit to leave his room, he insists upon hurrying off
+to keep an appointment somewhere on the Continent. The little
+operation we spoke of last night was successful, as Doctor Sarson
+prophesied, and Mr. Dunster was quite conscious and able to sit up
+early this morning. We telephoned at six o'clock to Norwich for a
+surgeon, who is now on his way over here, but he will not wait even
+to see him. What can you do with a man so obstinate!"
+
+Neither Hamel nor Gerald had resumed their places. The former,
+after a moment's hesitation, turned towards the door.
+
+"I think," he said, "that I should like to see the last of Mr.
+Dunster."
+
+"Pray do," Mr. Fentolin begged. "I have said good-by to him myself,
+and all that I hope is that next time you offer a wayfarer the
+hospitality of St. David's Hall, Gerald, he may be a more tractable
+person. This morning I shall give myself a treat. I shall eat an
+old-fashioned English breakfast. Close the door after you, if you
+please, Gerald."
+
+Hamel, with Gerald by his side, hurried out into the hall. Just
+as they crossed the threshold they saw Mr. Dunster, wrapped from
+head to foot in his long ulster, a soft hat upon his head and one
+of Mr. Fentolin's cigars in his mouth, step from the bottom
+stair into the hall and make his way with somewhat uncertain
+footsteps towards the front door. Doctor Sarson walked on one
+side, and Meekins held him by the arm. He glanced towards Gerald
+and his companion and waved the hand which held his cigar.
+
+"So long, my young friend!" he exclaimed. "You see, I've got them
+to let me make a start. Next time we go about the country in a
+saloon car together, I hope we'll have better luck. Say, but I'm
+groggy about the knees!"
+
+"You'd better save your breath," Doctor Sarson advised him grimly.
+"You haven't any to spare now, and you'll want more than you have
+before you get to the end of your journey. Carefully down the
+steps, mind."
+
+They helped him into the car. Hamel and Gerald stood under the
+great stone portico, watching.
+
+"Well, I'm jiggered!" the boy exclaimed, under his breath.
+
+Hamel was watching the proceedings with a puzzled frown. To his
+surprise, neither Doctor Sarson nor Meekins were accompanying the
+departing man.
+
+"He's off, right enough," Hamel declared, as the car glided away.
+"Do you understand it? I don't."
+
+Gerald did not speak for several moments. His eyes were still fixed
+upon the back of the disappearing car. Then he turned towards Hamel.
+
+"There isn't much," he said softly, "that Mr. Fentolin doesn't know.
+If that detective was really on his way here, there wasn't any
+chance of keeping Mr. Dunster to himself. You see, the whole story
+is common property. And yet, there's something about the affair
+that bothers me."
+
+"And me," Hamel admitted, watching the car until it became a speck
+in the distance.
+
+"He was fairly well cornered," Gerald concluded, as they made their
+way back to the dining-room, "but it isn't like him to let go of
+anything so easily."
+
+"So you've seen the last of our guest," Mr. Fentolin remarked, as
+Hamel and Gerald re-entered the dining-room. "A queer fellow--almost
+a new type to me. Dogged and industrious, I should think. He hadn't
+the least right to travel, you know, and I think so long as we had
+taken the trouble to telephone to Norwich, he might have waited to
+see the physician. Sarson was very angry about it, but what can you
+do with these fellows who are never ill? They scarcely know what
+physical disability means. Well, Mr. Hamel, and how are you going
+to amuse yourself to-day?"
+
+"I had thought of commencing some reading I brought with me," Hamel
+replied, "but Miss Esther has challenged me to another game of golf."
+
+"Excellent!" Mr. Fentolin declared. "It is very kind of you indeed,
+Mr. Hamel. It is always a matter of regret for me that society in
+these parts is so restricted. My nephew and niece have little
+opportunity for enjoying themselves. Play golf with Mr. Hamel, by
+all means, my dear child," he continued, turning to his niece. "Make
+the most of this glorious spring weather. And what about you, Gerald?
+What are you doing to-day?"
+
+"I haven't made up my mind yet, sir," the boy replied.
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"Always that lack of initiative," he remarked. "A lack of initiative
+is one of your worst faults, I am afraid, dear Gerald."
+
+The boy looked up quickly. For a moment it seemed as though he were
+about to make a fierce reply. He met Mr. Fentolin's steady gaze,
+however, and the words died away upon his lips.
+
+"I rather thought," he said, "of going into Norwich, if you could
+spare me. Captain Holt has asked me to lunch at the Barracks."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head gently.
+
+"It is most unfortunate," he declared. "I have a commission for
+you later in the day."
+
+Gerald continued his breakfast in silence. He bent over his plate
+so that his face was almost invisible. Mr. Fentolin was peeling a
+peach. A servant entered the room.
+
+"Lieutenant Godfrey, sir," he announced.
+
+They all looked up. A trim, clean-shaven, hard-featured young man
+in naval uniform was standing upon the threshold. He bowed to
+Esther.
+
+"Very sorry to intrude, sir, at this hour of the morning," he said
+briskly. "Lieutenant Godfrey, my name. I am flag lieutenant of
+the Britannia. You can't see her, but she's not fifty miles off at
+this minute. I landed at Sheringham this morning, hired a car and
+made the best of my way here. Message from the Admiral, sir."
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled genially.
+
+"We are delighted to see you, Lieutenant Godfrey," he said. "Have
+some breakfast."
+
+"You are very good, sir," the officer answered. "Business first.
+I'll breakfast afterwards, with pleasure, if I may. The Admiral's
+compliments, and he would take it as a favour if you would haul
+down your wireless for a few days."
+
+"Haul down my wireless," Mr. Fentolin repeated slowly.
+
+"We are doing a lot of manoeuvring within range of you, and likely
+to do a bit more," the young man explained. "You are catching up
+our messages all the time. Of course, we know they're quite safe
+with you, but things get about. As yours is only a private
+installation, we'd like you, if you don't mind, sir, to shut up
+shop for a few days."
+
+Mr. Fentolin seemed puzzled.
+
+"But, my dear sir," he protested, "we are not at war, are we?"
+
+"Not yet," the young officer replied, "but God knows when we shall
+be! We are under sealed orders, anyway, and we don't want any
+risk of our plans leaking out. That's why we want your wireless
+disconnected."
+
+"You need say no more," Mr. Fentolin assured him. "The matter is
+already arranged. Esther, let me present Lieutenant Godfrey--my
+niece, Miss Fentolin; Mr. Gerald Fentolin, my nephew; Mr. Hamel, a
+guest. See that Lieutenant Godfrey has some breakfast, Gerald. I
+will go myself and see my Marconi operator."
+
+"Awfully good of you, sir," the young man declared, "and I am sure
+we are very sorry to trouble you. In a week or two's time you can
+go into business again as much as you like. It's only while we
+are fiddling around here that the Admiral's jumpy about things.
+May my man have a cup of coffee, sir? I'd like to be on the way
+back in a quarter of an hour."
+
+Mr. Fentolin halted his chair by the side of the bell, and rang it.
+
+"Pray make use of my house as your own, sir," he said gravely.
+"From what you leave unsaid, I gather that things are more serious
+than the papers would have us believe. Under those circumstances,
+I need not assure you that any help we can render is entirely yours."
+
+Mr. Fentolin left the room. Lieutenant Godfrey was already
+attacking his breakfast. Gerald leaned towards him eagerly.
+
+"Is there really going to be war?" he demanded.
+
+"Ask those chaps at The Hague," Lieutenant Godfrey answered.
+"Doing their best to freeze us out, or something. All I know is,
+if there's going to be fighting, we are ready for them. By-the-by,
+what have you got wireless telegraphy for here, anyway?"
+
+"It's a fad of my uncle's," Gerald replied. "Since his accident he
+amuses himself in all sorts of queer ways."
+
+Lieutenant Godfrey nodded.
+
+"Poor fellow!" he said. "I heard he was a cripple, or something
+of the sort. Forgive my asking, but--you people are English,
+aren't you?"
+
+"Rather!" Gerald answered. "The Fentolins have lived here for
+hundreds of years. Why do you ask that?"
+
+Lieutenant Godfrey hesitated. He looked, for the moment, scarcely
+at his ease.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," he replied. "The old man was very anxious I
+should find out. You see, a lot of information seems to have got
+over on the other side, and we couldn't think where it had leaked
+out, except through your wireless. However, that isn't likely, of
+course, unless you've got one of these beastly Germans in your
+receiving-room. Now if I can borrow a cigarette, a cigar, or a
+pipe of tobacco--any mortal thing to smoke--I'll be off, if I may.
+The old man turned me out at an unearthly hour this morning, and in
+Sheringham all the shops were closed. Steady on, young fellow," he
+laughed, as Gerald filled his pockets with cigarettes. "Well, here's
+good morning to you, Miss Fentolin. Good morning, sir. How long
+ought it to take me to get to Sheringham?"
+
+"About forty minutes," Gerald told him, "if your car's any good at
+all."
+
+"It isn't much," was the somewhat dubious reply. "However, we'll
+shove along. You in the Service?" he enquired, as they walked down
+the hall together.
+
+"Hope I shall be before long," Gerald answered. "I'm going into the
+army, though."
+
+"Have to hurry up, won't you?"
+
+Gerald sighed.
+
+"It's a little difficult for me. Here's your car. Good luck to you!"
+
+"My excuses to Mr. Fentolin," Lieutenant Godfrey shouted, "and many
+thanks."
+
+He jumped into the automobile and was soon on his way back. Gerald
+watched him until he was nearly out of sight. On the knoll, two of
+the wireless operators were already at work. Mr. Fentolin sat in
+his chair below, watching. The blue sparks were flashing. A message
+was just being delivered. Presently Mr. Fentolin turned his chair,
+and with Meekins by his side, made his way back to the house. He
+passed along the hall and into his study. Gerald, who was on his
+way to the dining-room, heard the ring of the telephone bell and the
+call for the trunk special line. He hesitated for a moment. Then
+he made his way slowly down towards the study and stood outside the
+door, listening. In a moment he heard Mr. Fentolin's clear voice,
+very low yet very penetrating.
+
+"The Mediterranean Fleet will be forty-seven hours before it comes
+together," was the message he heard. "The Channel Fleet will
+manoeuvre off Sheerness, waiting for it. The North Sea Fleet is
+seventeen units under nominal strength."
+
+Gerald turned the handle of the door slowly and entered. Mr.
+Fentolin was just replacing the receiver on its stand. He looked
+up at his nephew, and his eyebrows came together.
+
+"What do you mean by this?" he demanded. "Don't you know that I
+allow no one in here when I am telephoning on the private wire?"
+
+Gerald closed the door behind him and summoned up all his courage.
+
+"It is because I have heard what you were saying over the telephone
+that I am here," he declared. "I want to know to whom you were
+sending that message which you have intercepted outside."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat for a moment in his chair with immovable face.
+Then he pointed to the door, which Gerald had left open behind him.
+
+"Close that door, Gerald."
+
+The boy obeyed. Mr. Fentolin waited until he had turned around
+again.
+
+"Come and stand over here by the side of the table," he directed.
+
+Gerald came without hesitation. He stood before his uncle with
+folded arms. There was something else besides sullenness in his
+face this morning, something which Mr. Fentolin was quick to
+recognise.
+
+"I do not quite understand the nature of your question, Gerald,"
+Mr. Fentolin began. "It is unlike you. You do not seem yourself.
+Is there anything in particular the matter?"
+
+"Only this," Gerald answered firmly. "I don't understand why this
+naval fellow should come here and ask you to close up your wireless
+because secrets have been leaking out, and a few moments afterwards
+you should be picking up a message and telephoning to London
+information which was surely meant to be private. That's all.
+I've come to ask you about it."
+
+"You heard the message, then?"
+
+"I did."
+
+"You listened--at the keyhole?"
+
+"I listened outside," Gerald assented doggedly. "I am glad I
+listened. Do you mind answering my question?"
+
+"Do I mind!" Mr. Fentolin repeated softly. "Really, Gerald, your
+politeness, your consideration, your good manners, astound me. I
+am positively deprived of the power of speech."
+
+"I'll wait here till it comes to you again, then," the boy declared
+bluntly. "I've waited on you hand and foot, done dirty work for
+you, put up with your ill-humours and your tyranny, and never
+grumbled. But there is a limit! You've made a poor sort of
+creature of me, but even the worm turns, you know. When it comes
+to giving away secrets about the movements of our navy at a time
+when we are almost at war, I strike."
+
+"Melodramatic, almost dramatic, but, alas! so inaccurate," Mr.
+Fentolin sighed. "Is this a fit of the heroics, boy, or what has
+come over you? Have you by any chance--forgotten?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's voice seemed suddenly to have grown in volume. His
+eyes dilated, he himself seemed to have grown in size. Gerald
+stepped a little back. He was trembling, but his expression had
+not changed.
+
+"No, I haven't forgotten. There's a great debt we are doing our
+best to pay, but there's such a thing as asking top much, there's
+such a thing as drawing the cords to snapping point. I'm speaking
+for Esther and mother as well as myself. We have been your slaves;
+in a way I suppose we are willing to go on being your slaves. It's
+the burden that Fate has placed around our necks, and we'll go
+through with it. All I want to point out is that there are limits,
+and it seems to me that we are up against them now."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded. He had the air of a man who wishes to be
+reasonable.
+
+"You are very young, my boy," he said, "very young indeed. Perhaps
+that is my fault for not having let you see more of the world. You
+have got some very queer ideas into your head. A little too much
+novel reading lately, eh? I might treat you differently. I might
+laugh at you and send you out of the room. I won't. I'll tell you
+what you ask. I'll explain what you find so mysterious. The person
+to whom I have been speaking is my stockbroker."
+
+"Your stockbroker!" Gerald exclaimed.
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"Mr. Bayliss," he continued, "of the firm of Bayliss, Hundercombe
+& Dunn, Throgmorton Court. Mr. Bayliss is a man of keen
+perceptions. He understands exactly the effect of certain classes
+of news upon the market. The message which I have just sent to him
+is practically common property. It will be in the Daily Mail
+to-morrow morning. The only thing is that I have sent it to him
+just a few minutes sooner than any one else can get it. There is a
+good deal of value in that, Gerald. I do not mind telling you that
+I have made a large fortune through studying the political situation
+and securing advance information upon matters of this sort. That
+fortune some day will probably be yours. It will be you who will
+benefit. Meanwhile, I am enriching myself and doing no one any harm."
+
+"But how do you know," Gerald persisted, "that this message would
+ever have found its way to the Press? It was simply a message from
+one battleship to another. It was not intended to be picked up on
+land. There is no other installation but ours that could have picked
+it up. Besides, it was in code. I know that you have the code, but
+the others haven't."
+
+Mr. Fentolin yawned slightly.
+
+"Ingenious, my dear Gerald, but inaccurate. You do not know that
+the message was in code, and in any case it was liable to be picked
+up by any steamer within the circle. You really do treat me, my boy,
+rather as though I were a weird, mischief-making person with a
+talent for intrigue and crime of every sort. Look at your suspicions
+last night. I believe that you and Mr. Hamel had quite made up your
+minds that I meant evil things for Mr. John P. Dunster. Well, I had
+my chance. You saw him depart."
+
+"What about his papers?"
+
+"I will admit," Mr. Fentolin replied, "that I read his papers. They
+were of no great consequence, however, and he has taken them away
+with him. Mr. Dunster, as a matter of fact, turned out to be
+rather a mare's-nest. Now, come, since you are here, finish
+everything you have to say to me. I am not angry. I am willing to
+listen quite reasonably."
+
+Gerald shook his head.
+
+"Oh, I can't!" he declared bitterly. "You always get the best of it.
+I'll only ask you one more question. Are you having the wireless
+hauled down?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin pointed out of the window. Gerald followed his finger.
+Three men were at work upon the towering spars.
+
+"You see," Mr. Fentolin continued tolerantly, "that I am keeping my
+word to Lieutenant Godfrey. You are suffering from a little too
+much imagination, I am afraid. It is really quite a good fault.
+By-the-by, how do you get on with our friend Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"Very well," the boy replied. "I haven't seen much of him."
+
+"He and Esther are together a great deal, eh?" Mr. Fentolin asked
+quickly.
+
+"They seem to be quite friendly."
+
+"It isn't Mr. Hamel, by any chance, who has been putting these
+ideas into your head?"
+
+"No one has been putting any ideas into my head," Gerald answered
+hotly. "It's simply what I've seen and overheard. It's simply
+what I feel around, the whole atmosphere of the place, the whole
+atmosphere you seem to create around you with these brutes Sarson
+and Meekins; and those white-faced, smooth-tongued Marconi men of
+yours, who can't talk decent English; and the post-office man, who
+can't look you in the face; and Miss Price, who looks as though
+she were one of the creatures, too, of your torture chamber.
+That's all."
+
+Mr. Fentolin waited until he had finished. Then he waved him away.
+
+"Go and take a long walk, Gerald," he advised. "Fresh air is what
+you need, fresh air and a little vigorous exercise. Run along now
+and send Miss Price to me."
+
+Gerald overtook Hamel upon the stairs.
+
+"By this time," the latter remarked, "I suppose that our friend
+Mr. Dunster is upon the sea."
+
+Gerald nodded silently. They passed along the corridor. The door
+of the room which Mr. Dunster had occupied was ajar. As though by
+common consent, they both stopped and looked in. The windows were
+all wide open, the bed freshly made. The nurse was busy collecting
+some medicine bottles and fragments of lint. She looked at them in
+surprise.
+
+"Mr. Dunster has left, sir," she told them.
+
+"We saw him go," Gerald replied.
+
+"Rather a quick recovery, wasn't it, nurse?" Hamel asked.
+
+"It wasn't a recovery at all, sir," the woman declared sharply.
+"He'd no right to have been taken away. It's my opinion Doctor
+Sarson ought to be ashamed of himself to have permitted it."
+
+"They couldn't exactly make a prison of the place, could they?"
+Hamel pointed out. "The man, after all, was only a guest."
+
+"That's as it may be, sir," the nurse replied. "All the same, those
+that won't obey their doctors aren't fit to be allowed about alone.
+That's the way I look at it."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin was passing along the corridor as they issued from
+the room. She started a little as she saw them.
+
+"What have you two been doing in there?" she asked quickly.
+
+"We were just passing," Hamel explained. "We stopped for a moment
+to speak to the nurse."
+
+"Mr. Dunster has gone," she said. "You saw him go, Gerald. You
+saw him, too, didn't you, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"I certainly did," Hamel admitted.
+
+Mrs. Fentolin pointed to the great north window near which they
+were standing, through which the clear sunlight streamed a little
+pitilessly upon her worn face and mass of dyed hair.
+
+"You ought neither of you to be indoors for a minute on a morning
+like this," she declared. "Esther is waiting for you in the car,
+I think, Mr. Hamel."
+
+Gerald passed on up the stairs to his room, but Hamel lingered.
+A curious impulse of pity towards his hostess stirred him. The
+morning sunlight seemed to have suddenly revealed the tragedy of
+her life. She stood there, a tired, worn woman, with the burden
+heavy upon her shoulders.
+
+"Why not come out with Miss Fentolin and me?" he suggested. "We
+could lunch at the Golf Club, out on the balcony. I wish you
+would. Can't you manage it?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Thank you very much," she said. "Mr. Fentolin does not like
+to be left."
+
+Something in the finality of her words seemed to him curiously
+eloquent of her state of mind. She did not move on. She seemed,
+indeed, to have the air of one anxious to say more. In that
+ruthless light, the advantages of her elegant clothes and
+graceful carriage were suddenly stripped away from her. She was
+the abject wreck of a beautiful woman, wizened, prematurely aged.
+Nothing remained but the eyes, which seemed somehow to have their
+message for him.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin is a little peculiar, you know," she went on, her
+voice shaking slightly with the effort she was making to keep it
+low. "He allows Esther so little liberty, she sees so few young
+people of her own age. I do not know why he allows you to be with
+her so much. Be careful, Mr. Hamel."
+
+Her voice seemed suddenly to vibrate with a curious note of
+suppressed fear. Almost as she finished her speech, she passed on.
+Her little gesture bade him remain silent. As she went up the
+stairs, she began to hum scraps of a little French air.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+Hamel sliced his ball at the ninth, and after waiting for a few
+minutes patiently, Esther came to help him look for it. He was
+standing down on the sands, a little apart from the two caddies
+who were beating out various tufts of long grass.
+
+"Where did it go?" she asked.
+
+"I have no idea," he admitted.
+
+"Why don't you help look for it?"
+
+"Searching for balls," he insisted, "is a caddy's occupation. Both
+the caddies are now busy. Let us sit down here. These sand hummocks
+are delightful. It is perfectly sheltered, and the sun is in our
+faces. Golf is an overrated pastime. Let us sit and watch that
+little streak of blue find its way up between the white posts."
+
+She hesitated for a moment.
+
+"We shall lose our place."
+
+"There is no one behind."
+
+She sank on to the little knoll of sand to which he had pointed,
+with a resigned sigh.
+
+"You really are a queer person," she declared. "You have been
+playing golf this morning as though your very life depended upon it.
+You have scarcely missed a shot or spoken a word. And now, all of
+a sudden, you want to sit on a sand hummock and watch the tide."
+
+"I have been silent," he told her, "because I have been thinking."
