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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Mystery of Cloomber, by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: The Mystery of Cloomber
+
+Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+Release Date: June 6, 2003 [eBook #7964]
+[Last updated: July 18, 2022]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: Lionel G. Sear and David Widger
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER ***
+
+
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER
+
+By Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I THE HEGIRA OF THE WESTS FROM EDINBURGH
+CHAPTER II OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH A TENANT CAME TO CLOOMBER
+CHAPTER III OF OUR FURTHER ACQUAINTANCE WITH MAJOR-GENERAL J. B. HEATHERSTONE
+CHAPTER IV OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A GREY HEAD
+CHAPTER V HOW FOUR OF US CAME TO BE UNDER THE SHADOW OF CLOOMBER
+CHAPTER VI HOW I CAME TO BE ENLISTED AS ONE OF THE GARRISON OF CLOOMBER
+CHAPTER VII OF CORPORAL RUFUS SMITH AND HIS COMING TO CLOOMBER
+CHAPTER VIII STATEMENT OF ISRAEL STAKES
+CHAPTER IX NARRATIVE OF JOHN EASTERLING, F.R.C.P. EDIN.
+CHAPTER X OF THE LETTER WHICH CAME FROM THE HALL
+CHAPTER XI OF THE CASTING AWAY OF THE BARQUE “BELINDA”
+CHAPTER XII OF THE THREE FOREIGN MEN UPON THE COAST
+CHAPTER XIII IN WHICH I SEE THAT WHICH HAS BEEN SEEN BY FEW
+CHAPTER XIV OF THE VISITOR WHO RAN DOWN THE ROAD IN THE NIGHT-TIME
+CHAPTER XV THE DAY-BOOK OF JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE
+CHAPTER XVI AT THE HOLE OF CREE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+THE HEGIRA OF THE WESTS FROM EDINBURGH
+
+
+I, John Fothergill West, student of law in the University of St. Andrews,
+have endeavoured in the ensuing pages to lay my statement before the
+public in a concise and business-like fashion.
+
+It is not my wish to achieve literary success, nor have I any desire by
+the graces of my style, or by the artistic ordering of my incidents, to
+throw a deeper shadow over the strange passages of which I shall have
+to speak. My highest ambition is that those who know something of the
+matter should, after reading my account, be able to conscientiously
+indorse it without finding a single paragraph in which I have either
+added to or detracted from the truth.
+
+Should I attain this result, I shall rest amply satisfied with the
+outcome of my first, and probably my last, venture in literature.
+
+It was my intention to write out the sequence of events in due order,
+depending on trustworthy hearsay when I was describing that which was
+beyond my own personal knowledge. I have now, however, through the
+kind cooperation of friends, hit upon a plan which promises to be less
+onerous to me and more satisfactory to the reader. This is nothing less
+than to make use of the various manuscripts which I have by me bearing
+upon the subject, and to add to them the first-hand evidence contributed
+by those who had the best opportunities of knowing Major-General J. B.
+Heatherstone.
+
+In pursuance of this design I shall lay before the public the testimony
+of Israel Stakes, formerly coachman at Cloomber Hall, and of
+John Easterling, F.R.C.P. Edin., now practising at Stranraer, in
+Wigtownshire. To these I shall add a verbatim account extracted from
+the journal of the late John Berthier Heatherstone, of the events which
+occurred in the Thul Valley in the autumn of '41 towards the end of
+the first Afghan War, with a description of the skirmish in the Terada
+defile, and of the death of the man Ghoolab Shah.
+
+To myself I reserve the duty of filling up all the gaps and chinks which
+may be left in the narrative. By this arrangement I have sunk from the
+position of an author to that of a compiler, but on the other hand
+my work has ceased to be a story and has expanded into a series of
+affidavits.
+
+My Father, John Hunter West, was a well known Oriental and Sanskrit
+scholar, and his name is still of weight with those who are interested
+in such matters. He it was who first after Sir William Jones called
+attention to the great value of early Persian literature, and his
+translations from the Hafiz and from Ferideddin Atar have earned the
+warmest commendations from the Baron von Hammer-Purgstall, of Vienna,
+and other distinguished Continental critics.
+
+In the issue of the _Orientalisches Scienzblatt_ for January, 1861,
+he is described as _“Der beruhmte und sehr gelhernte Hunter West von
+Edinburgh”_--a passage which I well remember that he cut out and stowed
+away, with a pardonable vanity, among the most revered family archives.
+
+He had been brought up to be a solicitor, or Writer to the Signet, as
+it is termed in Scotland, but his learned hobby absorbed so much of his
+time that he had little to devote to the pursuit of his profession.
+
+When his clients were seeking him at his chambers in George Street, he
+was buried in the recesses of the Advocates' Library, or poring over
+some mouldy manuscript at the Philosophical Institution, with his brain
+more exercised over the code which Menu propounded six hundred years
+before the birth of Christ than over the knotty problems of Scottish law
+in the nineteenth century. Hence it can hardly be wondered at that
+as his learning accumulated his practice dissolved, until at the very
+moment when he had attained the zenith of his celebrity he had also
+reached the nadir of his fortunes.
+
+There being no chair of Sanscrit in any of his native universities, and
+no demand anywhere for the only mental wares which he had to dispose
+of, we should have been forced to retire into genteel poverty, consoling
+ourselves with the aphorisms and precepts of Firdousi, Omar Khayyam, and
+others of his Eastern favourites, had it not been for the kindness
+and liberality of his half-brother William Farintosh, the Laird of
+Branksome, in Wigtownshire.
+
+This William Farintosh was the proprietor of a landed estate, the
+acreage which bore, unfortunately, a most disproportional relation to
+its value, for it formed the bleakest and most barren tract of land
+in the whole of a bleak and barren shire. As a bachelor, however, his
+expenses had been small, and he had contrived from the rents of his
+scattered cottages, and the sale of the Galloway nags, which he bred
+upon the moors, not only to live as a laird should, but to put by a
+considerable sum in the bank.
+
+We had heard little from our kinsman during the days of our comparative
+prosperity, but just as we were at our wit's end, there came a letter
+like a ministering angel, giving us assurance of sympathy and succour.
+In it the Laird of Branksome told us that one of his lungs had been
+growing weaker for some time, and that Dr. Easterling, of Stranraer, had
+strongly advised him to spend the few years which were left to him in
+some more genial climate. He had determined, therefore to set out for
+the South of Italy, and he begged that we should take up our residence
+at Branksome in his absence, and that my father should act as his land
+steward and agent at a salary which placed us above all fear of want.
+
+Our mother had been dead for some years, so that there were only myself,
+my father, and my sister Esther to consult, and it may be readily
+imagined that it did not take us long to decide upon the acceptance
+of the laird's generous offer. My father started for Wigtown that very
+night, while Esther and I followed a few days afterwards, bearing with
+us two potato-sacksful of learned books, and such other of our household
+effects that were worth the trouble and expense of transport.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH A TENANT CAME TO CLOOMBER
+
+
+Branksome might have appeared a poor dwelling-place when compared with
+the house of an English squire, but to us, after our long residence in
+stuffy apartments, it was of regal magnificence.
+
+The building was broad-spread and low, with red-tiled roof,
+diamond-paned windows, and a profusion of dwelling rooms with
+smoke-blackened ceilings and oaken wainscots. In front was a small lawn,
+girt round with a thin fringe of haggard and ill grown beeches, all
+gnarled and withered from the effects of the sea-spray. Behind lay the
+scattered hamlet of Branksome-Bere--a dozen cottages at most--inhabited
+by rude fisher-folk who looked upon the laird as their natural
+protector.
+
+To the west was the broad, yellow beach and the Irish Sea, while in all
+other directions the desolate moors, greyish-green in the foreground
+and purple in the distance, stretched away in long, low curves to the
+horizon.
+
+Very bleak and lonely it was upon this Wigtown coast. A man might
+walk many a weary mile and never see a living thing except the white,
+heavy-flapping kittiwakes, which screamed and cried to each other with
+their shrill, sad voices.
+
+Very lonely and very bleak! Once out of sight of Branksome and there
+was no sign of the works of man save only where the high, white tower of
+Cloomber Hall shot up, like a headstone of some giant grave, from amid
+the firs and larches which girt it round.
+
+This great house, a mile or more from our dwelling, had been built by a
+wealthy Glasgow merchant of strange tastes and lonely habits, but at
+the time of our arrival it had been untenanted for many years, and stood
+with weather-blotched walls and vacant, staring windows looking blankly
+out over the hill side.
+
+Empty and mildewed, it served only as a landmark to the fishermen, for
+they had found by experience that by keeping the laird's chimney and the
+white tower of Cloomber in a line they could steer their way through
+the ugly reef which raises its jagged back, like that of some sleeping
+monster, above the troubled waters of the wind-swept bay.
+
+To this wild spot it was that Fate had brought my father, my sister,
+and myself. For us its loneliness had no terrors. After the hubbub and
+bustle of a great city, and the weary task of upholding appearances upon
+a slender income, there was a grand, soul-soothing serenity in the long
+sky-line and the eager air. Here at least there was no neighbour to pry
+and chatter.
+
+The laird had left his phaeton and two ponies behind him, with the aid
+of which my father and I would go the round of the estate doing such
+light duties as fall to an agent, or “factor” as it was there called,
+while our gentle Esther looked to our household needs, and brightened
+the dark old building.
+
+Such was our simple, uneventful existence, until the summer night when
+an unlooked-for incident occurred which proved to be the herald of those
+strange doings which I have taken up my pen to describe.
+
+It had been my habit to pull out of an evening in the laird's skiff
+and to catch a few whiting which might serve for our supper. On this
+well-remembered occasion my sister came with me, sitting with her book
+in the stern-sheets of the boat, while I hung my lines over the bows.
+
+The sun had sunk down behind the rugged Irish coast, but a long bank of
+flushed cloud still marked the spot, and cast a glory upon the waters.
+The whole broad ocean was seamed and scarred with crimson streaks. I had
+risen in the boat, and was gazing round in delight at the broad panorama
+of shore and sea and sky, when my sister plucked at my sleeve with a
+little, sharp cry of surprise.
+
+“See, John,” she cried, “there is a light in Cloomber Tower!”
+
+I turned my head and stared back at the tall, white turret which peeped
+out above the belt of trees. As I gazed I distinctly saw at one of the
+windows the glint of a light, which suddenly vanished, and then shone
+out once more from another higher up. There it flickered for some time,
+and finally flashed past two successive windows underneath before the
+trees obscured our view of it. It was clear that some one bearing a lamp
+or a candle had climbed up the tower stairs and had then returned into
+the body of the house.
+
+“Who in the world can it be?” I exclaimed, speaking rather to myself
+than to Esther, for I could see by the surprise upon her face that she
+had no solution to offer. “Maybe some of the folk from Branksome-Bere
+have wanted to look over the place.”
+
+My sister shook her head.
+
+“There is not one of them would dare to set foot within the avenue
+gates,” she said. “Besides, John, the keys are kept by the house-agent
+at Wigtown. Were they ever so curious, none of our people could find
+their way in.”
+
+When I reflected upon the massive door and ponderous shutters which
+guarded the lower storey of Cloomber, I could not but admit the force
+of my sister's objection. The untimely visitor must either have used
+considerable violence in order to force his way in, or he must have
+obtained possession of the keys.
+
+Piqued by the little mystery, I pulled for the beach, with the
+determination to see for myself who the intruder might be, and what
+were his intentions. Leaving my sister at Branksome, and summoning
+Seth Jamieson, an old man-o'-war's-man and one of the stoutest of the
+fishermen, I set off across the moor with him through the gathering
+darkness.
+
+“It hasna a guid name after dark, yon hoose,” remarked my companion,
+slackening his pace perceptibly as I explained to him the nature of our
+errand. “It's no for naething that him wha owns it wunna gang within a
+Scotch mile o't.”
+
+“Well, Seth, there is some one who has no fears about going into it,”
+ said I, pointing to the great, white building which flickered up in
+front of us through the gloom.
+
+The light which I had observed from the sea was moving backwards and
+forward past the lower floor windows, the shutters of which had been
+removed. I could now see that a second fainter light followed a few
+paces behind the other. Evidently two individuals, the one with a
+lamp and the other with a candle or rushlight, were making a careful
+examination of the building.
+
+“Let ilka man blaw his ain parritch,” said Seth Jamieson doggedly,
+coming to a dead stop. “What is it tae us if a wraith or a bogle
+minds tae tak' a fancy tae Cloomber? It's no canny tae meddle wi' such
+things.”
+
+“Why, man,” I cried, “you don't suppose a wraith came here in a gig?
+What are those lights away yonder by the avenue gates?”
+
+“The lamps o' a gig, sure enough!” exclaimed my companion in a less
+lugubrious voice. “Let's steer for it, Master West, and speer where she
+hails frae.”
+
+By this time night had closed in save for a single long, narrow slit in
+the westward. Stumbling across the moor together, we made our way into
+the Wigtown Road, at the point where the high stone pillars mark the
+entrance to the Cloomber avenue. A tall dog-cart stood in front of the
+gateway, the horse browsing upon the thin border of grass which skirted
+the road.
+
+“It's a' richt!” said Jamieson, taking a close look at the deserted
+vehicle. “I ken it weel. It belongs tae Maister McNeil, the factor body
+frae Wigtown--him wha keeps the keys.”
+
+“Then we may as well have speech with him now that we are here,” I
+answered. “They are coming down, if I am not mistaken.”
+
+As I spoke we heard the slam of the heavy door and within a few minutes
+two figures, the one tall and angular, the other short and thick came
+towards us through the darkness. They were talking so earnestly that
+they did not observe us until they had passed through the avenue gate.
+
+“Good evening, Mr. McNeil,” said I, stepping forward and addressing the
+Wigtown factor, with whom I had some slight acquaintance.
+
+The smaller of the two turned his face towards me as I spoke, and showed
+me that I was not mistaken in his identity, but his taller companion
+sprang back and showed every sign of violent agitation.
+
+“What is this, McNeil?” I heard him say, in a gasping, choking voice.
+“Is this your promise? What is the meaning of it?”
+
+“Don't be alarmed, General! Don't be alarmed!” said the little fat
+factor in a soothing fashion, as one might speak to a frightened child.
+“This is young Mr. Fothergill West, of Branksome, though what brings him
+up here tonight is more than I can understand. However, as you are to be
+neighbours, I can't do better than take the opportunity to introduce you
+to each other. Mr. West, this is General Heatherstone, who is about to
+take a lease of Cloomber Hall.”
+
+I held out my hand to the tall man, who took it in a hesitating,
+half-reluctant fashion.
+
+“I came up,” I explained, “because I saw your lights in the windows, and
+I thought that something might be wrong. I am very glad I did so, since
+it has given me the chance of making the general's acquaintance.”
+
+Whilst I was talking, I was conscious that the new tenant of Cloomber
+Hall was peering at me very closely through the darkness. As I
+concluded, he stretched out a long, tremulous arm, and turned the
+gig-lamp in such a way as to throw a flood of light upon my face.
+
+“Good Heavens, McNeil!” he cried, in the same quivering voice as before,
+“the fellow's as brown as chocolate. He's not an Englishman. You're not
+an Englishman--you, sir?”
+
+“I'm a Scotchman, born and bred,” said I, with an inclination to laugh,
+which was only checked by my new acquaintance's obvious terror.
+
+“A Scotchman, eh?” said he, with a sigh of relief. “It's all one
+nowadays. You must excuse me, Mr.--Mr. West. I'm nervous, infernally
+nervous. Come along, McNeil, we must be back in Wigtown in less than an
+hour. Good-night, gentlemen, good-night!”
+
+The two clambered into their places; the factor cracked his whip,
+and the high dog-cart clattered away through the darkness, casting a
+brilliant tunnel of yellow light on either side of it, until the rumble
+of its wheels died away in the distance.
+
+“What do you think of our new neighbour, Jamieson?” I asked, after a
+long silence.
+
+“'Deed, Mr. West, he seems, as he says himsel', to be vera nervous.
+Maybe his conscience is oot o' order.”
+
+“His liver, more likely,” said I. “He looks as if he had tried his
+constitution a bit. But it's blowing chill, Seth, my lad, and it's time
+both of us were indoors.”
+
+I bade my companion good-night, and struck off across the moors for the
+cheery, ruddy light which marked the parlour windows of Branksome.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+OF OUR FURTHER ACQUAINTANCE WITH MAJOR-GENERAL J. B. HEATHERSTONE
+
+
+There was, as may well be imagined, much stir amongst our small
+community at the news that the Hall was to be inhabited once more, and
+considerable speculation as to the new tenants, and their object in
+choosing this particular part of the country for their residence.
+
+It speedily became apparent that, whatever their motives might be, they
+had definitely determined upon a lengthy stay, for relays of plumbers
+and of joiners came down from Wigtown, and there was hammering and
+repairing going on from morning till night.
+
+It was surprising how quickly the signs of the wind and weather were
+effaced, until the great, square-set house was all as spick-and-span
+as though it had been erected yesterday. There were abundant signs that
+money was no consideration to General Heatherstone, and that it was not
+on the score of retrenchment that he had taken up his abode among us.
+
+“It may be that he is devoted to study,” suggested my father, as we
+discussed the question round the breakfast table. “Perhaps he has chosen
+this secluded spot to finish some magnum opus upon which he is engaged.
+If that is the case I should be happy to let him have the run of my
+library.”
+
+Esther and I laughed at the grandiloquent manner in which he spoke of
+the two potato-sacksful of books.
+
+“It may be as you say,” said I, “but the general did not strike me
+during our short interview as being a man who was likely to have any
+very pronounced literary tastes. If I might hazard a guess, I should say
+that he is here upon medical advice, in the hope that the complete quiet
+and fresh air may restore his shattered nervous system. If you had seen
+how he glared at me, and the twitching of his fingers, you would have
+thought it needed some restoring.”
+
+“I do wonder whether he has a wife and a family,” said my sister. “Poor
+souls, how lonely they will be! Why, excepting ourselves, there is not a
+family that they could speak to for seven miles and more.”
+
+“General Heatherstone is a very distinguished soldier,” remarked my
+father.
+
+“Why, papa, however came you to know anything about him?”
+
+“Ah, my dears,” said my father, smiling at us over his coffee-cup, “you
+were laughing at my library just now, but you see it may be very useful
+at times.” As he spoke he took a red-covered volume from a shelf and
+turned over the pages. “This is an Indian Army List of three
+years back,” he explained, “and here is the very gentleman we
+want--'Heatherstone, J. B., Commander of the Bath,' my dears, and 'V.C.',
+think of that, 'V.C.'--'formerly colonel in the Indian Infantry, 41st
+Bengal Foot, but now retired with the rank of major-general.' In this
+other column is a record of his services--'capture of Ghuznee and
+defence of Jellalabad, Sobraon 1848, Indian Mutiny and reduction of
+Oudh. Five times mentioned in dispatches.' I think, my dears, that we
+have cause to be proud of our new neighbour.”
+
+“It doesn't mention there whether he is married or not, I suppose?”
+ asked Esther.
+
+“No,” said my father, wagging his white head with a keen appreciation
+of his own humour. “It doesn't include that under the heading of 'daring
+actions'--though it very well might, my dear, it very well might.”
+
+All our doubts, however, upon this head were very soon set at rest, for
+on the very day that the repairing and the furnishing had been completed
+I had occasion to ride into Wigtown, and I met upon the way a carriage
+which was bearing General Heatherstone and his family to their new home.
+An elderly lady, worn and sickly-looking, was by his side, and opposite
+him sat a young fellow about my own age and a girl who appeared to be a
+couple of years younger.
+
+I raised my hat, and was about to pass them, when the general shouted to
+his coachman to pull up, and held out his hand to me. I could see now
+in the daylight that his face, although harsh and stern, was capable of
+assuming a not unkindly expression.
+
+“How are you, Mr. Fothergill West?” he cried. “I must apologise to
+you if I was a little brusque the other night--you will excuse an old
+soldier who has spent the best part of his life in harness--All
+the same, you must confess that you are rather dark-skinned for a
+Scotchman.”
+
+“We have a Spanish strain in our blood,” said I, wondering at his
+recurrence to the topic.
+
+“That would, of course, account for it,” he remarked. “My dear,” to his
+wife, “allow me to introduce Mr. Fothergill West to you. This is my son
+and my daughter. We have come here in search of rest, Mr. West--complete
+rest.”
+
+“And you could not possibly have come to a better place,” said I.
+
+“Oh, you think so?” he answered. “I suppose it is very quiet indeed, and
+very lonely. You might walk through these country lanes at night, I dare
+say, and never meet a soul, eh?”
+
+“Well, there are not many about after dark,” I said.
+
+“And you are not much troubled with vagrants or wandering beggars, eh?
+Not many tinkers or tramps or rascally gipsies--no vermin of that sort
+about?”
+
+“I find it rather cold,” said Mrs. Heatherstone, drawing her thick
+sealskin mantle tighter round her figure. “We are detaining Mr. West,
+too.”
+
+“So we are, my dear, so we are. Drive on, coachman. Good-day, Mr. West.”
+
+The carriage rattled away towards the Hall, and I trotted thoughtfully
+onwards to the little country metropolis.
+
+As I passed up the High Street, Mr. McNeil ran out from his office and
+beckoned to me to stop.
+
+“Our new tenants have gone out,” he said. “They drove over this
+morning.”
+
+“I met them on the way,” I answered.
+
+As I looked down at the little factor, I could see that his face was
+flushed and that he bore every appearance of having had an extra glass.
+
+“Give me a real gentleman to do business with,” he said, with a burst of
+laughter. “They understand me and I understand them. 'What shall I fill
+it up for?' says the general, taking a blank cheque out o' his pouch and
+laying it on the table. 'Two hundred,' says I, leaving a bit o' a margin
+for my own time and trouble.”
+
+“I thought that the landlord had paid you for that,” I remarked.
+
+“Aye, aye, but it's well to have a bit margin. He filled it up and threw
+it over to me as if it had been an auld postage stamp. That's the way
+business should be done between honest men--though it wouldna do if one
+was inclined to take an advantage. Will ye not come in, Mr. West, and
+have a taste of my whisky?”
+
+“No, thank you,” said I, “I have business to do.”
+
+“Well, well, business is the chief thing. It's well not to drink in the
+morning, too. For my own part, except a drop before breakfast to give
+me an appetite, and maybe a glass, or even twa, afterwards to promote
+digestion, I never touch spirits before noon. What d'ye think o' the
+general, Mr. West?”
+
+“Why, I have hardly had an opportunity of judging,” I answered.
+
+Mr. McNeil tapped his forehead with his forefinger.
+
+“That's what I think of him,” he said in a confidential whisper, shaking
+his head at me. “He's gone, sir, gone, in my estimation. Now what would
+you take to be a proof of madness, Mr. West?”
+
+“Why, offering a blank cheque to a Wigtown house-agent,” said I.
+
+“Ah, you're aye at your jokes. But between oorsel's now, if a man asked
+ye how many miles it was frae a seaport, and whether ships come there
+from the East, and whether there were tramps on the road, and whether
+it was against the lease for him to build a high wall round the grounds,
+what would ye make of it, eh?”
+
+“I should certainly think him eccentric,” said I.
+
+“If every man had his due, our friend would find himsel' in a house with
+a high wall round the grounds, and that without costing him a farthing,”
+ said the agent.
+
+“Where then?” I asked, humouring his joke.
+
+“Why, in the Wigtown County Lunatic Asylum,” cried the little man, with
+a bubble of laughter, in the midst of which I rode on my way, leaving
+him still chuckling over his own facetiousness.
+
+The arrival of the new family at Cloomber Hall had no perceptible effect
+in relieving the monotony of our secluded district, for instead of
+entering into such simple pleasures as the country had to offer, or
+interesting themselves, as we had hoped, in our attempts to improve
+the lot of our poor crofters and fisherfolk, they seemed to shun all
+observation, and hardly ever to venture beyond the avenue gates.
+
+We soon found, too, that the factor's words as to the inclosing of the
+grounds were founded upon fact, for gangs of workmen were kept hard at
+work from early in the morning until late at night in erecting a high,
+wooden fence round the whole estate.
+
+When this was finished and topped with spikes, Cloomber Park became
+impregnable to any one but an exceptionally daring climber. It was as
+if the old soldier had been so imbued with military ideas that, like my
+Uncle Toby, he could not refrain even in times of peace from standing
+upon the defensive.
+
+Stranger still, he had victualled the house as if for a siege, for
+Begbie, the chief grocer of Wigtown, told me himself in a rapture
+of delight and amazement that the general had sent him an order for
+hundreds of dozens of every imaginable potted meat and vegetable.
+
+It may be imagined that all these unusual incidents were not allowed to
+pass without malicious comment. Over the whole countryside and as far
+away as the English border there was nothing but gossip about the new
+tenants of Cloomber Hall and the reasons which had led them to come
+among us.
+
+The only hypothesis, however, which the bucolic mind could evolve, was
+that which had already occurred to Mr. McNeil, the factor--namely, that
+the old general and his family were one and all afflicted with madness,
+or, as an alternative conclusion, that he had committed some heinous
+offence and was endeavouring to escape the consequences of his misdeeds.
+
+These were both natural suppositions under the circumstances, but
+neither of them appeared to me to commend itself as a true explanation
+of the facts.
+
+It is true that General Heatherstone's behaviour on the occasion of our
+first interview was such as to suggest some suspicion of mental disease,
+but no man could have been more reasonable or more courteous than he had
+afterwards shown himself to be.
+
+Then, again, his wife and children led the same secluded life that he
+did himself, so that the reason could not be one peculiar to his own
+health.
+
+As to the possibility of his being a fugitive from justice, that theory
+was even more untenable. Wigtownshire was bleak and lonely, but it was
+not such an obscure corner of the world that a well-known soldier could
+hope to conceal himself there, nor would a man who feared publicity set
+every one's tongue wagging as the general had done.
+
+On the whole, I was inclined to believe that the true solution of the
+enigma lay in his own allusion to the love of quiet, and that they
+had taken shelter here with an almost morbid craving for solitude and
+repose. We very soon had an instance of the great lengths to which this
+desire for isolation would carry them.
+
+My father had come down one morning with the weight of a great
+determination upon his brow.
+
+“You must put on your pink frock to-day, Esther,” said he, “and you,
+John, you must make yourself smart, for I have determined that the three
+of us shall drive round this afternoon and pay our respects to Mrs.
+Heatherstone and the general.”
+
+“A visit to Cloomber,” cried Esther, clapping her hands.
+
+“I am here,” said my father, with dignity, “not only as the laird's
+factor, but also as his kinsman. In that capacity I am convinced that he
+would wish me to call upon these newcomers and offer them any politeness
+which is in our power. At present they must feel lonely and friendless.
+What says the great Firdousi? 'The choicest ornaments to a man's house
+are his friends.'”
+
+My sister and I knew by experience that when the old man began to
+justify his resolution by quotations from the Persian poets there was no
+chance of shaking it. Sure enough that afternoon saw the phaeton at the
+door, with my father perched upon the seat, with his second-best coat on
+and a pair of new driving-gloves.
+
+“Jump in, my dears,” he cried, cracking his whip briskly, “we shall show
+the general that he has no cause to be ashamed of his neighbours.”
+
+Alas! pride always goes before a fall. Our well-fed ponies and shining
+harness were not destined that day to impress the tenants of Cloomber
+with a sense of our importance.
+
+We had reached the avenue gate, and I was about to get out and open it,
+when our attention was arrested by a very large wooden placard, which
+was attached to one of the trees in such a manner that no one could
+possibly pass without seeing it. On the white surface of this board was
+printed in big, black letters the following hospitable inscription:
+
+ GENERAL AND MRS. HEATHERSTONE
+ HAVE NO WISH
+ TO INCREASE
+ THE CIRCLE OF THEIR ACQUAINTANCE.
+
+We all sat gazing at this announcement for some moments in silent
+astonishment. Then Esther and I, tickled by the absurdity of the thing,
+burst out laughing, but my father pulled the ponies' heads round, and
+drove home with compressed lips and the cloud of much wrath upon his
+brow. I have never seen the good man so thoroughly moved, and I am
+convinced that his anger did not arise from any petty feeling of injured
+vanity upon his own part, but from the thought that a slight had been
+offered to the Laird of Branksome, whose dignity he represented.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A GREY HEAD
+
+
+If I had any personal soreness on account of this family snub, it was a
+very passing emotion, and one which was soon effaced from my mind.
+
+It chanced that on the very next day after the episode I had occasion
+to pass that way, and stopped to have another look at the obnoxious
+placard. I was standing staring at it and wondering what could have
+induced our neighbours to take such an outrageous step, when I became
+suddenly aware of a sweet, girlish face which peeped out at me from
+between the bars of the gate, and of a white hand which eagerly beckoned
+me to approach. As I advanced to her I saw that it was the same young
+lady whom I had seen in the carriage.
+
+“Mr. West,” she said, in a quick whisper, glancing from side to side as
+she spoke in a nervous, hasty manner, “I wish to apologise to you for
+the indignity to which you and your family were subjected yesterday.
+My brother was in the avenue and saw it all, but he is powerless to
+interfere. I assure you, Mr. West, that if that hateful thing,” pointing
+up at the placard, “has given you any annoyance, it has given my brother
+and myself far more.”
+
+“Why, Miss Heatherstone,” said I, putting the matter off with a laugh,
+“Britain is a free country, and if a man chooses to warn off visitors
+from his premises there is no reason why he should not.”
+
+“It is nothing less than brutal,” she broke out, with a petulant
+stamp of the foot. “To think that your sister, too, should have such an
+unprovoked insult offered to her! I am ready to sink with shame at the
+very thought.”
+
+“Pray do not give yourself one moment's uneasiness upon the subject,”
+ said I earnestly, for I was grieved at her evident distress. “I am sure
+that your father has some reason unknown to us for taking this step.”
+
+“Heaven knows he has!” she answered, with ineffable sadness in her
+voice, “and yet I think it would be more manly to face a danger than
+to fly from it. However, he knows best, and it is impossible for us to
+judge. But who is this?” she exclaimed, anxiously, peering up the dark
+avenue. “Oh, it is my brother Mordaunt. Mordaunt,” she said, as the
+young man approached us, “I have been apologising to Mr. West for what
+happened yesterday, in your name as well as my own.”
+
+“I am very, very glad to have the opportunity of doing it in person,”
+ said he courteously. “I only wish that I could see your sister and your
+father as well as yourself, to tell them how sorry I am. I think you
+had better run up to the house, little one, for it's getting near
+tiffin-time. No--don't you go Mr. West. I want to have a word with you.”
+
+Miss Heatherstone waved her hand to me with a bright smile, and tripped
+up the avenue, while her brother unbolted the gate, and, passing
+through, closed it again, locking it upon the outside.
+
+“I'll have a stroll down the road with you, if you have no objection.
+Have a manilla.” He drew a couple of cheroots from his pocket and
+handed one to me. “You'll find they are not bad,” he said. “I became a
+connoisseur in tobacco when I was in India. I hope I am not interfering
+with your business in coming along with you?”
+
+“Not at all,” I answered, “I am very glad to have your company.”
+
+“I'll tell you a secret,” said my companion. “This is the first time
+that I have been outside the grounds since we have been down here.”
+
+“And your sister?”