+
+"That may be truthful," she remarked, "but you wouldn't call it
+polite, would you?"
+
+"The subject of my thoughts is my excuse. I have been thinking of
+you."
+
+For a single moment her eyes seemed to have caught something of that
+sympathetic light with which he was regarding her. Then she looked
+away.
+
+"Was it my mashie shots you were worrying about?" she asked.
+
+"It was not," he replied simply. "It was you--you yourself."
+
+She laughed, not altogether naturally.
+
+"How flattering!" she murmured. "By-the-by, you are rather a
+downright person, aren't you, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"So much so," he admitted, "that I am going to tell you one or two
+things now. I am going to be very frank indeed."
+
+She sat suddenly quite still. Her face was turned from him, but
+for the first time since he had known her there was a slight
+undertone of colour in her cheeks.
+
+"A week ago," he said, "I hadn't the faintest idea of coming into
+Norfolk. I knew about this little shanty of my father's, but I
+had forgotten all about it. I came as the result of a conversation
+I had with a friend who is in the Foreign Office."
+
+She looked at him with startled eyes.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked quickly. "You are Mr. Hamel, aren't
+you?"
+
+"Certainly," he replied. "Not only am I Richard Hamel, mining
+engineer, but I really have all that reading to do I have spoken
+about, and I really was looking for a quiet spot to do it in. It
+is true that I had this part of the world in my mind, but I do not
+think that I should ever have really decided to come here if it
+had not been for my friend in London. He was very interested
+indeed directly I mentioned St. David's Tower. Would you like to
+know what he told me?"
+
+"Yes! Go on, please."
+
+"He told me a little of the history of your uncle, Mr. Fentolin,
+and what he did not tell me at the time, he has since supplemented.
+I suppose," he added, hesitatingly, "that you yourself--"
+
+"Please go on. Please speak as though I knew nothing."
+
+"Well, then," Hamel continued, "he told me that your uncle was at
+one time in the Foreign Office himself. He seemed to have a most
+brilliant career before him when suddenly there was a terrible
+scandal. A political secret--I don't know what it was--had leaked
+out. There were rumours that it had been acquired for a large sum
+of money by a foreign Power. Mr. Fentolin retired to Norfolk,
+pending an investigation. It was just as that time that he met with
+his terrible accident, and the matter was dropped."
+
+"Go on, please," she murmured.
+
+"My friend went on to say that during the last few years Mr. Fentolin
+has once again become an object of some suspicion to the head of our
+Secret Service Department. For a long time they have known that he
+was employing agents abroad, and that he was showing the liveliest
+interest in underground politics. They believed that it was a mere
+hobby, born of his useless condition, a taste ministered to, without
+doubt, by the occupation of his earlier life. Once or twice lately
+they have had reason to change their minds. You know, I dare say,
+in what a terribly disturbed state European affairs are just now.
+Well, my friend had an idea that Mr. Fentolin was showing an
+extraordinary amount of interest in a certain conference which we
+understand is to take place at The Hague. He begged me to come down,
+and to watch your uncle while I was down here, and report to him
+anything that seemed to me noteworthy. Since then I have had a
+message from him concerning the American whom you entertained--Mr.
+John P. Dunster. It appears that he was the bearer of very important
+dispatches for the Continent."
+
+"But he has gone," she said quickly. "Nothing happened to him,
+after all. He went away without a word of complaint. We all saw
+him."
+
+"That is quite true," Hamel admitted. "Mr. Dunster has certainly
+gone. It is rather a coincidence, however, that he should have
+taken his departure just as the enquiries concerning his whereabouts
+had reached such a stage that it had become quite impossible to keep
+him concealed any longer."
+
+She turned a little in her place and looked at him steadfastly.
+
+"Mr. Hamel," she said, "tell me--what of your mission? You have
+had an opportunity of studying my uncle. You have even lived under
+his roof. Tell me what you think."
+
+His face was troubled.
+
+"Miss Fentolin," he said, "I will tell you frankly that up to now
+I have not succeeded in solving the problem of your uncle's
+character. To me personally he has been most courteous. He lives
+apparently a studious and an unselfish life. I have heard him even
+spoken of as a philanthropist. And yet you three--you, your mother,
+and your brother, who are nearest to him, who live in his house and
+under his protection, have the air of passing your days in mortal
+fear of him."
+
+"Mr. Hamel," she exclaimed nervously, "you don't believe that! He
+is always very kind."
+
+"Apparently," Hamel observed drily. "And yet you must remember that
+you, too, are afraid of him. I need not remind you of our
+conversations, but there the truth is. You praise his virtues and
+his charities, you pity him, and yet you go about with a load of
+fear, and--forgive me--of secret terror in your heart, you and
+Gerald, too. As for your mother--"
+
+"Don't!" she interrupted suddenly. "Why do you bring me here to
+talk like this? You cannot alter things. Nothing can be altered."
+
+"Can't it!" he replied. "Well, I will tell you the real reason of
+my having brought you here and of my having made this confession.
+I brought you here because I could not bear to go on living, if not
+under your roof, at any rate in the neighbourhood, without telling
+you the truth. Now you know it. I am here to watch Mr. Fentolin.
+I am going on watching him. You can put him on his guard, if you
+like; I shan't complain. Or you can--"
+
+He paused so long that she looked at him. He moved a little closer
+to her, his fingers suddenly gripped her hand.
+
+"Or you can marry me and come away from it all," he concluded
+quietly. "Forgive me, please--I mean it."
+
+For a moment the startled light in her eyes was followed by a
+delicious softness. Her lips were parted, she leaned a little
+towards him. Then suddenly she seemed to remember. She rose with
+swift alertness to her feet.
+
+"I think," she said, "that we had better play golf."
+
+"But I have asked you to marry me," he protested, as he scrambled up.
+
+"Your caddy has found your ball a long time ago," she pointed out,
+walking swiftly on ahead.
+
+He played his shot and caught her up.
+
+"Miss Fentolin--Esther," he pleaded eagerly, "do you think that I
+am not in earnest? Because I am. I mean it. Even if I have only
+known you for a few days, it has been enough. I think that I knew
+it was coming from the moment that you stepped into my railway
+carriage."
+
+"You knew that what was coming?" she asked, raising her eyes
+suddenly.
+
+"That I should care for you."
+
+"It's the first time you've told me," she reminded him, with a queer
+little smile. "Oh, forgive me, please! I didn't mean to say that.
+I don't want to have you tell me so. It's all too ridiculous and
+impossible."
+
+"Is it? And why?"
+
+"I have only known you for three days."
+
+"We can make up for that."
+
+"But I don't--care about you. I have never thought of any one in
+that way. It is absurd," she went on.
+
+"You'll have to, sometime or other," he declared. "I'll take you
+travelling with me, show you the world, new worlds, unnamed rivers,
+untrodden mountains. Or do you want to go and see where the little
+brown people live among the mimosa and the cherry blossoms? I'll
+take you so far away that this place and this life will seem like
+a dream."
+
+Her breath caught a little.
+
+"Don't, please," she begged. "You know very well--or rather you
+don't know, perhaps, but I must tell you--that I couldn't. I am
+here, tied and bound, and I can't escape."
+
+"Ah! dear, don't believe it," he went on earnestly. "There isn't
+any bond so strong that I won't break it for you, no knot I won't
+untie, if you give me the right."
+
+They were climbing slowly on to the tee. He stepped forward and
+pulled her up. Her hand was cold. Her eyes were raised to his,
+very softly yet almost pleadingly.
+
+"Please don't say anything more," she begged. "I can't--quite bear
+it just now. You know, you must remember--there is my mother. Do
+you think that I could leave her to struggle alone?"
+
+His caddy, who had teed the ball, and who had regarded the
+proceedings with a moderately tolerant air, felt called upon at last
+to interfere.
+
+"We'd best get on," he remarked, pointing to two figures in the
+distance, "or they'll say we've cut in."
+
+Hamel smote his ball far and true. On a more moderate scale she
+followed his example. They descended the steps together.
+
+"Love-making isn't going to spoil our golf," he whispered, smiling,
+as he touched her fingers once more.
+
+She looked at him almost shyly.
+
+"Is this love-making?" she asked.
+
+They walked together from the eighteenth green towards the
+club-house. A curious silence seemed suddenly to have enveloped
+them. Hamel was conscious of a strange exhilaration, a queer
+upheaval of ideas, an excitement which nothing in his previous
+life had yet been able to yield him. The wonder of it amazed him,
+kept him silent. It was not until they reached the steps, indeed,
+that he spoke.
+
+"On our way home--" he began.
+
+She seemed suddenly to have stiffened. He looked at her, surprised.
+She was standing quite still, her hand gripping the post, her eyes
+fixed upon the waiting motor-car. The delicate softness had gone
+from her face. Once more that look of partly veiled suffering was
+there, suffering mingled with fear.
+
+"Look!" she whispered, under her breath. "Look! It is Mr. Fentolin!
+He has come for us himself; he is there in the car."
+
+Mr. Fentolin, a strange little figure lying back among the cushions
+of the great Daimler, raised his hat and waved it to them.
+
+"Come along, children," he cried. "You see, I am here to fetch you
+myself. The sunshine has tempted me. What a heavenly morning!
+Come and sit by my side, Esther, and fight your battle all over
+again. That is one of the joys of golf, isn't it?" he asked,
+turning to Hamel. "You need not be afraid of boring me. To-day
+is one of my bright days. I suppose that it is the sunshine and
+the warm wind. On the way here we passed some fields. I could
+swear that I smelt violets. Where are you going, Esther?"
+
+"To take my clubs to my locker and pay my caddy," she replied.
+
+"Mr. Hamel will do that for you," Mr. Fentolin declared. "Come and
+take your seat by my side, and let us wait for him. I am tired of
+being alone."
+
+She gave up her clubs reluctantly. All the life seemed to have gone
+from her face.
+
+"Why didn't mother come with you?" she asked simply.
+
+"To tell you the truth, dear Esther," he answered, "when I started,
+I had a fancy to be alone. I think--in fact I am sure--that your
+mother wanted to come. The sunshine, too, was tempting her. Perhaps
+it was selfish of me not to bring her, but then, there is a great
+deal to be forgiven me, isn't there, Esther?"
+
+"A great deal," she echoed, looking steadily ahead of her.
+
+"I came," he went on, "because it occurred to me that, after all,
+I had my duties as your guardian, dear Esther. I am not sure that
+we can permit flirtations, you know. Let me see, how old are you?"
+
+"Twenty-one," she replied.
+
+"In a magazine I was reading the other day," he continued, "I was
+interested to observe that the modern idea as regards marriage is
+a changed one. A woman, they say, should not marry until she
+is twenty-seven or twenty-eight--a very excellent idea. I think
+we agree, do we not, on that, Esther?"
+
+"I don't know," she replied. "I have never thought about the
+matter."
+
+"Then," he went on, "we will make up our minds to agree.
+Twenty-seven or twenty-eight, let us say. A very excellent age!
+A girl should know her own mind by then. And meanwhile, dear Esther,
+would it be wise, I wonder, to see a little less of our friend Mr.
+Hamel? He leaves us to-day, I think. He is very obstinate about
+that. If he were staying still in the house, well, it might be
+different. But if he persists in leaving us, you will not forget,
+dear, that association with a guest is one thing; association with
+a young man living out of the house is another. A great deal less
+of Mr. Hamel I think that we must see."
+
+She made no reply whatever. Hamel was coming now towards them.
+
+"Really a very personable young man," Mr. Fentolin remarked,
+studying him through his eyeglass. "Is it my fancy, I wonder, as
+an observant person, or is he just a little--just a little taken
+with you, Esther? A pity if it is so--a great pity."
+
+She said nothing, but her hand which rested upon the rug was
+trembling a little.
+
+"If you have an opportunity," Mr. Fentolin suggested, dropping his
+voice, "you might very delicately, you know--girls are so clever
+at that sort of thing-convey my views to Mr. Hamel as regards his
+leaving us and its effect upon your companionship. You understand
+me, I am sure?"
+
+For the first time she turned her head towards him.
+
+"I understand," she said, "that you have some particular reason for
+not wishing Mr. Hamel to leave St. David's Hall."
+
+He smiled benignly.
+
+"You do my hospitable impulses full justice, dear Esther," he
+declared. "Sometimes I think that you understand me almost as well
+as your dear mother. If, by any chance, Mr. Hamel should change
+his mind as to taking up his residence at the Tower, I think you
+would not find me in any sense of the word an obdurate or exacting
+guardian. Come along, Mr. Hamel. That seat opposite to us is quite
+comfortable. You see, I resign myself to the inevitable. I have
+come to fetch golfers home to luncheon, and I compose myself to
+listen. Which of you will begin the epic of missed putts and
+brassey shots which failed by a foot to carry?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+Hamel sat alone upon the terrace, his afternoon coffee on a small
+table in front of him. His eyes were fixed upon a black speck at
+the end of the level roadway which led to the Tower. Only a few
+minutes before, Mr. Fentolin, in his little carriage, had shot out
+from the passage beneath the terrace, on his way to the Tower.
+Behind him came Meekins, bending over his bicycle. Hamel watched
+them both with thoughtful eyes. There were several little incidents
+in connection with their expedition which he scarcely understood.
+
+Then there came at last the sound for which he had been listening,
+the rustle of a skirt along the terraced way. Hamel turned quickly
+around, half rising to his feet, and concealing his disappointment
+with difficulty. It was Mrs. Seymour Fentolin who stood there, a
+little dog under each arm; a large hat, gay with flowers, upon her
+head. She wore patent shoes with high heels, and white silk
+stockings. She had, indeed, the air of being dressed for luncheon
+at a fashionable restaurant. As she stooped to set the dogs down,
+a strong waft of perfume was shaken from her clothes.
+
+"Are you entirely deserted, Mr. Hamel?" she asked.
+
+"I am," he replied. "Miss Esther went, I think, to look for you.
+My host," he added, pointing to the black speck in the distance,
+"begged me to defer my occupation of the Tower for an hour or so,
+and has gone down there to collect some of his trifles."
+
+Her eyes followed his outstretched hand. She seemed to him to
+shiver for a moment.
+
+"You really mean, then, that you are going to leave us?" she asked,
+accepting the chair which he had drawn up close to his.
+
+He smiled.
+
+"Well, I scarcely came on a visit to St. David's Hall, did I?" he
+reminded her. "It has been delightfully hospitable of Mr. Fentolin
+to have insisted upon my staying on here for these few days, but I
+could not possibly inflict myself upon you all for an unlimited
+period."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin sat quite still for a time. In absolute repose, if
+one could forget her mass of unnaturally golden hair, the forced
+and constant smile, the too liberal use of rouge and powder, the
+nervous motions of her head, it was easily to be realised that
+there were still neglected attractions about her face and figure.
+Only, in these moments of repose, an intense and ageing weariness
+seemed to have crept into her eyes and face. It was as though she
+had dropped the mask of incessant gaiety and permitted a glimpse of
+her real self to steal to the surface.
+
+"Mr. Hamel," she said quietly, "I dare say that even during these
+few days you have realised that Mr. Fentolin is a very peculiar man."
+
+"I have certainly observed--eccentricities," Hamel assented.
+
+"My life, and the lives of my two children," she went on, "is devoted
+to the task of ministering to his happiness."
+
+"Isn't that rather a heavy sacrifice?" he asked. Mrs. Seymour
+Fentolin looked down the long, narrow way along which Mr. Fentolin
+had passed. He was out of sight now, inside the Tower. Somehow
+or other, the thought seemed to give her courage and dignity. She
+spoke differently, without nervousness or hurry.
+
+"To you, Mr. Hamel," she said, "it may seem so. We who make it know
+of its necessity."
+
+He bowed his head. It was not a subject for him to discuss with her.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin has whims," she went on, "violent whims. We all try
+to humour him. He has his own ideas about Gerald's bringing up.
+I do not agree with them, but we submit. Esther, too, suffers,
+perhaps to a less extent. As for me,"--her voice broke a little--
+"Mr. Fentolin likes people around him who are always cheerful. He
+prefers even a certain style--of dress. I, too, have to do my
+little share."
+
+Hamel's face grew darker.
+
+"Has it ever occurred to you," he demanded, "that Mr. Fentolin is a
+tyrant?"
+
+She closed her eyes for a moment.
+
+"There are reasons," she declared, "why I cannot discuss that with
+you. He has these strong fancies, and it is our task in life to
+humour them. He has one now with regard to the Tower, with regard
+to you. You are, of course, your own master. You can do as you
+choose, and you will do as you choose. Neither I nor my children
+have any claim upon your consideration. But, Mr. Hamel, you have
+been so kind that I feel moved to tell you this. It would make it
+very much easier for all of us if you would give up this scheme of
+yours, if you would stay on here instead of going to reside at the
+Tower."
+
+Hamel threw away his cigarette. He was deeply interested.
+
+"Mrs. Fentolin," he said, "I am glad to have you speak so plainly.
+Let me answer you in the same spirit. I am leaving this house
+mainly because I have conceived certain suspicions with regard to
+Mr. Fentolin. I do not like him, I do not trust him, I do not
+believe in him. Therefore, I mean to remove myself from the burden
+of his hospitality. There are reasons," he went on, "why I do not
+wish to leave the neighbourhood altogether. There are certain
+investigations which I wish to make. That is why I have decided to
+go to the Tower."
+
+"Miles was right, then!" she cried suddenly. "You are here to spy
+upon him!"
+
+He turned towards her swiftly.
+
+"To spy upon him, Mrs. Fentolin? For what reason? Why? Is he a
+criminal, then?"
+
+She opened her lips and closed them again. There was a slight frown
+upon her forehead. It was obvious that the word had unintentionally
+escaped her.
+
+"I only know what it is that he called you, what he suspects you of
+being," she explained. "Mr. Fentolin is very clever, and he is
+generally at work upon something. We do not enquire into the
+purpose of his labours. The only thing I know is that he suspects
+you of wanting to steal one of his secrets."
+
+"Secrets? But what secrets has he?" Hamel demanded. "Is he an
+inventor?"
+
+"You ask me idle questions," she sighed. "We have gone, perhaps,
+a little further than I intended. I came to plead with you for all
+our sakes, if I could, to make things more comfortable by remaining
+here instead of insisting upon your claim to the Tower."
+
+"Mrs. Fentolin," Hamel said firmly. "I like to do what I can to
+please and benefit my friends, especially those who have been kind
+to me. I will be quite frank with you. There is nothing you could
+ask me which I would not do for your daughter's sake--if I were
+convinced that it was for her good."
+
+Mrs. Seymour Fentolin seemed to be trembling a little. Her hands
+were crossed upon her bosom.
+
+"You have known her for so short a time," she murmured.
+
+Hamel smiled confidently.
+
+"I will not weary you," he said, "with the usual trite remarks. I
+will simply tell you that the time has been long enough. I love
+your daughter."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin sat quite still. Only in her eyes, fixed steadily
+seawards, there was the light of something new, as though some new
+thought was stirring in her brain. Her lips moved, although the
+sound which came was almost inaudible.
+
+"Why not?" she murmured, as though arguing with some unseen critic
+of her thoughts. "Why not?"
+
+"I am not a rich man," Hamel went on, "but I am fairly well off.
+I could afford to be married at once, and I should like--"
+
+She turned suddenly upon him and gripped his wrist.
+
+"Listen," she interrupted, "you are a traveller, are you not? You
+have been to distant countries, where white people go seldom;
+inaccessible countries, where even the arm of the law seldom reaches.
+Couldn't you take her away there, take her right away, travel so fast
+that nothing could catch you, and hide--hide for a little time?"
+
+Hamel stared at his companion, for a moment, blankly. Her attitude
+was so unexpected, her questioning so fierce.
+
+"My dear Mrs. Fentolin," he began--.
+
+She suddenly relaxed her grip of his arm. Something of the old
+hopelessness was settling down upon her face. Her hands fell into
+her lap.
+
+"No," she interrupted, "I forgot! I mustn't talk like that. She,
+too, is part of the sacrifice."
+
+"Part of the sacrifice," Hamel repeated, frowning. "Is she, indeed!
+I don't know what sacrifice you mean, but Esther is the girl whom
+sooner or later, somehow or other, I am going to make my wife, and
+when she is my wife, I shall see to it that she isn't afraid of
+Miles Fentolin or of any other man breathing."
+
+A gleam of hopefulness shone through the stony misery of the woman's
+face.
+
+"Does Esther care?" she asked softly.
+
+"How can I tell? I can only hope so. If she doesn't yet, she shall
+some day. I suppose," he added, with a sigh, "it is rather too soon
+yet to expect that she should. If it is necessary, I can wait."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin's eyes were once more fixed upon the Tower. The sun
+had caught the top of the telephone wire and played around it till
+it seemed like a long, thin shaft of silver.
+
+"If you go down there," she said, "Esther will not be allowed to
+see you at all. Mr. Fentolin has decided to take it as a personal
+affront. You will be ostracised from here."
+
+"Shall I?" he answered. "Well, it won't be for long, at any rate.
+And as to not seeing Esther, you must remember that I come from
+outside this little domain, and I see nothing more in Mr. Fentolin
+than a bad-tempered, mischievous, tyrannical old invalid, who is
+fortunately prevented by his infirmities from doing as much mischief
+as he might. I am not afraid of your brother-in-law, or of the
+bully he takes about with him, and I am going to see your daughter
+somehow or other, and I am going to marry her before very long."
+
+She thrust out her hand suddenly and grasped his. The fingers were
+very thin, almost bony, and covered with rings. Their grip was
+feverish and he felt them tremble.
+
+"You are a brave man, Mr. Hamel," she declared speaking in a low,
+quick undertone. "Perhaps you are right. The shadow isn't over
+your head. You haven't lived in the terror of it. You may find a
+way. God grant it!"
+
+She wrung his fingers and rose to her feet. Her voice suddenly
+changed into another key. Hamel knew instinctively that she wished
+him to understand that their conversation was over.
+
+"Chow-Chow," she cried, "come along, dear, we must have our walk.
+Come along, Koto; come along, little dogs."
+
+Hamel strolled down the terrace steps and wandered for a time in
+the gardens behind the house. Here, in the shelter of the great
+building, he found himself suddenly in an atmosphere of springtime.
+There were beds of crocuses and hyacinths, fragrant clumps of
+violets, borders of snowdrops, masses of primroses and early
+anemones. He slowly climbed one or two steep paths until he reached
+a sort of plateau, level with the top of the house. The flowers
+here grew more sparsely, the track of the salt wind lay like a
+withering band across the flower-beds. The garden below was like a
+little oasis of colour and perfume. Arrived at the bordering red
+brick wall, he turned around and looked along the narrow road which
+led to the sea. There was no sign of Mr. Fentolin's return. Then
+to his left he saw a gate open and heard the clamour of dogs.
+Esther appeared, walking swiftly towards the little stretch of road
+which led to the village. He hurried after her.
+
+"Unsociable person!" he exclaimed, as he caught her up. "Didn't
+you know that I was longing for a walk?"
+
+"How should I read your thoughts?" she answered. "Besides, a few
+minutes ago I saw you on the terrace, talking to mother. I am only
+going as far as the village."
+
+"May I come?" he asked. "I have business there myself."
+
+She laughed.
+
+"There are nine cottages, three farmhouses, and a general shop in
+St. David's," she remarked. "Also about fifteen fishermen's
+cottages dotted about the marsh. Your business, I presume, is with
+the general shop?"
+
+He shook his head, falling into step with her.
+
+"What I want," he explained, "is to find a woman to come in and
+look after me at the Tower. Your servant who valets me has given
+me two names."
+
+Something of the lightness faded from her face.
+
+"So you have quite made up your mind to leave us?" she asked slowly.
+"Mother wasn't able to persuade you to stay?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"She was very kind," he said, "but there are really grave reasons
+why I feel that I must not accept Mr. Fentolin's hospitality any
+longer. I had," he went on, "a very interesting talk with your
+mother."
+
+She turned quickly towards him. The slightest possible tinge of
+additional colour was in her cheeks. She was walking on the top
+of a green bank, with the wind blowing her skirts around her. The
+turn of her head was a little diffident, almost shy. Her eyes were
+asking him questions. At that moment she seemed to him, with her
+slim body, her gently parted lips and soft, tremulous eyes, almost
+like a child. He drew a little nearer to her.
+
+"I told your mother," he continued, "all that I have told you, and
+more. I told her, dear, that I cared for you, that I wanted you to
+be my wife."
+
+She was caught in a little gust of wind. Both her hands went up to
+her hat; her face was hidden. She stepped down from the bank.
+
+"You shouldn't have done that," she said quietly.
+
+"Why not?" he demanded. "It was the truth."
+
+He stooped forward, intent upon looking into her face. The mystic
+softness was still in her eyes, but her general expression was
+inscrutable. It seemed to him that there was fear there.
+
+"What did mother say?" she whispered.
+
+"Nothing discouraging," he replied. "I don't think she minded at
+all. I have decided, if you give me permission, to go and talk to
+Mr. Fentolin this evening."
+
+She shook her head very emphatically.
+
+"Don't!" she implored. "Don't! Don't give him another whip to
+lash us with. Keep silent. Let me just have the memory for a few
+days all to myself."
+
+Her words came to him like numb things. There was little expression
+in them, and yet he felt that somehow they meant so much.
+
+"Esther dear," he said, "I shall do just as you ask me. At the
+same time, please listen. I think that you are all absurdly
+frightened of Mr. Fentolin. Living here alone with him, you have
+all grown under his dominance to an unreasonable extent. Because
+of his horrible infirmity, you have let yourselves become his
+slaves. There are limits to this sort of thing, Esther. I come
+here as a stranger, and I see nothing more in Mr. Fentolin than
+a very selfish, irritable, domineering, and capricious old man.
+Humour him, by all means. I am willing to do the same myself.
+But when it comes to the great things in life, neither he nor any
+living person is going to keep from me the woman I love."
+
+She walked by his side in silence. Her breath was coming a little
+quicker, her fingers lay passive in his. Then for a moment he felt
+the grip of them almost burn into his flesh. Still she said nothing.
+
+"I want your permission, dear," he went on, "to go to him. I
+suppose he calls himself your guardian. If he says no, you are of
+age. I just want you to believe that I am strong enough to put my
+arms, around you and to carry you away to my own world and keep you
+there, although an army of Mr. Fentolin's creatures followed us."
+
+She turned, and he saw the great transformation. Her face was
+brilliant, her eyes shone with wonderful things.
+
+"Please," she begged, "will you say or do nothing at all for a
+little time, until I tell you when? I want just a few days' peace.
+You have said such beautiful things to me that I want them to lie
+there in my thoughts, in my heart, undisturbed, for just a little
+time. You see, we are at the village now. I am going to call at
+this third cottage. While I am inside, you can go and make what
+enquiries you like. Come and knock at the door for me when you are
+ready."
+
+"And we will walk back together?"
+
+"We will walk back together," she promised him.
+
+"I will take you home another way. I will take you over what they
+call the Common, and come down behind the Hall into the gardens."
+
+She dismissed him with a little smile. He strolled along the
+village street and plunged into the mysterious recesses of the
+one tiny shop.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+Hamel met Kinsley shortly before one o'clock the following afternoon,
+in the lounge of the Royal Hotel at Norwich.
+
+"You got my wire, then?" the latter asked, as he held out his hand.
+"I had it sent by special messenger from Wells."
+
+"It arrived directly after breakfast," Hamel replied. "It wasn't
+the easiest matter to get here, even then, for there are only about
+two trains a day, and I didn't want to borrow a car from Mr.
+Fentolin."
+
+"Quite right," Kinsley agreed. "I wanted you to come absolutely on
+your own. Let's get into the coffee-room and have some lunch now.
+I want to catch the afternoon train hack to town."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you've come all the way down here to talk
+to me for half an hour or so?" Hamel demanded, as they took their
+places at a table.
+
+"All the way from town," Kinsley assented, "and up to the eyes in
+work we are, too. Dick, what do you think of Miles Fentolin?"
+
+"Hanged if I know!" Hamel answered, with a sigh.
+
+"Nothing definite to tell us, then?"
+
+"Nothing!"
+
+"What about Mr. John P. Dunster?"
+
+"He left yesterday morning," Hamel said. "I saw him go. He looked
+very shaky. I understood that Mr. Fentolin sent him to Yarmouth."
+
+"Did Mr. Fentolin know that there was an enquiry on foot about this
+man's disappearance?" Kinsley asked.
+
+"Certainly. I heard Lord Saxthorpe tell him that the police had
+received orders to scour the country for him, and that they were
+coming to St. David's Hall."
+
+Kinsley, for a moment, was singularly and eloquently profane.
+
+"That's why Mr. Fentolin let him go, then. If Saxthorpe had only
+held his tongue, or if those infernal police hadn't got chattering
+with the magistrates, we might have made a coup. As it is, the
+game's up. Mr. Dunster left for Yarmouth, you say, yesterday
+morning?"
+
+"I saw him go myself. He looked very shaky and ill, but he was
+able to smoke a big cigar and walk down-stairs leaning on the
+doctor's arm."
+
+"I don't doubt," Kinsley remarked, "but that you saw what you say
+you saw. At the same time, you may be surprised to hear that Mr.
+Dunster has disappeared again."
+
+"Disappeared again?" Hamel muttered.
+
+"It looks very much," Kinsley continued, "as though your friend
+Miles Fentolin has been playing with him like a cat with a mouse.
+He has been obliged to turn him out of one hiding-place, and he has
+simply transferred him to another."
+
+Hamel looked doubtful.
+
+"Mr. Dunster left quite alone in the car," he said. "He was on his
+guard too, for Mr. Fentolin and he had had words. I really can't
+see how it was possible for him to have got into any more trouble."
+
+"Where is he, then?" Kinsley demanded. "Come, I will let you a
+little further into our confidence. We have reason to believe that
+he carries with him a written message which is practically the only
+chance we have of avoiding disaster during the next few days. That
+written message is addressed to the delegates at The Hague, who are
+now sitting. Nothing had been heard of Dunster or the document he
+carries. No word has come from him of any sort since he left St.
+David's Hall."
+
+"Have you tried to trace him from there?" Hamel asked.
+
+"Trace him?" Kinsley repeated. "By heavens, you don't seem to
+understand, Dick, the immense, the extraordinary importance of this
+man to us! The cleverest detective in England spent yesterday
+under your nose at St. David's Hall. There are a dozen others
+working upon the job as hard as they can. All the reports confirm
+what you say--that Dunster left St. David's Hall at half-past nine
+yesterday morning, and he certainly arrived in Yarmouth at a little
+before twelve. From there he seems, however, to have completely
+disappeared. The car went back to St. David's Hall empty; the man
+only stayed long enough in Yarmouth, in fact, to have his dinner.
+We cannot find a single smack owner who was approached in any way
+for the hire of a boat. Yarmouth has been ransacked in vain. He
+certainly has not arrived at The Hague or we should have heard news
+at once. As a last resource, I ran down here to see you on the
+chance of your having picked up any information."
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"You seem to know a good deal more than I do, already," he said.
+
+"What do you think of Mr. Fentolin? You have stayed in his house.
+You have had an opportunity of studying him."
+
+"So far as my impressions go," Hamel replied, "everything which you
+have suggested might very well be true. I think that either out of
+sheer love of mischief, or from some subtler motive, he is capable
+of anything. Every one in the place, except one poor woman, seems
+to look upon him as a sort of supernatural being. He gives money
+away to worthless people with both hands. Yet I share your opinion
+of him. I believe that he is a creature without conscience or morals.
+I have sat at his table and shivered when he has smiled."
+
+"Are you staying at St. David's Hall now?"
+
+"I left yesterday."
+
+"Where are you now, then?"
+
+"I am at St. David's Tower--the little place I told you of that
+belonged to my father--but I don't know whether I shall be able to
+stop there. Mr. Fentolin, for some reason or other, very much
+resented my leaving the Hall and was very annoyed at my insisting
+upon claiming the Tower. When I went down to the village to get
+some one to come up and look after me, there wasn't a woman there
+who would come. It didn't matter what I offered, they were all the
+same. They all muttered some excuse or other, and seemed only
+anxious to show me out. At the village shop they seemed to hate
+to serve me with anything. It was all I could do to get a packet
+of tobacco yesterday afternoon. You would really think that I was
+the most unpopular person who ever lived, and it can only be because
+of Mr. Fentolin's influence."
+
+"Mr. Fentolin evidently doesn't like to have you in the locality,"
+Kinsley remarked thoughtfully.
+
+"He was all right so long as I was at St. David's Hall," Hamel
+observed.
+
+"What's this little place like--St. David's Tower, you call it?"
+Kinsley asked.
+
+"Just a little stone building actually on the beach," Hamel
+explained. "There is a large shed which Mr. Fentolin keeps locked
+up, and the habitable portion consists just of a bedroom and
+sitting-room. From what I can see, Mr. Fentolin has been making
+a sort of hobby of the place. There is telephonic communication
+with the house, and he seems to have used the sitting-room as a
+sort of studio. He paints sea pictures and really paints them
+very well."
+
+A man came into the coffee-room, made some enquiry of the waiter
+and went out again. Hamel stared at him in a puzzled manner. For
+the moment he could only remember that the face was familiar. Then
+he suddenly gave vent to a little exclamation.
+
+"Any one would think that I had been followed," he remarked. "The
+man who has just looked into the room is one of Mr. Fentolin's
+parasites or bodyguards, or whatever you call them."
+
+"You probably have," Kinsley agreed. "What post does he hold in
+the household?"
+
+"I have no idea," Hamel replied. "I saw him the first day I arrived
+and not since. Sort of secretary, I should think."
+
+"He is a queer-looking fellow, anyway," Kinsley muttered. "Look
+out, Dick. Here he comes back again."
+
+Mr. Ryan approached the table a little diffidently.
+
+"I hope you will forgive the liberty, sir," he said to Hamel. "You
+remember me, I trust--Mr. Ryan. I am the librarian at St. David's
+Hall."
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"I thought I'd seen you there."
+
+"I was wondering," the man continued, "whether you had a car of Mr.
+Fentolin's in Norwich to-day, and if so, whether I might beg a seat
+back in case you were returning before the five o'clock train? I
+came in early this morning to go through some manuscripts at a
+second-hand bookseller's here, and I have unfortunately missed the
+train back."
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"I came in by train myself, or I would have given you a lift back,
+with pleasure," he said.
+
+Mr. Ryan expressed his thanks briefly and left the room. Kinsley
+watched him from over the top of a newspaper.
+
+"So that is one of Mr. Fentolin's creatures, too," he remarked.
+"Keeping his eye on you in Norwich, eh? Tell me, Dick, by-the-by,
+how do you get on with the rest of Mr. Fentolin's household, and
+exactly of whom does it consist?"
+
+"There is his sister-in-law," Hamel replied, "Mrs. Seymour Fentolin.
+She is a strange, tired-looking woman who seems to stand in mortal
+fear of Mr. Fentolin. She is always overdressed and never natural,
+but it seems to me that nearly everything she does is done to suit
+his whims, or at his instigation."
+
+Kinsley nodded thoughtfully.
+
+"I remember Seymour Fentolin," he said; "a really fine fellow he was.
+Well, who else?"
+
+"Just the nephew and niece. The boy is half sullen, half
+discontented, yet he, too, seems to obey his uncle blindly. The
+three of them seem to be his slaves. It's a thing you can't live
+in the house without noticing."
+
+"It seems to be a cheerful sort of household," Kinsley observed.
+"You read the papers, I suppose, Dick?" he asked, after a moment's
+pause.
+
+"On and off, the last few days. I seem to have been busy doing all
+sorts of things."
+
+"Well, I'll tell you something," Kinsley continued. "The whole of
+our available fleet is engaged in carrying out what they call a
+demonstration in the North Sea. They have patrol boats out in every
+direction, and only the short distance wireless signals are being
+used. Everything, of course, is in code, yet we know this for a
+fact: a good deal of private information passing between the Admiral
+and his commanders was known in Germany three hours after the signals
+themselves had been given. It is suspected--more than suspected,
+in fact--that these messages were picked up by Mr. Fentolin's
+wireless installation."
+
+"I don't suppose he could help receiving them," Hamel remarked.
+
+"He could help decoding them and sending them through to Germany,
+though," Kinsley retorted grimly. "The worst of it is, he has a
+private telephone wire in his house to London. If he isn't up
+to mischief, what does he need all these things for--private
+telegraph line, private telephone, private wireless? We have given
+the postmaster a hint to have the telegraph office moved down into
+the village, but I don't know that that will help us much."
+
+"So far as regards the wireless," Hamel said, "I rather believe
+that it is temporarily dismantled. We had a sailor-man over, the
+morning before yesterday, to complain of his messages having been
+picked up. Mr. Fentolin promised at once to put his installation
+out of work for a time."
+
+"He has done plenty of mischief with it already," Kinsley groaned.
+"However, it was Dunster I came down to make enquiries about. I
+couldn't help hoping that you might have been able to put us on the
+right track."
+
+Hamel sighed.
+
+"I know nothing beyond what I have told you."
+
+"How did he look when he went away?"
+
+"Very ill indeed," Hamel declared. "I afterwards saw the nurse who
+had been attending him, and she admitted that he was not fit to
+travel. I should say the probabilities are that he is laid up again
+somewhere."
+
+"Did you actually speak to him?"
+
+"Just a word or two."
+
+"And you saw him go off in the car?"
+
+"Gerald Fentolin and I both saw him and wished him good-by."
+
+Kinsley glanced at the clock and rose to his feet. "Walk down to
+the station with me," he suggested. "I needn't tell you, I am sure,"
+he went on, as they left the hotel a few minutes later, "that if
+anything does turn up, or if you get the glimmering of an idea,
+you'll let me know? We've a small army looking for the fellow, but
+it does seem as though he had disappeared off the face of the earth.
+If he doesn't turn up before the end of the Conference, we are done."
+
+"Tell me," Hamel asked, after they had walked for some distance in
+silence, "exactly why is our fleet demonstrating to such an extent?"
+
+"That Conference I have spoken of," Kinsley replied, "which is being
+held at The Hague, is being held, we know, purposely to discuss
+certain matters in which we are interested. It is meeting for their
+discussion without any invitation having been sent to this country.
+There is only one reply possible to such a course. It is there in
+the North Sea. But unfortunately--"
+
+Kinsley paused. His tone and his expression had alike become
+gloomier.
+
+"Go on," Hamel begged.
+
+"Our reply, after all, is a miserable affair," Kinsley concluded.
+"You remember the outcry over the withdrawal of our Mediterranean
+Fleet? Now you see its sequel. We haven't a ship worth a snap of
+the fingers from Gibraltar to Suez. If France deserts us, it's
+good-by to Malta, good-by to Egypt, good-by to India. It's the
+disruption of the British Empire. And all this," he wound up, as
+he paused before taking his seat in the railway carriage, "all this
+might even now be avoided if only we could lay our hands upon the
+message which that man Dunster was bringing from New York!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+Once more Hamel descended from the little train, and, turning away
+from St. David's Hall, made his way across the marshes, seawards.
+The sunshine of the last few days had departed. The twilight was
+made gloomy by a floating veil of white mist, which hung about in
+wet patches. Hamel turned up his coat collar as he walked and
+shivered a little. The thought of his solitary night and
+uncomfortable surroundings, after all the luxury of St. David's
+Hall, was scarcely inspiring. Yet, on the whole, he was splendidly
+cheerful. The glamour of a host of new sensations was upon him.
+There was a new love of living in his heart. He forgot the cold
+east wind which blew in his face, bringing with it little puffs
+of damp grey mist. He forgot the cheerlessness which he was about
+to face, the lonely night before him. For the first time in his
+life a woman reigned in his thoughts.
+
+It was not until he actually reached the very side of the Tower
+that he came back to earth. As he opened the door, he found a
+surprise in store for him. A fire was burning in the sitting-room,
+smoke was ascending from the kitchen chimney. The little round
+table was laid with a white cloth. There was a faint odour of
+cooking from the back premises. His lamp was lit, there were logs
+hissing and crackling upon the fire. As he stood there looking
+wonderingly about him, the door from the back was opened. Hannah
+Cox came quietly into the room.
+
+"What time would you like your dinner, sir?" she enquired.
+
+Hamel stared at her.
+
+"Why, are you going to keep house for me, Mrs. Cox?" he asked.
+
+"If you please, sir. I heard that you had been in the village,
+looking for some one. I am sorry that I was away. There is no one
+else who would come to you."
+
+"So I discovered," he remarked, a little grimly.
+
+"No one else," she went on, "would come to you because of Mr.
+Fentolin. He does not wish to have you here. They love him so
+much in the village that he had only to breathe the word. It was
+enough."
+
+"Yet you are here," he reminded her.
+
+"I do not count," she answered. "I am outside all these things."
+
+Hamel gave a little sigh of satisfaction.
+
+"Well, I am glad you could come, anyhow. If you have something for
+dinner, I should like it in about half an hour."
+
+He climbed the narrow stairs which led to his bedroom. To his
+surprise, there were many things there for his comfort which he had
+forgotten to order--clean bed-linen, towels, even a curtain upon
+the window.
+
+"Where did you get all the linen up-stairs from, Mrs. Cox?" he
+asked her, when he descended. "The room was almost empty yesterday,
+and I forgot nearly all the things I meant to bring home from
+Norwich."
+
+"Mrs. Seymore Fentolin sent down a hamper for you," the woman
+replied, "with a message from Mr. Fentolin. He said that nothing
+among the oddments left by your father had been preserved, but
+that you were welcome to anything you desired, if you would let
+them know at the Hall."
+
+"It is very kind of both of them," Hamel said thoughtfully.
+
+The woman stood still for a moment, looking at him. Then she drew
+a step nearer.
+
+"Has Mr. Fentolin given you the key of the shed?" she asked, very
+quietly.
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"We don't need the place, do we?"
+
+"He did not give you the key?" she persisted.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin said that he had some things in there which he wished
+to keep locked up," he explained.
+
+She remained thoughtful for several moments. Then she turned away.
+
+"No," she said, "it was not likely he would not give you that key!"
+
+Hamel dined simply but comfortably. Mrs. Cox cleared away the
+things, brought him his coffee, and appeared a few minutes later,
+her shawl wrapped around her, ready for departure.
+
+"I shall be here at seven o'clock in the morning, sir," she
+announced.