+
+“She has never been out, either,” he answered. “I have given the
+governor the slip to-day, but he wouldn't half like it if he knew. It's
+a whim of his that we should keep ourselves entirely to ourselves. At
+least, some people would call it a whim, for my own part I have reason
+to believe that he has solid grounds for all that he does--though
+perhaps in this matter he may be a little too exacting.”
+
+“You must surely find it very lonely,” said I. “Couldn't you manage to
+slip down at times and have a smoke with me? That house over yonder is
+Branksome.”
+
+“Indeed, you are very kind,” he answered, with sparkling eyes. “I should
+dearly like to run over now and again. With the exception of Israel
+Stakes, our old coachman and gardener, I have not a soul that I can
+speak to.”
+
+“And your sister--she must feel it even more,” said I, thinking in my
+heart that my new acquaintance made rather too much of his own troubles
+and too little of those of his companion.
+
+“Yes; poor Gabriel feels it, no doubt,” he answered carelessly, “but
+it's a more unnatural thing for a young man of my age to be cooped up in
+this way than for a woman. Look at me, now. I am three-and-twenty next
+March, and yet I have never been to a university, nor to a school for
+that matter. I am as complete an ignoramus as any of these clodhoppers.
+It seems strange to you, no doubt, and yet it is so. Now, don't you
+think I deserve a better fate?”
+
+He stopped as he spoke, and faced round to me, throwing his palms
+forward in appeal.
+
+As I looked at him, with the sun shining upon his face, he certainly did
+seem a strange bird to be cooped up in such a cage. Tall and muscular,
+with a keen, dark face, and sharp, finely cut features, he might have
+stepped out of a canvas of Murillo or Velasquez. There were latent
+energy and power in his firm-set mouth, his square eyebrows, and the
+whole pose of his elastic, well-knit figure.
+
+“There is the learning to be got from books and the learning to be got
+from experience,” said I sententiously. “If you have less of your share
+of the one, perhaps you have more of the other. I cannot believe you
+have spent all your life in mere idleness and pleasure.”
+
+“Pleasure!” he cried. “Pleasure! Look at this!” He pulled off his hat,
+and I saw that his black hair was all decked and dashed with streaks of
+grey. “Do you imagine that this came from pleasure?” he asked, with a
+bitter laugh.
+
+“You must have had some great shock,” I said, astonished at the sight,
+“some terrible illness in your youth. Or perhaps it arises from a more
+chronic cause--a constant gnawing anxiety. I have known men as young as
+you whose hair was as grey.”
+
+“Poor brutes!” he muttered. “I pity them.”
+
+“If you can manage to slip down to Branksome at times,” I said, “perhaps
+you could bring Miss Heatherstone with you. I know that my father and my
+sister would be delighted to see her, and a change, if only for an hour
+or two, might do her good.”
+
+“It would be rather hard for us both to get away together,” he answered.
+“However, if I see a chance I shall bring her down. It might be
+managed some afternoon perhaps, for the old man indulges in a siesta
+occasionally.”
+
+We had reached the head of the winding lane which branches off from the
+high road and leads to the laird's house, so my companion pulled up.
+
+“I must go back,” he said abruptly, “or they will miss me. It's very
+kind of you, West, to take this interest in us. I am very grateful to
+you, and so will Gabriel be when she hears of your kind invitation.
+It's a real heaping of coals of fire after that infernal placard of my
+father's.”
+
+He shook my hand and set off down the road, but he came running after me
+presently, calling me to stop.
+
+“I was just thinking,” he said, “that you must consider us a great
+mystery up there at Cloomber. I dare say you have come to look upon
+it as a private lunatic asylum, and I can't blame you. If you are
+interested in the matter, I feel it is unfriendly upon my part not to
+satisfy your curiosity, but I have promised my father to be silent about
+it. And indeed if I were to tell you all that I know you might not
+be very much the wiser after all. I would have you understand this,
+however--that my father is as sane as you or I, and that he has very
+good reasons for living the life which he does. I may add that his wish
+to remain secluded does not arise from any unworthy or dishonourable
+motives, but merely from the instinct of self-preservation.”
+
+“He is in danger, then?” I ejaculated.
+
+“Yes; he is in constant danger.”
+
+“But why does he not apply to the magistrates for protection?” I asked.
+“If he is afraid of any one, he has only to name him and they will bind
+him over to keep the peace.”
+
+“My dear West,” said young Heatherstone, “the danger with which
+my father is threatened is one that cannot be averted by any human
+intervention. It is none the less very real, and possibly very
+imminent.”
+
+“You don't mean to assert that it is supernatural,” I said
+incredulously.
+
+“Well, hardly that, either,” he answered with hesitation. “There,” he
+continued, “I have said rather more than I should, but I know that you
+will not abuse my confidence. Good-bye!”
+
+He took to his heels and was soon out of sight round a curve in the
+country road.
+
+A danger which was real and imminent, not to be averted by human means,
+and yet hardly supernatural--here was a conundrum indeed!
+
+I had come to look upon the inhabitants of the Hall as mere eccentrics,
+but after what young Mordaunt Heatherstone had just told me, I could
+no longer doubt that some dark and sinister meaning underlay all their
+actions. The more I pondered over the problem, the more unanswerable did
+it appear, and yet I could not get the matter out of my thoughts.
+
+The lonely, isolated Hall, and the strange, impending catastrophe which
+hung over its inmates, appealed forcibly to my imagination. All that
+evening, and late into the night, I sat moodily by the fire, pondering
+over what I had heard, and revolving in my mind the various incidents
+which might furnish me with some clue to the mystery.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+HOW FOUR OF US CAME TO BE UNDER THE SHADOW OF CLOOMBER
+
+
+I trust that my readers will not set me down as an inquisitive busybody
+when I say that as the days and weeks went by I found my attention and
+my thoughts more and more attracted to General Heatherstone and the
+mystery which surrounded him.
+
+It was in vain that I endeavoured by hard work and a strict attention to
+the laird's affairs to direct my mind into some more healthy channel.
+Do what I would, on land or on the water, I would still find myself
+puzzling over this one question, until it obtained such a hold upon me
+that I felt it was useless for me to attempt to apply myself to anything
+until I had come to some satisfactory solution of it.
+
+I could never pass the dark line of five-foot fencing, and the great
+iron gate, with its massive lock, without pausing and racking my brain
+as to what the secret might be which was shut in by that inscrutable
+barrier. Yet, with all my conjectures and all my observations, I could
+never come to any conclusion which could for a moment be accepted as an
+explanation of the facts.
+
+My sister had been out for a stroll one night, visiting a sick peasant
+or performing some other of the numerous acts of charity by which she
+had made herself beloved by the whole countryside.
+
+“John,” she said when she returned, “have you seen Cloomber Hall at
+night?”
+
+“No,” I answered, laying down the book which I was reading. “Not since
+that memorable evening when the general and Mr. McNeil came over to make
+an inspection.”
+
+“Well, John, will you put your hat on and come a little walk with me?”
+
+I could see by her manner that something had agitated or frightened her.
+
+“Why, bless the girl!” cried I boisterously, “what is the matter? The
+old Hall is not on fire, surely? You look as grave as if all Wigtown
+were in a blaze.”
+
+“Not quite so bad as that,” she said, smiling. “But do come out, Jack. I
+should very much like you to see it.”
+
+I had always refrained from saying anything which might alarm my sister,
+so that she knew nothing of the interest which our neighbours' doings
+had for me. At her request I took my hat and followed her out into the
+darkness. She led the way along a little footpath over the moor, which
+brought us to some rising ground, from which we could look down upon the
+Hall without our view being obstructed by any of the fir-trees which had
+been planted round it.
+
+“Look at that!” said my sister, pausing at the summit of this little
+eminence.
+
+Cloomber lay beneath us in a blaze of light. In the lower floors the
+shutters obscured the illumination, but above, from the broad windows
+of the second storey to the thin slits at the summit of the tower, there
+was not a chink or an aperture which did not send forth a stream of
+radiance. So dazzling was the effect that for a moment I was persuaded
+that the house was on fire, but the steadiness and clearness of the
+light soon freed me from that apprehension. It was clearly the result of
+many lamps placed systematically all over the building.
+
+It added to the strange effect that all these brilliantly illuminated
+rooms were apparently untenanted, and some of them, so far as we could
+judge, were not even furnished. Through the whole great house there was
+no sign of movement or of life--nothing but the clear, unwinking flood
+of yellow light.
+
+I was still lost in wonder at the sight when I heard a short, quick sob
+at my side.
+
+“What is it, Esther, dear?” I asked, looking down at my companion.
+
+“I feel so frightened. Oh, John, John, take me home, I feel so
+frightened!”
+
+She clung to my arm, and pulled at my coat in a perfect frenzy of fear.
+
+“It's all safe, darling,” I said soothingly. “There is nothing to fear.
+What has upset you so?”
+
+“I am afraid of them, John; I am afraid of the Heatherstones. Why is
+their house lit up like this every night? I have heard from others that
+it is always so. And why does the old man run like a frightened hare if
+any one comes upon him. There is something wrong about it, John, and it
+frightens me.”
+
+I pacified her as well as I could, and led her home with me, where I
+took care that she should have some hot port negus before going to bed.
+I avoided the subject of the Heatherstones for fear of exciting her,
+and she did not recur to it of her own accord. I was convinced, however,
+from what I had heard from her, that she had for some time back been
+making her own observations upon our neighbours, and that in doing so
+she had put a considerable strain upon her nerves.
+
+I could see that the mere fact of the Hall being illuminated at night
+was not enough to account for her extreme agitation, and that it must
+have derived its importance in her eyes from being one in a chain of
+incidents, all of which had left a weird or unpleasant impression upon
+her mind.
+
+That was the conclusion which I came to at the time, and I have reason
+to know now that I was right, and that my sister had even more cause
+than I had myself for believing that there was something uncanny about
+the tenants of Cloomber.
+
+Our interest in the matter may have arisen at first from nothing higher
+than curiosity, but events soon took a turn which associated us more
+closely with the fortunes of the Heatherstone family.
+
+Mordaunt had taken advantage of my invitation to come down to the
+laird's house, and on several occasions he brought with him his
+beautiful sister. The four of us would wander over the moors together,
+or perhaps if the day were fine set sail upon our little skiff and stand
+off into the Irish Sea.
+
+On such excursions the brother and sister would be as merry and as happy
+as two children. It was a keen pleasure to them to escape from their
+dull fortress, and to see, if only for a few hours, friendly and
+sympathetic faces round them.
+
+There could be but one result when four young people were brought
+together in sweet, forbidden intercourse. Acquaintance-ship warmed into
+friendship, and friendship flamed suddenly into love.
+
+Gabriel sits beside me now as I write, and she agrees with me that, dear
+as is the subject to ourselves, the whole story of our mutual affection
+is of too personal a nature to be more than touched upon in this
+statement. Suffice it to say that, within a few weeks of our first
+meeting Mordaunt Heatherstone had won the heart of my dear sister, and
+Gabriel had given me that pledge which death itself will not be able to
+break.
+
+I have alluded in this brief way to the double tie which sprang up
+between the two families, because I have no wish that this narrative
+should degenerate into anything approaching to romance, or that I should
+lose the thread of the facts which I have set myself to chronicle. These
+are connected with General Heatherstone, and only indirectly with my own
+personal history.
+
+It is enough if I say that after our engagement the visits to Branksome
+became more frequent, and that our friends were able sometimes to spend
+a whole day with us when business had called the general to Wigtown, or
+when his gout confined him to his room.
+
+As to our good father, he was ever ready to greet us with many small
+jests and tags of Oriental poems appropriate to the occasion, for we had
+no secrets from him, and he already looked upon us all as his children.
+
+There were times when on account of some peculiarly dark or restless fit
+of the general's it was impossible for weeks on end for either Gabriel
+or Mordaunt to get away from the grounds. The old man would even stand
+on guard, a gloomy and silent sentinel, at the avenue gate, or pace up
+and down the drive as though he suspected that attempts had been made to
+penetrate his seclusion.
+
+Passing of an evening I have seen his dark, grim figure flitting about
+in the shadow of the trees, or caught a glimpse of his hard, angular,
+swarthy face peering out suspiciously at me from behind the bars.
+
+My heart would often sadden for him as I noticed his uncouth, nervous
+movements, his furtive glances and twitching features. Who would have
+believed that this slinking, cowering creature had once been a dashing
+officer, who had fought the battles of his country and had won the palm
+of bravery among the host of brave men around him?
+
+In spite of the old soldier's vigilance, we managed to hold
+communication with our friends.
+
+Immediately behind the Hall there was a spot where the fencing had been
+so carelessly erected that two of the rails could be removed without
+difficulty, leaving a broad gap, which gave us the opportunity for
+many a stolen interview, though they were necessarily short, for the
+general's movements were erratic, and no part of the grounds was secure
+from his visitations.
+
+How vividly one of these hurried meetings rises before me! It stands out
+clear, peaceful, and distinct amid the wild, mysterious incidents which
+were destined to lead up to the terrible catastrophe which has cast a
+shade over our lives.
+
+I can remember that as I walked through the fields the grass was damp
+with the rain of the morning, and the air was heavy with the smell of
+the fresh-turned earth. Gabriel was waiting for me under the hawthorn
+tree outside the gap, and we stood hand-in-hand looking down at the long
+sweep of moorland and at the broad blue channel which encircled it with
+its fringe of foam.
+
+Far away in the north-west the sun glinted upon the high peak of Mount
+Throston. From where we stood we could see the smoke of the steamers as
+they ploughed along the busy water-way which leads to Belfast.
+
+“Is it not magnificent?” Gabriel cried, clasping her hands round my arm.
+“Ah, John, why are we not free to sail away over these waves together,
+and leave all our troubles behind us on the shore?”
+
+“And what are the troubles which you would leave behind you, dear one?”
+ I asked. “May I not know them, and help you to bear them?”
+
+“I have no secrets from you, John,” she answered. “Our chief trouble is,
+as you may guess, our poor father's strange behaviour. Is it not a sad
+thing for all of us that a man who has played such a distinguished part
+in the world should skulk from one obscure corner of the country to
+another, and should defend himself with locks and barriers as though he
+were a common thief flying from justice? This is a trouble, John, which
+it is out of your power to alleviate.”
+
+“But why does he do it, Gabriel?” I asked.
+
+“I cannot tell,” she answered frankly. “I only know that he imagines
+some deadly danger to be hanging over his head, and that this danger was
+incurred by him during his stay in India. What its nature may be I have
+no more idea than you have.”
+
+“Then your brother has,” I remarked. “I am sure from the way in which he
+spoke to me about it one day that he knows what it is, and that he looks
+upon it as real.”
+
+“Yes, he knows, and so does my mother,” she answered, “but they have
+always kept it secret from me. My poor father is very excited at
+present. Day and night he is in an agony of apprehension, but it will
+soon be the fifth of October, and after that he will be at peace.”
+
+“How do you know that?” I asked in surprise.
+
+“By experience,” she answered gravely. “On the fifth of October these
+fears of his come to a crisis. For years back he has been in the habit
+of locking Mordaunt and myself up in our rooms on that date, so that we
+have no idea what occurs, but we have always found that he has been
+much relieved afterwards, and has continued to be comparatively in peace
+until that day begins to draw round again.”
+
+“Then you have only ten days or so to wait,” I remarked, for September
+was drawing to a close. “By the way, dearest, why is it that you light
+up all your rooms at night?”
+
+“You have noticed it, then?” she said. “It comes also from my father's
+fears. He does not like to have one dark corner in the whole house.
+He walks about a good deal at night, and inspects everything, from the
+attics right down to the cellars. He has large lamps in every room and
+corridor, even the empty ones, and he orders the servants to light them
+all at dusk.”
+
+“I am rather surprised that you manage to keep your servants,” I said,
+laughing. “The maids in these parts are a superstitious class, and
+their imaginations are easily excited by anything which they don't
+understand.”
+
+“The cook and both housemaids are from London, and are used to our
+ways. We pay them on a very high scale to make up for any inconvenience to
+which they may be put. Israel Stakes, the coachman, is the only one who
+comes from this part of the country, and he seems to be a stolid, honest
+fellow, who is not easily scared.”
+
+“Poor little girl,” I exclaimed, looking down at the slim, graceful
+figure by my side. “This is no atmosphere for you to live in. Why will
+you not let me rescue you from it? Why won't you allow me to go straight
+and ask the general for your hand? At the worst he could only refuse.”
+
+She turned quite haggard and pale at the very thought.
+
+“For Heaven's sake, John,” she cried earnestly, “do nothing of the kind.
+He would whip us all away in the dead of the night, and within a week
+we should be settling down again in some wilderness where we might never
+have a chance of seeing or hearing from you again. Besides, he never
+would forgive us for venturing out of the grounds.”
+
+“I don't think that he is a hard-hearted man,” I remarked. “I have seen
+a kindly look in his eyes, for all his stern face.”
+
+“He can be the kindest of fathers,” she answered. “But he is terrible
+when opposed or thwarted. You have never seen him so, and I trust you
+never will. It was that strength of will and impatience of opposition
+which made him such a splendid officer. I assure you that in India every
+one thought a great deal of him. The soldiers were afraid of him, but
+they would have followed him anywhere.”
+
+“And had he these nervous attacks then?”
+
+“Occasionally, but not nearly so acutely. He seems to think that the
+danger--whatever it may be--becomes more imminent every year. Oh, John,
+it is terrible to be waiting like this with a sword over our heads--and
+all the more terrible to me since I have no idea where the blow is to
+come from.”
+
+“Dear Gabriel,” I said, taking her hand and drawing her to my side,
+“look over all this pleasant countryside and the broad blue sea. Is it
+not all peaceful and beautiful? In these cottages, with their red-tiled
+roofs peeping out from the grey moor, there live none but simple,
+God-fearing men, who toil hard at their crafts and bear enmity to no
+man. Within seven miles of us is a large town, with every civilised
+appliance for the preservation of order. Ten miles farther there is
+a garrison quartered, and a telegram would at any time bring down a
+company of soldiers. Now, I ask you, dear, in the name of common-sense,
+what conceivable danger could threaten you in this secluded
+neighbourhood, with the means of help so near? You assure me that the
+peril is not connected with your father's health?”
+
+“No, I am sure of that. It is true that Dr. Easterling, of Stranraer,
+has been over to see him once or twice, but that was merely for some
+small indisposition. I can assure you that the danger is not to be
+looked for in that direction.”
+
+“Then I can assure you,” said I, laughing, “that there is no danger
+at all. It must be some strange monomania or hallucination. No other
+hypothesis will cover the facts.”
+
+“Would my father's monomania account for the fact of my brother's hair
+turning grey and my mother wasting away to a mere shadow?”
+
+“Undoubtedly,” I answered. “The long continued worry of the general's
+restlessness and irritability would produce those effects on sensitive
+natures.”
+
+“No, no!” said she, shaking her head sadly, “I have been exposed to his
+restlessness and irritability, but they have had no such effect upon
+me. The difference between us lies in the fact that they know this awful
+secret and I do not.”
+
+“My dear girl,” said I, “the days of family apparitions and that kind
+of thing are gone. Nobody is haunted nowadays, so we can put that
+supposition out of the question. Having done so, what remains? There is
+absolutely no other theory which could even be suggested. Believe me,
+the whole mystery is that the heat of India has been too much for your
+poor father's brain.”
+
+What she would have answered I cannot tell, for at that moment she gave
+a start as if some sound had fallen upon her ear. As she looked round
+apprehensively, I suddenly saw her features become rigid and her eyes
+fixed and dilated.
+
+Following the direction of her gaze, I felt a sudden thrill of fear pass
+through me as I perceived a human face surveying us from behind one of
+the trees--a man's face, every feature of which was distorted by the
+most malignant hatred and anger. Finding himself observed, he stepped
+out and advanced towards us, when I saw that it was none other than the
+general himself. His beard was all a-bristle with fury, and his deepset
+eyes glowed from under their heavily veined lids with a most sinister
+and demoniacal brightness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+HOW I CAME TO BE ENLISTED AS ONE OF THE GARRISON OF CLOOMBER
+
+
+“To your room, girl!” he cried in a hoarse, harsh voice, stepping in
+between us and pointing authoritatively towards the house.
+
+He waited until Gabriel, with a last frightened glance at me, had
+passed through the gap, and then he turned upon me with an expression so
+murderous that I stepped back a pace or two, and tightened my grasp upon
+my oak stick.
+
+“You-you--” he spluttered, with his hand twitching at his throat, as
+though his fury were choking him. “You have dared to intrude upon my
+privacy! Do you think I built this fence that all the vermin in the
+country might congregate round it? Oh, you have been very near your
+death, my fine fellow! You will never be nearer until your time comes.
+Look at this!” He pulled a squat, thick pistol out of his bosom. “If
+you had passed through that gap and set foot on my land I'd have let
+daylight into you. I'll have no vagabonds here. I know how to treat
+gentry of that sort, whether their faces are black or white.”
+
+“Sir,” said I, “I meant no harm by coming here, and I do not know how I
+have deserved this extraordinary outburst. Allow me to observe, however,
+that you are still covering me with your pistol, and that, as your hand
+is rather tremulous, it is more than possible that it may go off. If
+you don't turn the muzzle down I shall be compelled in self-defence to
+strike you over the wrist with my stick.”
+
+“What the deuce brought you here, then?” he asked, in a more composed
+voice, putting his weapon back into his bosom. “Can't a gentleman live
+quietly without your coming to peep and pry? Have you no business
+of your own to look after, eh? And my daughter? how came you to know
+anything of her? and what have you been trying to squeeze out of her? It
+wasn't chance that brought you here.”
+
+“No,” said I boldly, “it was not chance which brought me here. I have
+had several opportunities of seeing your daughter and of appreciating
+her many noble qualities. We are engaged to be married to each other,
+and I came up with the express intention of seeing her.”
+
+Instead of blazing into a fury, as I had expected, the general gave a
+long whistle of astonishment, and then leant up against the railings,
+laughing softly to himself.
+
+“English terriers are fond of nosing worms,” he remarked at last. “When
+we brought them out to India they used to trot off into the jungle and
+begin sniffing at what they imagined to be worms there. But the worm
+turned out to be a venomous snake, and so poor doggy played no more. I
+think you'll find yourself in a somewhat analogous position if you don't
+look out.”
+
+“You surely don't mean to cast an aspersion upon your own daughter?” I
+said, flushing with indignation.
+
+“Oh, Gabriel is all right,” he answered carelessly. “Our family is not
+exactly one, however, which I should recommend a young fellow to marry
+into. And pray how is it that I was not informed of this snug little
+arrangement of yours?”
+
+“We were afraid, sir, that you might separate us,” I replied, feeling
+that perfect candour was the best policy under the circumstances. “It is
+possible that we were mistaken. Before coming to any final decision, I
+implore you to remember that the happiness of both of us is at stake. It
+is in your power to divide our bodies, but our souls shall be for ever
+united.”
+
+“My good fellow,” said the general, in a not unkindly tone, “you don't
+know what you are asking for. There is a gulf between you and any one of
+the blood of Heatherstone which can never be bridged over.”
+
+All trace of anger had vanished now from his manner, and given place to
+an air of somewhat contemptuous amusement.
+
+My family pride took fire at his words. “The gulf may be less than you
+imagine,” I said coldly. “We are not clodhoppers because we live in this
+out-of-the-way place. I am of noble descent on one side, and my mother
+was a Buchan of Buchan. I assure you that there is no such disparity
+between us as you seem to imagine.”
+
+“You misunderstand me,” the general answered. “It is on our side that
+the disparity lies. There are reasons why my daughter Gabriel should
+live and die single. It would not be to your advantage to marry her.”
+
+“But surely, sir,” I persisted, “I am the best judge of my own interests
+and advantages. Since you take this ground all becomes easy, for I do
+assure you that the one interest which overrides all others is that I
+should have the woman I love for my wife. If this is your only objection
+to our match you may surely give us your consent, for any danger or
+trial which I may incur in marrying Gabriel will not weigh with me one
+featherweight.”
+
+“Here's a young bantam!” exclaimed the old soldier, smiling at my
+warmth. “It's easy to defy danger when you don't know what the danger
+is.”
+
+“What is it, then?” I asked, hotly. “There is no earthly peril which
+will drive me from Gabriel's side. Let me know what it is and test me.”
+
+“No, no. That would never do,” he answered with a sigh, and then,
+thoughtfully, as if speaking his mind aloud: “He has plenty of pluck and
+is a well-grown lad, too. We might do worse than make use of him.”
+
+He went on mumbling to himself with a vacant stare in his eyes as if he
+had forgotten my presence.
+
+“Look here, West,” he said presently. “You'll excuse me if I spoke
+hastily a little time ago. It is the second time that I have had
+occasion to apologise to you for the same offence. It shan't occur
+again. I am rather over-particular, no doubt, in my desire for complete
+isolation, but I have good reasons for insisting on the point. Rightly
+or wrongly, I have got it into my head that some day there might be an
+organised raid upon my grounds. If anything of the sort should occur I
+suppose I might reckon upon your assistance?”
+
+“With all my heart.”
+
+“So that if ever you got a message such as 'Come up,' or even
+'Cloomber,' you would know that it was an appeal for help, and would
+hurry up immediately, even if it were in the dead of the night?”
+
+“Most certainly I should,” I answered. “But might I ask you what the
+nature of the danger is which you apprehend?”
+
+“There would be nothing gained by your knowing. Indeed, you would hardly
+understand it if I told you. I must bid you good day now, for I have
+stayed with you too long. Remember, I count upon you as one of the
+Cloomber garrison now.”
+
+“One other thing, sir,” I said hurriedly, for he was turning away, “I
+hope that you will not be angry with your daughter for anything which I
+have told you. It was for my sake that she kept it all secret from you.”
+
+“All right,” he said, with his cold, inscrutable smile. “I am not such
+an ogre in the bosom of my family as you seem to think. As to this
+marriage question, I should advise you as a friend to let it drop
+altogether, but if that is impossible I must insist that it stand over
+completely for the present. It is impossible to say what unexpected turn
+events may take. Good-bye.”
+
+He plunged into the wood and was quickly out of sight among the dense
+plantation.
+
+Thus ended this extraordinary interview, in which this strange man
+had begun by pointing a loaded pistol at my breast and had ended,
+by partially acknowledging the possibility of my becoming his future
+son-in-law. I hardly knew whether to be cast down or elated over it.
+
+On the one hand he was likely, by keeping a closer watch over his
+daughter, to prevent us from communicating as freely as we had done
+hitherto. Against this there was the advantage of having obtained an
+implied consent to the renewal of my suit at some future date. On the
+whole, I came to the conclusion as I walked thoughtfully home that I had
+improved my position by the incident.
+
+But this danger--this shadowy, unspeakable danger--which appeared to
+rise up at every turn, and to hang day and night over the towers of
+Cloomber! Rack my brain as I would, I could not conjure up any solution
+to the problem which was not puerile and inadequate.
+
+One fact struck me as being significant. Both the father and the son had
+assured me, independently of each other, that if I were told what the
+peril was, I would hardly realise its significance. How strange and
+bizarre must the fear be which can scarcely be expressed in intelligible
+language!
+
+I held up my hand in the darkness before I turned to sleep that night,
+and I swore that no power of man or devil should ever weaken my love for
+the woman whose pure heart I had had the good fortune to win.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+OF CORPORAL RUFUS SMITH AND HIS COMING TO CLOOMBER
+
+
+In making this statement I have purposely couched it in bald and simple
+language, for fear I should be accused of colouring my narrative for the
+sake of effect. If, however, I have told my story with any approach to
+realism, the reader will understand me when I say that by this time
+the succession of dramatic incidents which had occurred had arrested
+my attention and excited my imagination to the exclusion of all minor
+topics.
+
+How could I plod through the dull routine of an agent's work, or
+interest myself in the thatch of this tenant's bothy or the sails of
+that one's boat, when my mind was taken up by the chain of events which
+I have described, and was still busy seeking an explanation for them.
+
+Go where I would over the countryside, I could see the square, white
+tower shooting out from among the trees, and beneath that tower this
+ill-fated family were watching and waiting, waiting and watching--and
+for what? That was still the question which stood like an impassable
+barrier at the end of every train of thought.
+
+Regarded merely as an abstract problem, this mystery of the Heatherstone
+family had a lurid fascination about it, but when the woman whom I
+loved a thousandfold better than I did myself proved to be so deeply
+interested in the solution, I felt that it was impossible to turn my
+thoughts to anything else until it had been finally cleared up.
+
+My good father had received a letter from the laird, dated from Naples,
+which told us that he had derived much benefit from the change, and that
+he had no intention of returning to Scotland for some time. This was
+satisfactory to all of us, for my father had found Branksome such an
+excellent place for study that it would have been a sore trial to him
+to return to the noise and tumult of a city. As to my dear sister and
+myself, there were, as I have shown, stronger reasons still to make us
+love the Wigtownshire moors.
+
+In spite of my interview with the general--or perhaps I might say on
+account of it--I took occasion at least twice a day to walk towards
+Cloomber and satisfy myself that all was well there. He had begun by
+resenting my intrusion, but he had ended by taking me into a sort of
+half-confidence, and even by asking my assistance, so I felt that I
+stood upon a different footing with him than I had done formerly, and
+that he was less likely to be annoyed by my presence. Indeed, I met him
+pacing round the inclosure a few days afterwards, and his manner towards
+me was civil, though he made no allusion to our former conversation.
+
+He appeared to be still in an extreme state of nervousness, starting
+from time to time, and gazing furtively about him, with little
+frightened, darting glances to the right and the left. I hoped that his
+daughter was right in naming the fifth of October as the turning point
+of his complaint, for it was evident to me as I looked at his gleaming
+eyes and quivering hands, that a man could not live long in such a state
+of nervous tension.
+
+I found on examination that he had had the loose rails securely fastened
+so as to block up our former trysting-place, and though I prowled round
+the whole long line of fencing, I was unable to find any other place
+where an entrance could be effected.
+
+Here and there between the few chinks left in the barrier I could catch
+glimpses of the Hall, and once I saw a rough-looking, middle-aged man
+standing at a window on the lower floor, whom I supposed to be Israel
+Stakes, the coachman. There was no sign, however, of Gabriel or of
+Mordaunt, and their absence alarmed me. I was convinced that, unless
+they were under some restraint, they would have managed to communicate
+with my sister or myself. My fears became more and more acute as day
+followed day without our seeing or hearing anything of them.
+
+One morning--it was the second day of October--I was walking towards the
+Hall, hoping that I might be fortunate enough to learn some news of my
+darling, when I observed a man perched upon a stone at the side of the
+road.
+
+As I came nearer to him I could see that he was a stranger, and from his
+dusty clothes and dilapidated appearance he seemed to have come from a
+distance. He had a great hunk of bread on his knee and a clasp-knife
+in his hand, but he had apparently just finished his breakfast, for he
+brushed the crumbs off his lap and rose to his feet when he perceived
+me.
+
+Noticing the great height of the fellow and that he still held his
+weapon, I kept well to the other side of the road, for I knew that
+destitution makes men desperate and that the chain that glittered on
+my waistcoat might be too great a temptation to him upon this lonely
+highway. I was confirmed in my fears when I saw him step out into the
+centre of the road and bar my progress.
+
+“Well, my lad,” I said, affecting an ease which I by no means felt,
+“what can I do for you this morning?”