+
+Hamel was a little startled. He withdrew the pip from his mouth
+and looked at her.
+
+"Why, of course," he remarked. "I'd forgotten. There is no place
+for you to stay here."
+
+"I shall go back to my brother's." she said.
+
+Hamel put some money upon the table.
+
+"Please get anything that is necessary," he directed. "I shall
+leave you to do the housekeeping for a few days."
+
+"Shall you be staying here long, sir?" she asked.
+
+"I am not sure," he replied.
+
+"I do not suppose," she said, "that you will stay for very long.
+I shall get only the things that you require from day to day. Good
+night, sir."
+
+She left the room. Hamel looked after her for a moment with a frown.
+In some indescribable way, the woman half impressed, half irritated
+him. She had always the air of keeping something in the background.
+He followed her out on to the little ridge of beach, a few minutes
+after she had left. The mist was still drifting about. Only a few
+yards away the sea rolled in, filling the air with dull thunder.
+The marshland was half obscured. St. David's Hall was invisible,
+but like strangely-hung lanterns in an empty space he saw the line
+of lights from the great house gleam through the obscurity. There
+was no sound save the sound of the sea. He shivered slightly. It
+was like an empty land, this.
+
+Then, moved by some instinct of curiosity, he made his way round to
+the closed door of the boat-house, only to find it, as he had
+expected, locked. He shook it slightly, without result. Then he
+strolled round to the back, entered his own little abode by the
+kitchen, and tried the other door which led into the boat-house.
+It was not only locked, but a staple had been put in, and it was
+fastened with a padlock of curious design which he did not remember
+to have seen there before. Again, half unconsciously, he listened,
+and again he found the silence oppressive. He went back to his
+room, brought out some of the books which it had been his intention
+to study, and sat and read over the fire.
+
+At ten o'clock he went to bed. As he threw open his window before
+undressing, it seemed to him that he could catch the sound of voices
+from the sea. He listened intently. A grey pall hung everywhere.
+To the left, with strange indistinctness, almost like something
+human struggling to assert itself, came the fitful flash from the
+light at the entrance to the tidal way. Once more he strained his
+ears. This time there was no doubt about it. He heard the sound
+of fishermen's voices. He heard one of them say distinctly:
+
+"Hard aport, Dave lad! That's Fentolin's light. Keep her out a bit.
+Steady, lad!"
+
+Through a rift in the mist, he caught a glimpse of the brown sail
+of a fishing-boat, dangerously near the land. He watched it alter
+its course slightly and pass on. Then again there was silence. He
+undressed slowly and went to bed.
+
+Later on he woke with a start and sat up in bed, listening intently,
+listening for he knew not what. Except for the backward scream of
+the pebbles, dragged down every few seconds by the receding waves,
+an unbroken silence seemed to prevail. He struck a match and looked
+at his watch. It was exactly three o'clock. He got out of bed. He
+was a man in perfect health, ignorant of the meaning of nerves, a
+man of proved courage. Yet he was conscious that his pulses were
+beating with absurd rapidity. A new feeling seemed to possess him.
+He could almost have declared that he was afraid. What sound had
+awakened him? He had no idea, yet he seemed to have a distinct and
+absolute conviction that it had been a real sound and no dream.
+He drew aside the curtains and looked out of the window. The mist
+now seemed to have become almost a fog, to have closed in upon sea
+and land. There was nothing whatever to be seen. As he stood there
+for a moment, listening, his face became moist with the drifting
+vapour. Suddenly upon the beach he saw what at first he imagined
+must be an optical illusion--a long shaft of light, invisible in
+itself except that it seemed to slightly change the density of the
+mist. He threw on an overcoat over his pyjamas, thrust on his
+slippers, and taking up his own electric torch, hastily descended
+the stairs. He opened the front door and stepped out on to the
+beach. He stood in the very place where the light had seemed to
+be, and looked inland. There was no sign of any human person, not
+a sound except the falling of the sea upon the pebbly beach. He
+raised his voice and called out. Somehow or other, speech seemed
+to be a relief.
+
+"Hullo!"
+
+There was no response. He tried again.
+
+"Is any one there?"
+
+Still no answer. He watched the veiled light from the harbour
+appear and disappear. It threw no shadow of illumination upon the
+spot to which he had gazed from his window. One window at St.
+David's Hall was illuminated. The rest of the place was wrapped
+now in darkness. He walked up to the boat-house. The door was
+still locked. There was no sign that any one had been there.
+Reluctantly at last he re-entered the Tower and made his way
+up-stairs.
+
+"Confound that fellow Kinsley!" he muttered, as he threw off his
+overcoat. "All his silly suggestions and melodramatic ideas have
+given me a fit of nerves. I am going to bed, and I am going to
+sleep. That couldn't have been a light I saw at all. I couldn't
+have heard anything. I am going to sleep."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+Hamel awoke to find his room filled with sunshine and a soft wind
+blowing in through the open window. There was a pleasant odour of
+coffee floating up from the kitchen. He looked at his watch--it
+was past eight o'clock. The sea was glittering and bespangled with
+sunlight. He found among his scanty belongings a bathing suit, and,
+wrapped in his overcoat, hurried down-stairs.
+
+"Breakfast in half an hour, Mrs. Cox," he called out.
+
+She stood at the door, watching him as he stepped across the pebbles
+and plunged in. For a few moments he swam. Then he turned over on
+his back. The sunlight was gleaming from every window of St. David's
+Hall. He even fancied that upon the terrace he could see a
+white-clad figure looking towards him. He turned over and swam once
+more. From her place in the doorway Mrs. Cox called out to him.
+
+"Mind the Dagger Rocks, sir!"
+
+He waved his hand. The splendid exhilaration of the salt water
+seemed to give him unlimited courage. He dived, but the woman's
+cry of fear soon recalled him. Presently he swam to shore and
+hurried up the beach. Mrs. Cox, with a sigh of relief, disappeared
+into the kitchen.
+
+"Those rocks on your nerves again, Mrs. Cox?" he asked,
+good-humouredly, as he took his place at the breakfast table a
+quarter of an hour later.
+
+"It's only us who live here, sir," she answered, "who know how
+terrible they are. There's one--it comes up like my hand--a long
+spike. A boat once struck upon that, and it's as though it'd been
+sawn through the middle."
+
+"I must have a look at them some day," he declared. "I am going to
+work this morning, Mrs. Cox. Lunch at one o'clock."
+
+He took rugs and established himself with a pile of books at the
+back of a grassy knoll, sheltered from the wind, with the sea almost
+at his feet. He sharpened his pencil and numbered the page of his
+notebook. Then he looked up towards the Hall garden and found
+himself dreaming. The sunshine was delicious, and a gentle optimism
+seemed to steal over him.
+
+"I am a fool!" he murmured to himself. "I am catching some part of
+these people's folly. Mr. Fentolin is only an ordinary, crotchety
+invalid with queer tastes. On the big things he is probably like
+other men. I shall go to him this morning."
+
+A sea-gull screamed over his head. Little, brown sailed
+fishing-boats came gliding down the harbourway. A pleasant,
+sensuous joyfulness seemed part of the spirit of the day. Hamel
+stretched himself out upon the dry sand.
+
+"Work be hanged!" he exclaimed.
+
+A soft voice answered him almost in his ear, a voice which was
+becoming very familiar.
+
+"A most admirable sentiment, my young friend, which you seem to be
+doing your best to live up to. Not a line written, I see."
+
+He sat up upon his rug. Mr. Fentolin, in his little carriage, was
+there by his side. Behind was the faithful Meekins, with an easel
+under his arm.
+
+"I trust that your first night in your new abode has been a pleasant
+one?" Mr. Fentolin asked.
+
+"I slept quite well, thanks," Hamel replied. "Glad to see you're
+going to paint."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head gloomily.
+
+"It is, alas!" he declared, "one of my weaknesses. I can work only
+in solitude. I came down on the chance that the fine weather might
+have tempted you over to the Golf Club. As it is, I shall return."
+
+"I am awfully sorry," Hamel said. "Can't I go out of sight
+somewhere?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"I will not ask your pardon for my absurd humours," he continued,
+a little sadly. "Their existence, however, I cannot deny. I
+will wait."
+
+"It seems a pity for you to do that," Hamel remarked. "You see,
+I might stay here for some time."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's face darkened. He looked at the young man with a
+sort of pensive wrath.
+
+"If," the latter went on, "you say 'yes' to something I am going
+to ask you, I might even stay--in the neighbourhood--for longer
+still."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sat quite motionless in his chair; his eyes were
+fixed upon Hamel.
+
+"What is it that you are going to ask me?" he demanded.
+
+"I want to marry your niece."
+
+Mr. Fentolin looked at the young man in mild surprise.
+
+"A sudden decision on your part, Mr. Hamel?" he murmured.
+
+"Not at all," Hamel assured him. "I have been ten years looking
+for her."
+
+"And the young lady?" Mr. Fentolin enquired. "What does she say?"
+
+"I believe, sir," Hamel replied, "that she would be willing."
+
+Mr. Fentolin sighed.
+
+"One is forced sometimes," he remarked regretfully, "to realise
+the selfishness of our young people. For many years one devotes
+oneself to providing them with all the comforts and luxuries of
+life. Then, in a single day, they turn around and give everything
+they have to give to a stranger. So you want to marry Esther?"
+
+"If you please."
+
+"She has a very moderate fortune."
+
+"She need have none at all," Hamel replied; "I have enough."
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced towards the house.
+
+"Then," he said, "I think you had better go and tell her so; in
+which case, I shall be able to paint."
+
+"I have your permission, then?" Hamel asked, rising to his feet
+eagerly.
+
+"Negatively," Mr. Fentolin agreed, "you have. I cannot refuse.
+Esther is of age; the thing is reasonable. I do not know whether
+she will be happy with you or not. A young man of your
+disposition who declines to study the whims of an unfortunate
+creature like myself is scarcely likely to be possessed of much
+sensibility. However, perhaps your views as to a solitary
+residence here will change with your engagement to my niece."
+
+Hamel did not reply for a moment. He was trying to ask himself
+why, even in the midst of this rush of anticipatory happiness, he
+should be conscious of a certain reluctance to leave the Tower--and
+Mr. Fentolin. He was looking longingly towards the Hall. Mr.
+Fentolin waved him away.
+
+"Go and make love," he ordered, "and leave me alone. We are both
+in pursuit of beauty--only our methods differ."
+
+Hamel hesitated no longer but walked up the narrow path with
+swift, buoyant footsteps. Everywhere he seemed to be surrounded
+by the glorious spring sunshine. It glittered in the little pools
+and creeks by his side. It drew a new colour from the dun-coloured
+marshes, the masses of emerald seaweed, the shimmering sands. It
+flashed in the long row of windows of the Hall. As he drew nearer,
+he could see the banks of yellow crocuses in the sloping gardens
+behind. There were odours of spring in the air. He ran lightly
+up the terrace steps. There was an easy-chair drawn into her
+favourite corner, and a book upon the table, but no sign of Esther.
+He hesitated for a moment, and then, retracing his steps along the
+terrace, entered the house by the front door, which stood wide
+open. There was no one in the hall, scarcely a sound about the
+place. A great clock ticked solemnly from the foot of the stairs.
+There was not even a servant in sight. Hamel wandered around, a
+ a loss what to do. He opened the door of the drawing-room and
+looked in. It was empty. He turned away, meaning to ring a bell.
+On his way across the hall he paused. A curiously suggestive
+sound reached him faintly from the end of one of the passages.
+It was the click of a typewriter.
+
+Hamel stood for a moment perfectly still. He had hurried up to
+the Hall, filled with the one selfish joy common to all mankind.
+He had had no thought save the thought of seeing Esther. The
+click of that machine brought him hack to the stern realities of
+life. He remembered his talk to Kinsley, his promise. On the
+hall table he could see from where he was standing the great
+headlines which announced the nation's anxiety. He was in the house
+of a suspected spy. The click of the typewriter was an accompaniment
+to his thought. He looked around once more and listened. Then he
+made his way quietly across the hail and down the long passage, at
+the end of which the room which Mr. Fentolin called his workroom
+was situated. He turned the handle of the door and entered, closing
+it immediately behind him. The woman who was typing paused with her
+fingers upon the keys. Her eyes met his coldly, without curiosity.
+She had paused in her work, but she took no other notice of his
+coming.
+
+"Has Mr. Fentolin sent you here?" she asked at last.
+
+He came over to the typewriter.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin has not sent me," he said slowly. "I am here on my
+own account. I dare say you will think that I am a lunatic to
+come to you like this. Nevertheless, please listen to me."
+
+Her fingers left the keys. She laid her hands upon the table in
+front of her. He drew a little nearer. She covered over the sheets
+of paper with which she was surrounded with a pad of blotting-paper.
+He pointed suddenly to them.
+
+"Why do you do that?" he demanded. "What is there in your work
+that you are afraid I might see?"
+
+She answered him without hesitation.
+
+"These are private papers of Mr. Fentolin's. No one has any
+business to see them. No one has any business to enter this room.
+Why are you here?"
+
+"I came to the Hall to find Miss Fentolin," he replied. "I heard
+the click of your typewriter. I came to you, I suppose I should
+say, on impulse."
+
+Her eyes rested upon his, filled with a cold and questioning light.
+
+"There's an impression up in London," Hamel went on, "that Mr.
+Fentolin has been interfering by means of his wireless in affairs
+which don't concern him, and giving away valuable information.
+This man Dunster's disappearance is as yet unexplained. I feel
+myself justified in making certain investigations, and among the
+first of them I should like you to tell me exactly the nature of
+the work for which Mr. Fentolin finds a secretary necessary?"
+
+She glanced towards the bell. He moved to the edge of the table
+as though to intercept her.
+
+"In any ordinary case," he continued, "I would not ask you to
+betray your employer's confidence. As things are, I think I am
+justified. You are English, are you not? You realise, I suppose,
+that the country is on the brink of war?"
+
+She looked at him from the depths of her still, lusterless eyes.
+
+"You must be a very foolish person," she remarked, "if you expect
+to obtain information in this manner."
+
+"Perhaps I am," he confessed, "but my folly has brought me to you,
+and you can give me the information if you will."
+
+"Where is Mr. Fentolin?" she asked.
+
+"Down at the Tower," he replied. "I left him there. He sent me
+up to see Miss Fentolin. I was looking for her when the click of
+your typewriter reminded me of other things."
+
+She turned composedly back to her work.
+
+"I think," she said, "that you had better go and find Miss Fentolin."
+
+"Don't talk nonsense! You can't think I have risked giving myself
+away to you for nothing? I mean to search this room, to read the
+papers which you are typing."
+
+She glanced around her a little contemptuously.
+
+"You are welcome," she assured him. "Pray proceed."
+
+They exchanged the glances of duelists. Her plain black frock was
+buttoned up to her throat. Her colourless face seemed set in exact
+and expressionless lines. Her eyes were like windows of glass. He
+felt only their scrutiny; nothing of the reason for it, or of the
+thoughts which stirred behind in her brain. There was nothing about
+her attitude which seemed in any way threatening, yet he had the
+feeling that in this interview it was she who possessed the upper
+hand.
+
+"You are a foolish person," she said calmly. "You are so foolish
+that you are not, in all probability, in the slightest degree
+dangerous. Believe me, ours is an unequal duel. There is a bell
+upon this table which has apparently escaped your notice. I sit
+with my finger upon the button--so. I have only to press it, and
+the servants will be here. I do not wish to press it. I do not
+desire that you should be, as you certainly would be, banished from
+this house."
+
+He was immensely puzzled. She had not resented his strange
+intrusion. She had accepted it, indeed, with curious equanimity.
+Her forefinger lingered still over the little ivory knob of the bell
+attached to her desk. He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"You have the advantage of me," he admitted, a little curtly. "All
+the same, I think I could possess myself of those sheets of paper,
+you know, before the bell was answered."
+
+"Would it be wise, I wonder, then, to ensure their safety?" she
+asked coolly.
+
+Her finger pressed the bell. He took a quick step forward. She
+held out her hand.
+
+"Stop!" she ordered. "These sheets will tell you nothing which you
+do not know already unless you are a fool. Never mind the bell.
+That is my affair. I am sending you away."
+
+He leaned a little towards her.
+
+"It wouldn't be possible to bribe you, I suppose?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I wonder you haven't tried that before. No, it would not--not
+with money, that is to say."
+
+"You'll tell Mr. Fentolin, I presume?" he asked quickly.
+
+"I have nothing to tell him," she replied. "Nothing has happened.
+Richards," she went on, as a servant entered the room, "Mr. Hamel
+is looking for Miss Fentolin. Will you see if you can find her?"
+
+The man's expression was full of polite regret.
+
+"Miss Fentolin went over to Legh Woods early this morning, sir,"
+he announced. "She is staying to lunch with Lady Saxthorpe."
+
+Hamel stood quite still for a moment. Then he turned to the window.
+In the far distance he could catch a glimpse of the Tower. Mr.
+Fentolin's chair had disappeared from the walk.
+
+"I am sorry," he said. "I must have made a mistake. I will hurry
+back."
+
+There were more questions which he was longing to ask, but the cold
+negativeness of her manner chilled him. She sat with her fingers
+poised over the keys, waiting for his departure. He turned and
+left the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+Mr. Fentolin, his carriage drawn up close to the beach, was painting
+steadily when Hamel stood once more by his side. His eyes moved
+only from the sea to the canvas. He never turned his head.
+
+"So your wooing has not prospered, my young friend," he remarked
+gently. "I am sorry. Is there anything I can do?"
+
+"Your niece has gone out to lunch," Hamel replied shortly.
+
+Mr. Fentolin stopped painting. His face was full of concern as he
+looked up at Hamel.
+
+"My dear sir," he exclaimed, "how can I apologise! Of course she
+has gone out to lunch. She has gone out to Lady Saxthorpe's. I
+remember the subject being discussed. I myself, in fact, was the
+instigator of her going. I owe you a thousand apologies, Mr. Hamel.
+Let me make what amends are possible for your useless journey.
+Dine with us to-night."
+
+"You are very kind."
+
+"A poor amends," Mr. Fentolin continued. "A morning like this was
+made for lovers. Sunshine and blue sky, a salt breeze flavoured
+just a little with that lavender, and a stroll through my spring
+gardens, where my hyacinths are like a field of purple and gold,
+a mantle of jewels upon the brown earth. Ah, well! One's thoughts
+will wander to the beautiful things of life. There were once women
+who loved me, Mr. Hamel."
+
+Hamel looked doubtfully at the strange little figure in the chair.
+Was this genuine, he wondered, a voluntary outburst, or was it some
+subtle attempt to incite sympathy? Mr. Fentolin seemed almost to
+have read his thought.
+
+"It is not for the sake of your pity that I say this," he continued.
+"Mine is only the passing across the line which age as well as
+infirmity makes inevitable. No one in the world who lives to grow
+old, and who has loved and felt the fire of it in his veins, can
+pass that line without sorrow, or look back without a pang. I am
+among a great army. Well, well, I shall paint no more to-day," he
+concluded abruptly.
+
+"Where is your servant?" Hamel asked.
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced around him carelessly.
+
+"He has wandered away out of sight. He knows well how necessary
+solitude is to me if once I take the brush between my fingers
+--solitude natural and entire, I mean. If any one is within a
+dozen yards of me I know it, even though I cannot see them.
+Meekins is wandering somewhere the other side of the Tower."
+
+"Shall I call him?"
+
+"On no account," Mr. Fentolin begged. "Presently he will appear,
+in plenty of time. There is the morning to be passed--barely
+eleven o'clock, I think, now. I shall sit in my chair, and sink a
+little down, and dream of these beautiful lights, these rolling,
+foam-flecked waves, these patches of blue and shifting green. I
+can form them in my brain. I can make a picture there, even though
+my fingers refuse to move. You are not an aesthete, I think, Mr.
+Hamel? The study of beauty does not mean to you what it did to your
+father, and my father, and, in a smaller way to me."
+
+"Perhaps not," Hamel confessed. "I believe I feel these things
+somewhere, because they bring a queer sense of content with them.
+I am afraid, though, that my artistic perceptions are not so keen
+as some men's."
+
+Mr. Fentolin looked at him thoughtfully.
+
+"It is the physical life in your veins--too splendid to permit you
+abstract pleasures. Compensations again, you see--compensations.
+I wonder what the law is that governs these things. I have
+forgotten sometimes," he went on, "forgotten my own infirmities in
+the soft intoxication of a wonderful seascape. Only," he went on,
+his face a little grey, "it is the physical in life which triumphs.
+There are the hungry hours which nothing will satisfy."
+
+His head sank, his chin rested upon his chest. He had all the
+appearance now of a man who talks in bitter earnest. Yet Hamel
+wondered. He looked towards the Tower; there was no sign of Meekins.
+The sea-gulls went screaming above their heads. Mr. Fentolin never
+moved. His eyes seemed half closed. It was only when Hamel rose to
+his feet that he looked swiftly up.
+
+"Stay with me, I beg you, Mr. Hamel," he said. "I am in one of
+the moods when solitude, even for a moment, is dangerous. Do you
+know what I have sometimes thought to myself?"
+
+He pointed to the planked way which led down the steep, pebbly beach
+to the sea.
+
+"I have sometimes thought," he went on, "that it would be glorious
+to find a friend to stand by my side at the top of the planks, just
+there, when the tide was high, and to bid him loose my chair and to
+steer it myself, to steer it down the narrow path into the arms of
+the sea. The first touch of the salt waves, the last touch of life.
+Why not? One sleeps without fear."
+
+He lifted his head suddenly. Meekins had appeared, coming round
+from the back of the Tower. Instantly Mr. Fentolin's whole manner
+changed. He sat up in his chair.
+
+"It is arranged, then," he said. "You dine with us to-night. For
+the other matters of which you have spoken, well, let them rest in
+the hands of the gods. You are not very kind to me. I am not sure
+whether you would make Esther a good husband. I am not sure, even,
+that I like you. You take no pains to make yourself agreeable.
+Considering that your father was an artist, you seem to me rather a
+dull and uninspired young man. But who can tell? There may be
+things stirring beneath that torpid brain of yours of which no other
+person knows save yourself."
+
+The concentrated gaze of Mr. Fentolin's keen eyes was hard to meet,
+but Hamel came out of the ordeal without flinching.
+
+"At eight o'clock, Mr. Fentolin," he answered. "I can see that I
+must try to earn your better opinion."
+
+Hamel read steadily for the remainder of the morning. It was past
+one o'clock when he rose stiffly from his seat among the sand
+knolls and, strolling back to the Tower, opened the door and
+entered. The cloth was laid for luncheon in the little
+sitting-room, but there were no signs of Hannah Cox. He passed
+on into the kitchen and came to a sudden standstill. Once more
+the memory of his own work passed away from him. Once more he
+was back again among that queer, clouded tangle of strange
+suspicions, of thrilling, half-formed fears, which had assailed
+him at times ever since his arrival at St, David's. He stopped
+quite short. The words which rose to his lips died away. He
+felt the breathless, compelling need for silence and grew tense in
+the effort to make no sound.
+
+Hannah Cox was kneeling on the stone floor. Her ear was close to
+the crack of the door which led into the boat-house. Her face,
+half turned from it, was set in a strange, concentrated passion of
+listening; her lips were parted, her eyes half closed. She took
+no more notice of Hamel or his arrival than if he had been some
+useless piece of furniture. Every faculty seemed to be absorbed in
+that one intense effort of listening. There was no need of her
+out-stretched finger. Hamel fell in at once with a mood so mesmeric.
+ He, too, listened. The small clock which she had brought with her
+from the village ticked away upon the mantelpiece. The full sea
+fell with placid softness upon the high beach outside. Some slight
+noise of cooking came from the stove. Save for these things there
+was silence. Yet, for a space of time which Hamel could never have
+measured, they both listened. When at last the woman rose to her
+feet, Hamel, finding words at last, was surprised to find that his
+throat was dry.
+
+"What is it, Mrs. Cox?" he asked. "Why were you listening there?"
+
+Her face was absolutely expressionless. She was busying herself
+now with a small saucepan, and her back was turned towards him.
+
+"I spend my life, sir," she said, "listening and waiting. One
+never knows when the end may come."
+
+"But the boat-house," Hamel objected. "No one has been in there
+his morning, have they?"
+
+"Who can tell?" she answered. "He could go anywhere when he chose,
+or how he chose--through the keyhole, if he wanted."
+
+"But why listen?" Hamel persisted. "There is nothing in there now
+but some odds and ends of machinery."
+
+She turned from the fire and looked at him for a moment. Her eyes
+were colourless, her tone unemotional.
+
+"Maybe! There's no harm in listening."
+
+"Did you hear anything which made you want to listen?"
+
+"Who can tell?" she answered. "A woman who lives well-nigh alone,
+as I live, in a quiet place, hears things so often that other folk
+never listen to. There's always something in my ears, night or day.
+Sometimes I am not sure whether it's in this world or the other. It
+was like that with me just then. It was for that reason I listened.
+Your luncheon's ready, sir."
+
+Hamel walked thoughtfully back into his sitting-room. He seated
+himself before a spotless cloth and watched Hannah Cox spread out
+his well-cooked, cleanly-served meal.
+
+"If there's anything you want, sir," she said, "I shall hear you at
+a word. The kitchen door is open."
+
+"One moment, Mrs. Cox."
+
+She lingered there patiently, with the tray in her hand.
+
+"There was some sound," Hamel continued, "perhaps a real sound,
+perhaps a fancy, which made you go down on your knees in the kitchen.
+Tell me what it was."
+
+"The sound I always hear, sir," she answered quietly. "I hear it in
+the night, and I hear it when I stand by the sea and look out. I
+have heard it for so many years that who can tell whether it comes
+from this world or the other--the cry of men who die!"
+
+She passed out. Hamel looked after her, for a moment, like a man
+in a dream. In his fancy he could see her back again once more in
+the kitchen, kneeling on the stone floor,--listening!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+A cold twilight had fallen upon the land when Hamel left the Tower
+that evening and walked briskly along the foot-way to the Hall.
+Little patches of mist hung over the creeks, the sky was almost
+frosty. The lights from St. David's Hall shone like cheerful
+beacons before him. He hastened up the stone steps, crossed the
+terrace, and passed into the hall. A servant conducted him at once
+to the drawing-room. Mrs. Fentolin, in a pink evening dress, with
+a pink ornament in her hair, held out both her hands. In the
+background, Mr. Fentolin, in his queerly-cut evening clothes, sat
+with folded arms, leaning back in his carriage. He listened grimly
+to his sister-in-law as she stood with Hamel's hands in hers.
+
+"My dear Mr. Hamel!" she exclaimed. "How perfectly charming of you
+to come up and relieve a little our sad loneliness! Delightful, I
+call it, of you. I was just saying so to Miles."
+
+Hamel looked around the room. Already his heart was beginning to
+sink.
+
+"Miss Fentolin is well, I hope?" he asked.
+
+"Well, but a very naughty girl," her mother declared. "I let her
+go to Lady Saxthorpe's to lunch, and now we have had simply the
+firmest letter from Lady Saxthorpe. They insist upon keeping Esther
+to dine and sleep. I have had to send her evening clothes, but you
+can't tell, Mr. Hamel, how I miss her."
+
+
+Hamel's disappointment was a little too obvious to pass unnoticed.
+There was a shade of annoyance, too, in his face. Mr. Fentolin
+smoothly intervened.
+
+"Let us be quite candid with Mr. Hamel, dear Florence," he begged.
+"I have spoken to my sister-in-law and told her the substance of
+our conversation this morning," he proceeded, wheeling his chair
+nearer to Hamel. "She is thunderstruck. She wishes to reflect, to
+consider. Esther chanced to be away. We have encouraged her
+absence for a few more hours."
+
+"I hope, Mrs. Fentolin," Hamel said simply, "that you will give
+her to me. I am not a rich man, but I am fairly well off. I should
+be willing to live exactly where Esther wishes, and I would do my
+best to make her happy."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin opened her lips once and closed them again. She
+laughed a little--a high-pitched, semi-hysterical laugh. The hand
+which gripped her fan was straining so that the blue veins stood out
+almost like whipcord.
+
+"Esther is very young, Mr. Hamel. We must talk this over. You have
+known her for such a very short time."
+
+A servant announced dinner, and Hamel offered his arm to his hostess.
+
+"Is Gerald away, too?" he asked.
+
+"We do indeed owe you our apologies," Mr. Fentolin declared.
+"Gerald is spending a couple of days at the Dormy House at
+Brancaster--a golf arrangement made some time back."
+
+"He promised to play with me to-morrow," Hamel remarked thoughtfully.
+"He said nothing about going away."
+
+"I fear that like most young men of his age he has little memory,"
+Mr. Fentolin sighed. "However, he will be back to-morrow or the
+next day. I owe you my apologies, Mr. Hamel, for our lack of young
+people. We must do our best to entertain our guest, Florence. You
+must be at your best, dear. You must tell him some of those capital
+stories of yours."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin shivered for a moment. Hamel, as he handed her to her
+place, was struck by a strange look which she threw upon him, half
+furtive, full of pain. Her hand almost clung to his. She slipped a
+little, and he held her tightly. Then he was suddenly conscious
+that something hard was being pressed into his palm. He drew his
+hand away at once.
+
+"You seem a little unsteady this evening, my dear Florence," Mr.
+Fentolin remarked, peering across the round table.
+
+She eyed him nonchalantly enough.
+
+"The floor is slippery," she said. "I was glad, for a moment, of
+Mr. Hamel's strong hand. Where are those dear puppies? Chow-Chow,"
+she went on, "come and sit by your mistress at once."
+
+Hamel's fingers inside his waistcoat pocket were smoothing out the
+crumpled piece of paper which she had passed to him. Soon he had
+it quite flat. Mrs. Fentolin, as though freed from some anxiety,
+chattered away gaily.
+
+"I don't know that I shall apologise to Mr. Hamel at all for the
+young people being away," she declared. "Just fancy what we have
+saved him from--a solitary meal served by Hannah Cox! Do you know
+that they say she is half-witted, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"So far, she has looked after me very well," Hamel observed.
+
+"Her intellect is defective," Mr. Fentolin remarked, "on one point
+only. The good woman is obsessed by the idea that her husband and
+sons are still calling to her from the Dagger Rocks. It is almost
+pitiful to meet her wandering about there on a stormy night. The
+seacoasts are full of these little village tragedies--real
+tragedies, too, however insignificant they may seem to us."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's tone was gently sympathetic. He changed the subject
+a moment or two later, however.
+
+"Nero fiddles to-night," he said, "while Rome burns. There are
+hundreds in our position, yet it certainly seems queer that we
+should be sitting here so quietly when the whole country is in such
+a state of excitement. I see the press this morning is preaching
+an immediate declaration of war."
+
+"Against whom?" Mrs. Fentolin asked.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"That does seem to be rather the trouble," he admitted. "Russia,
+Austria, Germany, Italy, and France are all assisting at a
+Conference to which no English representative has been bidden. In
+a sense, of course, that is equivalent to an act of hostility from
+all these countries towards England. The question is whether we
+have or have not a secret understanding with France, and if so, how
+far she will be bound by it. There is a rumour that when Monsieur
+Deschelles was asked formally whom he represented, that he replied
+--'France and Great Britain.' There may be something in it. It is
+hard to see how any English statesman could have left unguarded the
+Mediterranean, with all that it means, trusting simply to the faith
+of a country with whom we have no binding agreement. On the other
+hand, there is the mobilisation of the fleet. If France is really
+faithful, one wonders if there was need for such an extreme step."
+
+"I am out of touch with political affairs," Hamel declared. "I have
+been away from England for so long."
+
+"I, on the other hand," Mr. Fentolin continued, his eyes glittering
+a little, "have made the study of the political situation in Europe
+my hobby for years. I have sent to me the leading newspapers of
+Berlin, Rome, Paris, St. Petersburg, and Vienna. For two hours
+every day I read them, side by side. It is curious sometimes to
+note the common understanding which seems to exist between the
+Powers not bound by any formal alliance. For years war seemed a
+very unlikely thing, and now," he added, leaning forward in his
+chair, "I pronounce it almost a certainty."
+
+Hamel looked at his host a little curiously. Mr. Fentolin's
+gentleness of expression seemed to have departed. His face was
+hard, his eyes agleam. He had almost the look of a bird of prey.
+For some reason, the thought of war seemed to be a joy to him.
+Perhaps he read something of Hamel's wonder in his expression, for
+with a shrug of the shoulders he dismissed the subject.
+
+"Well," he concluded, "all these things lie on the knees of the gods.
+I dare say you wonder, Mr. Hamel, why a poor useless creature like
+myself should take the slightest interest in passing events? It is
+just the fascination of the looker-on. I want your opinion about
+that champagne. Florence dear, you must join us. We will drink to
+Mr. Hamel's health. We will perhaps couple that toast in our minds
+with the sentiment which I am sure is not very far from your
+thoughts, Florence."
+
+Hamel raised his glass and bowed to his host and hostess. He was
+not wholly at his ease. It seemed to him that he was being watched
+with a queer persistence by both of them. Mrs. Fentolin continued
+to talk and laugh with a gaiety which was too obviously forced. Mr.
+Fentolin posed for a while as the benevolent listener. He mildly
+applauded his sister-in-law's stories, and encouraged Hamel in the
+recital of some of his reminiscences. Suddenly the door was opened.
+Miss Price appeared. She walked smoothly across the room and stood
+by Mr. Fentolin's side. Stooping down, she whispered in his ear. He
+pushed his chair back a little from the table. His face was dark
+with anger.
+
+"I said not before ten to-night," he muttered.
+
+Again she spoke in his ear, so softly that the sound of her voice
+itself scarcely travelled even as far as where Hamel was sitting.
+Mr. Fentolin looked steadfastly for a moment at his sister-in-law
+and from her to Hamel. Then he backed his chair away front the
+table.
+
+"I shall have to ask to be excused for three minutes," he said.
+"I must speak upon the telephone. It is a call from some one who
+declares that they have important news."
+
+He turned the steering-wheel of his chair, and with Miss Price
+by his side passed across the dining-room, out of the Oasis of
+rose-shaded lights into the shadows, and through the open door.
+From there he turned his head before he disappeared, as though to
+watch his guest. Mrs. Fentolin was busy fondling one of her dogs,
+which she had raised to her lap, and Hamel was watching her with a
+tolerant smile.
+
+"Koto, you little idiot, why can't you sit up like your sister?
+Was its tail in the way, then! Mr. Hamel," she whispered under her
+breath, so softly that he barely caught the words, although he was
+only a few feet away, "don't look at me. I feel as though we were
+being watched all the time. You can destroy that piece of paper in
+your pocket. All that it says is 'Leave here immediately after
+dinner.'"
+
+Hamel sipped his wine in a nonchalant fashion. His fingers had
+strayed over the silky coat of the little dog, which she had held
+out as though for his inspection.
+
+"How can I?" he asked. "What excuse can I make?"
+
+"Invent one," she insisted swiftly. "Leave here before ten o'clock.
+Don't let anything keep you. And destroy that piece of paper in
+your pocket, if you can--now."
+
+"But, Mrs. Fentolin--" he began.
+
+She caught up one of her absurd little pets and held it to her mouth.
+
+"Meekins is in the doorway," she whispered.
+
+"Don't argue with me, please. You are in danger you know nothing
+about. Pass me the cigarettes."
+
+She leaned back in her chair, smoking quickly. She held one of the
+dogs on her knee and talked rubbish to it. Hamel watched her,
+leaning back in his carved oak chair, and he found it hard to keep
+the pity from his eyes. The woman was playing a part, playing it
+with desperate and pitiful earnestness, a part which seemed the more
+tragical because of the soft splendour of their surroundings. From
+the shadowy walls, huge, dimly-seen pictures hung about them, a
+strange and yet impressive background. Their small round
+dining-table, with its rare cut glass, its perfect appointments, its
+bowls of pink roses, was like a spot of wonderful colour in the great
+room. Two men servants stood at the sideboard a few yards away, a
+triumph of negativeness. The butler, who had been absent for a
+moment, stood now silently waiting behind his master's place. Hamel
+was oppressed, during those few minutes of waiting, by a curious
+sense of unreality, as though he were taking part in some strange
+tableau. There was something unreal about his surroundings and his
+own presence there; something unreal in the atmosphere, charged as
+it seemed to be with some omen of impending happenings; something
+unreal in that whispered warning, those few hoarsely uttered words
+which had stolen to his hearing across the clusters of drooping
+roses; the absurd babble of the woman, who sat there with tragic
+things under the powder with which her face was daubed.
+
+"Koto must learn to sit upon his tail--like that. No, not another
+grape till he sits up. There, then!"
+
+She was leaning forward with a grape between her teeth, towards the
+tiny animal who was trying in vain to balance his absurdly shaped
+little body upon the tablecloth. Hamel, without looking around,
+knew quite well what was happening. Soon he heard the click of the
+chair. Mr. Fentolin was back in his place. His skin seemed paler
+and more parchment-like than ever. His eyes glittered.
+
+"It seems," he announced quietly, as he raised his wine-glass to his
+lips with the air of one needing support, "that we entertained an
+angel unawares here. This Mr. Dunster is lost for the second time.
+A very important personage he turns out to be."
+
+"You mean the American whom Gerald brought home after the accident?"
+Mrs. Fentolin asked carelessly.
+
+ Mr. Fentolin replied. "He insisted upon continuing his journey
+before he was strong enough. I warned him of what might happen.
+He has evidently been take ill somewhere. It seems that he was
+on his way to The Hague."
+
+"Do you mean that he has disappeared altogether this time?" Hamel
+asked.
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook his head.
+
+"No, he has found his way to The Hague safely enough. He is lying
+there at a hotel in the city, but he is unconscious. There is some
+talk about his having been robbed on the way. At any rate, they
+are tracing his movements backwards. We are to be honoured with a
+visit from one of Scotland Yard's detectives, to reconstruct his
+journey from here. Our quiet little corner of the world is becoming
+quite notorious. Florence dear, you are tired. I can see it in
+your eyes. Your headache continues, I am sure. We will not be
+selfish. Mr. Hamel and I are going to have a long evening in the
+library. Let me recommend a phenacetin and bed."
+
+She rose at once to her feet, with a dog under either arm.
+
+"I'll take the phenacetin," she promised, "but I hate going to bed
+early. Shall I see you again, I wonder, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"Not this evening, I fear," he answered. "I am going to ask Mr.
+Fentolin to excuse me early."
+
+She passed out of the room. Hamel escorted her as far as the door
+and then returned. Mr. Fentolin was sitting quite still in his
+chair. His eyes were fixed upon the tablecloth. He looked up
+quickly as Hamel resumed his seat.
+
+"You are not in earnest, I hope, Mr. Hamel," he said, "when you tell
+me that you must leave early? I have been anticipating a long
+evening. My library is filled with books on South America which I
+want to discuss with you."
+
+"Another evening, if you don't mind," Hamel begged. "To-night I
+must ask you to excuse my hurrying away."
+
+Mr. Fentolin looked up from underneath his eyelids. His glance was
+quick and penetrating.
+
+"Why this haste?"
+
+Hamel shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"To tell you the truth," he admitted, "I had an idea while I was
+reading an article on cantilever bridges this morning. I want to
+work it out."
+
+Mr. Fentolin glanced behind him. The door of the dining-room was
+closed. The servants had disappeared. Meekins alone, looking more
+like a prize fighter than ever in his somber evening clothes, had
+taken the place of the butler behind his master's chair.
+
+"We shall see," Mr. Fentolin said quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+Mr. Fentolin pointed to the little pile of books upon the table,
+the deep easy-chair, the green-shaded lamps, the decanter of wine.
+He had insisted upon a visit, however brief, to the library.
+
+"It is a student's appeal which I make to you, Mr. Hamel," he said,
+with a whimsical smile. "Here we are in my study, with the door
+closed, secure against interruption, a bright fire in the grate, a
+bowling and ever-increasing wind outside. Let us go together over
+the ground of your last wonderful expedition over the Andes. You
+will find that I am not altogether ignorant of your profession, or
+of those very interesting geological problems which you spoke of in
+connection with that marvellous railway scheme. We will discuss
+them side by side as sybarites, hang ourselves around with cigarette
+smoke, drink wine, and presently coffee. It is necessary, is it
+not, for many reasons, that we become better acquainted? You realise
+that, I am sure, and you will not persist in returning to your
+selfish solitude."
+
+Hamel's eyes were fixed a little longingly upon some of the volumes
+with which the table was covered.
+
+"You must not think me ungrateful or churlish, Mr. Fentolin," he
+begged. "I have a habit of keeping promises which I make to myself,
+and to-night I have made myself a promise that I will be back at
+the Tower by ten o'clock."
+
+"You are obdurate?" Mr. Fentolin asked softly.
+
+"I am afraid I am."
+
+Mr. Fentolin busied himself with the handle of his chair.
+
+"Tell me," he insisted, "is there any other person save yourself
+to whom you have given this mysterious promise?"
+
+"No one," Hamel replied promptly.
+
+"I am a person very sensitive to atmosphere," Mr. Fentolin continued
+slowly. "Since the unfortunate visit of this man Dunster, I seem to
+have been conscious of a certain suspicion, a little cloud of
+suspicion under which I seem to live and move, even among the members
+of my own household. My sister-in-law is nervous and hysterical;
+Gerald has been sullen and disobedient; Esther has avoided me. And
+now--well, I find even your attitude a little difficult to
+understand. What does it mean, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"I am not in the confidence of the different members of your family,"
+he answered. "So far as I, personally, am concerned--"
+
+"It pleases me sometimes," Mr. Fentolin interrupted, "to interfere
+to some extent in the affairs of the outside world. If I do so,
+that is my business. I do it for my own amusement. It is at no
+time a serious position which I take up. Have I by any chance, Mr.
+Hamel, become an object of suspicion to you?"
+
+"There are matters in which you are concerned," Hamel admitted,
+"which I do not understand, but I see no purpose in discussing them."
+
+Mr. Fentolin wheeled his chair round in a semicircle. He was now
+between the door and Hamel.
+
+"Weaker mortals than I, Mr. Hamel," he said calmly, "have wielded
+before now the powers of life and death. From my chair I can make
+the lightnings bite. Science has done away with the triumph of
+muscularity. Even as we are here together at this moment, Mr. Hamel,
+if we should disagree, it is I who am the preordained victor."