+
+The fellow's face was the colour of mahogany with exposure to the
+weather, and he had a deep scar from the corner of his mouth to his ear,
+which by no means improved his appearance. His hair was grizzled, but
+his figure was stalwart, and his fur cap was cocked on one side so as to
+give him a rakish, semi-military appearance. Altogether he gave me the
+impression of being one of the most dangerous types of tramp that I had
+ever fallen in with.
+
+Instead of replying to my question, he eyed me for some time in silence
+with sullen, yellow-shot eyes, and then closed his knife with a loud
+snick.
+
+“You're not a beak,” he said, “too young for that, I guess. They had me
+in chokey at Paisley and they had me in chokey at Wigtown, but by
+the living thunder if another of them lays a hand on me I'll make him
+remember Corporal Rufus Smith! It's a darned fine country this, where
+they won't give a man work, and then lay him by the heels for having no
+visible means of subsistence.”
+
+“I am sorry to see an old soldier so reduced,” said I. “What corps did
+you serve in?”
+
+“H Battery, Royal Horse Artillery. Bad cess to the Service and every
+one in it! Here I am nigh sixty years of age, with a beggarly pension of
+thirty-eight pound ten--not enough to keep me in beer and baccy.”
+
+“I should have thought thirty-eight pound ten a year would have been a
+nice help to you in your old age,” I remarked.
+
+“Would you, though?” he answered with a sneer, pushing his
+weather-beaten face forward until it was within a foot of my own.
+
+“How much d'ye think that slash with a tulwar is worth? And my foot with
+all the bones rattling about like a bagful of dice where the trail
+of the gun went across it. What's that worth, eh? And a liver like a
+sponge, and ague whenever the wind comes round to the east--what's the
+market value of that? Would you take the lot for a dirty forty pound a
+year--would you now?”
+
+“We are poor folk in this part of the country,” I answered. “You would
+pass for a rich man down here.”
+
+“They are fool folk and they have fool tastes,” said he, drawing a black
+pipe from his pocket and stuffing it with tobacco. “I know what good
+living is, and, by cripes! while I have a shilling in my pocket I like
+to spend it as a shilling should be spent. I've fought for my country
+and my country has done darned little for me. I'll go to the Rooshians,
+so help me! I could show them how to cross the Himalayas so that it
+would puzzle either Afghans or British to stop 'em. What's that secret
+worth in St. Petersburg, eh, mister?”
+
+“I am ashamed to hear an old soldier speak so, even in jest,” said I
+sternly.
+
+“Jest, indeed!” he cried, with a great, roaring oath. “I'd have done it
+years ago if the Rooshians had been game to take it up. Skobeloff
+was the best of the bunch, but he's been snuffed out. However, that's
+neither here nor there. What I want to ask you is whether you've ever
+heard anything in this quarter of a man called Heatherstone, the same
+who used to be colonel of the 41st Bengalis? They told me at Wigtown
+that he lived somewhere down this way.”
+
+“He lives in that large house over yonder,” said I, pointing to Cloomber
+Tower. “You'll find the avenue gate a little way down the road, but the
+general isn't over fond of visitors.”
+
+The last part of my speech was lost upon Corporal Rufus Smith; for the
+instant that I pointed out the gate he set off hopping down the road.
+
+His mode of progression was the most singular I have ever seen, for he
+would only put his right foot to the ground once in every half-dozen
+strides, while he worked so hard and attained such a momentum with the
+other limb that he got over the ground at an astonishing speed.
+
+I was so surprised that I stood in the roadway gazing after this hulking
+figure until the thought suddenly struck me that some serious result
+might come from a meeting between a man of such blunt speech and the
+choleric, hot-headed general. I therefore followed him as he hopped
+along like some great, clumsy bird, and overtook him at the avenue gate,
+where he stood grasping the ironwork and peering through at the dark
+carriage-drive beyond.
+
+“He's a sly old jackal,” he said, looking round at me and nodding his
+head in the direction of the Hall. “He's a deep old dog. And that's his
+bungalow, is it, among the trees?”
+
+“That is his house,” I answered; “but I should advise you to keep a more
+civil tongue in your head if you intend to speak with the general. He is
+not a man to stand any nonsense.”
+
+“Right you are. He was always a hard nut to crack. But isn't this him
+coming down the avenue?”
+
+I looked through the gate and saw that it was indeed the general, who,
+having either seen us or been attracted by our voices, was hurrying down
+towards us. As he advanced he would stop from time to time and peer at
+us through the dark shadow thrown by the trees, as if he were irresolute
+whether to come on or no.
+
+“He's reconnoitering!” whispered my companion with a hoarse chuckle.
+“He's afraid--and I know what he's afraid of. He won't be caught in a
+trap if he can help it, the old 'un. He's about as fly as they make 'em,
+you bet!”
+
+Then suddenly standing on his tip-toes and waving his hand through the
+bars of the gate, he shouted at the top of his voice:
+
+“Come on, my gallant commandant! Come on! The coast's clear, and no
+enemy in sight.”
+
+This familiar address had the effect of reassuring the general, for he
+came right for us, though I could tell by his heightened colour that his
+temper was at boiling point.
+
+“What, you here, Mr. West?” he said, as his eye fell upon me. “What is
+it you want, and why have you brought this fellow with you?”
+
+“I have not brought him with me, sir,” I answered, feeling rather
+disgusted at being made responsible for the presence of the
+disreputable-looking vagabond beside me. “I found him on the road here,
+and he desired to be directed to you, so I showed him the way. I know
+nothing of him myself.”
+
+“What do you want with me, then?” the general asked sternly, turning to
+my companion.
+
+“If you please, sir,” said the ex-corporal, speaking in a whining voice,
+and touching his moleskin cap with a humility which contrasted strangely
+with the previous rough independence of his bearing, “I'm an old gunner
+in the Queen's service, sir, and knowing your name by hearing it in
+India I thought that maybe you would take me as your groom or gardener,
+or give me any other place as happened to be vacant.”
+
+“I am sorry that I cannot do anything for you, my man,” the old soldier
+answered impressively.
+
+“Then you'll give me a little just to help me on my way, sir,” said the
+cringing mendicant. “You won't see an old comrade go to the bad for the
+sake of a few rupees? I was with Sale's brigade in the Passes, sir, and
+I was at the second taking of Cabul.”
+
+General Heatherstone looked keenly at the supplicant, but was silent
+to his appeal.
+
+“I was in Ghuznee with you when the walls were all shook down by an
+earthquake, and when we found forty thousand Afghans within gunshot of
+us. You ask me about it, and you'll see whether I'm lying or not. We
+went through all this when we were young, and now that we are old you
+are to live in a fine bungalow, and I am to starve by the roadside. It
+don't seem to me to be fair.”
+
+“You are an impertinent scoundrel,” said the general. “If you had been a
+good soldier you would never need to ask for help. I shall not give you
+a farthing.”
+
+“One word more, sir,” cried the tramp, for the other was turning away,
+“I've been in the Tarada Pass.”
+
+The old soldier sprang round as if the words had been a pistol-shot.
+
+“What--what d'ye mean?” he stammered.
+
+“I've been in the Tarada Pass, sir, and I knew a man there called
+Ghoolab Shah.”
+
+These last were hissed out in an undertone, and a malicious grin
+overspread the face of the speaker.
+
+Their effect upon the general was extraordinary. He fairly staggered
+back from the gateway, and his yellow countenance blanched to a livid,
+mottled grey. For a moment he was too overcome to speak. At last he
+gasped out:
+
+“Ghoolab Shah? Who are you who know Ghoolab Shah?”
+
+“Take another look,” said the tramp, “your sight is not as keen as it
+was forty years ago.”
+
+The general took a long, earnest look at the unkempt wanderer in front
+of him, and as he gazed I saw the light of recognition spring up in his
+eyes.
+
+“God bless my soul!” he cried. “Why, it's Corporal Rufus Smith.”
+
+“You've come on it at last,” said the other, chuckling to himself. “I
+was wondering how long it would be before you knew me. And, first
+of all, just unlock this gate, will you? It's hard to talk through a
+grating. It's too much like ten minutes with a visitor in the cells.”
+
+The general, whose face still bore evidences of his agitation, undid the
+bolts with nervous, trembling fingers. The recognition of Corporal Rufus
+Smith had, I fancied, been a relief to him, and yet he plainly showed
+by his manner that he regarded his presence as by no means an unmixed
+blessing.
+
+“Why, Corporal,” he said, as the gate swung open, “I have often wondered
+whether you were dead or alive, but I never expected to see you again.
+How have you been all these long years?”
+
+“How have I been?” the corporal answered gruffly. “Why, I have been
+drunk for the most part. When I draw my money I lay it out in liquor,
+and as long as that lasts I get some peace in life. When I'm cleaned out
+I go upon tramp, partly in the hope of picking up the price of a dram,
+and partly in order to look for you.”
+
+“You'll excuse us talking about these private matters, West,” the
+general said, looking round at me, for I was beginning to move away.
+“Don't leave us. You know something of this matter already, and may find
+yourself entirely in the swim with us some of these days.”
+
+Corporal Rufus Smith looked round at me in blank astonishment.
+
+“In the swim with us?” he said. “However did he get there?”
+
+“Voluntarily, voluntarily,” the general explained, hurriedly sinking his
+voice. “He is a neighbour of mine, and he has volunteered his help in
+case I should ever need it.”
+
+This explanation seemed, if anything, to increase the big stranger's
+surprise.
+
+“Well, if that don't lick cock-fighting!” he exclaimed, contemplating me
+with admiration. “I never heard tell of such a thing.”
+
+“And now you have found me, Corporal Smith,” said the tenant of
+Cloomber, “what is it that you want of me?”
+
+“Why, everything. I want a roof to cover me, and clothes to wear, and
+food to eat, and, above all, brandy to drink.”
+
+“Well, I'll take you in and do what I can for you,” said the general
+slowly. “But look here, Smith, we must have discipline. I'm the general
+and you are the corporal; I am the master and you are the man. Now,
+don't let me have to remind you of that again.”
+
+The tramp drew himself up to his full height and raised his right hand
+with the palm forward in a military salute.
+
+“I can take you on as gardener and get rid of the fellow I have got.
+As to brandy, you shall have an allowance and no more. We are not deep
+drinkers at the Hall.”
+
+“Don't you take opium, or brandy, or nothing yourself, sir?” asked
+Corporal Rufus Smith.
+
+“Nothing,” the general said firmly.
+
+“Well, all I can say is, that you've got more nerve and pluck than I
+shall ever have. I don't wonder now at your winning that Cross in the
+Mutiny. If I was to go on listening night after night to them things
+without ever taking a drop of something to cheer my heart--why, it would
+drive me silly.”
+
+General Heatherstone put his hand up, as though afraid that his
+companion might say too much.
+
+“I must thank you, Mr. West,” he said, “for having shown this man my
+door. I would not willingly allow an old comrade, however humble, to go
+to the bad, and if I did not acknowledge his claim more readily it
+was simply because I had my doubts as to whether he was really what he
+represented himself to be. Just walk up to the Hall, Corporal, and I
+shall follow you in a minute.”
+
+“Poor fellow!” he continued, as he watched the newcomer hobbling up the
+avenue in the ungainly manner which I have described. “He got a gun over
+his foot, and it crushed the bones, but the obstinate fool would not let
+the doctors take it off. I remember him now as a smart young soldier in
+Afghanistan. He and I were associated in some queer adventures, which I
+may tell you of some day, and I naturally feel sympathy towards him, and
+would befriend him. Did he tell you anything about me before I came?”
+
+“Not a word,” I replied.
+
+“Oh,” said the general carelessly, but with an evident expression of
+relief, “I thought perhaps he might have said something of old times.
+Well, I must go and look after him, or the servants will be frightened,
+for he isn't a beauty to look at. Good-bye!”
+
+With a wave of the hand the old man turned away from me and hurried
+up the drive after this unexpected addition to his household, while I
+strolled on round the high, black paling, peering through every chink
+between the planks, but without seeing a trace either of Mordaunt or of
+his sister.
+
+I have now brought this statement down to the coming of Corporal Rufus
+Smith, which will prove to be the beginning of the end.
+
+I have set down soberly and in order the events which brought us to
+Wigtownshire, the arrival of the Heatherstones at Cloomber, the many
+strange incidents which excited first our curiosity and finally our
+intense interest in that family, and I have briefly touched upon the
+circumstances which brought my sister and myself into a closer and more
+personal relationship with them. I think that there cannot be a better
+moment than this to hand the narrative over to those who had means of
+knowing something of what was going on inside Cloomber during the months
+that I was observing it from without.
+
+Israel Stakes, the coachman, proved to be unable to read or write, but
+Mr. Mathew Clark, the Presbyterian Minister of Stoneykirk, has copied
+down his deposition, duly attested by the cross set opposite to his
+name. The good clergyman has, I fancy, put some slight polish upon the
+narrator's story, which I rather regret, as it might have been more
+interesting, if less intelligible, when reported verbatim. It still
+preserves, however, considerable traces of Israel's individuality,
+and may be regarded as an exact record of what he saw and did while in
+General Heatherstone's service.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+STATEMENT OF ISRAEL STAKES
+
+
+(Copied and authenticated by the Reverend Mathew Clark, Presbyterian
+Minister of Stoneykirk, in Wigtownshire)
+
+Maister Fothergill West and the meenister say that I maun tell all I can
+aboot General Heatherstone and his hoose, but that I maunna say muckle
+aboot mysel' because the readers wouldna care to hear aboot me or my
+affairs. I am na sae sure o' that, for the Stakes is a family weel
+kenned and respecked on baith sides o' the Border, and there's mony in
+Nithsdale and Annandale as would be gey pleased to hear news o' the son
+o' Archie Stakes, o' Ecclefechan.
+
+I maun e'en do as I'm tauld, however, for Mr. West's sake, hoping he'll
+no forget me when I chance to hae a favour tae ask.(1) I'm no able tae
+write mysel' because my feyther sent me oot to scare craws instead o'
+sendin' me tae school, but on the ither hond he brought me up in the
+preenciples and practice o' the real kirk o' the Covenant, for which may
+the Lord be praised!
+
+It way last May twel'month that the factor body, Maister McNeil, cam
+ower tae me in the street and speered whether I was in want o' a place
+as a coachman and gairdner. As it fell oot I chanced tae be on the look
+oot for something o' the sort mysel' at the time, but I wasna ower quick
+to let him see that I wanted it.
+
+“Ye can tak it or leave it,” says he sharp like. “It's a guid place,
+and there's mony would be glad o't. If ye want it ye can come up tae my
+office at twa the morn and put your ain questions tae the gentleman.”
+
+That was a' I could get frae him, for he's a close man and a hard one at
+a bargain--which shall profit him leetle in the next life, though he lay
+by a store o' siller in this. When the day comes there'll be a hantle o'
+factors on the left hand o' the throne, and I shouldna be surprised if
+Maister McNeil found himsel' amang them.
+
+Weel, on the morn I gaed up to the office and there I foond the factor
+and a lang, thin, dour man wi' grey hair and a face as brown and
+crinkled as a walnut. He looked hard at me wi' a pair o' een that glowed
+like twa spunks, and then he says, says he:
+
+“You've been born in these pairts, I understan'?”
+
+“Aye,” says I, “and never left them neither.”
+
+“Never been oot o' Scotland?” he speers.
+
+“Twice to Carlisle fair,” says I, for I am a man wha loves the truth;
+and besides I kenned that the factor would mind my gaeing there, for I
+bargained fur twa steers and a stirk that he wanted for the stockin' o'
+the Drumleugh Fairm.
+
+“I learn frae Maister McNeil,” says General Heatherstone--for him it was
+and nane ither--“that ye canna write.”
+
+“Na,” says I.
+
+“Nor read?”
+
+“Na,” says I.
+
+“It seems tae me,” says he, turnin' tae the factor, “that this is the
+vera man I want. Servants is spoilt noo-a-days,” says he, “by ower
+muckle eddication. I hae nae doobt, Stakes, that ye will suit me well
+enough. Ye'll hae three pund a month and a' foond, but I shall resairve
+the right o' givin' ye twenty-four hoors' notice at any time. How will
+that suit ye?”
+
+“It's vera different frae my last place,” says I, discontented-like.
+
+And the words were true enough, for auld Fairmer Scott only gave me a
+pund a month and parritch twice a day.
+
+“Weel, weel,” says he, “maybe we'll gie ye a rise if ye suit. Meanwhile
+here's the han'sel shillin' that Maister McNeil tells me it's the custom
+tae give, and I shall expec' tae see ye at Cloomber on Monday.”
+
+When the Monday cam roond I walked oot tae Cloomber, and a great muckle
+hoose it is, wi' a hunderd windows or mair, and space enough tae hide
+awa' half the parish.
+
+As tae gairdening, there was no gairden for me tae work at, and the
+horse was never taken oot o' the stables frae week's end tae week's end.
+I was busy enough for a' that, for there was a deal o' fencing tae
+be put up, and one thing or anither, forbye cleanin' the knives and
+brushin' the boots and such-like jobs as is mair fit for an auld wife
+than for a grown man.
+
+There was twa besides mysel' in the kitchen, the cook Eliza, and Mary
+the hoosemaid, puir, benighted beings baith o' them, wha had wasted a'
+their lives in London, and kenned leetle aboot the warld or the ways o'
+the flesh.
+
+I hadna muckle tae say to them, for they were simple folk who could
+scarce understand English, and had hardly mair regard for their ain
+souls than the tods on the moor. When the cook said she didna think
+muckle o' John Knox, and the ither that she wouldna give saxpence tae
+hear the discourse o' Maister Donald McSnaw o' the true kirk, I kenned
+it was time for me tae leave them tae a higher Judge.
+
+There was four in family, the general, my leddy, Maister Mordaunt,
+and Miss Gabriel, and it wasna long before I found that a' wasna just
+exactly as it should be. My leddy was as thin and as white as a ghaist,
+and many's the time as I've come on her and found her yammerin' and
+greetin' all by hersel'. I've watched her walkin' up and doon in the
+wood where she thought nane could see her and wringin' her honds like
+one demented.
+
+There was the young gentleman, tae, and his sister--they baith seemed
+to hae some trouble on their minds, and the general maist of a', for the
+ithers were up ane day and down anither; but he was aye the same, wi' a
+face as dour and sad as a felon when he feels the tow roond his neck.
+
+I speered o' the hussies in the kitchen whether they kenned what was
+amiss wi' the family, but the cook she answered me back that it wasna
+for her tae inquire into the affairs o' her superiors, and that it was
+naething to her as long as she did her work and had her wages. They were
+puir, feckless bodies, the twa o' them, and would scarce gie an answer
+tae a ceevil question, though they could clack lood eneugh when they had
+a mind.
+
+Weel, weeks passed into months and a' things grew waur instead o'
+better in the Hall. The general he got mair nairvous, and his leddy
+mair melancholy every day, and yet there wasna any quarrel or bickering
+between them, for when they've been togither in the breakfast room
+I used often tae gang round and prune the rose-tree alongside o'
+the window, so that I couldna help hearin' a great pairt o' their
+conversation, though sair against the grain.
+
+When the young folk were wi' them they would speak little, but when they
+had gone they would aye talk as if some waefu' trial ere aboot to fa'
+upon them, though I could never gather from their words what it was that
+they were afeared o'.
+
+I've heard the general say mair than ance that he wasna frighted o'
+death, or any danger that he could face and have done wi', but that it
+was the lang, weary waitin' and the uncertainty that had taken a' the
+strength and the mettle oot o' him. Then my leddy would console him and
+tell him that maybe it wasna as bad as he thocht, and that a' would come
+richt in the end--but a' her cheery words were clean throwed away upon
+him.
+
+As tae the young folks, I kenned weel that they didna bide in the
+groonds, and that they were awa' whenever they got a chance wi' Maister
+Fothergill West tae Branksome, but the general was too fu' o' his ain
+troubles tae ken aboot it, and it didna seem tae me that it was pairt
+o' my duties either as coachman or as gairdner tae mind the bairns.
+He should have lairnt that if ye forbid a lassie and a laddie to dae
+anything it's just the surest way o' bringin' it aboot. The Lord foond
+that oot in the gairden o' Paradise, and there's no muckle change
+between the folk in Eden and the folk in Wigtown.
+
+There's ane thing that I havena spoke aboot yet, but that should be set
+doon.
+
+The general didna share his room wi' his wife, but slept a' alane in a
+chamber at the far end o' the hoose, as distant as possible frae every
+one else. This room was aye lockit when he wasna in it, and naebody was
+ever allowed tae gang into it. He would mak' his ain bed, and red it up
+and dust it a' by himsel', but he wouldna so much as allow one o' us to
+set fut on the passage that led tae it.
+
+At nicht he would walk a' ower the hoose, and he had lamps hung in every
+room and corner, so that no pairt should be dark.
+
+Many's the time frae my room in the garret I've heard his futsteps
+comin' and gangin', comin' and gangin' doon one passage and up anither
+frae midnight till cockcraw. It was weary wark to lie listenin' tae his
+clatter and wonderin' whether he was clean daft, or whether maybe he'd
+lairnt pagan and idolatrous tricks oot in India, and that his conscience
+noo was like the worm which gnaweth and dieth not. I'd ha' speered frae
+him whether it wouldna ease him to speak wi' the holy Donald McSnaw, but
+it might ha' been a mistake, and the general wasna a man that you'd care
+tae mak' a mistake wi'.
+
+Ane day I was workin' at the grass border when he comes up and he says,
+says he:
+
+“Did ye ever have occasion tae fire a pistol, Israel?”
+
+“Godsakes!” says I, “I never had siccan a thing in my honds in my life.”
+
+“Then you'd best not begin noo,” says he. “Every man tae his ain
+weepon,” he says. “Now I warrant ye could do something wi' a guid
+crab-tree cudgel!”
+
+“Aye, could I,” I answered blithely, “as well as ony lad on the Border.”
+
+“This is a lonely hoose,” says he, “and we might be molested by some
+rascals. It's weel tae be ready for whatever may come. Me and you and my
+son Mordaunt and Mr. Fothergill West of Branksome, who would come if he
+was required, ought tae be able tae show a bauld face--what think ye?”
+
+“'Deed, sir,” I says, “feastin' is aye better than fechtin'--but if
+ye'll raise me a pund a month, I'll no' shirk my share o' either.”
+
+“We won't quarrel ower that,” says he, and agreed tae the extra twal'
+pund a year as easy as though it were as many bawbees. Far be it frae me
+tae think evil, but I couldna help surmisin' at the time that money that
+was so lightly pairted wi' was maybe no' so very honestly cam by.
+
+I'm no' a curious or a pryin' mun by nature, but I was sair puzzled in
+my ain mind tae tell why it was that the general walked aboot at nicht
+and what kept him frae his sleep.
+
+Weel, ane day I was cleanin' doon the passages when my e'e fell on a
+great muckle heap o' curtains and auld cairpets and sic' like things
+that were piled away in a corner, no vera far frae the door o' the
+general's room. A' o' a sudden a thocht came intae my heid and I says
+tae mysel':
+
+“Israel, laddie,” says I, “what's tae stop ye frae hidin' behind that
+this vera nicht and seein' the auld mun when he doesna ken human e'e is
+on him?”
+
+The mair I thocht o't the mair seemple it appeared, and I made up my
+mind tae put the idea intae instant execution.
+
+When the nicht cam roond I tauld the women-folk that I was bad wi' the
+jawache, and would gang airly tae my room. I kenned fine when ance I got
+there that there was na chance o' ony ane disturbin' me, so I waited a
+wee while, and then when a' was quiet, I slippit aff my boots and ran
+doon the ither stair until I cam tae the heap o' auld clothes, and there
+I lay doon wi' ane e'e peepin' through a kink and a' the rest covered up
+wi' a great, ragged cairpet.
+
+There I bided as quiet as a mouse until the general passed me on his
+road tae bed, and a' was still in the hoose.
+
+My certie! I wouldna gang through wi' it again for a' the siller at the
+Union Bank of Dumfries, I canna think o't noo withoot feelin' cauld a'
+the way doon my back.
+
+It was just awfu' lyin' there in the deid silence, waitin' and waitin'
+wi' never a soond tae break the monotony, except the heavy tickin' o' an
+auld clock somewhere doon the passage.
+
+First I would look doon the corridor in the one way, and syne I'd look
+doon in t'ither, but it aye seemed to me as though there was something
+coming up frae the side that I wasna lookin' at. I had a cauld sweat on
+my broo, and my hairt was beatin' twice tae ilka tick o' the clock, and
+what feared me most of a' was that the dust frae the curtains and things
+was aye gettin' doon intae my lungs, and it was a' I could dae tae keep
+mysel' frae coughin'.
+
+Godsakes! I wonder my hair wasna grey wi' a' that I went through. I
+wouldna dae it again to be made Lord Provost o' Glasgie.
+
+Weel, it may have been twa o'clock in the mornin' or maybe a little
+mair, and I was just thinkin' that I wasna tae see onything after
+a'--and I wasna very sorry neither--when all o' a sudden a soond cam tae
+my ears clear and distinct through the stillness o' the nicht.
+
+I've been asked afore noo tae describe that soond, but I've aye foond
+that it's no' vera easy tae gie a clear idea o't, though it was unlike
+any other soond that ever I hearkened tae. It was a shairp, ringin'
+clang, like what could be caused by flippin' the rim o' a wineglass, but
+it was far higher and thinner than that, and had in it, tae, a kind o'
+splash, like the tinkle o' a rain-drop intae a water-butt.
+
+In my fear I sat up amang my cairpets, like a puddock among
+gowan-leaves, and I listened wi' a' my ears. A' was still again noo,
+except for the dull tickin' o' the distant clock.
+
+Suddenly the soond cam again, as clear, as shrill, as shairp as ever,
+and this time the general heard it, for I heard him gie a kind o' groan,
+as a tired man might wha has been roosed oot o' his sleep.
+
+He got up frae his bed, and I could make oot a rustling noise, as though
+he were dressin' himsel', and presently his footfa' as he began tae walk
+up and doon in his room.
+
+Mysakes! it didna tak lang for me tae drap doon amang the cairpets again
+and cover mysel' ower. There I lay tremblin' in every limb, and sayin'
+as mony prayers as I could mind, wi' my e'e still peepin' through the
+keek-hole, and fixed upon the door o' the general's room.
+
+I heard the rattle o' the handle presently, and the door swung slowly
+open. There was a licht burnin' in the room beyond, an' I could just
+catch a glimpse o' what seemed tae me like a row o' swords stuck alang
+the side o' the wa', when the general stepped oot and shut the door
+behind him. He was dressed in a dressin' goon, wi' a red smokin'-cap
+on his heid, and a pair o' slippers wi' the heels cut off and the taes
+turned up.
+
+For a moment it cam into my held that maybe he was walkin' in his sleep,
+but as he cam towards me I could see the glint o' the licht in his e'en,
+and his face was a' twistin', like a man that's in sair distress o'
+mind. On my conscience, it gies me the shakes noo when I think o' his
+tall figure and his yelley face comin' sae solemn and silent doon the
+lang, lone passage.
+
+I haud my breath and lay close watchin' him, but just as he cam tae
+where I was my vera hairt stood still in my breast, for “ting!”--loud
+and clear, within a yaird o' me cam the ringin', clangin' soond that I
+had a'ready hairkened tae.
+
+Where it cam frae is mair than I can tell or what was the cause o't. It
+might ha' been that the general made it, but I was sair puzzled tae tell
+hoo, for his honds were baith doon by his side as he passed me. It cam
+frae his direction, certainly, but it appeared tae me tae come frae ower
+his heid, but it was siccan a thin, eerie, high-pitched, uncanny kind o'
+soond that it wasna easy tae say just exactly where it did come frae.
+
+The general tuk nae heed o't, but walked on and was soon oot o' sicht,
+and I didna lose a minute in creepin' oot frae my hidin' place and
+scamperin' awa' back tae my room, and if a' the bogies in the Red Sea
+were trapesin' up and doon the hale nicht through, I wud never put my
+heid oot again tae hae a glimpse o' them.
+
+I didna say a word tae anybody aboot what I'd seen, but I made up my
+mind that I wudna stay muckle langer at Cloomber Ha'. Four pund a month
+is a good wage, but it isna enough tae pay a man for the loss o' his
+peace o' mind, and maybe the loss o' his soul as weel, for when the deil
+is aboot ye canna tell what sort o' a trap he may lay for ye, and though
+they say that Providence is stronger than him, it's maybe as weel no' to
+risk it.
+
+It was clear tae me that the general and his hoose were baith under some
+curse, and it was fit that that curse should fa' on them that had earned
+it, and no' on a righteous Presbyterian, wha had ever trod the narrow
+path.
+
+My hairt was sair for young Miss Gabriel--for she was a bonnie and
+winsome lassie--but for a' that, I felt that my duty was tae mysel' and
+that I should gang forth, even as Lot ganged oot o' the wicked cities o'
+the plain.
+
+That awfu' cling-clang was aye dingin' in my lugs, and I couldna bear
+to be alane in the passages for fear o' hearin' it ance again. I only
+wanted a chance or an excuse tae gie the general notice, and tae gang
+back to some place where I could see Christian folk, and have the kirk
+within a stone-cast tae fa' back upon.
+
+But it proved tae be ordained that, instead o' my saying the word, it
+should come frae the general himsel'.
+
+It was ane day aboot the beginning of October, I was comin' oot o' the
+stable, after giein' its oats tae the horse, when I seed a great muckle
+loon come hoppin' on ane leg up the drive, mair like a big, ill-faured
+craw than a man.
+
+When I clapped my een on him I thocht that maybe this was ane of the
+rascals that the maister had been speakin' aboot, so withoot mair ado
+I fetched oot my bit stick with the intention o' tryin' it upon the
+limmer's heid. He seed me comin' towards him, and readin' my intention
+frae my look maybe, or frae the stick in my hand, he pu'ed oot a lang
+knife frae his pocket and swore wi' the most awfu' oaths that if I didna
+stan' back he'd be the death o' me.
+
+Ma conscience! the words the chiel used was eneugh tae mak' the hair
+stand straight on your heid. I wonder he wasna struck deid where he
+stood.
+
+We were still standin' opposite each ither--he wi' his knife and me wi'
+the stick--when the general he cam up the drive and foond us. Tae my
+surprise he began tae talk tae the stranger as if he'd kenned him a' his
+days.
+
+“Put your knife in your pocket, Corporal,” says he. “Your fears have
+turned your brain.”
+
+“Blood an' wounds!” says the other. “He'd ha' turned my brain tae some
+purpose wi' that muckle stick o' his if I hadna drawn my snickersnee.
+You shouldna keep siccan an auld savage on your premises.”
+
+The maister he frooned and looked black at him, as though he didna
+relish advice comin' frae such a source. Then turnin' tae me--“You won't
+be wanted after to-day, Israel,” he says; “you have been a guid servant,
+and I ha' naething tae complain of wi' ye, but circumstances have arisen
+which will cause me tae change my arrangements.”
+
+“Vera guid, sir,” says I.
+
+“You can go this evening,” says he, “and you shall have an extra month's
+pay tae mak up t'ye for this short notice.”
+
+Wi' that he went intae the hoose, followed by the man that he ca'ed the
+corporal, and frae that day tae this I have never clapped een either on
+the ane or the ither. My money was sent oot tae me in an envelope,
+and havin' said a few pairtin' words tae the cook and the wench wi'
+reference tae the wrath tae come and the treasure that is richer than
+rubies, I shook the dust o' Cloomber frae my feet for ever.
+
+Maister Fothergill West says I maunna express an opeenion as tae what
+cam aboot afterwards, but maun confine mysel' tae what I saw mysel'. Nae
+doubt he has his reasons for this--and far be it frae me tae hint that
+they are no' guid anes--but I maun say this, that what happened didna
+surprise me. It was just as I expeckit, and so I said tae Maister Donald
+McSnaw.
+
+I've tauld ye a' aboot it noo, and I havena a word tae add or tae
+withdraw. I'm muckle obleeged tae Maister Mathew Clairk for puttin'
+it a' doon in writin' for me, and if there's ony would wish tae speer
+onything mair o' me I'm well kenned and respeckit in Ecclefechan, and
+Maister McNeil, the factor o' Wigtown, can aye tell where I am tae be
+foond.
+
+
+(1) The old rascal was well paid for his trouble, so he need not have
+made such a favour of it.--J.F.W.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+NARRATIVE OF JOHN EASTERLING, F.R.C.P.EDIN.
+
+
+Having given the statement of Israel Stakes _in extenso_, I shall append
+a short memorandum from Dr. Easterling, now practising at Stranraer.
+It is true that the doctor was only once within the walls of Cloomber
+during its tenancy by General Heatherstone, but there were some
+circumstances connected with this visit which made it valuable,
+especially when considered as a supplement to the experiences which I
+have just submitted to the reader.
+
+The doctor has found time amid the calls of a busy country practice
+to jot down his recollections, and I feel that I cannot do better than
+subjoin them exactly as they stand.
+
+I have very much pleasure in furnishing Mr. Fothergill West with an
+account of my solitary visit to Cloomber Hall, not only on account
+of the esteem which I have formed for that gentleman ever since his
+residence at Branksome, but also because it is my conviction that the
+facts in the case of General Heatherstone are of such a singular nature
+that it is of the highest importance that they should be placed before
+the public in a trustworthy manner.
+
+It was about the beginning of September of last year that I received
+a note from Mrs. Heatherstone, of Cloomber Hall, desiring me to make a
+professional call upon her husband, whose health, she said, had been for
+some time in a very unsatisfactory state.
+
+I had heard something of the Heatherstones and of the strange seclusion
+in which they lived, so that I was very much pleased at this opportunity
+of making their closer acquaintance, and lost no time in complying with
+her request.
+
+I had known the Hall in the old days of Mr. McVittie, the original
+proprietor, and I was astonished on arriving at the avenue gate to
+observe the changes which had taken place.
+
+The gate itself, which used to yawn so hospitably upon the road, was
+now barred and locked, and a high wooden fence, with nails upon the
+top, encircled the whole grounds. The drive itself was leaf-strewn and
+uncared-for, and the whole place had a depressing air of neglect and
+decay.
+
+I had to knock twice before a servant-maid opened the door and showed me
+through a dingy hall into a small room, where sat an elderly, careworn
+lady, who introduced herself as Mrs. Heatherstone. With her pale face,
+her grey hair, her sad, colourless eyes, and her faded silk dress, she
+was in perfect keeping with her melancholy surroundings.
+
+“You find us in much trouble, doctor,” she said, in a quiet, refined
+voice. “My poor husband has had a great deal to worry him, and his
+nervous system for a long time has been in a very weak state. We came to
+this part of the country in the hope that the bracing air and the quiet
+would have a good effect upon him. Instead of improving, however, he
+has seemed to grow weaker, and this morning he is in a high fever and a
+little inclined to be delirious. The children and I were so frightened
+that we sent for you at once. If you will follow me I will take you to
+the general's bedroom.”
+
+She led the way down a series of corridors to the chamber of the sick
+man, which was situated in the extreme wing of the building.
+
+It was a carpetless, bleak-looking room, scantily furnished with a small
+truckle bed, a campaigning chair, and a plain deal table, on which were
+scattered numerous papers and books. In the centre of this table there
+stood a large object of irregular outline, which was covered over with a
+sheet of linen.
+
+All round the walls and in the corners were arranged a very choice and
+varied collection of arms, principally swords, some of which were of
+the straight pattern in common use in the British Army, while among
+the others were scimitars, tulwars, cuchurries, and a score of other
+specimens of Oriental workmanship. Many of these were richly mounted,
+with inlaid sheaths and hilts sparkling with precious stones, so that
+there was a piquant contrast between the simplicity of the apartment and
+the wealth which glittered on the walls.
+
+I had little time, however, to observe the general's collection, since
+the general himself lay upon the couch and was evidently in sore need of
+my services.
+
+He was lying with his head turned half away from us. Breathing heavily,
+and apparently unconscious of our presence. His bright, staring eyes and
+the deep, hectic flush upon his cheek showed that his fever was at its
+height.
+
+I advanced to the bedside, and, stooping over him, I placed my fingers
+upon his pulse, when immediately he sprang up into the sitting position
+and struck at me frenziedly with his clenched hands. I have never seen
+such intensity of fear and horror stamped upon a human face as appeared
+upon that which was now glaring up at me.
+
+“Bloodhound!” he yelled; “let me go--let me go, I say! Keep your hands
+off me! Is it not enough that my life has been ruined? When is it all to
+end? How long am I to endure it?”
+
+“Hush, dear, hush!” said his wife in a soothing voice, passing her
+cool hand over his heated forehead. “This is Doctor Easterling, from
+Stranraer. He has not come to harm you, but to do you good.”
+
+The general dropped wearily back upon his pillow, and I could see by the
+changed expression of his face that his delirium had left him, and that
+he understood what had been said.
+
+I slipped my clinical thermometer into his armpit and counted his pulse
+rate. It amounted to 120 per minute, and his temperature proved to be
+104 degrees. Clearly it was a case of remittent fever, such as occurs in
+men who have spent a great part of their lives in the tropics.
+
+“There is no danger,” I remarked. “With a little quinine and arsenic we
+shall very soon overcome the attack and restore his health.”
+
+“No danger, eh?” he said. “There never is any danger for me. I am as
+hard to kill as the Wandering Jew. I am quite clear in the head now,
+Mary; so you may leave me with the doctor.”
+
+Mrs. Heatherstone left the room--rather unwillingly, as I thought--and
+I sat down by the bedside to listen to anything which my patient might
+have to communicate.
+
+“I want you to examine my liver,” he said when the door was closed. “I
+used to have an abscess there, and Brodie, the staff-surgeon, said that
+it was ten to one that it would carry me off. I have not felt much of it
+since I left the East. This is where it used to be, just under the angle
+of the ribs.”
+
+“I can find the place,” said I, after making a careful examination;
+“but I am happy to tell you that the abscess has either been entirely
+absorbed, or has turned calcareous, as these solitary abscesses will.
+There is no fear of its doing you any harm now.”
+
+He seemed to be by no means overjoyed at the intelligence.
+
+“Things always happen so with me,” he said moodily. “Now, if another
+fellow was feverish and delirious he would surely be in some danger, and
+yet you will tell me that I am in none. Look at this, now.” He bared
+his chest and showed me a puckered wound over the region of the heart.
+“That's where the jezail bullet of a Hillman went in. You would think
+that was in the right spot to settle a man, and yet what does it do but
+glance upon a rib, and go clean round and out at the back, without so
+much as penetrating what you medicos call the pleura. Did ever you hear
+of such a thing?”
+
+“You were certainly born under a lucky star,” I observed, with a smile.
+
+“That's a matter of opinion,” he answered, shaking his head. “Death
+has no terrors for me, if it will but come in some familiar form, but I
+confess that the anticipation of some strange, some preternatural form
+of death is very terrible and unnerving.”
+
+“You mean,” said I, rather puzzled at his remark, “that you would prefer
+a natural death to a death by violence?”
+
+“No, I don't mean that exactly,” he answered. “I am too familiar with
+cold steel and lead to be afraid of either. Do you know anything about
+odyllic force, doctor?”
+
+“No, I do not,” I replied, glancing sharply at him to see if there were
+any signs of his delirium returning. His expression was intelligent,
+however, and the feverish flush had faded from his cheeks.
+
+“Ah, you Western scientific men are very much behind the day in some
+things,” he remarked. “In all that is material and conducive to the
+comfort of the body you are pre-eminent, but in what concerns the subtle
+forces of Nature and the latent powers of the human spirit your best
+men are centuries behind the humblest coolies of India. Countless
+generations of beef-eating, comfort loving ancestors have given our
+animal instincts the command over our spiritual ones. The body, which
+should have been a mere tool for the use of the soul, has now become a
+degrading prison in which it is confined. The Oriental soul and body are
+not so welded together as ours are, and there is far less wrench when
+they part in death.”
+
+“They do not appear to derive much benefit from this peculiarity in
+their organisation,” I remarked incredulously.
+
+“Merely the benefit of superior knowledge,” the general answered. “If
+you were to go to India, probably the very first thing you would see in
+the way of amusement would be a native doing what is called the mango
+trick. Of course you have heard or read of it. The fellow plants a mango
+seed, and makes passes over it until it sprouts and bears leaves and
+fruit--all in the space of half-an-hour. It is not really a trick--it
+is a power. These men know more than your Tyndalls or Huxleys do about
+Nature's processes, and they can accelerate or retard her workings
+by subtle means of which we have no conception. These low-caste
+conjurers--as they are called--are mere vulgar dabblers, but the men who
+have trod the higher path are as far superior to us in knowledge as we
+are to the Hottentots or Patagonians.”
+
+“You speak as if you were well acquainted with them,” I remarked.
+
+“To my cost, I am,” he answered. “I have been brought in contact with
+them in a way in which I trust no other poor chap ever will be. But,
+really, as regards odyllic force, you ought to know something of it,
+for it has a great future before it in your profession. You should read
+Reichenbach's 'Researches on Magnetism and Vital Force,' and Gregory's
+'Letters on Animal Magnetism.' These, supplemented by the twenty-seven
+Aphorisms of Mesmer, and the works of Dr. Justinus Kerner, of Weinsberg,
+would enlarge your ideas.”
+
+I did not particularly relish having a course of reading prescribed for
+me on a subject connected with my own profession, so I made no comment,
+but rose to take my departure. Before doing so I felt his pulse once
+more, and found that the fever had entirely left him in the sudden,
+unaccountable fashion which is peculiar to these malarious types of
+disease.
+
+I turned my face towards him to congratulate him upon his improvement,
+and stretched out my hand at the same time to pick my gloves from the
+table, with the result that I raised not only my own property, but also
+the linen cloth which was arranged over some object in the centre.
+
+I might not have noticed what I had done had I not seen an angry look
+upon the invalid's face and heard him utter an impatient exclamation.
+I at once turned, and replaced the cloth so promptly that I should
+have been unable to say what was underneath it, beyond having a general
+impression that it looked like a bride-cake.
+
+“All right, doctor,” the general said good-humouredly, perceiving how
+entirely accidental the incident was. “There is no reason why you should
+not see it,” and stretching out his hand, he pulled away the linen
+covering for the second time.
+
+I then perceived that what I had taken for a bride-cake was really an
+admirably executed model of a lofty range of mountains, whose snow-clad
+peaks were not unlike the familiar sugar pinnacles and minarets.
+
+“These are the Himalayas, or at least the Surinam branch of them,” he
+remarked, “showing the principal passes between India and Afghanistan.
+It is an excellent model. This ground has a special interest for me,
+because it is the scene of my first campaign. There is the pass opposite
+Kalabagh and the Thul valley, where I was engaged during the summer
+of 1841 in protecting the convoys and keeping the Afridis in order. It
+wasn't a sinecure, I promise you.”
+
+“And this,” said I, indicating a blood-red spot which had been marked
+on one side of the pass which he had pointed out--“this is the scene of
+some fight in which you were engaged.”
+
+“Yes, we had a skirmish there,” he answered, leaning forward and looking
+at the red mark. “We were attacked by--”
+
+At this moment he fell back upon his pillow as if he had been shot,
+while the same look of horror came over his face which I had observed
+when I first entered the room. At the same instant there came,
+apparently from the air immediately above his bed, a sharp, ringing,
+tinkling sound, which I can only compare with the noise made by a
+bicycle alarm, though it differed from this in having a distinctly
+throbbing character. I have never, before or since, heard any sound
+which could be confounded with it.
+
+I stared round in astonishment, wondering where it could have come from,
+but without perceiving anything to which it could be ascribed.
+
+“It's all right, doctor,” the general said with a ghastly smile. “It's
+only my private gong. Perhaps you had better step downstairs and write
+my prescription in the dining-room.”
+
+He was evidently anxious to get rid of me, so I was forced to take my
+departure, though I would gladly have stayed a little longer, in the
+hope of learning something as to the origin of the mysterious sound.
+
+I drove away from the house with the full determination of calling again
+upon my interesting patient, and endeavouring to elicit some further
+particulars as to his past life and his present circumstances. I was
+destined, however, to be disappointed, for I received that very evening
+a note from the general himself, enclosing a handsome fee for my single
+visit, and informing me that my treatment had done him so much good that
+he considered himself to be convalescent, and would not trouble me to
+see him again.
+
+This was the last and only communication which I ever received from the
+tenant of Cloomber.
+
+I have been asked frequently by neighbours and others who were
+interested in the matter whether he gave me the impression of insanity.
+To this I must unhesitatingly answer in the negative. On the contrary,
+his remarks gave me the idea of a man who had both read and thought
+deeply.
+
+I observed, however, during our single interview, that his reflexes
+were feeble, his arcus senilis well marked, and his arteries
+atheromatous--all signs that his constitution was in an unsatisfactory
+condition, and that a sudden crisis might be apprehended.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+OF THE LETTER WHICH CAME FROM THE HALL
+
+
+Having thrown this side-light upon my narrative, I can now resume the
+statement of my own personal experiences. These I had brought down, as
+the reader will doubtless remember, to the date of the arrival of the
+savage-looking wanderer who called himself Corporal Rufus Smith. This
+incident occurred about the beginning of the month of October, and I
+find upon a comparison of dates that Dr. Easterling's visit to Cloomber
+preceded it by three weeks or more.
+
+During all this time I was in sore distress of mind, for I had never
+seen anything either of Gabriel or of her brother since the interview
+in which the general had discovered the communication which was kept up
+between us. I had no doubt that some sort of restraint had been placed
+upon them; and the thought that we had brought trouble on their heads
+was a bitter one both to my sister and myself.
+
+Our anxiety, however, was considerably mitigated by the receipt, a
+couple of days after my last talk with the general, of a note from
+Mordaunt Heatherstone. This was brought us by a little, ragged urchin,
+the son of one of the fishermen, who informed us that it had been handed
+to him at the avenue gate by an old woman--who, I expect, must have been
+the Cloomber cook.
+
+“MY DEAREST FRIENDS,” it ran, “Gabriel and I have grieved to think how
+concerned you must be at having neither heard from nor seen us. The fact
+is that we are compelled to remain in the house. And this compulsion is
+not physical but moral.
+
+“Our poor father, who gets more and more nervous every day, has
+entreated us to promise him that we will not go out until after the
+fifth of October, and to allay his fears we have given him the desired
+pledge. On the other hand, he has promised us that after the fifth--that
+is, in less than a week--we shall be as free as air to come or go as we
+please, so we have something to look forward to.
+
+“Gabriel says that she has explained to you that the governor is always
+a changed man after this particular date, on which his fears reach a
+crisis. He apparently has more reason than usual this year to anticipate
+that trouble is brewing for this unfortunate family, for I have never
+known him to take so many elaborate precautions or appear so thoroughly
+unnerved. Who would ever think, to see his bent form and his shaking
+hands, that he is the same man who used some few short years ago to
+shoot tigers on foot among the jungles of the Terai, and would laugh at
+the more timid sportsmen who sought the protection of their elephant's
+howdah?
+
+“You know that he has the Victoria Cross, which he won in the streets
+of Delhi, and yet here he is shivering with terror and starting at every
+noise, in the most peaceful corner of the world. Oh, the pity of it.
+West! Remember what I have already told you--that it is no fanciful or
+imaginary peril, but one which we have every reason to suppose to be
+most real. It is, however, of such a nature that it can neither be
+averted nor can it profitably be expressed in words. If all goes well,
+you will see us at Branksome on the sixth.
+
+“With our fondest love to both of you, I am ever, my dear friends, your
+attached
+
+“MORDAUNT.”
+
+This letter was a great relief to us as letting us know that the brother
+and sister were under no physical restraint, but our powerlessness and
+inability even to comprehend what the danger was which threatened those
+whom we had come to love better than ourselves was little short of
+maddening.
+
+Fifty times a day we asked ourselves and asked each other from what
+possible quarter this peril was to be expected, but the more we thought
+of it the more hopeless did any solution appear.
+
+In vain we combined our experiences and pieced together every word
+which had fallen from the lips of any inmate of Cloomber which might be
+supposed to bear directly or indirectly upon the subject.
+
+At last, weary with fruitless speculation, we were fain to try to drive
+the matter from our thoughts, consoling ourselves with the reflection
+that in a few more days all restrictions would be removed, and we should
+be able to learn from our friends' own lips.
+
+Those few intervening days, however, would, we feared, be dreary, long
+ones. And so they would have been, had it not been for a new and most
+unexpected incident, which diverted our minds from our own troubles and
+gave them something fresh with which to occupy themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+OF THE CASTING AWAY OF THE BARQUE “BELINDA”
+
+
+The third of October had broken auspiciously with a bright sun and a
+cloudless sky. There had in the morning been a slight breeze, and a few
+little white wreaths of vapour drifted here and there like the scattered
+feathers of some gigantic bird, but, as the day wore on, such wind as
+there was fell completely away, and the air became close and stagnant.
+
+The sun blazed down with a degree of heat which was remarkable so late
+in the season, and a shimmering haze lay upon the upland moors and
+concealed the Irish mountains on the other side of the Channel.
+
+The sea itself rose and fell in a long, heavy, oily roll, sweeping
+slowly landward, and breaking sullenly with a dull, monotonous booming
+upon the rock-girt shore. To the inexperienced all seemed calm and
+peaceful, but to those who are accustomed to read Nature's warnings
+there was a dark menace in air and sky and sea.
+
+My sister and I walked out in the afternoon, sauntering slowly along
+the margin of the great, sandy spit which shoots out into the Irish Sea,
+flanking upon one side the magnificent Bay of Luce, and on the other the
+more obscure inlet of Kirkmaiden, on the shores of which the Branksome
+property is situated.
+
+It was too sultry to go far, so we soon seated ourselves upon one of the
+sandy hillocks, overgrown with faded grass-tufts, which extend along the
+coast-line, and which form Nature's dykes against the encroachments of
+the ocean.
+
+Our rest was soon interrupted by the scrunching of heavy boots upon the
+shingle, and Jamieson, the old man-o'-war's man whom I have already had
+occasion to mention, made his appearance, with the flat, circular net
+upon his back which he used for shrimp-catching. He came towards us upon
+seeing us, and said in his rough, kindly way that he hoped we would
+not take it amiss if he sent us up a dish of shrimps for our tea at
+Branksome.
+
+“I aye make a good catch before a storm,” he remarked.
+
+“You think there is going to be a storm, then?” I asked.
+
+“Why, even a marine could see that,” he answered, sticking a great wedge
+of tobacco into his cheek. “The moors over near Cloomber are just white
+wi' gulls and kittiewakes. What d'ye think they come ashore for except
+to escape having all the feathers blown out o' them? I mind a day like
+this when I was wi' Charlie Napier off Cronstadt. It well-nigh blew us
+under the guns of the forts, for all our engines and propellers.”
+
+“Have you ever known a wreck in these parts?” I asked.
+
+“Lord love ye, sir, it's a famous place for wrecks. Why, in that very
+bay down there two o' King Philip's first-rates foundered wi' all hands
+in the days o' the Spanish war. If that sheet o' water and the Bay o'
+Luce round the corner could tell their ain tale they'd have a gey lot
+to speak of. When the Jedgment Day comes round that water will be
+just bubbling wi' the number o' folks that will be coming up frae the
+bottom.”
+
+“I trust that there will be no wrecks while we are here,” said Esther
+earnestly.
+
+The old man shook his grizzled head and looked distrustfully at the hazy
+horizon.
+
+“If it blows from the west,” he said, “some o' these sailing ships may
+find it no joke to be caught without sea-room in the North Channel.
+There's that barque out yonder--I daresay her maister would be glad
+enough to find himsel' safe in the Clyde.”
+
+“She seems to be absolutely motionless,” I remarked, looking at the
+vessel in question, whose black hull and gleaming sails rose and fell
+slowly with the throbbing of the giant pulse beneath her. “Perhaps,
+Jamieson, we are wrong, and there will be no storm after all.”
+
+The old sailor chuckled to himself with an air of superior knowledge,
+and shuffled away with his shrimp-net, while my sister and I walked
+slowly homewards through the hot and stagnant air.
+
+I went up to my father's study to see if the old gentleman had any
+instructions as to the estate, for he had become engrossed in a new work
+upon Oriental literature, and the practical management of the property
+had in consequence devolved entirely upon me.
+
+I found him seated at his square library table, which was so heaped with
+books and papers that nothing of him was visible from the door except a
+tuft of white hair.
+
+“My dear son,” he said to me as I entered, “it is a great grief to me
+that you are not more conversant with Sanscrit. When I was your age, I
+could converse not only in that noble language, but also in the Tamulic,
+Lohitic, Gangelic, Taic, and Malaic dialects, which are all offshoots
+from the Turanian branch.”
+
+“I regret extremely, sir,” I answered, “that I have not inherited your
+wonderful talents as a polyglot.”
+
+“I have set myself a task,” he explained, “which, if it could only be
+continued from generation to generation in our own family until it was
+completed, would make the name of West immortal. This is nothing less
+than to publish an English translation of the Buddhist Djarmas, with a
+preface giving an idea of the position of Brahminism before the coming
+of Sakyamuni. With diligence it is possible that I might be able myself
+to complete part of the preface before I die.”
+
+“And pray, sir,” I asked, “how long would the whole work be when it was
+finished?”
+
+“The abridged edition in the Imperial Library of Pekin,” said my father,
+rubbing his hands together, “consists of 325 volumes of an average
+weight of five pounds. Then the preface, which must embrace some
+account of the Rig-veda, the Sama-veda, the Yagur-veda, and the
+Atharva-veda, with the Brahmanas, could hardly be completed in less
+than ten volumes. Now, if we apportion one volume to each year, there is
+every prospect of the family coming to an end of its task about the date
+2250, the twelfth generation completing the work, while the thirteenth
+might occupy itself upon the index.”
+
+“And how are our descendants to live, sir,” I asked, with a smile,
+“during the progress of this great undertaking:”
+
+“That's the worst of you, Jack,” my father cried petulantly. “There is
+nothing practical about you. Instead of confining your attention to the
+working out of my noble scheme, you begin raising all sorts of absurd
+objections. It is a mere matter of detail how our descendants live, so
+long as they stick to the Djarmas. Now, I want you to go up to the bothy
+of Fergus McDonald and see about the thatch, and Willie Fullerton has
+written to say that his milk-cow is bad. You might took in upon your way
+and ask after it.”
+
+I started off upon my errands, but before doing so I took a look at the
+barometer upon the wall. The mercury had sunk to the phenomenal point
+of twenty-eight inches. Clearly the old sailor had not been wrong in his
+interpretation of Nature's signs.
+
+As I returned over the moors in the evening, the wind was blowing in
+short, angry puffs, and the western horizon was heaped with sombre
+clouds which stretched their long, ragged tentacles right up to the
+zenith.
+
+Against their dark background one or two livid, sulphur-coloured
+splotches showed up malignant and menacing, while the surface of the
+sea had changed from the appearance of burnished quicksilver to that of
+ground glass. A low, moaning sound rose up from the ocean as if it knew
+that trouble was in store for it.
+
+Far out in the Channel I saw a single panting, eager steam vessel making
+its way to Belfast Lough, and the large barque which I had observed in
+the morning still beating about in the offing, endeavouring to pass to
+the northward.
+
+At nine o'clock a sharp breeze was blowing, at ten it had freshened into
+a gale, and before midnight the most furious storm was raging which I
+can remember upon that weather-beaten coast.
+
+I sat for some time in our small, oak-panelled sitting-room listening to
+the screeching and howling of the blast and to the rattle of the gravel
+and pebbles as they pattered against the window. Nature's grim orchestra
+was playing its world-old piece with a compass which ranged from
+the deep diapason of the thundering surge to the thin shriek of the
+scattered shingle and the keen piping of frightened sea birds.
+
+Once for an instant I opened the lattice window, but a gust of wind and
+rain came blustering through, bearing with it a great sheet of seaweed,
+which flapped down upon the table. It was all I could do to close it
+again with a thrust of my shoulder in the face of the blast.
+
+My sister and father had retired to their rooms, but my thoughts
+were too active for sleep, so I continued to sit and to smoke by the
+smouldering fire.
+
+What was going on in the Hall now, I wondered? What did Gabriel think of
+the storm, and how did it affect the old man who wandered about in the
+night? Did he welcome these dread forces of Nature as being of the same
+order of things as his own tumultuous thoughts?
+
+It was only two days now from the date which I had been assured was to
+mark a crisis in his fortunes. Would he regard this sudden tempest as
+being in any way connected with the mysterious fate which threatened
+him?
+
+Over all these things and many more I pondered as I sat by the glowing
+embers until they died gradually out, and the chill night air warned me
+that it was time to retire.
+
+I may have slept a couple of hours when I was awakened by someone
+tugging furiously at my shoulder. Sitting up in bed, I saw by the dim
+light that my father was standing half-clad by my bedside, and that it
+was his grasp which I felt on my night-shirt.
+
+“Get up, Jack, get up!” he was crying excitedly. “There's a great ship
+ashore in the bay, and the poor folk will all be drowned. Come down, my
+boy, and let us see what we can do.”
+
+The good old man seemed to be nearly beside himself with excitement and
+impatience. I sprang from my bed, and was huddling on a few clothes,
+when a dull, booming sound made itself heard above the howling of the
+wind and the thunder of the breakers.
+
+“There it is again!” cried my father. “It is their signal gun, poor
+creatures! Jamieson and the fishermen are below. Put your oil-skin coat
+on and the Glengarry hat. Come, come, every second may mean a human
+life!”
+
+We hurried down together and made our way to the beach, accompanied by a
+dozen or so of the inhabitants of Branksome.
+
+The gale had increased rather than moderated, and the wind screamed all
+round us with an infernal clamour. So great was its force that we had
+to put our shoulders against it, and bore our way through it, while the
+sand and gravel tingled up against our faces.
+
+There was just light enough to make out the scudding clouds and the
+white gleam of the breakers, but beyond that all was absolute darkness.
+
+We stood ankle deep in the shingle and seaweed, shading our eyes with
+our hands and peering out into the inky obscurity.
+
+It seemed to me as I listened that I could hear human voices loud
+in intreaty and terror, but amid the wild turmoil of Nature it was
+difficult to distinguish one sound from another.
+
+Suddenly, however, a light glimmered in the heart of the tempest, and
+next instant the beach and sea and wide, tossing bay were brilliantly
+illuminated by the wild glare of a signal light.
+
+The ship lay on her beam-ends right in the centre of the terrible Hansel
+reef, hurled over to such an angle that I could see all the planking of
+her deck. I recognised her at once as being the same three-masted barque
+which I had observed in the Channel in the morning, and the Union
+Jack which was nailed upside down to the jagged slump of her mizzen
+proclaimed her nationality.
+
+Every spar and rope and writhing piece of cordage showed up hard and
+clear under the vivid light which spluttered and flickered from the
+highest portion of the forecastle. Beyond the doomed ship, out of the
+great darkness came the long, rolling lines of big waves, never ending,
+never tiring, with a petulant tuft of foam here and there upon their
+crests. Each as it reached the broad circle of unnatural light appeared
+to gather strength and volume and to hurry on more impetuously until
+with a roar and a jarring crash it sprang upon its victim.
+
+Clinging to the weather shrouds we could distinctly see ten or a dozen
+frightened seamen who, when the light revealed our presence, turned
+their white faces towards us and waved their hands imploringly. The poor
+wretches had evidently taken fresh hope from our presence, though it was
+clear that their own boats had either been washed away or so damaged as
+to render them useless.
+
+The sailors who clung to the rigging were not, however, the only
+unfortunates on board. On the breaking poop there stood three men who
+appeared to be both of a different race and nature from the cowering
+wretches who implored our assistance.
+
+Leaning upon the shattered taff-rail they seemed to be conversing
+together as quietly and unconcernedly as though they were unconscious of
+the deadly peril which surrounded them.
+
+As the signal light flickered over them, we could see from the shore
+that these immutable strangers wore red fezes, and that their faces were
+of a swarthy, large-featured type, which proclaimed an Eastern origin.
+
+There was little time, however, for us to take note of such details.
+The ship was breaking rapidly, and some effort must be made to save the
+poor, sodden group of humanity who implored our assistance.
+
+The nearest lifeboat was in the Bay of Luce, ten long miles away, but
+here was our own broad, roomy craft upon the shingle, and plenty of
+brave fisher lads to form a crew. Six of us sprang to the oars, the
+others pushed us off, and we fought our way through the swirling, raging
+waters, staggering and recoiling before the great, sweeping billows, but
+still steadily decreasing the distance between the barque and ourselves.
+
+It seemed, however, that our efforts were fated to be in vain.
+
+As we mounted upon a surge I saw a giant wave, topping all the others,
+and coming after them like a driver following a flock, sweep down upon
+the vessel, curling its great, green arch over the breaking deck.
+
+With a rending, riving sound the ship split in two where the terrible,
+serrated back of the Hansel reef was sawing into her keel. The
+after-part, with the broken mizzen and the three Orientals, sank
+backwards into deep water and vanished, while the fore-half oscillated
+helplessly about, retaining its precarious balance upon the rocks.
+
+A wail of fear went up from the wreck and was echoed from the beach,
+but by the blessing of Providence she kept afloat until we made our way
+under her bowsprit and rescued every man of the crew.
+
+We had not got half-way upon our return, however, when another great
+wave swept the shattered forecastle off the reef, and, extinguishing the
+signal light, hid the wild denouement from our view.
+
+Our friends upon the shore were loud in congratulation and praise, nor
+were they backward in welcoming and comforting the castaways. They were
+thirteen in all, as cold and cowed a set of mortals as ever slipped
+through Death's fingers, save, indeed, their captain, who was a hardy,
+robust man, and who made light of the affair.
+
+Some were taken off to this cottage and some to that, but the greater
+part came back to Branksome with us, where we gave them such dry clothes
+as we could lay our hands on, and served them with beef and beer by the
+kitchen fire. The captain, whose name was Meadows, compressed his bulky
+form into a suit of my own, and came down to the parlour, where he
+mixed himself some grog and gave my father and myself an account of the
+disaster.
+
+“If it hadn't been for you, sir, and your brave fellows,” he said,
+smiling across at me, “we should be ten fathoms deep by this time. As to
+the _Belinda_, she was a leaky old tub and well insured, so neither the
+owners nor I are likely to break our hearts over her.”
+
+“I am afraid,” said my father sadly, “that we shall never see your three
+passengers again. I have left men upon the beach in case they should be
+washed up, but I fear it is hopeless. I saw them go down when the vessel
+split, and no man could have lived for a moment among that terrible
+surge.”