+
+Hamel saw the glitter in his hand. This was the end, then, of all
+doubt! He remained silent.
+
+"Suspicions which are, in a sense, absurd," Mr. Fentolin continued,
+"have grown until I find them obtrusive and obnoxious. What have I
+to do with Mr. John P. Dunster? I sent him out from my house. If
+he is lost or ill, the affair is not mine. Yet one by one those
+around me are falling away. I told you an hour ago that Gerald was
+at Brancaster. It is a lie. He has left this house, but no soul
+in it knows his destination."
+
+Hamel started.
+
+"You mean that he has run away?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"All that I can surmise is that he has followed Dunster," he
+proceeded. "He has an idea that in some way I robbed or injured
+the man. He has broken the bond of relationship between us. He
+has broken his solemn vow. He has run a grave and terrible risk."
+
+"What of Miss Esther?" Hamel asked quickly.
+
+"I have sent her away," Mr. Fentolin replied, "until we come to a
+clear understanding, you and I. You seem to be a harmless enough
+person, Mr. Hamel but appearances are sometimes deceptive. It has
+been suggested to me that you are a spy."
+
+"By whom?" Hamel demanded.
+
+"By those in whom I trust," Mr. Fentolin told him sternly. "You
+are a friend of Reginald Kinsley. You met him in Norwich the other
+day--secretly. Kinsley's chief is a member of the Government. He
+is one of those who will find eternal obloquy if The Hague
+Conference comes to a successful termination. For some strange
+reason, I am supposed to have robbed or harmed the one man in the
+world whose message might bring to nought that Conference. Are you
+here to watch me, Mr. Hamel? Are you one of those who believe that
+I am either in the pay of a foreign country, or that my harmless
+efforts to interest myself in great things are efforts inimical to
+this country; that I am, in short, a traitor?"
+
+"You must admit that many of your actions are incomprehensible,"
+Hamel replied slowly. "There are things here which I do not
+understand--which certainly require explanation."
+
+"Still, why do you make them your business?" Mr. Fentolin
+persisted. "If indeed the course which I steer is a harmless one,"
+he continued, with a strange new glitter in his eyes, "then you are
+an impertinent stranger to whom my doors cannot any longer be open.
+If you have taken advantage of my hospitality to spy upon me and my
+actions, if indeed you have a mission here, then you can carry it
+with you down into hell!"
+
+"I understand that you are threatening me?" Hamel murmured.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"Scarcely that, my young friend. I am not quite the obvious sort
+of villain who flourishes revolvers and lures his victims into
+secret chambers. These words to you are simply words of warning.
+I am not like other men, neither am I used to being crossed. When
+I am crossed, I am dangerous. Leave here, if you will, in safety,
+and mind your own affairs; but if you show one particle of
+curiosity as to mine, if you interfere in matters which concern me
+and me only, remember that you are encircled by powers which are
+entirely ruthless, absolutely omnipotent. You can walk back to the
+Tower to-night and remember that there isn't a step you take which
+might not be your last if I willed it, and never a soul the wiser.
+There's a very hungry little mother here who takes her victims and
+holds them tight. You can hear her calling to you now. Listen!"
+
+He held up his finger. The tide had turned, and through the
+half-open window came the low thunder of the waves.
+
+"You decline to share my evening," Mr. Fentolin concluded. "Let
+it be so. Go your own way, Hamel, only take care that your way does
+not cross mine."
+
+He backed his chair slowly and pressed the bell. Hamel felt himself
+dismissed. He passed out into the hall. The door of the
+drawing-room stood open, and he heard the sound of Mrs. Fentolin's
+thin voice singing some little French song. He hesitated and then
+stepped in. With one hand she beckoned him to her, continuing to
+play all the time. He stepped over to her side.
+
+"I come to make my adieux," he whispered, with a glance towards the
+door.
+
+"You are leaving, then?" she asked quickly.
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin is in a strange humour," she went on, a moment later,
+after she had struck the final chords of her song. "There are
+things going on around us which no one can understand. I think
+that one of his schemes has miscarried; he has gone too far. He
+suspects you; I cannot tell you why or how. If only you would go
+away!"
+
+"What about Esther?" he asked quietly.
+
+"You must leave her," she cried, with a little catch in her throat.
+"Gerald has broken away. Esther and I must carry still the burden."
+
+She motioned him to go. He touched her fingers for a moment.
+
+"Mrs. Fentolin," he said, "I have been a good many years making up
+my mind. Now that I have done so, I do not think that any one will
+keep Esther from me."
+
+She looked at him a little pitifully, a little wistfully. Then,
+with a shrug of the shoulders, she turned round to the piano and
+recommenced to play. Hamel took his coat and hat from a servant
+who was waiting in the hail and passed out into the night.
+
+He walked briskly until he reached the Tower. The wind had risen,
+but there was still enough light to help him on his way. The
+little building was in complete darkness. He opened the door and
+stepped into the sitting-room, lit the lamp, and, holding it over
+his head, went down the passage and into the kitchen. Then he gave
+a start. The lamp nearly slipped from his fingers. Kneeling on
+the stone floor, in very much the same attitude as he had found her
+earlier in the day, Hannah Cox was crouching patiently by the door
+which led into the boat-house, her face expressionless, her ear
+turned towards the crack. She was still listening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+Hamel set down the lamp upon the table. He glanced at the little
+clock upon the dresser; it was a quarter past ten. The woman had
+observed his entrance, although it seemed in no way to have
+discomposed her.
+
+"Do you know the time, Mrs. Cox?" he asked. "You ought to have been
+home hours ago. What are you doing there?"
+
+She rose to her feet. Her expression was one of dogged but patient
+humility.
+
+"I started for home before nine o'clock, sir," she told him, "but
+it was worse than ever to-night. All the way along by the sea I
+seemed to hear their voices, so I came back. I came back to listen.
+I have been listening for an hour."
+
+Hamel looked at her with a frown upon his forehead.
+
+"Mrs. Cox," he said, "I wish I could understand what it is that you
+have in your mind. Those are not real voices that you hear; you
+cannot believe that?"
+
+"Not real voices," she repeated, without the slightest expression in
+her tone.
+
+"Of course not! And tell me what connection you find between these
+fancies of yours and that room? Why do you come and listen here?"
+
+"I do not know," she answered patiently.
+
+"You must have some reason," he persisted.
+
+"I have no reason," she assured him, "only some day I shall see
+behind these doors. Afterwards, I shall hear the voices no more."
+
+She was busy tying a shawl around her head. Hamel watched her,
+still puzzled. He could not get rid of the idea that there was
+some method behind her madness.
+
+"Tell me--I have found you listening here before. Have you ever
+heard anything suspicious?"
+
+"I have heard nothing yet," she admitted, "nothing that counts."
+
+"Come," he continued, "couldn't we clear this matter up sensibly?
+Do you believe that there is anybody in there? Do you believe the
+place is being used in any way for a wrong purpose? If so, we will
+insist upon having the keys from Mr. Fentolin. He cannot refuse.
+The place is mine."
+
+"Mr. Fentolin would not give you the keys, sir," she replied. "If
+he did, it would be useless."
+
+"Would you like me to break the door in?" Hamel asked.
+
+"You could not do it, sir," she told him, "not you nor anybody else.
+The door is thicker than my fist, of solid oak. It was a mechanic
+from New York who fitted the locks. I have heard it said in the
+village--Bill Hamas, the carpenter, declares that there are double
+doors. The workmen who were employed here were housed in a tent
+upon the beach and sent home the day they finished their job. They
+were never allowed in the village. They were foreigners, most of
+them. They came from nobody knows where, and when they had finished
+they disappeared. Why was that, sir? What is there inside which
+Mr. Fentolin needs to guard so carefully?"
+
+"Mr. Fentolin has invented something," Hamel explained. "He keeps
+the model in there. Inventors are very jealous of their work."
+
+She looked down upon the floor for a moment.
+
+"I shall be here at seven o'clock in the morning, sir. I will give
+you your breakfast at the usual time."
+
+Hamel opened the door for her.
+
+"Good night, Mrs. Cox," he said. "Would you like me to walk a
+little way with you? It's a lonely path to the village, and the
+dikes are full."
+
+"Thank you, no, sir," she replied. "It's a lonely way, right enough,
+but it isn't loneliness that frightens me. I am less afraid out
+with the winds and the darkness than under this roof. If I lose my
+way and wander all night upon the marsh, I'll be safer out there
+than you, sir."
+
+She passed away, and Hamel watched her disappear into the darkness.
+Then he dragged out a bowl of tobacco and filled a pipe. Although
+he was half ashamed of himself, he strolled back once more into the
+kitchen, and, drawing up a stool, he sat down just where he had
+discovered Hannah Cox, sat still and listened. No sound of any sort
+reached him. He sat there for ten minutes. Then he scrambled to
+his feet.
+
+"She is mad, of course!" he muttered.
+
+He mixed himself a whisky and soda, relit his pipe, which had gone
+out, and drew up an easy-chair to the fire which she had left him
+in the sitting-room. The wind had increased in violence, and the
+panes of his window rattled continually. He yawned and tried to
+fancy that he was sleepy. It was useless. He was compelled to
+admit the truth--that his nerves were all on edge. In a sense he
+was afraid. The thought of bed repelled him. He had not a single
+impulse towards repose. Outside, the wind all the time was
+gathering force. More than once his window was splashed with the
+spray carried on by the wind which followed the tide. He sat quite
+still and tried to think calmly, tried to piece together in his mind
+the sequence of events which had brought him to this part of the
+world and which had led to his remaining where he was, an undesired
+hanger-on at the threshold of Miles Fentolin. He had the feeling
+that to-night he had burned his boats. There was no longer any
+pretence of friendliness possible between him and this strange
+creature. Mr. Fentolin suspected him, realised that he himself was
+suspected. But of what? Hamel moved in his chair restlessly.
+Sometimes that gathering cloud of suspicion seemed to him grotesque.
+Of what real harm could he be capable, this little autocrat who from
+his chair seemed to exercise such a malign influence upon every one
+with whom he was brought into contact? Hamel sighed. The riddle
+was insoluble. With a sudden rush of warmer and more joyous
+feelings, he let the subject slip away from him. He closed his eyes
+and dreamed for a while. There was a new world before him, joys
+which only so short a time ago he had fancied had passed him by.
+
+He sat up in his chair with a start. The fire had become merely
+a handful of grey ashes, his limbs were numb and stiff. The lamp
+was flickering out. He had been dozing, how long he had no idea.
+Something had awakened him abruptly. There was a cold draught
+blowing through the room. He turned his head, his hands still
+gripping the sides of his chair. His heart gave a leap. The
+outer door was a few inches open, was being held open by some
+invisible force. There was some one there, some one on the point
+of entering stealthily. Even as he watched, the crack became a
+little wider. He sat with his eyes riveted upon that opening
+space. The unseen hand was still at work. Every instant he
+expected to see a face thrust forward. The sensation of absolute
+physical fear by which he was oppressed was a revelation to him.
+He found himself wishing almost feverishly that he was armed. The
+physical strength in which he had trusted seemed to him at that
+instant a valueless and impotent thing. There was a splash of
+spray or raindrops against the window and through the crack in
+the door. The lamp chimney hissed and spluttered and finally the
+light went out. The room was in sudden darkness. Hamel sprang
+then to his feet. Silence had become an intolerable thing. He
+felt the close presence of another human being creeping in upon
+him.
+
+"Who's there?" he cried. "Who's there, I say?"
+
+There was no direct answer, only the door was pushed a little
+further open. He had stepped close to it now. The sweep of the
+wind was upon his face, although in the black darkness he could
+see nothing. And then a sudden recollection flashed in upon him.
+From his trousers pocket he snatched a little electric torch. In
+an instant his thumb had pressed the button. He turned it upon
+the door. The shivering white hand which held it open was plainly
+in view. It was the hand of a woman! He stepped swiftly forward.
+A dark figure almost fell into his arms.
+
+"Mrs. Fentolin!" he exclaimed, aghast.
+
+An hysterical cry, choked and subdued, broke from her lips. He
+half carried, half led her to his easy-chair. Suddenly steadied by
+the presence of this unlooked-for emergency, he closed the outside
+door and relit the lamp with firm fingers. Then he turned to face
+her, and his amazement at this strange visit became consternation.
+
+She was still in her dinner-gown of black satin, but it was soaked
+through with the rain and hung about her like a black shroud. She
+had lost one shoe, and there was a great hole in her silk stocking.
+Her hair was all disarranged; one of its numerous switches was
+hanging down over her ear. The rouge upon her cheeks had run down
+on to her neck. She sat there, looking at him out of her hollow
+eyes like some trapped animal. She was shaking with fear. It was
+fear, not faintness, which kept her silent.
+
+"Tell me, please, what is the matter?" he insisted, speaking as
+indifferently as he could. "Tell me at once what has happened?"
+
+She pointed to the door.
+
+"Lock it!" she implored.
+
+He turned down the latch and drew the bolt. The sound seemed to
+give her a little courage. Her fingers went to her throat for a
+moment.
+
+"Give me some water."
+
+He poured out some soda-water. She drank only a sip and put it down
+again. He began to be alarmed. She had the appearance of one who
+has suddenly lost her senses.
+
+"Please tell me just what has happened?" he begged. "If I can help
+in any way, you know I will. But you must tell me. Do you realise
+that it is three o'clock? I should have been in bed, only I went
+to sleep over the fire here."
+
+"I know," she answered. "It is just the wind that has taken away
+my breath. It was a hard struggle to get here. Listen--you are
+our friend, Mr. Hamel--Esther's and mine? Swear that you are our
+friend?"
+
+"Upon my honour, I am," he assured her. "You should know that."
+
+"For eight years," she went on, her voice clear enough now, although
+it seemed charged with a curious metallic vibration, "for eight
+years we've borne it, all three of us, slaves, bound hand and foot,
+lashed with his tongue, driven along the path of his desires. We
+have seen evil things. We have been on the point of rebellion, and
+he's come a little nearer and he's pointed back. He has taken me by
+the hand, and I have walked by the side of his chair, loathing it,
+loathing myself, out on to the terrace and down below, just where
+it happened. You know what happened there, Mr. Hamel?"
+
+"You mean where Mr. Fentolin met with his accident."
+
+"It was no accident!" she cried, glancing for a moment around her.
+"It was no accident! It was my husband who took him up and threw
+him over the terrace, down below; my husband who tried to kill him;
+Esther's father--Gerald's father! Miles was in the Foreign Office
+then, and he did something disgraceful. He sold a secret to Austria.
+He was always a great gambler, and he was in debt. Seymour found
+out about it. He followed him down here. They met upon the terrace.
+I--I saw it!"
+
+He was silent for a moment.
+
+"No one has known the truth," he murmured.
+
+"No one has ever known," she assented, "and our broken lives have
+been the price. It was Miles himself who made the bargain. We--we
+can't go on, Mr. Hamel."
+
+"I begin to understand," Hamel said softly. "You suffer everything
+from Miles Fentolin because he kept the secret. Very well, that
+belongs to the past. Something has happened, something to-night,
+which has brought you here. Tell me about it?"
+
+Once more her voice began to shake.
+
+"We've seen--terrible things--horrible things," she faltered.
+"We've held our peace. Perhaps it's been nearly as bad before,
+but we've closed our eyes; we haven't wanted to know. Now--we
+can't help it. Mr. Hamel, Esther isn't at Lord Saxthorpe's.
+She never went there. They didn't ask her. And Dunster--the
+man Dunster--"
+
+"Where is Esther?" Hamel interrupted suddenly.
+
+"Locked up away from you, locked up because she rebelled!"
+
+"And Dunster?"
+
+She shook her head. Her eyes were filled with horror.
+
+"But he left the Hall--I saw him!"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"It wasn't Dunster. It was the man Miles makes use of--Ryan, the
+librarian. He was once an actor."
+
+"Where is Dunster, then?" Hamel asked quickly. "What has become
+of him?"
+
+She opened her lips and closed them again, struggled to speak and
+failed. She sat there, breathing quickly, but silent. The power
+of speech had gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+Hamel, for the next few minutes, forgot everything else in his
+efforts to restore to consciousness his unexpected visitor. He
+rebuilt the fire, heated some water upon his spirit lamp, and forced
+some hot drink between the lips of the woman who was now almost in
+a state of collapse. Then he wrapped her round in his own ulster
+and drew her closer to the fire. He tried during those few moments
+to put away the memory of all that she had told him. Gradually she
+began to recover. She opened her eyes and drew a little sigh. She
+made no effort at speech, however. She simply lay and looked at
+him like some wounded animal. He came over to her side and chafed
+one of her cold hands.
+
+"Come," he said at last, "you begin to look more like yourself now.
+You are quite safe in here, and, for Esther's sake as well as your
+own, you know that I am your friend."
+
+She nodded, and her fingers gently pressed his.
+
+"I am sure of it," she murmured.
+
+"Now let us see where we are," he continued. "Tell me exactly why
+you risked so much by leaving St. David's Hall to-night and coming
+down here. Isn't there any chance that he might find out?"
+
+"I don't know," she answered. "It was Lucy Price who sent me. She
+came to my room just as I was undressing."
+
+"Lucy Price," he repeated. "The secretary?"
+
+"Yes! She told me that she had meant to come to you herself. She
+sent me instead. She thought it best. This man Dunster is being
+kept alive because there is something Miles wants him to tell him,
+and he won't. But to-night, if he is still alive, if he won't tell,
+they mean to make away with him. They are afraid."
+
+"Miss Price told you this?" Hamel asked gravely.
+
+Mrs. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"Yes! She said so. She knows--she knows everything. She has
+been like the rest of us. She, too, has suffered. She, too, has
+reached the breaking point. She loved him before the accident.
+She has been his slave ever since. Listen!"
+
+She suddenly clutched his arm. They were both silent. There was
+nothing to be heard but the wind. She leaned a little closer to
+him.
+
+"Lucy Price sent me here to-night because she was afraid that it
+was to-night they meant to take him from his hiding-place and kill
+him. The police have left off searching for Mr. Dunster in Yarmouth
+and at The Hague. There is a detective in the neighbourhood and
+another one on his way here. They are afraid to keep him alive any
+longer."
+
+"Where was Mr. Fentolin when you left?" Hamel asked.
+
+"I asked Lucy Price that," she replied. "When she came to my room,
+there were no signs of his leaving. She told me to come and tell
+you everything. Do you know where Mr. Dunster is?"
+
+Hamel shook his head.
+
+"Within a few yards of here," she went on. "He is in the
+boat-house, the place where Miles told you he kept a model of his
+invention. They brought him here the night before they put his
+clothes on Ryan and sent him off disguised as Mr. Dunster, in the
+car to Yarmouth."
+
+Hamel started up, but she clutched at his arm and pulled him back.
+"No," she cried, "you can't break in! There are double doors and
+a wonderful lock. The boat-house is yours; the building is yours.
+In the morning you must demand the keys--if he does not come
+to-night!"
+
+"And how are we to know," Hamel asked, "if he comes to-night?"
+
+"Go outside," she whispered. "Look towards St. David's Hall and
+tell me how many lights you can see."
+
+He drew back the bolt, unlatched the door, and stepped out into the
+darkness. The wind and the driving rain beat against his face. A
+cloud of spray enveloped and soaked him. Like lamps hung in the
+sky, the lights of St. David's Hall shone out through the black
+gulf. He counted them carefully; then he stepped back.
+
+"There are seven," he told her, closing the door with an effort.
+
+She counted upon her fingers.
+
+"I must come and see," she muttered. "I must be sure. Help me."
+
+He lifted her to her feet, and they staggered out together.
+
+"Look!" she went on, gripping his arm. "You see that row of lights?
+If anything happens, if Mr. Fentolin leaves the Hall to-night to
+come down here, a light will appear on the left in the far corner.
+We must watch for that light. We must watch--"
+
+The words, whispered hoarsely into his ear, suddenly died away.
+Even as they stood there, far away from the other lights, another
+one shone suddenly out in the spot towards which she had pointed,
+and continued to burn steadily. He felt the woman who was clinging
+to his arm become suddenly a dead weight.
+
+"She was right!" Mrs. Fentolin moaned. "He is coming down to-night!
+He is preparing to leave now; perhaps he has already started! What
+shall we do? What shall we do?"
+
+Hamel was conscious of a gathering sense of excitement. He, too,
+looked at the signal which was flashing out its message towards them.
+Then he gripped his companion's arm and almost carried her back into
+the sitting-room.
+
+"Look here," he said firmly, "you can do nothing further. You have
+done your part and done it well. Stay where you are and wait. The
+rest belongs to me."
+
+"But what can you do?" she demanded, her voice shaking with fear.
+"Meekins will come with him, and Doctor Sarson, unless he is here
+already. What can you do against them? Meekins can break any
+ordinary man's back, and Mr. Fentolin will have a revolver."
+
+Hamel threw another log on to the fire and drew her chair closer
+to it.
+
+"Never mind about," he declared cheerfully. "Mr. Fentolin is too
+clever to attempt violence, except as a last resource. He knows
+that I have friends in London who would need some explanation
+of my disappearance. Stay here and wait."
+
+She recognised the note of authority in his tone, and she bowed her
+head. Then she looked up at him; she was a changed woman.
+
+"Perhaps I have done ill to drag you into our troubles, Mr. Hamel,"
+she said, "and yet, I believe in you. I believe that you really
+care for Esther. If you can help us now, it will be for your
+happiness, too. You are a man. God bless you!"
+
+Hamel groped his way round the side of the Tower and took up a
+position at the extreme corner of the landward side of the building,
+within a yard of the closed doors. The light far out upon the left
+was still gleaming brightly, but two of the others in a line with
+it had disappeared. He flattened himself against the wall and
+waited, listening intently, his eyes straining through the darkness.
+Yet they were almost upon him before he had the slightest indication
+of their presence. A single gleam of light in the path, come and
+gone like a flash, the gleam of an electric torch directed
+momentarily towards the road, was his first indication that they
+were near. A moment or two later he heard the strange click, click
+of the little engine attached to Mr. Fentolin's chair. Hamel set
+his teeth and stepped a few inches further back. The darkness was
+so intense that they were actually within a yard or so of him before
+he could even dimly discern their shapes. There were three of them
+--Mr. Fentolin in his chair, Doctor Sarson, and Meekins. They
+paused for a moment while the latter produced a key. Hamel
+distinctly heard a slow, soft whisper from Doctor Sarson.
+
+"Shall I go round to the front and see that he is in bed?"
+
+"No need," Mr. Fentolin replied calmly. "It is nearly four o'clock.
+Better not to risk the sound of your footsteps upon the pebbles.
+Now!"
+
+The door swung noiselessly open. The darkness was so complete that
+even though Hamel could have touched them with an outstretched hand,
+their shapes were invisible. Hamel, who had formed no definite
+plans, had no time to hesitate. As the last one disappeared through
+the door, he, too, slipped in. He turned abruptly to the left and,
+holding his breath, stood against the wall. The door closed behind
+them. The gleam of the electric light flashed across the stone
+floor and rested for a moment upon a trap-door, which Meekins had
+already stooped to lift. It fell back noiselessly upon rubber studs,
+and Meekins immediately slipped through it a ladder, on either side
+of which was a grooved stretch of board, evidently fashioned to
+allow Mr. Fentolin's carriage to pass down. Hamel held his breath.
+The moment for him was critical. If the light flashed once in his
+direction, he must be discovered. Both Meekins and Doctor Sarson,
+however, were intent upon the task of steering Mr. Fentolin's little
+carriage down below. They placed the wheels in the two grooves,
+and Meekins secured the carriage with a rope which he let run
+through his fingers. As soon as the little vehicle had apparently
+reached the bottom, he turned, thrust the electric torch in his
+pocket, and stepped lightly down the ladder. Doctor Sarson
+followed his example. They disappeared in perfect silence and left
+the door open. Presently a gleam of light came travelling up, from
+which Hamel knew that they had lit a lamp below. Very softly he
+crept across the floor, threw himself upon his stomach and peered
+down. Below him was a room, or rather a cellar, parts of which
+seemed to have been cut out of the solid rock. Immediately
+underneath was a plain iron bedstead, on which was lying stretched
+the figure of a man. In those first few moments Hamel failed
+altogether to recognise Mr. Dunster. He was thin and white, and
+he seemed to have shrunken; his face, with its coarse growth of
+beard, seemed like the face of an old man. Yet the eyes were open,
+eyes dull and heavy as though with pain. So far no word had been
+spoken, but at that moment Mr. Fentolin broke the silence.
+
+"My dear guest," he said, "I bring you our most sincere apologies.
+It has gone very much against the grain, I can assure you, to have
+neglected you for so long a time. It is entirely the fault of the
+very troublesome young man who occupies the other portion of this
+building. In the daytime his presence makes it exceedingly
+difficult for us to offer you those little attentions which you
+might naturally expect."
+
+The man upon the bed neither moved nor changed his position in any
+way. Nor did he speak. All power of initiative seemed to have
+deserted him. He lay quite still, his eyes fixed upon Mr. Fentolin.
+
+"There comes a time," the latter continued, "when every one of us
+is confronted with what might be described as the crisis of our
+lives. Yours has come, my guest, at precisely this moment. It is,
+if my watch tells me the truth, five and twenty minutes to four.
+It is the last day of April. The year you know. You have exactly
+one minute to decide whether you will live a short time longer, or
+whether you will on this last day of April, and before--say, a
+quarter to four, make that little journey the nature of which you
+and I have discussed more than once."
+
+Still the man upon the bed made no movement nor any reply. Mr.
+Fentolin sighed and beckoned to Doctor Sarson.
+
+"I am afraid," he whispered, "that that wonderful drug of yours,
+Doctor, has been even a little too far-reaching in its results. It
+has kept our friend so quiet that he has lost even the power of
+speech, perhaps even the desire to speak. A little restorative,
+I think--just a few drops."
+
+Doctor Sarson nodded silently. He drew from his pocket a little
+phial and poured into a wine-glass which stood on a table by the
+side of the bed, half a dozen drops of some ruby-coloured liquid,
+to which he added a tablespoonful of water. Then he leaned once
+more over the bed and poured the contents of the glass between the
+lips of the semi-conscious man.
+
+"Give him two minutes," he said calmly. "He will be able to speak
+then."
+
+Mr. Fentolin nodded and leaned back in his chair. He glanced around
+the room a little critically. There was a thick carpet upon the
+floor, a sofa piled with cushions in one corner, and several other
+articles of furniture. The walls, however, were uncovered and were
+stained with damp. A great pink fungus stood out within a few
+inches of the bed, a grim mixture of exquisite colouring and
+loathsome imperfections. The atmosphere was fetid. Meekins suddenly
+struck a match and lit some grains of powder in a saucer. A curious
+odour of incense stole through the place. Mr. Fentolin nodded
+appreciatively.
+
+"That is better," he declared. "Really, the atmosphere here is
+positively unpleasant. I am ashamed to think that our guest has
+had to put up with it so long. And yet," he went on, "I think we
+must call it his own fault. I trust that he will no longer be
+obstinate."
+
+The effect of the restorative began to show itself. The man on the
+bed moved restlessly. His eyes were no longer altogether
+expressionless. He was staring at Mr. Fentolin as one looks at some
+horrible vision. Mr. Fentolin smiled pleasantly.
+
+"Now you are looking more like your old self, my dear Mr. Dunster,"
+he remarked. "I don't think that I need repeat what I said when I
+first came, need I? You have just to utter that one word, and your
+little visit to us will be at an end."
+
+The man looked around at all of them. He raised himself a little
+on his elbow. For the first time, Hamel, crouching above,
+recognised any likeness to Mr. John P. Dunster.
+
+"I'll see you in hell first!"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's face momentarily darkened. He moved a little nearer
+to the man upon the bed.
+
+"Dunster," he said, "I am in grim earnest. Never mind arguments.
+Never mind why I am on the other side. They are restless about you
+in America. Unless I can cable that word to-morrow morning, they'll
+communicate direct with The Hague, and I shall have had my trouble
+for nothing. It is not my custom to put up with failure. Therefore,
+let me tell you that no single one of my threats has been
+exaggerated. My patience has reached its breaking point. Give me
+that word, or before four o'clock strikes, you will find yourself
+in a new chamber, among the corpses of those misguided fishermen,
+mariners of ancient days, and a few others. It's only a matter of
+fifty yards out to the great sea pit below the Dagger Rocks--I've
+spoken to you about it before, haven't I? So surely as I speak to
+you of it at this moment."
+
+Mr. Fentolin's speech came to an abrupt termination. A convulsive
+movement of Meekins', an expression of blank amazement on the part
+of Doctor Sarson, had suddenly checked the words upon his lips. He
+turned his head quickly in the direction towards which they had been
+gazing, towards which in fact, at that moment, Meekins, with a low
+cry, had made a fruitless spring. The ladder down which they had
+descended was slowly disappearing. Meekins, with a jump, missed
+the last rung by only a few inches. Some unseen hand was drawing
+it up. Already the last few feet were vanishing in mid-air. Mr.
+Fentolin sat quite quiet and still. He looked through the trap-door
+and saw Hamel.
+
+"Most ingenious and, I must confess, most successful, my young
+friend!" he exclaimed pleasantly. "When you have made the ladder
+quite secure, perhaps you will be so good as to discuss this little
+matter with us?"
+
+There was no immediate reply. The eyes of all four men were turned
+now upon that empty space through which the ladder had finally
+disappeared. Mr. Fentolin's fingers disappeared within the pocket
+of his coat. Something very bright was glistening in his hand when
+he withdrew it.
+
+"Come and parley with us, Mr. Hamel," he begged. "You will not find
+us unreasonable."
+
+Hamel's voice came back in reply, but Hamel himself kept well away
+from the opening.
+
+"The conditions," he said, "are unpropitious. A little time for
+reflection will do you no harm."
+
+The trap-doors were suddenly closed. Mr. Fentolin's face, as he
+looked up, became diabolic.
+
+"We are trapped!" he muttered; "caught like rats in a hole!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+A gleam of day was in the sky as Hamel, with Mrs. Fentolin by his
+side, passed along the path which led from the Tower to St. David's
+Hall. Lights were still burning from its windows; the outline of
+the building itself was faintly defined against the sky. Behind
+him, across the sea, was that one straight line of grey merging
+into silver. The rain had ceased and the wind had dropped. On
+either side of them stretched the brimming creeks.
+
+"Can we get into the house without waking any one?" he asked.
+
+"Quite easily," she assured him. "The front door is never barred."
+
+She walked by his side, swiftly and with surprising vigour. In the
+still, grey light, her face was more ghastly than ever, but there
+was a new firmness about her mouth, a new decision in her tone.
+They reached the Hall without further speech, and she led the way
+to a small door on the eastern side, through which they entered
+noiselessly and passed along a little passage out into the hall.
+A couple of lights were still burning. The place seemed full of
+shadows.
+
+"What are you going to do now?" she whispered.
+
+"I want to ring up London on the telephone," he replied. "I know
+that there is a detective either in the neighbourhood or on his
+way here, but I shall tell my friend that he had better come down
+himself."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"I am going to release Esther," she said. "She is locked in her
+room. The telephone is in the study. I will come down there to
+you."
+
+She passed silently up the broad staircase. Hamel groped his way
+across the hail into the library. He turned on the small electric
+reading-lamp and drew up a chair to the side of the telephone. Even
+as he lifted the receiver to his ear, he looked around him half
+apprehensively. It seemed as though every moment he would hear the
+click of Mr. Fentolin's chair.
+
+He got the exchange at Norwich without difficulty, and a few minutes
+later a sleepy reply came from the number he had rung up in London.
+It was Kinsley's servant who answered.
+
+"I want to speak to Mr. Kinsley at once upon most important
+business," Hamel announced.
+
+"Very sorry, sir," the man repelled. "Mr. Kinsley left town last
+night for the country."
+
+"Where has he gone?" Hamel demanded quickly. "You can tell me.
+You know who I am; I am Mr. Hamel."
+
+"Into Norfolk somewhere, sir. He went with several other gentlemen."
+
+"Is that Bullen?" Hamel asked.
+
+The man admitted the fact.
+
+"Can you tell me if any of the people with whom Mr. Kinsley left
+London were connected with the police?" he inquired.
+
+The man hesitated.
+
+"I believe so, sir," he admitted. "The gentlemen started in a
+motor-car and were going to drive all night."
+
+Hamel laid down the receiver. At any rate, he would not be left
+long with this responsibility upon him. He walked out into the hall.
+The house was still wrapped in deep silence. Then, from somewhere
+above him, coming down the stairs, he heard the rustle of a woman's
+gown. He looked up, and saw Miss Price, fully dressed, coming
+slowly towards him. She held up her finger and led the way back
+into the library. She was dressed as neatly as ever, but there
+was a queer light in her eyes.
+
+"I have seen Mrs. Seymour Fentolin," she said. "She tells me that
+you have left Mr. Fentolin and the others in the subterranean room
+of the Tower."
+
+Hamel nodded.
+
+"They have Dunster down there," he told her. "I followed them in;
+it seemed the best thing to do. I have a friend from London who is
+on his way down here now with some detective officers, to enquire
+into the matter of Dunster's disappearance."
+
+"Are you going to leave them where they are until these people
+arrive?" she asked.
+
+"I think so," he replied, after a moment's hesitation. "I don't
+seem to have had time to consider even what to do. The opportunity
+came, and I embraced it. There they are, and they won't dare to
+do any further harm to Dunster now. Mrs. Fentolin was down in my
+room, and I thought it best to bring her back first before I even
+parleyed with them again."
+
+"You must be careful," she advised slowly. "The man Dunster has
+been drugged, he has lost some of his will; he may have lost some
+of his mental balance. Mr. Fentolin is clever. He will find a
+dozen ways to wriggle out of any charge that can be brought against
+him. You know what he has really done?"
+
+"I can guess."
+
+"He has kept back a document signed by the twelve men in America
+who control the whole of Wall Street, who control practically the
+money markets of the world. That document is a warning to Germany
+that they will have no war against England. Owing to Mr. Fentolin,
+it has not been delivered, and the Conference is sitting now. War
+may be declared at any moment."
+
+"But as a matter of common sense," Hamel asked, "why does Mr.
+Fentolin desire war?"
+
+"You do not understand Mr. Fentolin," she told him quietly. "He
+is not like other men. There are some who live almost entirely for
+the sake of making others happy, who find joy in seeing people
+content and satisfied. Mr. Fentolin is the reverse of this. He
+has but one craving in life: to see pain in others. To see a human
+being suffer is to him a debauch of happiness. A war which laid
+this country waste would fill him with a delight which you could
+never understand. There are no normal human beings like this. It
+is a disease in the man, a disease which came upon him after his
+accident."
+
+"Yet you have all been his slaves," Hamel said curiously.
+
+"We have all been his slaves," she admitted, "for different reasons.
+Before his accident came, Mr. Fentolin was my master and the only
+man in the world for me. After his accident, I think my feelings
+for him, if anything, grew stronger. I became his slave. I sold
+my conscience, my self-respect, everything in life worth having, to
+bring a smile to his lips, to help him through a single moment of
+his misery. And just lately the reaction has come. He has played
+with me just as he would sit and pull the legs out of a spider to
+watch its agony. I have been one of his favourite amusements. And
+even now, if he came into this room I think that I should be
+helpless. I should probably fall at his feet and pray for
+forgiveness."
+
+Hamel looked at her wonderingly.
+
+"I have come down to warn you," she went on. "It is possible that
+this is the beginning of the end, that his wonderful fortune will
+desert him, that his star has gone down. But remember that he has
+the brains and courage of genius. You think that you have him in
+a trap. Don't be surprised, when you go back, to find that he has
+turned the tables upon you."
+
+"Impossible!" Hamel declared. "I looked all round the place. There
+isn't a window or opening anywhere. The trap-door is in the middle
+of the ceiling and it is fifteen feet from the floor. It shuts
+with a spring."
+
+"It may be as you say," she observed. "It may be that he is safe.
+Remember, though, if you go near him, that he is desperate."
+
+"Do you know where Miss Fentolin is?" he interrupted.
+
+"She is with her mother," the woman replied, impatiently. "She is
+coming down. Tell me, what are you going to do with Mr. Fentolin?
+Nothing else matters."
+
+"I have a friend," Hamel answered, "who will see to that."
+
+"If you are relying upon the law," she said, "I think you will find
+that the law cannot touch him. Mr. Dunster was brought to the
+house in a perfectly natural manner. He was certainly injured, and
+injured in a railway accident. Doctor Sarson is a fully qualified
+surgeon, and he will declare that Mr. Dunster was unfit to travel.
+If necessary, they will have destroyed the man's intelligence. If
+you think that you have him broken, let me warn you that you may be
+disappointed. Let me, if I may, give you one word of advice."
+
+"Please do," Hamel begged.
+
+She looked at him coldly. Her tone was still free from any sort of
+emotion.
+
+"You have taken up some sort of position here," she continued, "as
+a friend of Mrs. Seymour Fentolin, a friend of the family. Don't
+let them come back under the yoke. You know the secret of their
+bondage?"
+
+"I know it," he admitted.
+
+"They have been his slaves because their absolute obedience to his
+will was one of the conditions of his secrecy. He has drawn the
+cords too tight. Better let the truth be known, if needs be, than
+have their three lives broken. Don't let them go back under his
+governance. For me, I cannot tell. If he comes back, as he will
+come back, I may become his slave again, but let them break away.
+Listen--that is Mrs. Fentolin."
+
+She left him. Hamel followed her out into the hail. Esther and
+her mother were already at the foot of the stairs. He drew them
+into the study. Esther gave him her hands, but she was trembling
+in every limb.
+
+"I am terrified!" she whispered. "Every moment I think I can hear
+the click of that awful carriage. He will come back; I am sure he
+will come back!"
+
+"He may," Hamel answered sturdily, "but never to make you people
+his slaves again. You have done enough. You have earned your
+freedom."
+
+"I agree," Mrs. Fentolin said firmly. "We have gone on from
+sacrifice to sacrifice, until it has become a habit with us to
+consider him the master of our bodies and our souls. To-day,
+Esther, we have reached the breaking point. Not even for the sake
+of that message from the other side of the grave, not even to
+preserve his honour and his memory, can we do more."
+
+Hamel held up his finger. He opened the French windows, and they
+followed him out on to the terrace. The grey dawn had broken now
+over the sea. There were gleams of fitful sunshine on the marshes.
+Some distance away a large motor-car was coming rapidly along the
+road.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster, lying flat upon his little bed, watched with
+dilated eyes the disappearance of the ladder. Then he laughed. It
+was a queer sound--broken, spasmodic, devoid of any of the ordinary
+elements of humor--and yet it was a laugh. Mr. Fentolin turned his
+head towards his prisoner and nodded thoughtfully.
+
+"What a constitution, my friend!" he exclaimed, without any trace
+of disturbance in his voice. "And what a sense of humour! Strange
+that a trifling circumstance like this should affect it. Meekins,
+burn some more of the powder. The atmosphere down here may be
+salubrious, but I am unaccustomed to it."
+
+"Perhaps," Mr. Dunster said in a hollow tone, "you will have some
+opportunity now of discovering with me what it is like."
+
+"That, too, is just possible," Mr. Fentolin admitted, blowing out
+a little volume of smoke from a cigarette which he had just lit,
+"but one never knows. We have friends, and our position, although,
+I must admit, a little ridiculous, is easily remedied. But how
+that mischief-making Mr. Hamel could have found his way into the
+boat-house does, I must confess, perplex me."
+
+"He must have been hanging around and followed us in when we came,"
+Meekins muttered. "Somehow, I fancied I felt some one near."
+
+"Our young friend," Mr. Fentolin continued, "has, without doubt, an
+obvious turn of mind. He will send for his acquaintance in the
+Foreign Office; they will haul out Mr. Dunster here, and he will
+have a belated opportunity of delivering his message at The Hague."
+
+"You aren't going to murder me first, then?" Mr. Dunster grunted.
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled at him benignly.
+
+"My dear and valued guest," he protested, "why so forbidding an
+idea? Let me assure you from the bottom of my heart that any bodily
+harm to you is the most unlikely thing in the world. You see,
+though you might not think it," he went on, "I love life. That is
+why I keep a doctor always by my side. That is why I insist upon
+his making a complete study of my constitution and treating me in
+every respect as though I were indeed an invalid. I am really only
+fifty-nine years old. It is my intention to live until I am
+eighty-nine. An offence against the law of the nature you indicate
+might interfere materially with my intentions."
+
+Mr. Dunster struggled for a moment for breath.
+
+"Look here," he said, "that's all right, but do you suppose you
+won't be punished for what you've done to me? You laid a
+deliberate plot to bring me to St. David's Hall; you've kept me
+locked up, dosed me with drugs, brought me down here at the dead
+of night, kept me a prisoner in a dungeon. Do you think you can do
+that for nothing? Do you think you won't have to suffer for it?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin smiled.
+
+"My dear Mr. Dunster," he reminded him, "you were in a railway
+accident, you know; there is no possible doubt about that. And the
+wound in your head is still there, in a very dangerous place. Men
+who have been in railway accidents, and who have a gaping wound
+very close to their brain, are subject to delusions. I have simply
+done my best to play the Good Samaritan. Your clothes and papers
+are all untouched. If my eminent physician had pronounced you
+ready to travel a week ago, you would certainly have been allowed
+to depart a week ago. Any interference in your movements has been
+entirely in the interests of your health."
+
+Mr. Dunster tried to sit up but found himself unable.
+
+"So you think they won't believe my story, eh?" he muttered. "Well,
+we shall see."
+
+Mr. Fentolin thoughtfully contemplated the burning end of his
+cigarette for a moment.
+
+"If I believed," he said, "that there was any chance of your
+statements being accepted, I am afraid I should be compelled, in
+all our interests, to ask Doctor Sarson to pursue just a step
+further that experiment into the anatomy of your brain with which
+he has already trifled."
+
+Mr. Dunster's face was suddenly ghastly. His reserve of strength
+seemed to ebb away. The memory of some horrible moment seemed to
+hold him in its clutches.
+
+"For God's sake, leave me alone!" he moaned. "Let me get away,
+that's all; let me crawl away!"
+
+"Ah!" Mr. Fentolin murmured. "That sounds much more reasonable.