+
+“Who were they?” I asked. “I could not have believed that it was
+possible for men to appear so unconcerned in the face of such imminent
+peril.”
+
+“As to who they are or were,” the captain answered, puffing thoughtfully
+at his pipe, “that is by no means easy to say. Our last port was
+Kurrachee, in the north of India, and there we took them aboard as
+passengers for Glasgow. Ram Singh was the name of the younger, and it is
+only with him that I have come in contact, but they all appeared to be
+quiet, inoffensive gentlemen. I never inquired their business, but I
+should judge that they were Parsee merchants from Hyderabad whose trade
+took them to Europe. I could never see why the crew should fear them,
+and the mate, too, he should have had more sense.”
+
+“Fear them!” I ejaculated in surprise.
+
+“Yes, they had some preposterous idea that they were dangerous
+shipmates. I have no doubt if you were to go down into the kitchen now
+you would find that they are all agreed that our passengers were the
+cause of the whole disaster.”
+
+As the captain was speaking the parlour door opened and the mate of
+the barque, a tall, red-bearded sailor, stepped in. He had obtained a
+complete rig-out from some kind-hearted fisherman, and looked in his
+comfortable jersey and well-greased seaboots a very favourable specimen
+of a shipwrecked mariner.
+
+With a few words of grateful acknowledgment of our hospitality, he drew
+a chair up to the fire and warmed his great, brown hands before the
+blaze.
+
+“What d'ye think now, Captain Meadows?” he asked presently, glancing up
+at his superior officer. “Didn't I warn you what would be the upshot of
+having those niggers on board the _Belinda_?”
+
+The captain leant back in his chair and laughed heartily.
+
+“Didn't I tell you?” he cried, appealing to us. “Didn't I tell you?”
+
+“It might have been no laughing matter for us,” the other remarked
+petulantly. “I have lost a good sea-kit and nearly my life into the
+bargain.”
+
+“Do I understand you to say,” said I, “that you attribute your
+misfortunes to your ill-fated passengers?”
+
+The mate opened his eyes at the adjective.
+
+“Why ill-fated, sir?” he asked.
+
+“Because they are most certainly drowned,” I answered.
+
+He sniffed incredulously and went on warming his hands.
+
+“Men of that kind are never drowned,” he said, after a pause. “Their
+father, the devil, looks after them. Did you see them standing on the
+poop and rolling cigarettes at the time when the mizzen was carried away
+and the quarter-boats stove? That was enough for me. I'm not surprised
+at you landsmen not being able to take it in, but the captain here,
+who's been sailing since he was the height of the binnacle, ought to
+know by this time that a cat and a priest are the worst cargo you can
+carry. If a Christian priest is bad, I guess an idolatrous pagan one is
+fifty times worse. I stand by the old religion, and be d--d to it!”
+
+My father and I could not help laughing at the rough sailor's very
+unorthodox way of proclaiming his orthodoxy. The mate, however, was
+evidently in deadly earnest, and proceeded to state his case, marking
+off the different points upon the rough, red fingers of his left hand.
+
+“It was at Kurrachee, directly after they come that I warned ye,” he
+said reproachfully to the captain. “There was three Buddhist Lascars in
+my watch, and what did they do when them chaps come aboard? Why, they
+down on their stomachs and rubbed their noses on the deck--that's what
+they did. They wouldn't ha' done as much for an admiral of the R'yal
+Navy. They know who's who--these niggers do; and I smelt mischief
+the moment I saw them on their faces. I asked them afterwards in your
+presence, Captain, why they had done it, and they answered that the
+passengers were holy men. You heard 'em yourself.”
+
+“Well, there's no harm in that, Hawkins,” said Captain Meadows.
+
+“I don't know that,” the mate said doubtfully. “The holiest Christian
+is the one that's nearest God, but the holiest nigger is, in my opinion,
+the one that's nearest the devil. Then you saw yourself, Captain
+Meadows, how they went on during the voyage, reading books that was
+writ on wood instead o' paper, and sitting up right through the night to
+jabber together on the quarter-deck. What did they want to have a chart
+of their own for and to mark the course of the vessel every day?”
+
+“They didn't,” said the captain.
+
+“Indeed they did, and if I did not tell you sooner it was because
+you were always ready to laugh at what I said about them. They had
+instruments o' their own--when they used them I can't say--but every day
+at noon they worked out the latitude and longitude, and marked out the
+vessel's position on a chart that was pinned on their cabin table. I saw
+them at it, and so did the steward from his pantry.”
+
+“Well, I don't see what you prove from that,” the captain remarked,
+“though I confess it is a strange thing.”
+
+“I'll tell you another strange thing,” said the mate impressively. “Do
+you know the name of this bay in which we are cast away?”
+
+“I have learnt from our kind friends here that we are upon the
+Wigtownshire coast,” the captain answered, “but I have not heard the
+name of the bay.”
+
+The mate leant forward with a grave face.
+
+“It is the Bay of Kirkmaiden,” he said.
+
+If he expected to astonish Captain Meadows he certainly succeeded, for
+that gentleman was fairly bereft of speech for a minute or more.
+
+“This is really marvellous,” he said, after a time, turning to us.
+“These passengers of ours cross-questioned us early in the voyage as
+to the existence of a bay of that name. Hawkins here and I denied all
+knowledge of one, for on the chart it is included in the Bay of
+Luce. That we should eventually be blown into it and destroyed is an
+extraordinary coincidence.”
+
+“Too extraordinary to be a coincidence,” growled the mate. “I saw
+them during the calm yesterday morning, pointing to the land over our
+starboard quarter. They knew well enough that that was the port they
+were making for.”
+
+“What do you make of it all, then, Hawkins?” asked the captain, with a
+troubled face. “What is your own theory on the matter?”
+
+“Why, in my opinion,” the mate answered, “them three swabs have no more
+difficulty in raising a gale o' wind than I should have in swallowing
+this here grog. They had reasons o' their own for coming to this
+God-forsaken--saving your presence, sirs--this God-forsaken bay, and
+they took a short cut to it by arranging to be blown ashore there.
+That's my idea o' the matter, though what three Buddhist priests could
+find to do in the Bay of Kirkmaiden is clean past my comprehension.”
+
+My father raised his eyebrows to indicate the doubt which his
+hospitality forbade him from putting into words.
+
+“I think, gentlemen,” he said, “that you are both sorely in need of rest
+after your perilous adventures. If you will follow me I shall lead you
+to your rooms.”
+
+He conducted them with old-fashioned ceremony to the laird's best spare
+bedroom, and then, returning to me in the parlour, proposed that we
+should go down together to the beach and learn whether anything fresh
+had occurred.
+
+The first pale light of dawn was just appearing in the east when we made
+our way for the second time to the scene of the shipwreck. The gale had
+blown itself out, but the sea was still very high, and all inside the
+breakers was a seething, gleaming line of foam, as though the fierce old
+ocean were gnashing its white fangs at the victims who had escaped from
+its clutches.
+
+All along the beach fishermen and crofters were hard at work hauling up
+spars and barrels as fast as they were tossed ashore. None of them had
+seen any bodies, however, and they explained to us that only such things
+as could float had any chance of coming ashore, for the undercurrent was
+so strong that whatever was beneath the surface must infallibly be swept
+out to sea.
+
+As to the possibility of the unfortunate passengers having been able to
+reach the shore, these practical men would not hear of it for a moment,
+and showed us conclusively that if they had not been drowned they must
+have been dashed to pieces upon the rocks.
+
+“We did all that could be done,” my father said sadly, as we returned
+home. “I am afraid that the poor mate has had his reason affected by
+the suddenness of the disaster. Did you hear what he said about Buddhist
+priests raising a gale?”
+
+“Yes, I heard him,” said I. “It was very painful to listen to him,” said
+my father. “I wonder if he would object to my putting a small mustard
+plaster under each of his ears. It would relieve any congestion of
+the brain. Or perhaps it would be best to wake him up and give him two
+antibilious pills. What do you think, Jack?”
+
+“I think,” said I, with a yawn, “that you had best let him sleep, and go
+to sleep yourself. You can physic him in the morning if he needs it.”
+
+So saying I stumbled off to my bedroom, and throwing myself upon the
+couch was soon in a dreamless slumber.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+OF THE THREE FOREIGN MEN UPON THE COAST
+
+
+It must have been eleven or twelve o'clock before I awoke, and it seemed
+to me in the flood of golden light which streamed into my chamber that
+the wild, tumultuous episodes of the night before must have formed part
+of some fantastic dream.
+
+It was hard to believe that the gentle breeze which whispered so softly
+among the ivy-leaves around my window was caused by the same element
+which had shaken the very house a few short hours before. It was as if
+Nature had repented of her momentary passion and was endeavouring to
+make amends to an injured world by its warmth and its sunshine. A chorus
+of birds in the garden below filled the whole air with their wonder and
+congratulations.
+
+Down in the hall I found a number of the shipwrecked sailors, looking
+all the better for their night's repose, who set up a buzz of pleasure
+and gratitude upon seeing me.
+
+Arrangements had been made to drive them to Wigtown, whence they were to
+proceed to Glasgow by the evening train, and my father had given orders
+that each should be served with a packet of sandwiches and hard-boiled
+eggs to sustain him on the way.
+
+Captain Meadows thanked us warmly in the name of his employers for the
+manner in which we had treated them, and he called for three cheers from
+his crew, which were very heartily given. He and the mate walked down
+with us after we had broken our fast to have a last look at the scene of
+the disaster.
+
+The great bosom of the bay was still heaving convulsively, and its waves
+were breaking into sobs against the rocks, but there was none of that
+wild turmoil which we had seen in the early morning. The long, emerald
+ridges, with their little, white crests of foam, rolled slowly and
+majestically in, to break with a regular rhythm--the panting of a tired
+monster.
+
+A cable length from the shore we could see the mainmast of the barque
+floating upon the waves, disappearing at times in the trough of the sea,
+and then shooting up towards Heaven like a giant javelin, shining
+and dripping as the rollers tossed it about. Other smaller pieces of
+wreckage dotted the waters, while innumerable spars and packages were
+littered over the sands. These were being drawn up and collected in
+a place of safety by gangs of peasants. I noticed that a couple of
+broad-winged gulls were hovering and skimming over the scene of the
+shipwreck, as though many strange things were visible to them beneath
+the waves. At times we could hear their raucous voices as they cried to
+one another of what they saw.
+
+“She was a leaky old craft,” said the captain, looking sadly out to sea,
+“but there's always a feeling of sorrow when we see the last of a ship
+we have sailed in. Well, well, she would have been broken up in any
+case, and sold for firewood.”
+
+“It looks a peaceful scene,” I remarked. “Who would imagine that three
+men lost their lives last night in those very waters?”
+
+“Poor fellows,” said the captain, with feeling. “Should they be cast
+up after our departure, I am sure, Mr. West, that you will have them
+decently interred.”
+
+I was about to make some reply when the mate burst into a loud guffaw,
+slapping his thigh and choking with merriment.
+
+“If you want to bury them,” he said, “you had best look sharp, or they
+may clear out of the country. You remember what I said last night? Just
+look at the top of that 'ere hillock, and tell me whether I was in the
+right or not?”
+
+There was a high sand dune some little distance along the coast, and
+upon the summit of this the figure was standing which had attracted the
+mate's attention. The captain threw up his hands in astonishment as his
+eyes rested upon it.
+
+“By the eternal,” he shouted, “it's Ram Singh himself! Let us overhaul
+him!”
+
+Taking to his heels in his excitement he raced along the beach, followed
+by the mate and myself, as well as by one or two of the fishermen who
+had observed the presence of the stranger.
+
+The latter, perceiving our approach, came down from his post of
+observation and walked quietly in our direction, with his head sunk upon
+his breast, like one who is absorbed in thought.
+
+I could not help contrasting our hurried and tumultuous advance with the
+gravity and dignity of this lonely Oriental, nor was the matter mended
+when he raised a pair of steady, thoughtful dark eyes and inclined his
+head in a graceful, sweeping salutation. It seemed to me that we were
+like a pack of schoolboys in the presence of a master.
+
+The stranger's broad, unruffled brow, his clear, searching gaze,
+firm-set yet sensitive mouth, and clean-cut, resolute expression, all
+combined to form the most imposing and noble presence which I had ever
+known. I could not have imagined that such imperturbable calm and at
+the same time such a consciousness of latent strength could have been
+expressed by any human face.
+
+He was dressed in a brown velveteen coat, loose, dark trousers, with a
+shirt that was cut low in the collar, so as to show the muscular,
+brown neck, and he still wore the red fez which I had noticed the night
+before.
+
+I observed with a feeling of surprise, as we approached him, that none
+of these garments showed the slightest indication of the rough treatment
+and wetting which they must have received during their wearer's
+submersion and struggle to the shore.
+
+“So you are none the worse for your ducking,” he said in a pleasant,
+musical voice, looking from the captain to the mate. “I hope that your
+poor sailors have found pleasant quarters.”
+
+“We are all safe,” the captain answered. “But we had given you up for
+lost--you and your two friends. Indeed, I was just making arrangements
+for your burial with Mr. West here.”
+
+The stranger looked at me and smiled.
+
+“We won't give Mr. West that trouble for a little time yet,” he
+remarked; “my friends and I came ashore all safe, and we have found
+shelter in a hut a mile or so along the coast. It is lonely down there,
+but we have everything which we can desire.”
+
+“We start for Glasgow this afternoon,” said the captain; “I shall be
+very glad if you will come with us. If you have not been in England
+before you may find it awkward travelling alone.”
+
+“We are very much indebted to you for your thoughtfulness,” Ram Singh
+answered; “but we will not take advantage of your kind offer. Since
+Nature has driven us here we intend to have a look about us before we
+leave.”
+
+“As you like,” the captain said, shrugging his shoulders. “I don't
+think you are likely to find very much to interest you in this hole of a
+place.”
+
+“Very possibly not,” Ram Singh answered with an amused smile. “You
+remember Milton's lines:
+
+ 'The mind is its own place, and in itself
+ Can make a hell of Heaven, a heaven of Hell.'
+
+I dare say we can spend a few days here comfortably enough. Indeed, I
+think you must be wrong in considering this to be a barbarous locality.
+I am much mistaken if this young gentleman's father is not Mr. James
+Hunter West, whose name is known and honoured by the pundits of India.”
+
+“My father is, indeed, a well-known Sanscrit scholar,” I answered in
+astonishment.
+
+“The presence of such a man,” observed the stranger slowly, “changes a
+wilderness into a city. One great mind is surely a higher indication of
+civilisation than are incalculable leagues of bricks and mortar.
+
+“Your father is hardly so profound as Sir William Jones, or so universal
+as the Baron Von Hammer-Purgstall, but he combines many of the virtues
+of each. You may tell him, however, from me that he is mistaken in
+the analogy which he has traced between the Samoyede and Tamulic word
+roots.”
+
+“If you have determined to honour our neighbourhood by a short stay,”
+ said I, “you will offend my father very much if you do not put up with
+him. He represents the laird here, and it is the laird's privilege,
+according to our Scottish custom, to entertain all strangers of repute
+who visit this parish.”
+
+My sense of hospitality prompted me to deliver this invitation, though
+I could feel the mate twitching at my sleeves as if to warn me that
+the offer was, for some reason, an objectionable one. His fears were,
+however, unnecessary, for the stranger signified by a shake of the head
+that it was impossible for him to accept it.
+
+“My friends and I are very much obliged to you,” he said, “but we have
+our own reasons for remaining where we are. The hut which we occupy is
+deserted and partly ruined, but we Easterns have trained ourselves to
+do without most of those things which are looked upon as necessaries in
+Europe, believing firmly in that wise axiom that a man is rich, not in
+proportion to what he has, but in proportion to what he can dispense
+with. A good fisherman supplies us with bread and with herbs, we have
+clean, dry straw for our couches; what could man wish for more?”
+
+“But you must feel the cold at night, coming straight from the tropics,”
+ remarked the captain. “Perhaps our bodies are cold sometimes. We
+have not noticed it. We have all three spent many years in the Upper
+Himalayas on the border of the region of eternal snow, so we are not
+very sensitive to inconveniences of the sort.”
+
+“At least,” said I, “you must allow me to send you over some fish and
+some meat from our larder.”
+
+“We are not Christians,” he answered, “but Buddhists of the higher
+school. We do not recognise that man has a moral right to slay an ox or
+a fish for the gross use of his body. He has not put life into them, and
+has assuredly no mandate from the Almighty to take life from them save
+under most pressing need. We could not, therefore, use your gift if you
+were to send it.”
+
+“But, sir,” I remonstrated, “if in this changeable and inhospitable
+climate you refuse all nourishing food your vitality will fail you--you
+will die.”
+
+“We shall die then,” he answered, with an amused smile. “And now,
+Captain Meadows, I must bid you adieu, thanking you for your kindness
+during the voyage, and you, too, good-bye--you will command a ship of
+your own before the year is out. I trust, Mr. West, that I may see you
+again before I leave this part of the country. Farewell!”
+
+He raised his red fez, inclined his noble head with the stately grace
+which characterised all his actions, and strode away in the direction
+from which he had come.
+
+“Let me congratulate you, Mr. Hawkins,” said the captain to the mate as
+we walked homewards. “You are to command your own ship within the year.”
+
+“No such luck!” the mate answered, with a pleased smile upon his
+mahogany face, “still, there's no saying how things may come out. What
+d'ye think of him, Mr. West?”
+
+“Why,” said I, “I am very much interested in him. What a magnificent
+head and bearing he has for a young man. I suppose he cannot be more
+than thirty.”
+
+“Forty,” said the mate.
+
+“Sixty, if he is a day,” remarked Captain Meadows. “Why, I have heard
+him talk quite familiarly of the first Afghan war. He was a man then,
+and that is close on forty years ago.”
+
+“Wonderful!” I ejaculated. “His skin is as smooth and his eyes are as
+clear as mine are. He is the superior priest of the three, no doubt.”
+
+“The inferior,” said the captain confidently. “That is why he does all
+the talking for them. Their minds are too elevated to descend to mere
+worldly chatter.”
+
+“They are the strangest pieces of flotsam and jetsam that were ever
+thrown upon this coast,” I remarked. “My father will be mightily
+interested in them.”
+
+“Indeed, I think the less you have to do with them the better for you,”
+ said the mate. “If I do command my own ship I'll promise you that I
+never carry live stock of that sort on board of her. But here we are all
+aboard and the anchor tripped, so we must bid you good-bye.”
+
+The wagonette had just finished loading up when we arrived, and the
+chief places, on either side of the driver, had been reserved for my two
+companions, who speedily sprang into them. With a chorus of cheers the
+good fellows whirled away down the road, while my father, Esther, and I
+stood upon the lawn and waved our hands to them until they disappeared
+behind the Cloomber woods, _en route_ for the Wigtown railway station.
+Barque and crew had both vanished now from our little world, the only
+relic of either being the heaps of _débris_ upon the beach, which were
+to lie there until the arrival of an agent from Lloyd's.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+IN WHICH I SEE THAT WHICH HAS BEEN SEEN BY FEW
+
+
+At dinner that evening I mentioned to my father the episode of the three
+Buddhist priests, and found, as I had expected, that he was very much
+interested by my account of them.
+
+When, however, he heard of the high manner in which Ram Singh had spoken
+of him, and the distinguished position which he had assigned him among
+philologists, he became so excited that it was all we could do to
+prevent him from setting off then and there to make his acquaintance.
+
+Esther and I were relieved and glad when we at last succeeded in
+abstracting his boots and manoeuvring him to his bedroom, for the
+exciting events of the last twenty-four hours had been too much for his
+weak frame and delicate nerves.
+
+I was sitting at the open porch in the gloaming, turning over in my
+mind the unexpected events which had occurred so rapidly--the gale, the
+wreck, the rescue, and the strange character of the castaways--when my
+sister came quietly over to me and put her hand in mine.
+
+“Don't you think, Jack,” she said, in her low, sweet voice, “that we
+are forgetting our friends over at Cloomber? Hasn't all this excitement
+driven their fears and their danger out of our heads?”
+
+“Out of our heads, but never out of our hearts,” said I, laughing.
+“However, you are right, little one, for our attention has certainly
+been distracted from them. I shall walk up in the morning and see if I
+can see anything of them. By the way, to-morrow is the fateful 5th of
+October--one more day, and all will be well with us.”
+
+“Or ill,” said my sister gloomily.
+
+“Why, what a little croaker you are, to be sure!” I cried. “What in the
+world is coming over you?”
+
+“I feel nervous and low-spirited,” she answered, drawing closer to my
+side and shivering. “I feel as if some great peril were hanging over the
+heads of those we love. Why should these strange men wish to stay upon
+the coast?”
+
+“What, the Buddhists?” I said lightly. “Oh, these fellows have continual
+feast-days and religious rites of all sorts. They have some very good
+reason for staying, you may be sure.”
+
+“Don't you think,” said Esther, in an awe-struck whisper, “that it is
+very strange that these priests should arrive here all the way from
+India just at the present moment? Have you not gathered from all you
+have heard that the general's fears are in some way connected with India
+and the Indians?”
+
+The remark made me thoughtful.
+
+“Why, now that you mention it,” I answered, “I have some vague
+impression that the mystery is connected with some incident which
+occurred in that country. I am sure, however, that your fears would
+vanish if you saw Ram Singh. He is the very personification of wisdom
+and benevolence. He was shocked at the idea of our killing a sheep, or
+even a fish for his benefit--said he would rather die than have a hand
+in taking the life of an animal.”
+
+“It is very foolish of me to be so nervous,” said my sister bravely.
+“But you must promise me one thing, Jack. You will go up to Cloomber in
+the morning, and if you can see any of them you must tell them of these
+strange neighbours of ours. They are better able to judge than we are
+whether their presence has any significance or not.”
+
+“All right, little one,” I answered, as we went indoors. “You have been
+over-excited by all these wild doings, and you need a sound night's rest
+to compose you. I'll do what you suggest, however, and our friends shall
+judge for themselves whether these poor fellows should be sent about
+their business or not.”
+
+I made the promise to allay my sister's apprehensions, but in the bright
+sunlight of morning it appeared less than absurd to imagine that our
+poor vegetarian castaways could have any sinister intentions, or that
+their advent could have any effect upon the tenant of Cloomber.
+
+I was anxious, myself, however, to see whether I could see anything of
+the Heatherstones, so after breakfast I walked up to the Hall. In their
+seclusion it was impossible for them to have learnt anything of the
+recent events. I felt, therefore, that even if I should meet the general
+he could hardly regard me as an intruder while I had so much news to
+communicate.
+
+The place had the same dreary and melancholy appearance which always
+characterised it. Looking through between the thick iron bars of the
+main gateway there was nothing to be seen of any of the occupants. One
+of the great Scotch firs had been blown down in the gale, and its long,
+ruddy trunk lay right across the grass-grown avenue; but no attempt had
+been made to remove it.
+
+Everything about the property had the same air of desolation and
+neglect, with the solitary exception of the massive and impenetrable
+fencing, which presented as unbroken and formidable an obstacle as ever
+to the would-be trespasser.
+
+I walked round this barrier as far as our old trysting-place without
+finding any flaw through which I could get a glimpse of the house, for
+the fence had been repaired with each rail overlapping the last, so
+as to secure absolute privacy for those inside, and to block those
+peep-holes which I had formerly used.
+
+At the old spot, however, where I had had the memorable interview with
+the general on the occasion when he surprised me with his daughter, I
+found that the two loose rails had been refixed in such a manner that
+there was a gap of two inches or more between them.
+
+Through this I had a view of the house and of part of the lawn in front
+of it, and, though I could see no signs of life outside or at any of the
+windows, I settled down with the intention of sticking to my post until
+I had a chance of speaking to one or other of the inmates. Indeed, the
+cold, dead aspect of the house had struck such a chill into my heart
+that I determined to scale the fence at whatever risk of incurring
+the general's displeasure rather than return without news of the
+Heatherstones.
+
+Happily there was no need of this extreme expedient, for I had not been
+there half-an-hour before I heard the harsh sound of an opening lock,
+and the general himself emerged from the main door.
+
+To my surprise he was dressed in a military uniform, and that not the
+uniform in ordinary use in the British Army. The red coat was strangely
+cut and stained with the weather. The trousers had originally been
+white, but had now faded to a dirty yellow. With a red sash across his
+chest and a straight sword hanging from his side, he stood the living
+example of a bygone type--the John Company's officer of forty years ago.
+
+He was followed by the ex-tramp, Corporal Rufus Smith, now well-clad and
+prosperous, who limped along beside his master, the two pacing up and
+down the lawn absorbed in conversation. I observed that from time to
+time one or other of them would pause and glance furtively all about
+them, as though guarding keenly against a surprise. I should have
+preferred communicating with the general alone, but since there was no
+dissociating him from his companion, I beat loudly on the fencing with
+my stick to attract their attention. They both faced round in a moment,
+and I could see from their gestures that they were disturbed and
+alarmed.
+
+I then elevated my stick above the barrier to show them where the sound
+proceeded from. At this the general began to walk in my direction with
+the air of a man who is bracing himself up for an effort, but the other
+caught him by the wrist and endeavoured to dissuade him.
+
+It was only when I shouted out my name and assured them that I was alone
+that I could prevail upon them to approach. Once assured of my identity
+the general ran eagerly towards me and greeted me with the utmost
+cordiality.
+
+“This is truly kind of you, West,” he said. “It is only at such times
+as these that one can judge who is a friend and who not. It would not be
+fair to you to ask you to come inside or to stay any time, but I am none
+the less very glad to see you.”
+
+“I have been anxious about you all,” I said, “for it is some little
+time since I have seen or heard from any of you. How have you all been
+keeping?”
+
+“Why, as well as could be expected. But we will be better tomorrow--we
+will be different men to-morrow, eh, Corporal?”
+
+“Yes, sir,” said the corporal, raising his hand to his forehead in a
+military salute. “We'll be right as the bank to-morrow.”
+
+“The corporal and I are a little disturbed in our minds just now,” the
+general explained, “but I have no doubt that all will come right. After
+all, there is nothing higher than Providence, and we are all in His
+hands. And how have you been, eh?”
+
+“We have been very busy for one thing,” said I. “I suppose you have
+heard nothing of the great shipwreck?”
+
+“Not a word,” the general answered listlessly.
+
+“I thought the noise of the wind would prevent you hearing the signal
+guns. She came ashore in the bay the night before last--a great barque
+from India.”
+
+“From India!” ejaculated the general.
+
+“Yes. Her crew were saved, fortunately, and have all been sent on to
+Glasgow.”
+
+“All sent on!” cried the general, with a face as bloodless as a corpse.
+
+“All except three rather strange characters who claim to be Buddhist
+priests. They have decided to remain for a few days upon the coast.”
+
+The words were hardly out of my mouth when the general dropped upon his
+knees with his long, thin arms extended to Heaven.
+
+“Thy will be done!” he cried in a cracking voice. “Thy blessed will be
+done!”
+
+I could see through the crack that Corporal Rufus Smith's face had
+turned to a sickly yellow shade, and that he was wiping the perspiration
+from his brow.
+
+“It's like my luck!” he said. “After all these years, to come when I
+have got a snug billet.”
+
+“Never mind, my lad,” the general said, rising, and squaring his
+shoulders like a man who braces himself up for an effort. “Be it what
+it may we'll face it as British soldiers should. D'ye remember at
+Chillianwallah, when you had to run from your guns to our square, and
+the Sikh horse came thundering down on our bayonets? We didn't flinch
+then, and we won't flinch now. It seems to me that I feel better than I
+have done for years. It was the uncertainty that was killing me.”
+
+“And the infernal jingle-jangle,” said the corporal. “Well, we all go
+together--that's some consolation.”
+
+“Good-bye, West,” said the general. “Be a good husband to Gabriel,
+and give my poor wife a home. I don't think she will trouble you long.
+Good-bye! God bless you!”
+
+“Look here, General,” I said, peremptorily breaking off a piece of wood
+to make communication more easy, “this sort of thing has been going on
+too long. What are these hints and allusions and innuendoes? It is time
+we had a little plain speaking. What is it you fear? Out with it! Are
+you in dread of these Hindoos? If you are, I am able, on my father's
+authority, to have them arrested as rogues and vagabonds.”
+
+“No, no, that would never do,” he answered, shaking his head. “You will
+learn about the wretched business soon enough. Mordaunt knows where to
+lay his hand upon the papers bearing on the matter. You can consult him
+about it to-morrow.”
+
+“But surely,” I cried, “if the peril is so imminent something may be
+done to avert it. If you would but tell me what you fear I should know
+how to act.”
+
+“My dear friend,” he said, “there is nothing to be done, so calm
+yourself, and let things take their course. It has been folly on my part
+to shelter myself behind mere barriers of wood and stone. The fact
+is, that inaction was terrible to me, and I felt that to do anything,
+however futile, in the nature of a precaution, was better than passive
+resignation. My humble friend here and I have placed ourselves in a
+position in which, I trust, no poor fellow will ever find himself
+again. We can only recommend ourselves to the unfailing goodness of the
+Almighty, and trust that what we have endured in this world may lessen
+our atonement in the world to come. I must leave you now, for I have
+many papers to destroy and much to arrange. Good-bye!”
+
+He pushed his hand through the hole which I had made, and grasped mine
+in a solemn farewell, after which he walked back to the Hall with a firm
+and decided step, still followed by the crippled and sinister corporal.
+
+I walked back to Branksome much disturbed by this interview, and
+extremely puzzled as to what course I should pursue.
+
+It was evident now that my sister's suspicions were correct, and that
+there was some very intimate connection between the presence of the
+three Orientals and the mysterious peril which hung over the towers of
+Cloomber.
+
+It was difficult for me to associate the noble-faced Ram Singh's gentle,
+refined manner and words of wisdom with any deed of violence, yet now
+that I thought of it I could see that a terrible capacity for wrath lay
+behind his shaggy brows and dark, piercing eyes.
+
+I felt that of all men whom I had ever met he was the one whose
+displeasure I should least care to face. But how could two men so
+widely dissociated as the foul-mouthed old corporal of artillery and
+the distinguished Anglo-Indian general have each earned the ill-will of
+these strange castaways? And if the danger were a positive physical one,
+why should he not consent to my proposal to have the three men placed
+under custody--though I confess it would have gone much against my grain
+to act in so inhospitable a manner upon such vague and shadowy grounds.
+
+These questions were absolutely unanswerable, and yet the solemn words
+and the terrible gravity which I had seen in the faces of both the
+old soldiers forbade me from thinking that their fears were entirely
+unfounded.
+
+It was all a puzzle--an absolutely insoluble puzzle.
+
+One thing at least was clear to me--and that was that in the present
+state of my knowledge, and after the general's distinct prohibition,
+it was impossible for me to interfere in any way. I could only wait and
+pray that, whatever the danger might be, it might pass over, or at least
+that my dear Gabriel and her brother might be protected against it.
+
+I was walking down the lane lost in thought, and had got as far as the
+wicket gate which opens upon the Branksome lawn, when I was surprised to
+hear my father's voice raised in most animated and excited converse.