+When you talk like that, my friend. I feel indeed that there is
+hope for you. Let us abandon this subject for the present. Have
+you solved the puzzle yet?" he asked Meekins.
+
+Meekins was standing below the closed trap-door. He had already
+dragged up a wooden case underneath and was piling it with various
+articles of furniture.
+
+"Not yet, sir," he replied. "When I have made this steadier, I
+am just going to see what pressure I can bring to bear on the
+trap-door."
+
+"I heard the bolts go," Doctor Sarson remarked uneasily.
+
+"In that case," Mr. Fentolin declared, "it will indeed be an
+interesting test of our friend Meekins' boasted strength. Meekins
+holds his place--a very desirable place, too--chiefly for two
+reasons: first his discretion and secondly his muscles. He has
+never before had a real opportunity of testing the latter. We
+shall see."
+
+Doctor Sarson came slowly and gravely to the bedside. He looked
+down upon his patient. Mr. Dunster shivered.
+
+"I am not sure, sir," he said very softly, "that Mr. Dunster, in
+his present state of mind, is a very safe person to be allowed his
+freedom. It is true that we have kept him here for his own sake,
+because of his fits of mental wandering. Our statements, however,
+may be doubted. An apparent return to sanity on his part may lend
+colour to his accusations, especially if permanent. Perhaps it
+would be as well to pursue that investigation a shade further. A
+touch more to the left and I do not think that Mr. Dunster will
+remember much in this world likely to affect us."
+
+Mr. Dunster's face was like marble. There were beads of perspiration
+upon his forehead, his eyes were filled with reminiscent horror. Mr.
+Fentolin bent over him with genuine interest.
+
+"What a picture he would make!" he murmured. "What a drama! Do you
+know, I am half inclined to agree with you, Sarson. The only trouble
+is that you have not your instruments here."
+
+"I could improvise something that would do the trick," the doctor
+said thoughtfully. "It really isn't a complicated affair. It
+seems to me that his story may gain credence from the very fact of
+our being discovered in this extraordinary place. To have moved
+him here was a mistake, sir."
+
+"Perhaps so," Mr. Fentolin admitted, with a sigh. "It was our
+young friend Mr. Hamel who was responsible for it. I fancied him
+arriving with a search warrant at any moment. We will bear in mind
+your suggestion for a few minutes. Let us watch Meekins. This
+promises to be interesting."
+
+By dint of piling together all the furniture in the place, the
+man was now able to reach the trap-door. He pressed upon it
+vigorously without even bending the wood. Mr. Fentolin smiled
+pleasantly.
+
+"Meekins," he said, "look at me."
+
+The man turned and faced his master. His aspect of dogged civility
+had never been more apparent.
+
+"Now listen," Mr. Fentolin went on. "I want to remind you of
+certain things, Meekins. We are among friends here--no secrecy,
+you understand, or anything of that sort. You need not be afraid!
+You know how you came to me? You remember that little affair of
+Anna Jayes in Hartlepool?"
+
+The face of the man was filled with terror. He began to tremble
+where he stood. Mr. Fentolin played for a moment with his collar,
+as though he found it tight.
+
+"Such a chance it was, my dear Meekins," Mr. Fentolin continued
+cheerfully, "which brought me that little scrap of knowledge
+concerning you. It has bought me through all these years a good
+deal of faithful service. I am not ungrateful, believe me. I
+intend to retain you for my body-servant and to keep my lips sealed,
+for a great many years to come. Now remember what I have said.
+When we leave this place, that little episode will steal back into
+a far corner of my mind. I shall, in short, forget it. If we are
+caught here and inconvenience follows, well, I cannot say. Do your
+best, Meekins. Do a little better than your best. You have the
+reputation of being a strong man. Let us see you justify it."
+
+The man took a long breath and returned to his task. His shoulders
+and arms were upon the door. He began to strain. He grew red in
+the face; the veins across his forehead stood out, blue, like
+tightly-drawn string. His complexion became purple. Through his
+open mouth his breath came in short pants. With every muscle of
+his body and neck he strained and strained. The woodwork gave a
+little, but it never even cracked. With a sob he suddenly almost
+collapsed. Mr. Fentolin looked at him, frowning.
+
+"Very good--very good, Meekins," he said, "but not quite good
+enough. You are a trifle out of practice, perhaps. Take your
+breath, take time. Remember that you have another chance. I am
+not angry with you, Meekins. I know there are many enterprises
+upon which one does not succeed the first time. Get your breath;
+there is no hurry. Next time you try, see that you succeed. It
+is very important, Meekins, for you as well as for us, that you
+succeed."
+
+The man turned doggedly back to his task. The eyes of the three
+men watched him--Mr. Dunster on the bed; Doctor Sarson, pale and
+gloomy, with something of fear in his dark eyes; and Mr. Fentolin
+himself, whose expression seemed to be one of purely benevolent and
+encouraging interest. Once more the face of the man became almost
+unrecognisable. There was a great crack, the trap-door had shifted.
+Meekins, with a little cry, reeled and sank backwards. Mr. Fentolin
+clapped his hands lightly.
+
+"Really, Meekins," he declared, "I do not know when I have enjoyed
+any performance so much. I feel as if I were back in the days of
+the Roman gladiators. I can see that you mean to succeed. You will
+succeed. You do not mean to end your days amid objectionable
+surroundings."
+
+With the air of a man temporarily mad, Meekins went back to his task.
+He was sobbing to himself now. His clothes had burst away from him.
+Suddenly there was a crash, the hinges of the trap-door had parted.
+With the blood streaming from a wound in his forehead, Meekins
+staggered back to his feet. Mr. Fentolin nodded.
+
+"Excellent!" he pronounced. "Really excellent. With a little
+assistance from our friend Meekins, you, I am sure, Sarson, will
+now be able to climb up and let down the steps."
+
+Doctor Sarson stood by Mr. Fentolin's chair, and together they looked
+up through the fragments of the trap-door. Meekins was still
+breathing heavily. Suddenly they heard the sound of a sharp report,
+as of a door above being slammed.
+
+"Some one was in the boat-house when I broke the trap-door," Meekins
+muttered. "I heard them moving about."
+
+Mr. Fentolin frowned.
+
+"Then let us hurry," he said. "Sarson, what about your patient?"
+
+Mr. Dunster was lying upon his side, watching them. The doctor
+went over to the bedside and felt his pulse and head.
+
+"He will do for twelve hours," he pronounced. "If you think that
+other little operation--"
+
+He broke off and looked at Mr. Fentolin meaningly. The man on the
+bed shrank back, his eyes lit with horror. Mr. Fentolin smiled
+pleasantly.
+
+"I fear," he said, "that we must not stay for that just now. A
+little later on, perhaps, if it becomes necessary. Let us first
+attend to the business on hand."
+
+Meekins once more clambered on to the little heap of furniture.
+The doctor stood by his side for a moment. Then, with an effort,
+he was hoisted up until he could catch hold of the floor of the
+outhouse. Meekins gave one push, and he disappeared.
+
+"Any one up there?" Mr. Fentolin enquired, a shade of anxiety in
+his tone.
+
+"No one," the doctor reported.
+
+"Has anything been disturbed?"
+
+Doctor Sarson was some little time before he replied.
+
+"Yes," he said, "some one seems to have been rummaging about."
+
+"Send down the steps quickly," Mr. Fentolin ordered. "I am beginning
+to find the atmosphere here unpleasant."
+
+There was a brief silence. Then they heard the sound of the ladder
+being dragged across the floor, and a moment or two later it was
+carefully lowered and placed in position. Mr. Fentolin passed the
+rope through the front of his carriage and was drawn up. From his
+bed Mr. Dunster watched them go. It was hard to tell whether he
+was relieved or disappointed.
+
+"Who has been in here?" Mr. Fentolin demanded, as he looked around
+the place.
+
+There was no reply. A grey twilight was struggling now through the
+high, dust-covered windows. Meekins, who had gone on towards the
+door, suddenly called out:
+
+"Some one has taken away the key! The door is locked on the other
+side!"
+
+Mr. Fentolin's frown was malign even for him.
+
+"Our dear friend, Mr. Hamel, I suppose," he muttered. "Another
+little debt we shall owe him! Try the other door."
+
+Meekins moved towards the partition. Suddenly he paused. Mr.
+Fentolin's hand was outstretched; he, too, was listening. Above
+the low thunder of the sea came another sound, a sound which at
+that moment they none of them probably understood. There was the
+steady crashing of feet upon the pebbles, a low murmur of voices.
+Mr. Fentolin for the first time showed symptoms of fear.
+
+"Try the other door quickly," he directed.
+
+Meekins came back, shaking his head. Outside, the noise seemed to
+be increasing. The door was suddenly thrown open. Hannah Cox stood
+outside in her plain black dress, her hair wind-tossed, her eyes
+aflame. She held the key in her fingers, and she looked in upon
+them. Her lips seemed to move, but she said nothing.
+
+"My good woman," Mr. Fentolin exclaimed, frowning, "are you the
+person who removed that key?"
+
+She laid her hand upon his chair. She took no notice of the other
+two.
+
+"Come," she said, "there is something here I want you to listen to.
+Come!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+Mr. Fentolin, arrived outside on the stone front of the boat-house,
+pointed the wheel of his chair towards the Hall. Hannah Cox, who
+kept by his side, however, drew it gently towards the beach.
+
+"Down here," she directed softly. "Bring your chair down the
+plank-way, close to the water's edge."
+
+"My good woman," Mr. Fentolin exclaimed furiously, "I am not in the
+humour for this sort of thing! Lock up, Sarson, at once; I am in
+a hurry to get back."
+
+"But you will come just this little way," she continued, speaking
+without any change of tone. "You see, the others are waiting, too.
+I have been down to the village and fetched them up."
+
+Mr. Fentolin followed her outstretched finger and gave a sudden
+start. Standing at the edge of the sea were a dozen or twenty
+fishermen. They were all muttering together and looking at the top
+of the boat-house. As he realised the direction of their gaze, Mr.
+Fentolin's face underwent a strange transformation. He seemed to
+shrink in his chair. He was ghastly pale even to the lips. Slowly
+he turned his head. From a place in the roof of the boat-house
+a tall support had appeared. On the top was a swinging globe.
+
+"What have you to do with that?" he asked in a low tone.
+
+"I found it," she answered. "I felt that it was there. I have
+brought them up with me to see it. I think that they want to ask
+you some questions. But first, come and listen."
+
+Mr. Fentolin shook her off. He looked around for Meekins.
+
+"Meekins, stand by my chair," he ordered sharply. "Turn round; I
+wish to go to the Hall. Drive this woman away."
+
+Meekins came hurrying up, but almost at the same moment half a dozen
+of the brown jerseyed fishermen detached themselves from the others.
+They formed a little bodyguard around the bath-chair.
+
+"What is the meaning of this?" Mr. Fentolin demanded, his voice
+shrill with anger. "Didn't you hear what I said? This woman annoys
+me. Send her away."
+
+Not one of the fishermen answered a word or made the slightest
+movement to obey him. One of them, a grey-bearded veteran, drew
+the chair a little further down the planked way across the pebbles.
+Hannah Cox kept close to its side. They came to a standstill only
+a few yards from where the waves were breaking. She lifted her hand.
+
+"Listen!" she cried. "Listen!"
+
+Mr. Fentolin turned helplessly around. The little group of
+fishermen had closed in upon Sarson and Meekins. The woman's hand
+was upon his shoulder; she pointed seaward to where a hissing line
+of white foam marked the spot where the topmost of the rocks were
+visible.
+
+"You wondered why I have spent so much of my time out here," she
+said quietly. "Now you will know. If you listen as I am listening,
+as I have listened for so many weary hours, so many weary years,
+you will hear them calling to me, David and John and Stephen.
+'The light!' Do you hear what they are crying? 'The light!
+Fentolin's light!' Look!"
+
+She forced him to look once more at the top of the boat-house.
+
+"They were right!" she proclaimed, her voice gaining in strength
+and intensity. "They were neither drunk nor reckless. They
+steered as straight as human hand could guide a tiller, for
+Fentolin's light! And there they are, calling and calling at the
+bottom of the sea--my three boys and my man. Do you know for whom
+they call?"
+
+Mr. Fentolin shrank back in his chair.
+
+"Take this woman away!" he ordered the fishermen. "Do you hear?
+Take her away; she is mad!"
+
+They looked towards him, but not one of them moved. Mr. Fentolin
+raised his whistle to his lips, and blew it.
+
+"Meekins!" he cried. "Where are you, Meekins?"
+
+He turned his head and saw at once that Meekins was powerless.
+Five or six of the fishermen had gathered around him. There were
+at least thirty of them about, sinewy, powerful men. The only
+person who moved towards Mr. Fentolin's carriage was Jacob, the
+coast guardsman.
+
+"Mr. Fentolin, sir," he said, "the lads have got your bully safe.
+It's a year and more that Hannah Cox has been about the village with
+some story about two lights on a stormy night. It's true what she
+says--that her man and boys lie drowned. There's William Green,
+besides, and a nephew of my own--John Kallender. And Philip Green
+--he was saved. He swore by all that was holy that he steered
+straight for the light when his boat struck, and that as he swam
+for shore, five minutes later, he saw the light reappear in another
+place. It's a strange story. What have you to say, sir, about
+that?"
+
+He pointed straight to the wire-encircled globe which towered on
+its slender support above the boat-house. Mr. Fentolin looked at
+it and looked back at the coast guardsman. The brain of a
+Machiavelli could scarcely have invented a plausible reply.
+
+"The light was never lit there," he said. "It was simply to help
+me in some electrical experiments."
+
+Then, for the first time in their lives, those who were looking on
+saw Mr. Fentolin apart from his carriage. Without any haste but
+with amazing strength, Hannah Cox leaned over, and, with her arms
+around his middle, lifted him sheer up into the air. She carried
+him, clasped in her arms, a weird, struggling object, to the clumsy
+boat that lay always at the top of the beach. She dropped him into
+the bottom, took her seat, and unshipped the oars. For one moment
+the coast guardsman hesitated; then he obeyed her look. He gave
+the boat a push which sent it grinding down the pebbles into the
+sea. The woman began to work at the oars. Every now and then she
+looked over her shoulder at that thin line of white surf which they
+were all the time approaching.
+
+"What are you doing, woman?" Mr. Fentolin demanded hoarsely.
+"Listen! It was an accident that your people were drowned. I'll
+give you an annuity. I'll make you rich for life--rich! Do you
+understand what that means?"
+
+"Aye!" she answered, looking down upon him as he lay doubled up at
+the bottom of the boat. "I know what it means to be rich--better
+than you, maybe. Not to let the gold and silver pieces fall through
+your fingers, or to live in a great house and be waited upon by
+servants who desert you in the hour of need. That isn't being rich.
+It's rich to feel the touch of the one you love, to see the faces
+around of those you've given birth to, to move on through the days
+and nights towards the end, with them around; not to know the chill
+loneliness of an empty life. I am a poor woman, Mr. Fentolin, and
+it's your hand that made me so, and not all the miracles that the
+Bible ever told of can make me rich again."
+
+"You are a fool!" he shrieked. "You can buy forgetfulness! The
+memory of everything passes."
+
+"I may be a fool," she retorted grimly, "and you the wise man; but
+this day we'll both know the truth."
+
+There was a little murmur from the shore, where the fishermen stood
+in a long line.
+
+"Bring him back, missus," Jacob called out. "You've scared him
+enough. Bring him back. We'll leave him to the law."
+
+They were close to the line of surf now; they had passed it, indeed,
+a little on the left, and the boat was drifting. She stood up,
+straight and stern, and her face, as she looked towards the land,
+was lit with the fire of the prophetess.
+
+"Aye," she cried, "we'll leave him to the law--to the law of God!"
+
+Then they saw her stoop down, and once more with that almost
+superhuman strength which seemed to belong to her for those few
+moments, she lifted the strange object who lay cowering there,
+high above her head. From the shore they realised what was going
+to happen, and a great shout arose. She stood on the side of the
+boat and jumped, holding her burden tightly in her arms. So they
+went down and disappeared.
+
+Half a dozen of the younger fishermen were in the water even before
+the grim spectacle was ended; another ran for a boat that was moored
+a little way down the beach. But from the first the search was
+useless. Only Jacob, who was a person afflicted with many
+superstitions, wiped the sweat from his forehead as he leaned over
+the bow of his boat and looked down into that fathomless space.
+
+"I heard her singing, her or her wraith," he swore afterwards.
+"I'll never forget the moment I looked down and down, and the water
+seemed to grow clearer, and I saw her walking there at the bottom
+among the rocks, with him over her back, singing as she went,
+looking everywhere for George and the boys!"
+
+But if indeed his eyes were touched with fire at that moment, no
+one else in the world saw anything more of Miles Fentolin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+Mr. John P. Dunster removed the cigar from his teeth and gazed at
+the long white ash with the air of a connoisseur. He was stretched
+in a long chair, high up in the terraced gardens behind the Hall.
+At his feet were golden mats of yellow crocuses; long borders of
+hyacinths--pink and purple; beds of violets; a great lilac tree,
+with patches of blossom here and there forcing their way into a
+sunlit world. The sea was blue; the sheltered air where they sat
+was warm and perfumed. Mr. Dunster, who was occupying the position
+of a favoured guest, was feeling very much at home.
+
+"There is one thing," he remarked meditatively, "which I can't help
+thinking about you Britishers. You may deserve it or you may not,
+but you do have the most almighty luck."
+
+"Sheer envy," Hamel murmured. "We escape from our tight corners by
+forethought."
+
+"Not on your life, sir," Mr. Dunster declared vigorously. "A year
+or less ago you got a North Sea scare, and on the strength of a
+merely honourable understanding with your neighbour, you risk your
+country's very existence for the sake of adding half a dozen
+battleships to your North Sea Squadron. The day the last of those
+battleships passed through the Straits of Gibraltar, this little
+Conference was plotted. I tell you they meant to make history there.
+
+"There was enough for everybody--India for Russia, a time-honoured
+dream, but why not? Alsace-Lorraine and perhaps Egypt, for France;
+Australia for Japan; China and South Africa for Germany. Why not?
+You may laugh at it on paper but I say again--why not?"
+
+"It didn't quite come off, sir," Gerald observed.
+
+"It didn't," Mr. Dunster admitted, "partly owing to you. There
+were only two things needed: France to consider her own big interests
+and to ignore an entente from which she gains nothing that was not
+assured to her under the new agreement, and the money. Strange,"
+Mr. Dunster continued, "how people forget that factor, and yet the
+man who was responsible for The Hague Conference knew it. We in
+the States are right outside all these little jealousies and wrangles
+that bring Europe, every now and then, right up to the gates of war,
+but I'm hanged if there is one of you dare pass through those gates
+without a hand on our money markets. It's a new word in history,
+that little document, news of which Mr. Gerald here took to The
+Hague, the word of the money kings of the world. There is something
+that almost nips your breath in the idea that a dozen men, descended
+from the Lord knows whom, stopped a war which would have altered the
+whole face of history."
+
+"There was never any proof," Hamel remarked, "that France would not
+have remained staunch to us."
+
+"Very likely not," Mr. Dunster agreed, "but, on the other hand, your
+country had never the right to put such a burden upon her honour.
+Remember that side by side with those other considerations, a great
+statesman's first duty is to the people over whom he watches, not to
+study the interests of other lands. However, it's finished. The
+Hague Conference is broken up. The official organs of the world
+allude to it, if at all, as an unimportant gathering called together
+to discuss certain frontier questions with which England had nothing
+to do. But the memory of it will live. A good cold douche for you
+people, I should say, and I hope you'll take warning by it. Whatever
+the attitude of America as a nation may be to these matters, the
+American people don't want to see the old country in trouble. Gee
+whiz! What's that?"
+
+There was a little cry from all of them. Only Hamel stood without
+sign of surprise, gazing downward with grim, set face. A dull roar,
+like the booming of a gun, flashes of fire, and a column of smoke
+--and all that was left of St. David's Tower was one tottering wall
+and a scattered mass of masonry.
+
+"I had an idea," Hamel said quietly, "that St. David's Tower was
+going to spoil the landscape for a good many years. My property,
+you know, and there's the end of it. I am sick of seeing people
+for the last few days come down and take photographs of it for
+every little rag that goes to press."
+
+Mr. Dunster pointed out to the line of surf beyond. "If only some
+hand," he remarked, "could plant dynamite below that streak of white,
+so that the sea could disgorge its dead! They tell me there's a
+Spanish galleon there, and a Dutch warship, besides a score or more
+of fishing-boats."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin shivered a little. She drew her cloak around her.
+Gerald, who had been watching her, sprang to his feet.
+
+"Come," he exclaimed, "we chose the gardens for our last afternoon
+here, to be out of the way of these places! We'll go round the hill."
+
+Mrs. Fentolin shook her head once more. Her face had recovered its
+serenity. She looked downward gravely but with no sign of fear.
+
+"There is nothing to terrify us there, Gerald," she declared. "The
+sea has gathered, and the sea will hold its own."
+
+Hamel held out his hand to Esther.
+
+"I have destroyed the only house in the world which I possess," he
+said. "Come and look for violets with me in the spinney, and let
+us talk of the houses we are going to build, and the dreams we
+shall dream in them."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Vanished Messenger by Oppenheim
+
+
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