+
+The old man had been of late so abstracted from the daily affairs of the
+world, and so absorbed in his own special studies, that it was difficult
+to engage his attention upon any ordinary, mundane topic. Curious to
+know what it was that had drawn him so far out of himself, I opened
+the gate softly, and walking quietly round the laurel bushes, found him
+sitting, to my astonishment, with none other than the very man who was
+occupying my thoughts, Ram Singh, the Buddhist.
+
+The two were sitting upon a garden bench, and the Oriental appeared to
+be laying down some weighty proposition, checking every point upon his
+long, quivering, brown fingers, while my father, with his hands thrown
+abroad and his face awry, was loud in protestation and in argument.
+
+So absorbed were they in their controversy, that I stood within a
+hand-touch of them for a minute or more before they became conscious of
+my presence.
+
+On observing me the priest sprang to his feet and greeted me with the
+same lofty courtesy and dignified grace which had so impressed me the
+day before.
+
+“I promised myself yesterday,” he said, “the pleasure of calling upon
+your father. You see I have kept my word. I have even been daring enough
+to question his views upon some points in connection with the Sanscrit
+and Hindoo tongues, with the result that we have been arguing for
+an hour or more without either of us convincing the other. Without
+pretending to as deep a theoretical knowledge as that which has made the
+name of James Hunter West a household word among Oriental scholars,
+I happen to have given considerable attention to this one point, and
+indeed I am in a position to say that I know his views to be unsound.
+I assure you, sir, that up to the year 700, or even later, Sanscrit was
+the ordinary language of the great bulk of the inhabitants of India.”
+
+“And I assure you, sir,” said my father warmly, “that it was dead and
+forgotten at that date, save by the learned, who used it as a vehicle
+for scientific and religious works--just as Latin was used in the Middle
+Ages long after it had ceased to be spoken by any European nation.”
+
+“If you consult the puranas you will find,” said Ram Singh, “that this
+theory, though commonly received, is entirely untenable.”
+
+“And if you will consult the Ramayana, and more particularly the
+canonical books on Buddhist discipline,” cried my father, “you will find
+that the theory is unassailable.”
+
+“But look at the Kullavagga,” said our visitor earnestly.
+
+“And look at King Asoka,” shouted my father triumphantly. “When, in the
+year 300 before the Christian era--before, mind you--he ordered the laws
+of Buddha to be engraved upon the rocks, what language did he employ,
+eh? Was it Sanscrit?--no! And why was it not Sanscrit? Because the lower
+orders of his subjects would not have been able to understand a word
+of it. Ha, ha! That was the reason. How are you going to get round King
+Asoka's edicts, eh?”
+
+“He carved them in the various dialects,” Ram Singh answered. “But
+energy is too precious a thing to be wasted in mere wind in this style.
+The sun has passed its meridian, and I must return to my companions.”
+
+“I am sorry that you have not brought them to see us,” said my father
+courteously. He was, I could see, uneasy lest in the eagerness of debate
+he had overstepped the bounds of hospitality.
+
+“They do not mix with the world,” Ram Singh answered, rising to
+his feet. “They are of a higher grade than I, and more sensitive to
+contaminating influences. They are immersed in a six months' meditation
+upon the mystery of the third incarnation, which has lasted with few
+intermissions from the time that we left the Himalayas. I shall not see
+you again, Mr. Hunter West, and I therefore bid you farewell. Your old
+age will be a happy one, as it deserves to be, and your Eastern studies
+will have a lasting effect upon the knowledge and literature of your own
+country. Farewell!”
+
+“And am I also to see no more of you?” I asked.
+
+“Unless you will walk with me along the sea-shore,” he answered. “But
+you have already been out this morning, and may be tired. I ask too much
+of you.”
+
+“Nay, I should be delighted to come,” I responded from my heart, and we
+set off together, accompanied for some little distance by my father, who
+would gladly, I could see, have reopened the Sanscrit controversy, had
+not his stock of breath been too limited to allow of his talking and
+walking at the same time.
+
+“He is a learned man,” Ram Singh remarked, after we had left him behind,
+“but, like many another, he is intolerant towards opinions which differ
+from his own. He will know better some day.”
+
+I made no answer to this observation, and we trudged along for a time in
+silence, keeping well down to the water's edge, where the sands afforded
+a good foothold.
+
+The sand dunes which lined the coast formed a continuous ridge upon our
+left, cutting us off entirely from all human observation, while on the
+right the broad Channel stretched away with hardly a sail to break its
+silvery uniformity. The Buddhist priest and I were absolutely alone with
+Nature.
+
+I could not help reflecting that if he were really the dangerous man
+that the mate affected to consider him, or that might be inferred from
+the words of General Heatherstone, I had placed myself completely in his
+power.
+
+Yet such was the majestic benignity of the man's aspect, and the
+unruffled serenity of his deep, dark eyes, that I could afford in his
+presence to let fear and suspicion blow past me as lightly as the breeze
+which whistled round us. His face might be stern, and even terrible, but
+I felt that he could never be unjust.
+
+As I glanced from time to time at his noble profile and the sweep of his
+jet-black beard, his rough-spun tweed travelling suit struck me with
+an almost painful sense of incongruity, and I re-clothed him in my
+imagination with the grand, sweeping Oriental costume which is the
+fitting and proper frame for such a picture--the only garb which does
+not detract from the dignity and grace of the wearer.
+
+The place to which he led me was a small fisher cottage which had been
+deserted some years before by its tenant, but still stood gaunt and
+bare, with the thatch partly blown away and the windows and doors in
+sad disrepair. This dwelling, which the poorest Scotch beggar would have
+shrunk from, was the one which these singular men had preferred to the
+proffered hospitality of the laird's house. A small garden, now a mass
+of tangled brambles, stood round it, and through this my acquaintance
+picked his way to the ruined door. He glanced into the house and then
+waved his hand for me to follow him.
+
+“You have now an opportunity,” he said, in a subdued, reverential voice,
+“of seeing a spectacle which few Europeans have had the privilege of
+beholding. Inside that cottage you will find two Yogis--men who are only
+one remove from the highest plane of adeptship. They are both wrapped
+in an ecstatic trance, otherwise I should not venture to obtrude your
+presence upon them. Their astral bodies have departed from them, to be
+present at the feast of lamps in the holy Lamasery of Rudok in Tibet.
+Tread lightly lest by stimulating their corporeal functions you recall
+them before their devotions are completed.”
+
+Walking slowly and on tiptoe, I picked my way through the weed-grown
+garden, and peered through the open doorway.
+
+There was no furniture in the dreary interior, nor anything to cover the
+uneven floor save a litter of fresh straw in a corner.
+
+Among this straw two men were crouching, the one small and wizened, the
+other large-boned and gaunt, with their legs crossed in Oriental fashion
+and their heads sunk upon their breasts. Neither of them looked up, or
+took the smallest notice of our presence.
+
+They were so still and silent that they might have been two bronze
+statues but for the slow and measured rhythm of their breathing. Their
+faces, however, had a peculiar, ashen-grey colour, very different from
+the healthy brown of my companion's, and I observed, on stooping my
+head, that only the whites of their eyes were visible, the balls being
+turned upwards beneath the lids.
+
+In front of them upon a small mat lay an earthenware pitcher of water
+and half-a-loaf of bread, together with a sheet of paper inscribed with
+certain cabalistic characters. Ram Singh glanced at these, and then,
+motioning to me to withdraw, followed me out into the garden.
+
+“I am not to disturb them until ten o'clock,” he said. “You have now
+seen in operation one of the grandest results of our occult philosophy,
+the dissociation of spirit from body. Not only are the spirits of these
+holy men standing at the present moment by the banks of the Ganges, but
+those spirits are clothed in a material covering so identical with their
+real bodies that none of the faithful will ever doubt that Lal Hoomi and
+Mowdar Khan are actually among them. This is accomplished by our power
+of resolving an object into its chemical atoms, of conveying these
+atoms with a speed which exceeds that of lightning to any given spot,
+and of there re-precipitating them and compelling them to retake their
+original form. Of old, in the days of our ignorance, it was necessary to
+convey the whole body in this way, but we have since found that it was
+as easy and more convenient to transmit material enough merely to build
+up an outside shell or semblance. This we have termed the astral body.”
+
+“But if you can transmit your spirits so readily,” I observed, “why
+should they be accompanied by any body at all?”
+
+“In communicating with brother initiates we are able to employ our
+spirits only, but when we wish to come in contact with ordinary mankind
+it is essential that we should appear in some form which they can see
+and comprehend.”
+
+“You have interested me deeply in all that you have told me,” I said,
+grasping the hand which Ram Singh had held out to me as a sign that
+our interview was at an end. “I shall often think of our short
+acquaintance.”
+
+“You will derive much benefit from it,” he said slowly, still holding my
+hand and looking gravely and sadly into my eyes. “You must remember that
+what will happen in the future is not necessarily bad because it does
+not fall in with your preconceived ideas of right. Be not hasty in your
+judgments. There are certain great rules which must be carried out, at
+whatever cost to individuals. Their operation may appear to you to be
+harsh and cruel, but that is as nothing compared with the dangerous
+precedent which would be established by not enforcing them. The ox and
+the sheep are safe from us, but the man with the blood of the highest
+upon his hands should not and shall not live.”
+
+He threw up his arms at the last words with a fierce, threatening
+gesture, and, turning away from me, strode back to the ruined hut.
+
+I stood gazing after him until he disappeared through the doorway, and
+then started off for home, revolving in my mind all that I had heard,
+and more particularly this last outburst of the occult philosopher.
+
+Far on the right I could see the tall, white tower of Cloomber standing
+out clear-cut and sharp against a dark cloud-bank which rose behind it.
+I thought how any traveller who chanced to pass that way would envy in
+his heart the tenant of that magnificent building, and how little
+they would guess the strange terrors, the nameless dangers, which were
+gathering about his head. The black cloud-wrack was but the image, I
+reflected, of the darker, more sombre storm which was about to burst.
+
+“Whatever it all means, and however it happens,” I ejaculated, “God
+grant that the innocent be not confounded with the guilty.”
+
+My father, when I reached home, was still in a ferment over his learned
+disputation with the stranger.
+
+“I trust, Jack,” he said, “that I did not handle him too roughly. I
+should remember that I am _in loco magistri_, and be less prone to argue
+with my guests. Yet, when he took up this most untenable position, I
+could not refrain from attacking him and hurling him out of it, which
+indeed I did, though you, who are ignorant of the niceties of the
+question, may have failed to perceive it. You observed, however, that my
+reference to King Asoka's edicts was so conclusive that he at once rose
+and took his leave.”
+
+“You held your own bravely,” I answered, “but what is your impression of
+the man now that you have seen him?”
+
+“Why,” said my father, “he is one of those holy men who, under the
+various names of Sannasis, Yogis, Sevras, Qualanders, Hakims, and Cufis
+have devoted their lives to the study of the mysteries of the Buddhist
+faith. He is, I take it, a theosophist, or worshipper of the God of
+knowledge, the highest grade of which is the adept. This man and his
+companions have not attained this high position or they could not have
+crossed the sea without contamination. It is probable that they are all
+advanced chelas who hope in time to attain to the supreme honour of
+adeptship.”
+
+“But, father,” interrupted my sister, “this does not explain why men of
+such sanctity and attainments should choose to take up their quarters on
+the shores of a desolate Scotch bay.”
+
+“Ah, there you get beyond me,” my father answered. “I may suggest,
+however, that it is nobody's business but their own, so long as they
+keep the peace and are amenable to the law of the land.”
+
+“Have you ever heard,” I asked, “that these higher priests of whom you
+speak have powers which are unknown to us?”
+
+“Why, Eastern literature is full of it. The Bible is an Eastern book,
+and is it not full of the record of such powers from cover to cover?
+It is unquestionable that they have in the past known many of Nature's
+secrets which are lost to us. I cannot say, however, from my own
+knowledge that the modern theosophists really possess the powers that
+they claim.”
+
+“Are they a vindictive class of people?” I asked. “Is there any offence
+among them which can only be expiated by death?”
+
+“Not that I know of,” my father answered, raising his white eyebrows
+in surprise. “You appear to be in an inquisitive humour this
+afternoon--what is the object of all these questions? Have our Eastern
+neighbours aroused your curiosity or suspicion in any way?”
+
+I parried the question as best I might, for I was unwilling to let the
+old man know what was in my mind. No good purpose could come from his
+enlightenment; his age and his health demanded rest rather than anxiety;
+and indeed, with the best will in the world I should have found it
+difficult to explain to another what was so very obscure to myself. For
+every reason I felt that it was best that he should be kept in the dark.
+
+Never in all my experience had I known a day pass so slowly as did that
+eventful 5th of October. In every possible manner I endeavoured to while
+away the tedious hours, and yet it seemed as if darkness would never
+arrive.
+
+I tried to read, I tried to write, I paced about the lawn, I walked to
+the end of the lane, I put new flies upon my fishing-hooks, I began to
+index my father's library--in a dozen ways I endeavoured to relieve the
+suspense which was becoming intolerable. My sister, I could see, was
+suffering from the same feverish restlessness.
+
+Again and again our good father remonstrated with us in his mild way for
+our erratic behaviour and the continual interruption of his work which
+arose from it.
+
+At last, however, the tea was brought, and the tea was taken, the
+curtains were drawn, the lamps lit, and after another interminable
+interval the prayers were read and the servants dismissed to their
+rooms. My father compounded and swallowed his nightly jorum of toddy,
+and then shuffled off to his room, leaving the two of us in the parlour
+with our nerves in a tingle and our minds full of the most vague and yet
+terrible apprehensions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+OF THE VISITOR WHO RAN DOWN THE ROAD IN THE NIGHT-TIME
+
+
+It was a quarter past ten o'clock by the parlour timepiece when my
+father went off to his room, and left Esther and myself together. We
+heard his slow steps dying away up the creaking staircase, until the
+distant slamming of a door announced that he had reached his sanctum.
+
+The simple oil lamp upon the table threw a weird, uncertain light over
+the old room, flickering upon the carved oak panelling, and casting
+strange, fantastic shadows from the high-elbowed, straight-backed
+furniture. My sister's white, anxious face stood out in the obscurity
+with a startling exactness of profile like one of Rembrandt's portraits.
+
+We sat opposite to each other on either side of the table with no sound
+breaking the silence save the measured ticking of the clock and the
+intermittent chirping of a cricket beneath the grate.
+
+There was something awe-inspiring in the absolute stillness. The
+whistling of a belated peasant upon the high road was a relief to us,
+and we strained our ears to catch the last of his notes as he plodded
+steadily homewards.
+
+At first we had made some pretence--she of knitting and I of
+reading--but we soon abandoned the useless deception, and sat uneasily
+waiting, starting and glancing at each other with questioning eyes
+whenever the faggot crackled in the fire or a rat scampered behind the
+wainscot. There was a heavy electrical feeling in the air, which weighed
+us down with a foreboding of disaster.
+
+I rose and flung the hall door open to admit the fresh breeze of the
+night. Ragged clouds swept across the sky, and the moon peeped out at
+times between their hurrying fringes, bathing the whole countryside in
+its cold, white radiance. From where I stood in the doorway I could see
+the edge of the Cloomber wood, though the house itself was only
+visible from the rising ground some little distance off. At my sister's
+suggestion we walked together, she with her shawl over her head, as far
+as the summit of this elevation, and looked out in the direction of the
+Hall.
+
+There was no illumination of the windows tonight. From roof to basement
+not a light twinkled in any part of the great building. Its huge mass
+loomed up dark and sullen amid the trees which surrounded it, looking
+more like some giant sarcophagus than a human habitation.
+
+To our overwrought nerves there was something of terror in its mere bulk
+and its silence. We stood for some little time peering at it through the
+darkness, and then we made our way back to the parlour again, where
+we sat waiting--waiting, we knew not for what, and yet with absolute
+conviction that some terrible experience was in store for us.
+
+It was twelve o'clock or thereabout when my sister suddenly sprang to
+her feet and held up her fingers to bespeak attention.
+
+“Do you hear nothing?” she asked.
+
+I strained my ears, but without success.
+
+“Come to the door,” she cried, with a trembling voice. “Now can you hear
+anything?”
+
+In the deep silence of the night I distinctly heard a dull, murmuring,
+clattering sound, continuous apparently, but very faint and low.
+
+“What is it?” I asked, in a subdued voice.
+
+“It's the sound of a man running towards us,” she answered, and then,
+suddenly dropping the last semblance of self-command, she fell upon
+her knees beside the table and began praying aloud with that frenzied
+earnestness which intense, overpowering fear can produce, breaking off
+now and again into half-hysterical whimperings.
+
+I could distinguish the sound clearly enough now to know that her quick,
+feminine perception had not deceived her, and that it was indeed caused
+by a running man.
+
+On he came, and on down the high road, his footfalls ringing out clearer
+and sharper every moment. An urgent messenger he must be, for he neither
+paused nor slackened his pace.
+
+The quick, crisp rattle was changed suddenly to a dull, muffled murmur.
+He had reached the point where sand had been recently laid down for
+a hundred yards or so. In a few moments, however, he was back on hard
+ground again and his flying feet came nearer and ever nearer.
+
+He must, I reflected, be abreast of the head of the lane now. Would he
+hold on? Or would he turn down to Branksome?
+
+The thought had hardly crossed my mind when I heard by the difference of
+the sound that the runner had turned the corner, and that his goal was
+beyond all question the laird's house.
+
+Rushing down to the gate of the lawn, I reached it just as our visitor
+dashed it open and fell into my arms. I could see in the moonlight that
+it was none other than Mordaunt Heatherstone.
+
+“What has happened?” I cried. “What is amiss, Mordaunt?”
+
+“My father!” he gasped--“my father!”
+
+His hat was gone, his eyes dilated with terror, and his face as
+bloodless as that of a corpse. I could feel that the hands which clasped
+my arms were quivering and shaking with emotion.
+
+“You are exhausted,” I said, leading him into the parlour. “Give
+yourself a moment's rest before you speak to us. Be calm, man, you are
+with your best friends.”
+
+I laid him on the old horsehair sofa, while Esther, whose fears had all
+flown to the winds now that something practical was to be done, dashed
+some brandy into a tumbler and brought it to him. The stimulant had a
+marvellous effect upon him, for the colour began to come back into his
+pale cheeks and the light of recognition in his eyes.
+
+He sat up and took Esther's hand in both of his, like a man who is
+waking out of some bad dream and wishes to assure himself that he is
+really in safety.
+
+“Your father?” I asked. “What of him?”
+
+“He is gone.”
+
+“Gone!”
+
+“Yes; he is gone; and so is Corporal Rufus Smith. We shall never set
+eyes upon them again.”
+
+“But where have they gone?” I cried. “This is unworthy of you, Mordaunt.
+What right have we to sit here, allowing our private feelings to
+overcome us, while there is a possibility of succouring your father? Up,
+man! Let us follow him. Tell me only what direction he took.”
+
+“It's no use,” young Heatherstone answered, burying his face in
+his hands. “Don't reproach me, West, for you don't know all the
+circumstances. What can we do to reverse the tremendous and unknown laws
+which are acting against us? The blow has long been hanging over us, and
+now it has fallen. God help us!”
+
+“In Heaven's name tell me what has happened?” said I excitedly. “We must
+not yield to despair.”
+
+“We can do nothing until daybreak,” he answered. “We shall then
+endeavour to obtain some trace of them. It is hopeless at present.”
+
+“And how about Gabriel and Mrs. Heatherstone?” I asked. “Can we
+not bring them down from the Hall at once? Your poor sister must be
+distracted with terror.”
+
+“She knows nothing of it,” Mordaunt answered. “She sleeps at the other
+side of the house, and has not heard or seen anything. As to my poor
+mother, she has expected some such event for so long a time that it has
+not come upon her as a surprise. She is, of course, overwhelmed with
+grief, but would, I think, prefer to be left to herself for the
+present. Her firmness and composure should be a lesson to me, but I am
+constitutionally excitable, and this catastrophe coming after our long
+period of suspense deprived me of my very reason for a time.”
+
+“If we can do nothing until the morning,” I said, “you have time to tell
+us all that has occurred.”
+
+“I will do so,” he answered, rising and holding his shaking hands to the
+fire. “You know already that we have had reason for some time--for many
+years in fact--to fear that a terrible retribution was hanging over my
+father's head for a certain action of his early life. In this action he
+was associated with the man known as Corporal Rufus Smith, so that the
+fact of the latter finding his way to my father was a warning to us that
+the time had come, and that this 5th of October--the anniversary of the
+misdeed--would be the day of its atonement. I told you of our fears
+in my letter, and, if I am not mistaken, my father also had some
+conversation with you, John, upon the subject. When I saw yesterday
+morning that he had hunted out the old uniform which he had always
+retained since he wore it in the Afghan war, I was sure that the end was
+at hand, and that our forebodings would be realised.
+
+“He appeared to be more composed in the afternoon than I have seen him
+for years, and spoke freely of his life in India and of the incidents of
+his youth. About nine o'clock he requested us to go up to our own rooms,
+and locked us in there--a precaution which he frequently took when the
+dark fit was upon him. It was always his endeavour, poor soul, to keep
+us clear of the curse which had fallen upon his own unfortunate head.
+Before parting from us he tenderly embraced my mother and Gabriel,
+and he afterwards followed me to my room, where he clasped my hand
+affectionately and gave into my charge a small packet addressed to
+yourself.”
+
+“To me?” I interrupted.
+
+“To you. I shall fulfill my commission when I have told you my story. I
+conjured him to allow me to sit up with him and share any danger which
+might arise, but he implored me with irresistible earnestness not to add
+to his troubles by thwarting his arrangements. Seeing that I was really
+distressing him by my pertinacity, I at last allowed him to close the
+door and to turn the key upon the outside. I shall always reproach
+myself for my want of firmness. But what can you do when your own father
+refuses your assistance or co-operation? You cannot force yourself upon
+him.”
+
+“I am sure that you did all you could do,” my sister said.
+
+“I meant to, dear Esther, but, God help me, it was hard to tell what
+was right. He left me, and I heard his footsteps die away down the long
+corridor. It was then about ten o'clock, or a little after. For a time
+I paced up and down the room, and then, carrying the lamp to the head of
+my bed, I lay down without undressing, reading St. Thomas a Kempis, and
+praying from my heart that the night might pass safely over us.
+
+“I had at last fallen into a troubled sleep when I was suddenly aroused
+by a loud, sonorous sound ringing in my ears. I sat up bewildered, but
+all was silent again. The lamp was burning low, and my watch showed
+me that it was going on to midnight. I blundered to my feet, and was
+striking a match with the intention of lighting the candles, when the
+sharp, vehement cry broke out again so loud and so clear that it might
+have been in the very room with me. My chamber is in the front of the
+house, while those of my mother and sister are at the back, so that I am
+the only one who commands a view of the avenue.
+
+“Rushing to the window I drew the blind aside and looked out. You know
+that the gravel-drive opens up so as to form a broad stretch immediately
+in front of the house. Just in the centre of this clear space there
+stood three men looking up at the house.
+
+“The moon shone full upon them, glistening on their upturned eyeballs,
+and by its light I could see that they were swarthy-faced and
+black-haired, of a type that I was familiar with among the Sikhs and
+Afridis. Two of them were thin, with eager, aesthetic countenances,
+while the third was kinglike and majestic, with a noble figure and
+flowing beard.”
+
+“Ram Singh!” I ejaculated.
+
+“What, you know of them?” exclaimed Mordaunt in great surprise. “You
+have met them?”
+
+“I know of them. They are Buddhist priests,” I answered, “but go on.”
+
+“They stood in a line,” he continued, “sweeping their arms upwards
+and downwards, while their lips moved as if repeating some prayer or
+incantation. Suddenly they ceased to gesticulate, and broke out for the
+third time into the wild, weird, piercing cry which had roused me from
+my slumber. Never shall I forget that shrill, dreadful summons swelling
+and reverberating through the silent night with an intensity of sound
+which is still ringing in my ears.
+
+“As it died slowly away, there was a rasping and creaking as of keys
+and bolts, followed by the clang of an opening door and the clatter of
+hurrying feet. From my window I saw my father and Corporal Rufus Smith
+rush frantically out of the house hatless and unkempt, like men who are
+obeying a sudden and overpowering impulse. The three strangers laid
+no hands on them, but all five swept swiftly away down the avenue and
+vanished among the trees. I am positive that no force was used, or
+constraint of any visible kind, and yet I am as sure that my poor father
+and his companion were helpless prisoners as if I had seen them dragged
+away in manacles.
+
+“All this took little time in the acting. From the first summons which
+disturbed my sleep to the last shadowy glimpse which I had of them
+between the tree trunks could hardly have occupied more than five
+minutes of actual time. So sudden was it, and so strange, that when the
+drama was over and they were gone I could have believed that it was
+all some terrible nightmare, some delusion, had I not felt that the
+impression was too real, too vivid, to be imputed to fancy.
+
+“I threw my whole weight against my bedroom door in the hope of forcing
+the lock. It stood firm for a while, but I flung myself upon it again
+and again, until something snapped and I found myself in the passage.
+
+“My first thought was for my mother. I rushed to her room and turned
+the key in her door. The moment that I did so she stepped out into the
+corridor in her dressing-gown, and held up a warning finger.
+
+“'No noise,' she said, 'Gabriel is asleep. They have been called away?'
+
+“'They have,' I answered.
+
+“'God's will be done!' she cried. 'Your poor father will be happier in
+the next world than he has ever been in this. Thank Heaven that Gabriel
+is asleep. I gave her chloral in her cocoa.'
+
+“'What am I to do?' I said distractedly.
+
+“'Where have they gone? How can I help him? We cannot let him go from
+us like this, or leave these men to do what they will with him. Shall I
+ride into Wigtown and arouse the police?'
+
+“'Anything rather than that,' my mother said earnestly. 'He has begged
+me again and again to avoid it. My son, we shall never set eyes upon
+your father again. You may marvel at my dry eyes, but if you knew as
+I know the peace which death would bring him, you could not find it in
+your heart to mourn for him. All pursuit is, I feel, vain, and yet some
+pursuit there must be. Let it be as private as possible. We cannot serve
+him better than by consulting his wishes.'
+
+“'But every minute is precious,' I cried. 'Even now he may be calling
+upon us to rescue him from the clutches of those dark-skinned fiends.'
+
+“The thought so maddened me that I rushed out of the house and down to
+the high road, but once there I had no indication in which direction to
+turn. The whole wide moor lay before me, without a sign of movement
+upon its broad expanse. I listened, but not a sound broke the perfect
+stillness of the night.
+
+“It was then, my dear friends, as I stood, not knowing in which
+direction to turn, that the horror and responsibility broke full upon
+me. I felt that I was combating against forces of which I knew nothing.
+All was strange and dark and terrible.
+
+“The thought of you, and of the help which I might look for from your
+advice and assistance, was a beacon of hope to me. At Branksome, at
+least, I should receive sympathy, and, above all, directions as to what
+I should do, for my mind is in such a whirl that I cannot trust my own
+judgment. My mother was content to be alone, my sister asleep, and
+no prospect of being able to do anything until daybreak. Under those
+circumstances what more natural than that I should fly to you as fast as
+my feet would carry me? You have a clear head, Jack; speak out, man, and
+tell me what I should do. Esther, what should I do?”
+
+He turned from one to the other of us with outstretched hands and eager,
+questioning eyes.
+
+“You can do nothing while the darkness lasts,” I answered. “We must
+report the matter to the Wigtown police, but we need not send our
+message to them until we are actually starting upon the search, so as to
+comply with the law and yet have a private investigation, as your mother
+wishes. John Fullarton, over the hill, has a lurcher dog which is as
+good as a bloodhound. If we set him on the general's trail he will run
+him down if he had to follow him to John o' Groat's.”
+
+“It is terrible to wait calmly here while he may need our assistance.”
+
+“I fear our assistance could under any circumstances do him little
+good. There are forces at work here which are beyond human intervention.
+Besides, there is no alternative. We have, apparently, no possible
+clue as to the direction which they have taken, and for us to wander
+aimlessly over the moor in the darkness would be to waste the strength
+which may be more profitably used in the morning. It will be daylight
+by five o'clock. In an hour or so we can walk over the hill together and
+get Fullarton's dog.”
+
+“Another hour!” Mordaunt groaned, “every minute seems an age.”
+
+“Lie down on the sofa and rest yourself,” said I. “You cannot serve your
+father better than by laying up all the strength you can, for we may
+have a weary trudge before us. But you mentioned a packet which the
+general had intended for me.”
+
+“It is here,” he answered, drawing a small, flat parcel from his pocket
+and handing it over to me, “you will find, no doubt, that it will
+explain all which has been so mysterious.”
+
+The packet was sealed at each end with black wax, bearing the impress
+of the flying griffin, which I knew to be the general's crest. It
+was further secured by a band of broad tape, which I cut with my
+pocket-knife. Across the outside was written in bold handwriting: “J.
+Fothergill West, Esq.,” and underneath: “To be handed to that gentleman
+in the event of the disappearance or decease of Major-General J. B.
+Heatherstone, V.C., C.B., late of the Indian Army.”
+
+So at last I was to know the dark secret which had cast a shadow over
+our lives. Here in my hands I held the solution of it.
+
+With eager fingers I broke the seals and undid the wrapper. A note and a
+small bundle of discoloured paper lay within. I drew the lamp over to me
+and opened the former. It was dated the preceding afternoon, and ran in
+this way:
+
+MY DEAR WEST,--
+
+I should have satisfied your very natural curiosity on the subject which
+we have had occasion to talk of more than once, but I refrained for your
+own sake. I knew by sad experience how unsettling and unnerving it is
+to be for ever waiting for a catastrophe which you are convinced must
+befall, and which you can neither avert nor accelerate.
+
+Though it affects me specially, as being the person most concerned, I am
+still conscious that the natural sympathy which I have observed in you,
+and your regard for Gabriel's father, would both combine to render you
+unhappy if you knew the hopelessness and yet the vagueness of the fate
+which threatens me. I feared to disturb your mind, and I was therefore
+silent, though at some cost to myself, for my isolation has not been the
+least of the troubles which have weighed me down.
+
+Many signs, however, and chief among them the presence of the Buddhists
+upon the coast as described by you this morning, have convinced me that
+the weary waiting is at last over and that the hour of retribution is at
+hand. Why I should have been allowed to live nearly forty years after my
+offence is more than I can understand, but it is possible that those who
+had command over my fate know that such a life is the greatest of all
+penalties to me.
+
+Never for an hour, night or day, have they suffered me to forget that
+they have marked me down as their victim. Their accursed astral bell has
+been ringing my knell for two-score years, reminding me ever that there
+is no spot upon earth where I can hope to be in safety. Oh, the peace,
+the blessed peace of dissolution! Come what may on the other side of the
+tomb, I shall at least be quit of that thrice terrible sound.
+
+There is no need for me to enter into the wretched business again, or
+to detail at any length the events of October 5th, 1841, and the various
+circumstances which led up to the death of Ghoolab Shah, the arch adept.
+
+I have torn a sheaf of leaves from my old journal, in which you will
+find a bald account of the matter, and an independent narrative was
+furnished by Sir Edward Elliott, of the Artillery, to the Star of India
+some years ago--in which, however, the names were suppressed.
+
+I have reason to believe that many people, even among those who knew
+India well, thought that Sir Edward was romancing, and that he had
+evolved his incidents from his imagination. The few faded sheets which
+I send you will show you that this is not the case, and that our men of
+science must recognise powers and laws which can and have been used by
+man, but which are unknown to European civilisation.
+
+I do not wish to whine or to whimper, but I cannot help feeling that I
+have had hard measure dealt me in this world. I would not, God knows,
+take the life of any man, far less an aged one, in cold blood. My temper
+and nature, however, were always fiery and headstrong, and in action
+when my blood is up, I have no knowledge of what I am about. Neither
+the corporal nor I would have laid a finger upon Ghoolab Shah had we not
+seen that the tribesmen were rallying behind him. Well, well, it is an
+old story now, and there is no profit in discussing it. May no other
+poor fellow ever have the same evil fortune!
+
+I have written a short supplement to the statements contained in my
+journal for your information and that of any one else who may chance to
+be interested in the matter.
+
+And now, adieu! Be a good husband to Gabriel, and, if your sister be
+brave enough to marry into such a devil-ridden family as ours, by all
+means let her do so. I have left enough to keep my poor wife in comfort.
+
+When she rejoins me I should wish it to be equally divided between the
+children. If you hear that I am gone, do not pity, but congratulate
+
+Your unfortunate friend,
+
+JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE.
+
+I threw aside the letter and picked up the roll of blue foolscap which
+contained the solution of the mystery. It was all ragged and frayed at
+the inner edge, with traces of gum and thread still adhering to it, to
+show that it had been torn out of a strongly bound volume. The ink with
+which it had been written was faded somewhat, but across the head of the
+first page was inscribed in bold, clear characters, evidently of later
+date than the rest: “Journal of Lieutenant J. B. Heatherstone in the
+Thull Valley during the autumn of 1841,” and then underneath:
+
+This extract contains some account of the events of the first week of
+October of that year, including the skirmish of the Terada ravine and
+the death of the man Ghoolab Shah.
+
+I have the narrative lying before me now, and I copy it verbatim. If it
+contains some matter which has no direct bearing upon the question
+at issue, I can only say that I thought it better to publish what is
+irrelevant than by cutting and clipping to lay the whole statement open
+to the charge of having been tampered with.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+THE DAY-BOOK OF JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE
+
+
+Thull Valley, Oct. 1, 1841.--The Fifth Bengal and Thirty-third Queen's
+passed through this morning on their way to the Front. Had tiffin with
+the Bengalese. Latest news from home that two attempts had been made on
+the Queen's life by semi-maniacs named Francis and Bean.
+
+It promises to be a hard winter. The snow-line has descended a thousand
+feet upon the peaks, but the passes will be open for weeks to come, and,
+even if they were blocked, we have established so many depots in the
+country that Pollock and Nott will have no difficulty in holding their
+own. They shall not meet with the fate of Elphinstone's army. One such
+tragedy is enough for a century.
+
+Elliott of the Artillery, and I, are answerable for the safety of the
+communications for a distance of twenty miles or more, from the mouth of
+the valley to this side of the wooden bridge over the Lotar. Goodenough,
+of the Rifles, is responsible on the other side, and Lieutenant-Colonel
+Sidney Herbert of the Engineers, has a general supervision over both
+sections.
+
+Our force is not strong enough for the work which has to be done. I have
+a company and a half of our own regiment, and a squadron of Sowars,
+who are of no use at all among the rocks. Elliott has three guns, but
+several of his men are down with cholera, and I doubt if he has enough
+to serve more than two.
+
+(Note: capsicum for cholera--tried it)
+
+On the other hand, each convoy is usually provided with some guard of
+its own, though it is often absurdly inefficient. These valleys and
+ravines which branch out of the main pass are alive with Afridis and
+Pathans, who are keen robbers as well as religious fanatics. I wonder
+they don't swoop down on some of our caravans. They could plunder them
+and get back to their mountain fastnesses before we could interfere or
+overtake them. Nothing but fear will restrain them.
+
+If I had my way I would hang one at the mouth of every ravine as a
+warning to the gang. They are personifications of the devil to look at,
+hawk-nosed, full-lipped, with a mane of tangled hair, and most Satanic
+sneer. No news today from the Front.
+
+October 2.--I must really ask Herbert for another company at the very
+least. I am convinced that the communications would be cut off if any
+serious attack were made upon us.
+
+Now, this morning two urgent messages were sent me from two different
+points more than sixteen miles apart, to say that there were signs of a
+descent of the tribes.
+
+Elliott, with one gun and the Sowars, went to the farther ravine, while
+I, with the infantry, hurried to the other, but we found it was a false
+alarm. I saw no signs of the Hillmen, and though we were greeted by a
+splutter of jezail bullets we were unable to capture any of the rascals.
+
+Woe betide them if they fall into my hands. I would give them as short
+a shrift as ever a Highland cateran got from a Glasgow judge. These
+continued alarms may mean nothing or they may be an indication that the
+Hillmen are assembling and have some plan in view.
+
+We have had no news from the Front for some time, but to-day a convoy of
+wounded came through with the intelligence that Nott had taken Ghuznee.
+I hope he warmed up any of the black rascals that fell into his hands.
+
+No word of Pollock.
+
+An elephant battery came up from the Punjab, looking in very good
+condition. There were several convalescents with it going up to rejoin
+their regiments. Knew none of them except Mostyn of the Hussars and
+young Blakesley, who was my fag at Charterhouse, and whom I have never
+seen since.
+
+Punch and cigars _al fresco_ up to eleven o'clock.
+
+Letters to-day from Wills & Co. about their little bill forwarded on
+from Delhi. Thought a campaign freed a man from these annoyances. Wills
+says in his note that, since his written applications have been in
+vain, he must call upon me in person. If he calls upon me now he will
+assuredly be the boldest and most persevering of tailors.
+
+A line from Calcutta Daisy and another from Hobhouse to say that Matilda
+comes in for all the money under the will. I am glad of it.
+
+October 3.--Glorious news from the Front today. Barclay, of the Madras
+Cavalry, galloped through with dispatches. Pollock entered Cabul
+triumphantly on the 16th of last month, and, better still, Lady Sale
+has been rescued by Shakespear, and brought safe into the British camp,
+together with the other hostages. _Te Deum laudamus!_
+
+This should end the whole wretched business--this and the sack of the
+city. I hope Pollock won't be squeamish, or truckle to the hysterical
+party at home. The towns should be laid in ashes and the fields sown
+with salt. Above all, the Residency and the Palace must come down. So
+shall Burnes, McNaghten, and many another gallant fellow know that his
+countrymen could avenge if they could not save him!
+
+It is hard when others are gaining glory and experience to be stuck in
+this miserable valley. I have been out of it completely, bar a few petty
+skirmishes. However, we may see some service yet.
+
+A jemidar of ours brought in a Hillman today, who says that the tribes
+are massing in the Terada ravine, ten miles to the north of us, and
+intend attacking the next convoy. We can't rely on information of this
+sort, but there may prove to be some truth in it. Proposed to shoot our
+informant, so as to prevent his playing the double traitor and reporting
+our proceedings. Elliott demurred.
+
+If you are making war you should throw no chance away. I hate
+half-and-half measures. The Children of Israel seem to have been the
+only people who ever carried war to its logical conclusion--except
+Cromwell in Ireland. Made a compromise at last by which the man is to
+be detained as a prisoner and executed if his information prove to be
+false. I only hope we get a fair chance of showing what we can do.
+
+No doubt these fellows at the Front will have C.B.'s and knighthoods
+showering upon them thick and fast, while we poor devils, who have had
+most of the responsibility and anxiety, will be passed over completely.
+Elliott has a whitlow.
+
+The last convoy left us a large packet of sauces, but as they forgot to
+leave anything to eat with them, we have handed them over to the Sowars,
+who drink them out of their pannikins as if they were liqueurs. We hear
+that another large convoy may be expected from the plains in the course
+of a day or two. Took nine to four on Cleopatra for the Calcutta Cup.
+
+October 4.--The Hillmen really mean business this time, I think. We have
+had two of our spies come in this morning with the same account about
+the gathering in the Terada quarter. That old rascal Zemaun is at the
+head of it, and I had recommended the Government to present him with
+a telescope in return for his neutrality! There will be no Zemaun to
+present it to if I can but lay hands upon him.
+
+We expect the convoy tomorrow morning, and need anticipate no attack
+until it comes up, for these fellows fight for plunder, not for glory,
+though, to do them justice, they have plenty of pluck when they get
+started. I have devised an excellent plan, and it has Elliott's hearty
+support. By Jove! if we can only manage it, it will be as pretty a ruse
+as ever I heard of.
+
+Our intention is to give out that we are going down the valley to meet
+the convoy and to block the mouth of a pass from which we profess to
+expect an attack. Very good. We shall make a night-march to-night and
+reach their camp. Once there I shall conceal my two hundred men in the
+waggons and travel up with the convoy again.
+
+Our friends the enemy, having heard that we intended to go south, and
+seeing the caravan going north without us, will naturally swoop down
+upon it under the impression that we are twenty miles away. We shall
+teach them such a lesson that they would as soon think of stopping a
+thunderbolt as of interfering again with one of Her Britannic Majesty's
+provision trains. I am all on thorns to be off.
+
+Elliott has rigged up two of his guns so ingeniously that they look more
+like costermongers' barrows than anything else. To see artillery ready
+for action in the convoy might arouse suspicion. The artillerymen will
+be in the waggons next the guns, all ready to unlimber and open fire.
+Infantry in front and rear. Have told our confidential and discreet
+Sepoy servants the plan which we do not intend to adopt. N.B.--If you
+wish a thing to be noised over a whole province always whisper it under
+a vow of secrecy to your confidential native servant.
+
+8.45 P.M.--Just starting for the convoy. May luck go with us!
+
+October 5.--Seven o'clock in the evening. _Io triumphe!_ Crown us with
+laurel--Elliott and myself! Who can compare with us as vermin killers?
+
+I have only just got back, tired and weary, stained with blood and
+dust, but I have sat down before either washing or changing to have the
+satisfaction of seeing our deeds set forth in black and white--if only
+in my private log for no eye but my own. I shall describe it all fully
+as a preparation for an official account, which must be drawn up when
+Elliott gets back. Billy Dawson used to say that there were three
+degrees of comparison--a prevarication, a lie, and an official account.
+We at least cannot exaggerate our success, for it would be impossible to
+add anything to it.
+
+We set out, then, as per programme, and came upon the camp near the head
+of the valley. They had two weak companies of the 54th with them who
+might no doubt have held their own with warning, but an unexpected rush
+of wild Hillmen is a very difficult thing to stand against. With our
+reinforcements, however, and on our guard, we might defy the rascals.
+
+Chamberlain was in command--a fine young fellow. We soon made him
+understand the situation, and were all ready for a start by daybreak
+though his waggons were so full that we were compelled to leave several
+tons of fodder behind in order to make room for my Sepoys and for the
+artillery.
+
+About five o'clock we inspanned, to use an Africanism, and by six we
+were well on our way, with our escort as straggling and unconcerned as
+possible--as helpless-looking a caravan as ever invited attack.
+
+I could soon see that it was to be no false alarm this time, and that
+the tribes really meant business.
+
+From my post of observation, under the canvas screens of one of the
+waggons, I could make out turbaned heads popping up to have a look at
+us from among the rocks, and an occasional scout hurrying northward with
+the news of our approach.
+
+It was not, however, until we came abreast of the Terada Pass, a gloomy
+defile bounded by gigantic cliffs, that the Afridis began to show in
+force, though they had ambushed themselves so cleverly that, had we not
+been keenly on the look-out for them, we might have walked right into
+the trap. As it was, the convoy halted, upon which the Hillmen, seeing
+that they were observed, opened a heavy but ill-directed fire upon us.
+
+I had asked Chamberlain to throw out his men in skirmishing order, and
+to give them directions to retreat slowly upon the waggons so as to draw
+the Afridis on. The ruse succeeded to perfection.
+
+As the redcoats steadily retired, keeping behind cover as much as
+possible, the enemy followed them up with yells of exultation, springing
+from rock to rock, waving their jezails in the air, and howling like a
+pack of demons.
+
+With their black, contorted, mocking faces, their fierce gestures, and
+their fluttering garments, they would have made a study for any painter
+who wished to portray Milton's conception of the army of the damned.
+
+From every side they pressed in until, seeing, as they thought, nothing
+between them and victory, they left the shelter of the rocks and came
+rushing down, a furious, howling throng, with the green banner of the
+Prophet in their van.
+
+Now was our chance, and gloriously we utilised it.
+
+From every cranny and slit of the waggons came a blaze of fire, every
+shot of which told among the close-packed mob. Two or three score rolled
+over like rabbits and the rest reeled for a moment, and then, with their
+chiefs at their head, came on again in a magnificent rush.
+
+It was useless, however, for undisciplined men to attempt to face such a
+well-directed fire. The leaders were bowled over, and the others, after
+hesitating for a few moments, turned and made for the rocks.
+
+It was our turn now to assume the offensive. The guns were unlimbered
+and grape poured into them, while our little infantry force advanced at
+the double, shooting and stabbing all whom they overtook.
+
+Never had I known the tide of battle turn so rapidly and so decisively.
+The sullen retreat became a flight, and the flight a panic-stricken
+rout, until there was nothing left of the tribesmen except a scattered,
+demoralised rabble flying wildly to their native fastnesses for shelter
+and protection.
+
+I was by no means inclined to let them off cheaply now that I had them
+in my power. On the contrary, I determined to teach them such a lesson
+that the sight of a single scarlet uniform would in future be a passport
+in itself.
+
+We followed hard upon the track of the fugitives and entered the Terada
+defile at their very heels. Having detached Chamberlain and Elliott with
+a company on either side to protect my wings, I pushed on with my Sepoys
+and a handful of artillerymen, giving the enemy no time to rally or
+to recover themselves. We were so handicapped, however, by our stiff
+European uniforms and by our want of practice in climbing, that we
+should have been unable to overtake any of the mountaineers had it not
+been for a fortunate accident.
+
+There is a smaller ravine which opens into the main pass, and in their
+hurry and confusion some of the fugitives rushed down this. I saw sixty
+or seventy of them turn down, but I should have passed them by and
+continued in pursuit of the main body had not one of my scouts come
+rustling up to inform me that the smaller ravine was a _cul-de-sac_, and
+that the Afridis who had gone up it had no possible means of getting out
+again except by cutting their way through our ranks.
+
+Here was an opportunity of striking terror into the tribes. Leaving
+Chamberlain and Elliott to continue the pursuit of the main body, I
+wheeled my Sepoys into the narrow path and proceeded slowly down it in
+extended order, covering the whole ground from cliff to cliff. Not a
+jackal could have passed us unseen. The rebels were caught like rats in
+a trap.
+
+The defile in which we found ourselves was the most gloomy and majestic
+that I have ever seen. On either side naked precipices rose sheer up
+for a thousand feet or more, converging upon each other so as to leave a
+very narrow slit of daylight above us, which was further reduced by the
+feathery fringe of palm trees and aloes which hung over each lip of the
+chasm.
+
+The cliffs were not more than a couple of hundred yards apart at the
+entrance, but as we advanced they grew nearer and nearer, until a half
+company in close order could hardly march abreast.
+
+A sort of twilight reigned in this strange valley, and the dim,
+uncertain light made the great, basalt rocks loom up vague and
+fantastic. There was no path, and the ground was most uneven, but I
+pushed on briskly, cautioning my fellows to have their fingers on their
+triggers, for I could see that we were nearing the point where the two
+cliffs would form an acute angle with each other.
+
+At last we came in sight of the place. A great pile of boulders was
+heaped up at the very end of the pass, and among these our fugitives
+were skulking, entirely demoralised apparently, and incapable of
+resistance. They were useless as prisoners, and it was out of the
+question to let them go, so there was no choice but to polish them off.
+
+Waving my sword, I was leading my men on, when we had a most dramatic
+interruption of a sort which I have seen once or twice on the boards of
+Drury Lane, but never in real life.
+
+In the side of the cliff, close to the pile of stones where the Hillmen
+were making their last stand, there was a cave which looked more like
+the lair of some wild beast than a human habitation.
+
+Out of this dark archway there suddenly emerged an old man--such a
+very, very old man that all the other veterans whom I have seen were
+as chickens compared with him. His hair and beard were both as white
+as snow, and each reached more than half-way to his waist. His face was
+wrinkled and brown and ebony, a cross between a monkey and a mummy, and
+so thin and emaciated were his shrivelled limbs that you would hardly
+have given him credit for having any vitality left, were it not for his
+eyes, which glittered and sparkled with excitement, like two diamonds in
+a setting of mahogany.
+
+This apparition came rushing out of the cave, and, throwing himself
+between the fugitives and our fellows, motioned us back with as
+imperious a sweep of the hand as ever an emperor used to his slaves.
+
+“Men of blood,” he cried, in a voice of thunder, speaking excellent
+English, too--“this is a place for prayer and meditation, not for
+murder. Desist, lest the wrath of the gods fall upon you.”
+
+“Stand aside, old man,” I shouted. “You will meet with a hurt if you
+don't get out of the way.”
+
+I could see that the Hillmen were taking heart, and that some of
+my Sepoys were flinching, as if they did not relish this new enemy.
+Clearly, I must act promptly if I wished to complete our success.
+
+I dashed forward at the head of the white artillerymen who had stuck to
+me. The old fellow rushed at us with his arms out as if to stop us, but
+it was not time to stick at trifles, so I passed my sword through his
+body at the same moment that one of the gunners brought his carbine down
+upon his head. He dropped instantly, and the Hillmen, at the sight of
+his fall, set up the most unearthly howl of horror and consternation.
+
+The Sepoys, who had been inclined to hang back, came on again the
+moment he was disposed of, and it did not take us long to consummate our
+victory. Hardly a man of the enemy got out of the defile alive.
+
+What could Hannibal or Caesar have done more? Our own loss in the whole
+affair has been insignificant--three killed and about fifteen wounded.
+Got their banner, a green wisp of a thing with a sentence of the Koran
+engraved upon it.
+
+I looked, after the action, for the old chap, but his body had
+disappeared, though how or whither I have no conception. His blood be
+upon his own head! He would be alive now if he had not interfered, as
+the constables say at home, “with an officer in the execution of his
+duty.”
+
+The scouts tell me that his name was Ghoolab Shah, and that he was one
+of the highest and holiest of the Buddhists. He had great fame in the
+district as a prophet and worker of miracles--hence the hubbub when he
+was cut down. They tell me that he was living in this very cave when
+Tamerlane passed this way in 1399, with a lot more bosh of that sort.
+
+I went into the cave, and how any man could live in it a week is a
+mystery to me, for it was little more than four feet high, and as damp
+and dismal a grotto as ever was seen. A wooden settle and a rough
+table were the sole furniture, with a lot of parchment scrolls with
+hieroglyphics.
+
+Well, he has gone where he will learn that the gospel of peace and good
+will is superior to all his Pagan lore. Peace go with him.
+
+Elliott and Chamberlain never caught the main body--I knew they
+wouldn't--so the honours of the day rest with me. I ought to get a step
+for it, anyhow, and perhaps, who knows? some mention in the _Gazette_.
+What a lucky chance! I think Zemaun deserves his telescope after all for
+giving it to me. Shall have something to eat now, for I am half starved.
+Glory is an excellent thing, but you cannot live upon it.
+
+October 6, 11 A.M.--Let me try to set down as calmly and as accurately
+as I can all that occurred last night. I have never been a dreamer or
+a visionary, so I can rely upon my own senses, though I am bound to
+say that if any other fellow had told me the same thing I should have
+doubted him. I might even have suspected that I was deceived at the time
+had I not heard the bell since. However, I must narrate what happened.
+
+Elliott was in my tent with me having a quiet cheroot until about ten
+o'clock. I then walked the rounds with my jemidar, and having seen that
+all was right I turned in a little before eleven.
+
+I was just dropping off to sleep, for I was dog-tired after the day's
+work, when I was aroused by some slight noise, and, looking round, I saw
+a man dressed in Asiatic costume standing at the entrance of my tent. He
+was motionless when I saw him, and he had his eyes fixed upon me with a
+solemn and stern expression.
+
+My first thought was that the fellow was some Ghazi or Afghan fanatic
+who had stolen in with the intention of stabbing me, and with this idea
+in my mind I had all the will to spring from my couch and defend myself,
+but the power was unaccountably lacking.
+
+An overpowering languor and want of energy possessed me. Had I seen
+the dagger descending upon my breast I could not have made an effort
+to avert it. I suppose a bird when it is under the influence of a snake
+feels very much as I did in the presence of this gloomy-faced stranger.
+My mind was clear enough, but my body was as torpid as though I were
+still asleep.
+
+I shut my eyes once or twice and tried to persuade myself that the whole
+thing was a delusion, but every time that I opened them there was the
+man still regarding me with the same stony, menacing stare.
+
+The silence became unendurable. I felt that I must overcome my languor
+so far as to address him. I am not a nervous man, and I never knew
+before what Virgil meant when he wrote “adhoesit faucibus ora.” At last
+I managed to stammer out a few words, asking the intruder who he was and
+what he wanted.
+
+“Lieutenant Heatherstone,” he answered, speaking slowly and gravely,
+“you have committed this day the foulest sacrilege and the greatest
+crime which it is possible for man to do. You have slain one of the
+thrice blessed and reverend ones, an arch adept of the first degree, an
+elder brother who has trod the higher path for more years than you
+have numbered months. You have cut him off at a time when his labours
+promised to reach a climax and when he was about to attain a height of
+occult knowledge which would have brought man one step nearer to his
+Creator. All this you have done without excuse, without provocation, at
+a time when he was pleading the cause of the helpless and distressed.
+Listen now to me, John Heatherstone.
+
+“When first the occult sciences were pursued many thousands of years
+ago, it was found by the learned that the short tenure of human
+existence was too limited to allow a man to attain the loftiest heights
+of inner life. The inquirers of those days directed their energies in
+the first place, therefore, to the lengthening of their own days in
+order that they might have more scope for improvement.
+
+“By their knowledge of the secret laws of Nature they were enabled to
+fortify their bodies against disease and old age. It only remained to
+protect themselves against the assaults of wicked and violent men who
+are ever ready to destroy what is wiser and nobler than themselves.
+There was no direct means by which this protection could be effected,
+but it was in some measure attained by arranging the occult forces in
+such a way that a terrible and unavoidable retribution should await the
+offender.
+
+“It was irrevocably ordained by laws which cannot be reversed that any
+one who should shed the blood of a brother who had attained a certain
+degree of sanctity should be a doomed man. Those laws are extant to this
+day, John Heatherstone, and you have placed yourself in their power.
+King or emperor would be helpless before the forces which you have
+called into play. What hope, then, is there for you?
+
+“In former days these laws acted so instantaneously that the slayer
+perished with his victim. It was judged afterwards that this prompt
+retribution prevented the offender from having time to realise the
+enormity of his offence.
+
+“It was therefore ordained that in all such cases the retribution should
+be left in the hands of the _chelas_, or immediate disciples of the
+holy man, with power to extend or shorten it at their will, exacting
+it either at the time or at any future anniversary of the day when the
+crime was committed.
+
+“Why punishment should come on those days only it does not concern
+you to know. Suffice it that you are the murderer of Ghoolab Shah,
+the thrice blessed, and that I am the senior of his three _chelas_
+commissioned to avenge his death.
+
+“It is no personal matter between us. Amid our studies we have no
+leisure or inclination for personal matters. It is an immutable law, and
+it is as impossible for us to relax it as it is for you to escape from
+it. Sooner or later we shall come to you and claim your life in atonement
+for the one which you have taken.
+
+“The same fate shall be meted out to the wretched soldier, Smith, who,
+though less guilty than yourself, has incurred the same penalty by
+raising his sacrilegious hand against the chosen of Buddha. If your
+life is prolonged, it is merely that you may have time to repent of your
+misdeed and to feel the full force of your punishment.
+
+“And lest you should be tempted to cast it out of your mind and to
+forget it, our bell--our astral bell, the use of which is one of our
+occult secrets--shall ever remind you of what have been and what is to
+be. You shall hear it by day and you shall hear it by night, and it will
+be a sign to you that do what you may and go where you will, you can
+never shake yourself clear of the _chelas_ of Ghoolab Shah.
+
+“You will never see me more, accursed one, until the day when we come
+for you. Live in fear, and in that anticipation which is worse than
+death.”
+
+With a menacing wave of the hand the figure turned and swept out of my
+tent into the darkness. The instant that the fellow disappeared from my
+sight I recovered from my lethargy which had fallen upon me. Springing
+to my feet, I rushed to the opening and looked out. A Sepoy sentry was
+standing leaning upon his musket, a few paces off.
+
+“You dog,” I said in Hindustani. “What do you mean by letting people
+disturb me in this way?”
+
+The man stared at me in amazement. “Has any one disturbed the sahib?” he
+asked.
+
+“This instant--this moment. You must have seen him pass out of my tent.”
+
+“Surely the Burra Sahib is mistaken,” the man answered, respectfully but
+firmly. “I have been here for an hour, and no one has passed from the
+tent.”
+
+Puzzled and disconcerted, I was sitting by the side of my couch
+wondering whether the whole thing were a delusion, brought on by the
+nervous excitement of our skirmish, when a new marvel overtook me. From
+over my head there suddenly sounded a sharp, tinkling sound, like that
+produced by an empty glass when flipped by the nail, only louder and
+more intense.
+
+I looked up, but nothing was to be seen. I examined the whole interior
+of the tent carefully, but without discovering any cause for the strange
+sound. At last, worn out with fatigue, I gave the mystery up, and
+throwing myself on the couch was soon fast asleep.
+
+When I awoke this morning I was inclined to put the whole of my
+yesternight's experiences down to imagination, but I was soon disabused
+of the idea, for I had hardly risen before the same strange sound was
+repeated in my very ear as loudly, and to all appearance as causelesly,
+as before. What it is or where it comes from I cannot conceive. I have
+not heard it since.
+
+Can the fellow's threats have something in them and this be the warning
+bell of which he spoke? Surely it is impossible. Yet his manner was
+indescribably impressive.
+
+I have tried to set down what he said as accurately as I can, but I
+fear I have omitted a good deal. What is to be the end of this strange
+affair? I must go in for a course of religion and holy water. Not a word
+to Chamberlain or Elliott. They tell me I am looking like a ghost this
+morning.
+
+_Evening_.--Have managed to compare notes with Gunner Rufus Smith of the
+Artillery, who knocked the old fellow over with the butt of his gun. His
+experience has been the same as mine. He has heard the sound, too. What
+is the meaning of it all? My brain is in a whirl.
+
+Oct. 10 (four days later).--God help us!
+
+This last laconic entry terminated the journal. It seemed to me that,
+coming as it did after four days' complete silence, it told a clearer
+tale of shaken nerve and a broken spirit than could any more elaborate
+narrative. Pinned on to the journal was a supplementary statement which
+had evidently been recently added by the general.
+
+“From that day to this,” it said, “I have had no night or day free from
+the intrusion of that dreadful sound with its accompanying train of
+thought. Time and custom have brought me no relief, but on the contrary,
+as the years pass over my head my physical strength decreases and my
+nerves become less able to bear up against the continual strain.
+
+“I am a broken man in mind and body. I live in a state of tension,
+always straining my ears for the hated sound, afraid to converse with
+my fellows for fear of exposing my dreadful condition to them, with
+no comfort or hope of comfort on this side of the grave. I should be
+willing, Heaven knows, to die, and yet as each 5th of October comes
+round, I am prostrated with fear because I do not know what strange and
+terrible experience may be in store for me.
+
+“Forty years have passed since I slew Ghoolab Shah, and forty times
+I have gone through all the horrors of death, without attaining the
+blessed peace which lies beyond.
+
+“I have no means of knowing in what shape my fate will come upon me. I
+have immured myself in this lonely country, and surrounded myself with
+barriers, because in my weaker moments my instincts urge me to take some
+steps for self-protection, but I know well in my heart how futile it
+all is. They must come quickly now, for I grow old, and Nature will
+forestall them unless they make haste.
+
+“I take credit to myself that I have kept my hands off the prussic-acid
+or opium bottle. It has always been in my power to checkmate my occult
+persecutors in that way, but I have ever held that a man in this world
+cannot desert his post until he has been relieved in due course by the
+authorities. I have had no scruples, however, about exposing myself to
+danger, and, during the Sikh and Sepoy wars, I did all that a man could
+do to court Death. He passed me by, however, and picked out many a young
+fellow to whom life was only opening and who had everything to live for,
+while I survived to win crosses and honours which had lost all relish
+for me.
+
+“Well, well, these things cannot depend upon chance, and there is no
+doubt some deep reason for it all.
+
+“One compensation Providence has made me in the shape of a true and
+faithful wife, to whom I told my dreadful secret before the wedding, and
+who nobly consented to share my lot. She has lifted half the burden from
+my shoulders, but with the effect, poor soul, of crushing her own life
+beneath its weight!
+
+“My children, too, have been a comfort to me. Mordaunt knows all, or
+nearly all. Gabriel we have endeavoured to keep in the dark, though we
+cannot prevent her from knowing that there is something amiss.
+
+“I should like this statement to be shown to Dr. John Easterling
+of Stranraer. He heard on one occasion this haunting sound. My sad
+experience may show him that I spoke truth when I said that there was
+much knowledge in the world which has never found its way to England.
+
+“J. B. HEATHERSTONE.”
+
+It was going on for dawn by the time that I had finished this
+extraordinary narrative, to which my sister and Mordaunt Heatherstone
+listened with the most absorbed attention. Already we could see through
+the window that the stars had begun to fade and a grey light to appear
+in the east. The crofter who owned the lurcher dog lived a couple of
+miles off, so it was time for us to be on foot. Leaving Esther to tell
+my father the story in such fashion as she might, we thrust some food in
+our pockets and set off upon our solemn and eventful errand.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+AT THE HOLE OF CREE
+
+
+It was dark enough when we started to make it no easy matter to find our
+way across the moors, but as we advanced it grew lighter and lighter,
+until by the time we reached Fullarton's cabin it was broad daylight.
+
+Early as it was, he was up and about, for the Wigtown peasants are an
+early rising race. We explained our mission to him in as few words as
+possible, and having made his bargain--what Scot ever neglected that
+preliminary?--he agreed not only to let us have the use of his dog but
+to come with us himself.
+
+Mordaunt, in his desire for privacy, would have demurred at this
+arrangement, but I pointed out to him that we had no idea what was in
+store for us, and the addition of a strong, able-bodied man to our party
+might prove to be of the utmost consequence.
+
+Again, the dog was less likely to give us trouble if we had its master
+to control it. My arguments carried the day, and the biped accompanied
+us as well as his four-footed companion.
+
+There was some little similarity between the two, for the man was a
+towsy-headed fellow with a great mop of yellow hair and a straggling
+beard, while the dog was of the long-haired, unkempt breed looking like
+an animated bundle of oakum.
+
+All our way to the Hall its owner kept retailing instances of the
+creature's sagacity and powers of scent, which, according to his
+account, were little less than miraculous. His anecdotes had a poor
+audience, I fear, for my mind was filled with the strange story which I
+had been reading, while Mordaunt strode on with wild eyes and feverish
+cheeks, without a thought for anything but the problem which we had to
+solve.
+
+Again and again as we topped an eminence I saw him look eagerly round
+him in the faint hope of seeing some trace of the absentee, but over the
+whole expanse of moorland there was no sign of movement or of life. All
+was dead and silent and deserted.
+
+Our visit to the Hall was a very brief one, for every minute now was
+of importance. Mordaunt rushed in and emerged with an old coat of his
+father's, which he handed to Fullarton, who held it out to the dog.
+
+The intelligent brute sniffed at it all over, then ran whining a little
+way down the avenue, came back to sniff the coat again, and finally
+elevating its stump of a tail in triumph, uttered a succession of sharp
+yelps to show that it was satisfied that it had struck the trail. Its
+owner tied a long cord to its collar to prevent it from going too fast
+for us, and we all set off upon our search, the dog tugging and
+straining at its leash in its excitement as it followed in the general's
+footsteps.
+
+Our way lay for a couple of hundred yards along the high road, and then
+passed through a gap in the hedge and on to the moor, across which we
+were led in a bee-line to the northward.
+
+The sun had by this time risen above the horizon, and the whole
+countryside looked so fresh and sweet, from the blue, sparkling sea to
+the purple mountains, that it was difficult to realise how weird and
+uncanny was the enterprise upon which we were engaged.
+
+The scent must have lain strongly upon the ground, for the dog never
+hesitated nor stopped, dragging its master along at a pace which
+rendered conversation impossible.
+
+At one place, in crossing a small stream, we seemed to get off the trail
+for a few minutes, but our keen-nosed ally soon picked it up on the
+other side and followed it over the trackless moor, whining and yelping
+all the time in its eagerness. Had we not all three been fleet of foot
+and long of wind, we could not have persisted in the continuous, rapid
+journey over the roughest of ground, with the heather often well-nigh up
+to our waists.
+
+For my own part, I have no idea now, looking back, what goal it was
+which I expected to reach at the end of our pursuit. I can remember that
+my mind was full of the vaguest and most varying speculations.
+
+Could it be that the three Buddhists had had a craft in readiness off
+the coast, and had embarked with their prisoners for the East? The
+direction of their track seemed at first to favour this supposition,
+for it lay in the line of the upper end of the bay, but it ended by
+branching off and striking directly inland. Clearly the ocean was not to
+be our terminus.
+
+By ten o'clock we had walked close upon twelve miles, and were compelled
+to call a halt for a few minutes to recover our breath, for the last
+mile or two we had been breasting the long, wearying slope of the
+Wigtown hills.
+
+From the summit of this range, which is nowhere more than a thousand
+feet in height, we could see, looking northward, such a scene of
+bleakness and desolation as can hardly be matched in any country.
+
+Right away to the horizon stretched the broad expanse of mud and of
+water, mingled and mixed together in the wildest chaos, like a portion
+of some world in the process of formation. Here and there on the
+dun-coloured surface of this great marsh there had burst out patches of
+sickly yellow reeds and of livid, greenish scum, which only served
+to heighten and intensify the gloomy effect of the dull, melancholy
+expanse.
+
+On the side nearest to us some abandoned peat-cuttings showed that
+ubiquitous man had been at work there, but beyond these few petty scars
+there was no sign anywhere of human life. Not even a crow nor a seagull
+flapped its way over that hideous desert.
+
+This is the great Bog of Cree. It is a salt-water marsh formed by an
+inroad of the sea, and so intersected is it with dangerous swamps and
+treacherous pitfalls of liquid mud, that no man would venture through
+it unless he had the guidance of one of the few peasants who retain the
+secret of its paths.
+
+As we approached the fringe of rushes which marked its border, a foul,
+dank smell rose up from the stagnant wilderness, as from impure water
+and decaying vegetation--an earthy, noisome smell which poisoned the
+fresh upland air.
+
+So forbidding and gloomy was the aspect of the place that our stout
+crofter hesitated, and it was all that we could do to persuade him
+to proceed. Our lurcher, however, not being subject to the delicate
+impressions of our higher organisation, still ran yelping along with its
+nose on the ground and every fibre of its body quivering with excitement
+and eagerness.
+
+There was no difficulty about picking our way through the morass, for
+wherever the five could go we three could follow.
+
+If we could have had any doubts as to our dog's guidance they would
+all have been removed now, for in the soft, black, oozing soil we could
+distinctly trace the tracks of the whole party. From these we could
+see that they had walked abreast, and, furthermore, that each was about
+equidistant from the other. Clearly, then, no physical force had been
+used in taking the general and his companion along. The compulsion had
+been psychical and not material.
+
+Once within the swamp, we had to be careful not to deviate from the
+narrow track, which offered a firm foothold.
+
+On each side lay shallow sheets of stagnant water overlying a
+treacherous bottom of semi-fluid mud, which rose above the surface
+here and there in moist, sweltering banks, mottled over with occasional
+patches of unhealthy vegetation. Great purple and yellow fungi had
+broken out in a dense eruption, as though Nature were afflicted with a
+foul disease, which manifested itself by this crop of plague spots.
+
+Here and there dark, crab-like creatures scuttled across our path,
+and hideous, flesh-coloured worms wriggled and writhed amid the sickly
+reeds. Swarms of buzzing, piping insects rose up at every step and
+formed a dense cloud around our heads, settling on our hands and faces
+and inoculating us with their filthy venom. Never had I ventured into so
+pestilent and forbidding a place.
+
+Mordaunt Heatherstone strode on, however, with a set purpose upon his
+swarthy brow, and we could but follow him, determined to stand by him
+to the end of the adventure. As we advanced, the path grew narrower
+and narrower until, as we saw by the tracks, our predecessors had been
+compelled to walk in single file. Fullarton was leading us with the dog,
+Mordaunt behind him, while I brought up the rear. The peasant had been
+sulky and surly for a little time back, hardly answering when spoken to,
+but he now stopped short and positively refused to go a step farther.
+
+“It's no' canny,” he said, “besides I ken where it will lead us tae.”
+
+“Where, then?” I asked.
+
+“Tae the Hole o' Cree,” he answered. “It's no far frae here, I'm
+thinking.”
+
+“The Hole of Cree! What is that, then?”
+
+“It's a great, muckle hole in the ground that gangs awa' doon so deep
+that naebody could ever reach the bottom. Indeed there are folk wha says
+that it's just a door leadin' intae the bottomless pit itsel'.”
+
+“You have been there, then?” I asked.
+
+“Been there!” he cried. “What would I be doin' at the Hole o' Cree? No,
+I've never been there, nor any other man in his senses.”
+
+“How do you know about it, then?”
+
+“My great-grandfeyther had been there, and that's how I ken,” Fullarton
+answered. “He was fou' one Saturday nicht and he went for a bet. He
+didna like tae talk aboot it afterwards, and he wouldna tell a' what
+befell him, but he was aye feared o' the very name. He's the first
+Fullarton that's been at the Hole o' Cree, and he'll be the last for
+me. If ye'll tak' my advice ye'll just gie the matter up and gang hame
+again, for there's na guid tae be got oot o' this place.”
+
+“We shall go on with you or without you,” Mordaunt answered. “Let us
+have your dog and we can pick you up on our way back.”
+
+“Na, na,” he cried, “I'll no' hae my dog scaret wi' bogles, and running
+down Auld Nick as if he were a hare. The dog shall bide wi' me.”
+
+“The dog shall go with us,” said my companion, with his eyes blazing.
+“We have no time to argue with you. Here's a five-pound note. Let us
+have the dog, or, by Heaven, I shall take it by force and throw you in
+the bog if you hinder us.”
+
+I could realise the Heatherstone of forty years ago when I saw the
+fierce and sudden wrath which lit up the features of his son.
+
+Either the bribe or the threat had the desired effect, for the fellow
+grabbed at the money with one hand while with the other he surrendered
+the leash which held the lurcher. Leaving him to retrace his steps, we
+continued to make our way into the utmost recesses of the great swamp.
+
+The tortuous path grew less and less defined as we proceeded, and was
+even covered in places with water, but the increasing excitement of the
+hound and the sight of the deep footmarks in the mud stimulated us to
+push on. At last, after struggling through a grove of high bulrushes,
+we came on a spot the gloomy horror of which might have furnished Dante
+with a fresh terror for his “Inferno.”
+
+The whole bog in this part appeared to have sunk in, forming a great,
+funnel-shaped depression, which terminated in the centre in a circular
+rift or opening about forty feet in diameter. It was a whirlpool--a
+perfect maelstrom of mud, sloping down on every side to this silent and
+awful chasm.
+
+Clearly this was the spot which, under the name of the Hole of Cree,
+bore such a sinister reputation among the rustics. I could not wonder at
+its impressing their imagination, for a more weird or gloomy scene, or
+one more worthy of the avenue which led to it, could not be conceived.
+
+The steps passed down the declivity which surrounded the abyss, and we
+followed them with a sinking feeling in our hearts, as we realised that
+this was the end of our search.
+
+A little way from the downward path was the return trail made by the
+feet of those who had come back from the chasm's edge. Our eyes fell
+upon these tracks at the same moment, and we each gave a cry of horror,
+and stood gazing speechlessly at them. For there, in those blurred
+footmarks, the whole drama was revealed.
+
+_Five had gone down, but only three had returned_.
+
+None shall ever know the details of that strange tragedy. There was no
+mark of struggle nor sign of attempt at escape. We knelt at the edge of
+the Hole and endeavoured to pierce the unfathomable gloom which shrouded
+it. A faint, sickly exhalation seemed to rise from its depths, and there
+was a distant hurrying, clattering sound as of waters in the bowels of
+the earth.
+
+A great stone lay embedded in the mud, and this I hurled over, but we
+never heard thud or splash to show that it had reached the bottom.
+
+As we hung over the noisome chasm a sound did at last rise to our ears
+out of its murky depths. High, clear, and throbbing, it tinkled for an
+instant out of the abyss, to be succeeded by the same deadly stillness
+which had preceded it.
+
+I did not wish to appear superstitious, or to put down to extraordinary
+causes that which may have a natural explanation. That one keen note may
+have been some strange water sound produced far down in the bowels of
+the earth. It may have been that or it may have been that sinister bell
+of which I had heard so much. Be this as it may, it was the only sign
+that rose to us from the last terrible resting-place of the two who had
+paid the debt which had so long been owing.
+
+We joined our voices in a call with the unreasoning obstinacy with which
+men will cling to hope, but no answer came back to us save a hollow
+moaning from the depths beneath. Footsore and heart-sick, we retraced
+our steps and climbed the slimy slope once more.
+
+“What shall we do, Mordaunt?” I asked, in a subdued voice. “We can but
+pray that their souls may rest in peace.”
+
+Young Heatherstone looked at me with flashing eyes.
+
+“This may be all according to occult laws,” he cried, “but we shall see
+what the laws of England have to say upon it. I suppose a _chela_ may be
+hanged as well as any other man. It may not be too late yet to run them
+down. Here, good dog, good dog--here!”
+
+He pulled the hound over and set it on the track of the three men.
+The creature sniffed at it once or twice, and then, falling upon its
+stomach, with bristling hair and protruding tongue, it lay shivering and
+trembling, a very embodiment of canine terror.
+
+“You see,” I said, “it is no use contending against those who have
+powers at their command to which we cannot even give a name. There is
+nothing for it but to accept the inevitable, and to hope that these poor
+men may meet with some compensation in another world for all that they
+have suffered in this.”
+
+“And be free from all devilish religions and their murderous
+worshippers!” Mordaunt cried furiously.
+
+Justice compelled me to acknowledge in my own heart that the murderous
+spirit had been set on foot by the Christian before it was taken up by
+the Buddhists, but I forbore to remark upon it, for fear of irritating
+my companion.
+
+For a long time I could not draw him away from the scene of his father's
+death, but at last, by repeated arguments and reasonings, I succeeded in
+making him realise how useless and unprofitable any further efforts on
+our part must necessarily prove, and in inducing him to return with me
+to Cloomber.
+
+Oh, the wearisome, tedious journey! It had seemed long enough when we
+had some slight flicker of hope, or at least of expectation, before us,
+but now that our worst fears were fulfilled it appeared interminable.
+
+We picked up our peasant guide at the outskirts of the marsh, and having
+restored his dog we let him find his own way home, without telling him
+anything of the results of our expedition. We ourselves plodded all
+day over the moors with heavy feet and heavier hearts until we saw the
+ill-omened tower of Cloomber, and at last, as the sun was setting, found
+ourselves once more beneath its roof.
+
+There is no need for me to enter into further details, nor to describe
+the grief which our tidings conveyed to mother and to daughter. Their
+long expectation of some calamity was not sufficient to prepare them for
+the terrible reality.
+
+For weeks my poor Gabriel hovered between life and death, and though
+she came round at last, thanks to the nursing of my sister and the
+professional skill of Dr. John Easterling, she has never to this day
+entirely recovered her former vigour. Mordaunt, too, suffered much
+for some time, and it was only after our removal to Edinburgh that he
+rallied from the shock which he had undergone.
+
+As to poor Mrs. Heatherstone, neither medical attention nor change of
+air can ever have a permanent effect upon her. Slowly and surely, but
+very placidly, she has declined in health and strength, until it is
+evident that in a very few weeks at the most she will have rejoined her
+husband and restored to him the one thing which he must have grudged to
+leave behind.
+
+The Laird of Branksome came home from Italy restored in health, with the
+result that we were compelled to return once more to Edinburgh.
+
+The change was agreeable to us, for recent events had cast a cloud over
+our country life and had surrounded us with unpleasant associations.
+Besides, a highly honourable and remunerative appointment in connection
+with the University library had become vacant, and had, through the
+kindness of the late Sir Alexander Grant, been offered to my father,
+who, as may be imagined, lost no time in accepting so congenial a post.
+
+In this way we came back to Edinburgh very much more important people
+than we left it, and with no further reason to be uneasy about the
+details of housekeeping. But, in truth, the whole household has been
+dissolved, for I have been married for some months to my dear Gabriel,
+and Esther is to become Mrs. Heatherstone upon the 23rd of the month. If
+she makes him as good a wife as his sister has made me, we may both set
+ourselves down as fortunate men.
+
+These mere domestic episodes are, as I have already explained,
+introduced only because I cannot avoid alluding to them.
+
+My object in drawing up this statement and publishing the evidence which
+corroborates it, was certainly not to parade my private affairs before
+the public, but to leave on record an authentic narrative of a most
+remarkable series of events. This I have endeavoured to do in as
+methodical a manner as possible, exaggerating nothing and suppressing
+nothing.
+
+The reader has now the evidence before him, and can form his own
+opinions unaided by me as to the causes of the disappearance and death
+of Rufus Smith and of John Berthier Heatherstone, V.C., C.B.
+
+There is only one point which is still dark to me. Why the _chelas_ of
+Ghoolab Shah should have removed their victims to the desolate Hole of
+Cree instead of taking their lives at Cloomber, is, I confess, a mystery
+to me.
+
+In dealing with occult laws, however, we must allow for our own complete
+ignorance of the subject. Did we know more we might see that there was
+some analogy between that foul bog and the sacrilege which had been
+committed, and that their ritual and customs demanded that just such a
+death was the one appropriate to the crime.
+
+On this point I should be sorry to be dogmatic, but at least we must
+allow that the Buddhist priests must have had some very good cause for
+the course of action which they so deliberately carried out.
+
+Months afterwards I saw a short paragraph in the _Star of India_
+announcing that three eminent Buddhists--Lal Hoomi, Mowdar Khan, and Ram
+Singh--had just returned in the steamship _Deccan_ from a short trip
+to Europe. The very next item was devoted to an account of the life and
+services of Major-General Heatherstone, “who has lately disappeared from
+his country house in Wigtownshire, and who, there is too much reason to
+fear, has been drowned.”
+
+I wonder if by chance there was any other human eye but mine which
+traced a connection between these paragraphs. I never showed them to
+my wife or to Mordaunt, and they will only know of their existence when
+they read these pages.
+
+I don't know that there is any other point which needs clearing up. The
+intelligent reader will have already seen the reasons for the general's
+fear of dark faces, of wandering men (not knowing how his pursuers might
+come after him), and of visitors (from the same cause and because his
+hateful bell was liable to sound at all times).
+
+His broken sleep led him to wander about the house at night, and
+the lamps which he burnt in every room were no doubt to prevent his
+imagination from peopling the darkness with terrors. Lastly, his
+elaborate precautions were, as he has himself explained, rather the
+result of a feverish desire to do something than in the expectation that
+he could really ward off his fate.
+
+Science will tell you that there are no such powers as those claimed
+by the Eastern mystics. I, John Fothergill West, can confidently answer
+that science is wrong.
+
+For what is science? Science is the consensus of opinion of scientific
+men, and history has shown that it is slow to accept a truth. Science
+sneered at Newton for twenty years. Science proved mathematically that
+an iron ship could not swim, and science declared that a steamship could
+not cross the Atlantic.
+
+Like Goethe's Mephistopheles, our wise professor's forte is “stets
+verneinen.” Thomas Didymus is, to use his own jargon, his prototype. Let
+him learn that if he will but cease to believe in the infallibility
+of his own methods, and will look to the East, from which all great
+movements come, he will find there a school of philosophers and of
+savants who, working on different lines from his own, are many thousand
+years ahead of him in all the essentials of knowledge.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER ***
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Mystery of Cloomber, by Arthur Conan Doyle</title>
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Mystery of Cloomber, by Arthur Conan Doyle</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Mystery of Cloomber</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Arthur Conan Doyle</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 6, 2003 [eBook #7964]<br />
+[Last updated: July 18, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Lionel G. Sear and David Widger</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER ***</div>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:55%;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="[Illustration]" />
+</div>
+
+<h1>THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">By Arthur Conan Doyle</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table summary="" cellpadding="4">
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0001">CHAPTER I. THE HEGIRA OF THE WESTS FROM EDINBURGH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0002">CHAPTER II. OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH A TENANT CAME TO CLOOMBER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0003">CHAPTER III. OF OUR FURTHER ACQUAINTANCE WITH MAJOR-GENERAL J. B.HEATHERSTONE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0004">CHAPTER IV. OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A GREY HEAD</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0005">CHAPTER V. HOW FOUR OF US CAME TO BE UNDER THE SHADOW OF CLOOMBER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0006">CHAPTER VI. HOW I CAME TO BE ENLISTED AS ONE OF THE GARRISON OF CLOOMBER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0007">CHAPTER VII. OF CORPORAL RUFUS SMITH AND HIS COMING TO CLOOMBER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0008">CHAPTER VIII. STATEMENT OF ISRAEL STAKES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0009">CHAPTER IX. NARRATIVE OF JOHN EASTERLING, F.R.C.P.EDIN.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0010">CHAPTER X. OF THE LETTER WHICH CAME FROM THE HALL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0011">CHAPTER XI. OF THE CASTING AWAY OF THE BARQUE &ldquo;BELINDA&rdquo;</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0012">CHAPTER XII. OF THE THREE FOREIGN MEN UPON THE COAST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0013">CHAPTER XIII. IN WHICH I SEE THAT WHICH HAS BEEN SEEN BY FEW</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0014">CHAPTER XIV. OF THE VISITOR WHO RAN DOWN THE ROAD IN THE NIGHT-TIME</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0015">CHAPTER XV. THE DAY-BOOK OF JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="pdd"> <a href="#link2HCH0016">CHAPTER XVI. AT THE HOLE OF CREE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></a>
+CHAPTER I.<br />
+THE HEGIRA OF THE WESTS FROM EDINBURGH</h2>
+
+<p>
+I, John Fothergill West, student of law in the University of St. Andrews, have
+endeavoured in the ensuing pages to lay my statement before the public in a
+concise and business-like fashion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is not my wish to achieve literary success, nor have I any desire by the
+graces of my style, or by the artistic ordering of my incidents, to throw a
+deeper shadow over the strange passages of which I shall have to speak. My
+highest ambition is that those who know something of the matter should, after
+reading my account, be able to conscientiously indorse it without finding a
+single paragraph in which I have either added to or detracted from the truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Should I attain this result, I shall rest amply satisfied with the outcome of
+my first, and probably my last, venture in literature.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was my intention to write out the sequence of events in due order, depending
+on trustworthy hearsay when I was describing that which was beyond my own
+personal knowledge. I have now, however, through the kind cooperation of
+friends, hit upon a plan which promises to be less onerous to me and more
+satisfactory to the reader. This is nothing less than to make use of the
+various manuscripts which I have by me bearing upon the subject, and to add to
+them the first-hand evidence contributed by those who had the best
+opportunities of knowing Major-General J. B. Heatherstone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In pursuance of this design I shall lay before the public the testimony of
+Israel Stakes, formerly coachman at Cloomber Hall, and of John Easterling,
+F.R.C.P. Edin., now practising at Stranraer, in Wigtownshire. To these I shall
+add a verbatim account extracted from the journal of the late John Berthier
+Heatherstone, of the events which occurred in the Thul Valley in the autumn of
+'41 towards the end of the first Afghan War, with a description of the skirmish
+in the Terada defile, and of the death of the man Ghoolab Shah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To myself I reserve the duty of filling up all the gaps and chinks which may be
+left in the narrative. By this arrangement I have sunk from the position of an
+author to that of a compiler, but on the other hand my work has ceased to be a
+story and has expanded into a series of affidavits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My Father, John Hunter West, was a well known Oriental and Sanskrit scholar,
+and his name is still of weight with those who are interested in such matters.
+He it was who first after Sir William Jones called attention to the great value
+of early Persian literature, and his translations from the Hafiz and from
+Ferideddin Atar have earned the warmest commendations from the Baron von
+Hammer-Purgstall, of Vienna, and other distinguished Continental critics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the issue of the <i>Orientalisches Scienzblatt</i> for January, 1861, he is
+described as <i>&ldquo;Der beruhmte und sehr gelhernte Hunter West von
+Edinburgh&rdquo;</i>&mdash;a passage which I well remember that he cut out and
+stowed away, with a pardonable vanity, among the most revered family archives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been brought up to be a solicitor, or Writer to the Signet, as it is
+termed in Scotland, but his learned hobby absorbed so much of his time that he
+had little to devote to the pursuit of his profession.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When his clients were seeking him at his chambers in George Street, he was
+buried in the recesses of the Advocates' Library, or poring over some mouldy
+manuscript at the Philosophical Institution, with his brain more exercised over
+the code which Menu propounded six hundred years before the birth of Christ
+than over the knotty problems of Scottish law in the nineteenth century. Hence
+it can hardly be wondered at that as his learning accumulated his practice
+dissolved, until at the very moment when he had attained the zenith of his
+celebrity he had also reached the nadir of his fortunes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There being no chair of Sanscrit in any of his native universities, and no
+demand anywhere for the only mental wares which he had to dispose of, we should
+have been forced to retire into genteel poverty, consoling ourselves with the
+aphorisms and precepts of Firdousi, Omar Khayyam, and others of his Eastern
+favourites, had it not been for the kindness and liberality of his half-brother
+William Farintosh, the Laird of Branksome, in Wigtownshire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This William Farintosh was the proprietor of a landed estate, the acreage which
+bore, unfortunately, a most disproportional relation to its value, for it
+formed the bleakest and most barren tract of land in the whole of a bleak and
+barren shire. As a bachelor, however, his expenses had been small, and he had
+contrived from the rents of his scattered cottages, and the sale of the
+Galloway nags, which he bred upon the moors, not only to live as a laird
+should, but to put by a considerable sum in the bank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We had heard little from our kinsman during the days of our comparative
+prosperity, but just as we were at our wit's end, there came a letter like a
+ministering angel, giving us assurance of sympathy and succour. In it the Laird
+of Branksome told us that one of his lungs had been growing weaker for some
+time, and that Dr. Easterling, of Stranraer, had strongly advised him to spend
+the few years which were left to him in some more genial climate. He had
+determined, therefore to set out for the South of Italy, and he begged that we
+should take up our residence at Branksome in his absence, and that my father
+should act as his land steward and agent at a salary which placed us above all
+fear of want.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our mother had been dead for some years, so that there were only myself, my
+father, and my sister Esther to consult, and it may be readily imagined that it
+did not take us long to decide upon the acceptance of the laird's generous
+offer. My father started for Wigtown that very night, while Esther and I
+followed a few days afterwards, bearing with us two potato-sacksful of learned
+books, and such other of our household effects that were worth the trouble and
+expense of transport.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"></a>
+CHAPTER II.<br />
+OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH A TENANT CAME TO CLOOMBER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Branksome might have appeared a poor dwelling-place when compared with the
+house of an English squire, but to us, after our long residence in stuffy
+apartments, it was of regal magnificence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The building was broad-spread and low, with red-tiled roof, diamond-paned
+windows, and a profusion of dwelling rooms with smoke-blackened ceilings and
+oaken wainscots. In front was a small lawn, girt round with a thin fringe of
+haggard and ill grown beeches, all gnarled and withered from the effects of the
+sea-spray. Behind lay the scattered hamlet of Branksome-Bere&mdash;a dozen
+cottages at most&mdash;inhabited by rude fisher-folk who looked upon the laird
+as their natural protector.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the west was the broad, yellow beach and the Irish Sea, while in all other
+directions the desolate moors, greyish-green in the foreground and purple in
+the distance, stretched away in long, low curves to the horizon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very bleak and lonely it was upon this Wigtown coast. A man might walk many a
+weary mile and never see a living thing except the white, heavy-flapping
+kittiwakes, which screamed and cried to each other with their shrill, sad
+voices.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very lonely and very bleak! Once out of sight of Branksome and there was no
+sign of the works of man save only where the high, white tower of Cloomber Hall
+shot up, like a headstone of some giant grave, from amid the firs and larches
+which girt it round.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This great house, a mile or more from our dwelling, had been built by a wealthy
+Glasgow merchant of strange tastes and lonely habits, but at the time of our
+arrival it had been untenanted for many years, and stood with weather-blotched
+walls and vacant, staring windows looking blankly out over the hill side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Empty and mildewed, it served only as a landmark to the fishermen, for they had
+found by experience that by keeping the laird's chimney and the white tower of
+Cloomber in a line they could steer their way through the ugly reef which
+raises its jagged back, like that of some sleeping monster, above the troubled
+waters of the wind-swept bay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To this wild spot it was that Fate had brought my father, my sister, and
+myself. For us its loneliness had no terrors. After the hubbub and bustle of a
+great city, and the weary task of upholding appearances upon a slender income,
+there was a grand, soul-soothing serenity in the long sky-line and the eager
+air. Here at least there was no neighbour to pry and chatter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The laird had left his phaeton and two ponies behind him, with the aid of which
+my father and I would go the round of the estate doing such light duties as
+fall to an agent, or &ldquo;factor&rdquo; as it was there called, while our
+gentle Esther looked to our household needs, and brightened the dark old
+building.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was our simple, uneventful existence, until the summer night when an
+unlooked-for incident occurred which proved to be the herald of those strange
+doings which I have taken up my pen to describe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had been my habit to pull out of an evening in the laird's skiff and to
+catch a few whiting which might serve for our supper. On this well-remembered
+occasion my sister came with me, sitting with her book in the stern-sheets of
+the boat, while I hung my lines over the bows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun had sunk down behind the rugged Irish coast, but a long bank of flushed
+cloud still marked the spot, and cast a glory upon the waters. The whole broad
+ocean was seamed and scarred with crimson streaks. I had risen in the boat, and
+was gazing round in delight at the broad panorama of shore and sea and sky,
+when my sister plucked at my sleeve with a little, sharp cry of surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See, John,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;there is a light in Cloomber
+Tower!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned my head and stared back at the tall, white turret which peeped out
+above the belt of trees. As I gazed I distinctly saw at one of the windows the
+glint of a light, which suddenly vanished, and then shone out once more from
+another higher up. There it flickered for some time, and finally flashed past
+two successive windows underneath before the trees obscured our view of it. It
+was clear that some one bearing a lamp or a candle had climbed up the tower
+stairs and had then returned into the body of the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who in the world can it be?&rdquo; I exclaimed, speaking rather to
+myself than to Esther, for I could see by the surprise upon her face that she
+had no solution to offer. &ldquo;Maybe some of the folk from Branksome-Bere
+have wanted to look over the place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My sister shook her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is not one of them would dare to set foot within the avenue
+gates,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Besides, John, the keys are kept by the
+house-agent at Wigtown. Were they ever so curious, none of our people could
+find their way in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I reflected upon the massive door and ponderous shutters which guarded the
+lower storey of Cloomber, I could not but admit the force of my sister's
+objection. The untimely visitor must either have used considerable violence in
+order to force his way in, or he must have obtained possession of the keys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Piqued by the little mystery, I pulled for the beach, with the determination to
+see for myself who the intruder might be, and what were his intentions. Leaving
+my sister at Branksome, and summoning Seth Jamieson, an old man-o'-war's-man
+and one of the stoutest of the fishermen, I set off across the moor with him
+through the gathering darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It hasna a guid name after dark, yon hoose,&rdquo; remarked my
+companion, slackening his pace perceptibly as I explained to him the nature of
+our errand. &ldquo;It's no for naething that him wha owns it wunna gang within
+a Scotch mile o't.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Seth, there is some one who has no fears about going into
+it,&rdquo; said I, pointing to the great, white building which flickered up in
+front of us through the gloom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light which I had observed from the sea was moving backwards and forward
+past the lower floor windows, the shutters of which had been removed. I could
+now see that a second fainter light followed a few paces behind the other.
+Evidently two individuals, the one with a lamp and the other with a candle or
+rushlight, were making a careful examination of the building.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let ilka man blaw his ain parritch,&rdquo; said Seth Jamieson doggedly,
+coming to a dead stop. &ldquo;What is it tae us if a wraith or a bogle minds
+tae tak' a fancy tae Cloomber? It's no canny tae meddle wi' such things.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, man,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;you don't suppose a wraith came here in
+a gig? What are those lights away yonder by the avenue gates?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The lamps o' a gig, sure enough!&rdquo; exclaimed my companion in a less
+lugubrious voice. &ldquo;Let's steer for it, Master West, and speer where she
+hails frae.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By this time night had closed in save for a single long, narrow slit in the
+westward. Stumbling across the moor together, we made our way into the Wigtown
+Road, at the point where the high stone pillars mark the entrance to the
+Cloomber avenue. A tall dog-cart stood in front of the gateway, the horse
+browsing upon the thin border of grass which skirted the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's a' richt!&rdquo; said Jamieson, taking a close look at the deserted
+vehicle. &ldquo;I ken it weel. It belongs tae Maister McNeil, the factor body
+frae Wigtown&mdash;him wha keeps the keys.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then we may as well have speech with him now that we are here,&rdquo; I
+answered. &ldquo;They are coming down, if I am not mistaken.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I spoke we heard the slam of the heavy door and within a few minutes two
+figures, the one tall and angular, the other short and thick came towards us
+through the darkness. They were talking so earnestly that they did not observe
+us until they had passed through the avenue gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good evening, Mr. McNeil,&rdquo; said I, stepping forward and addressing
+the Wigtown factor, with whom I had some slight acquaintance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The smaller of the two turned his face towards me as I spoke, and showed me
+that I was not mistaken in his identity, but his taller companion sprang back
+and showed every sign of violent agitation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is this, McNeil?&rdquo; I heard him say, in a gasping, choking
+voice. &ldquo;Is this your promise? What is the meaning of it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't be alarmed, General! Don't be alarmed!&rdquo; said the little fat
+factor in a soothing fashion, as one might speak to a frightened child.
+&ldquo;This is young Mr. Fothergill West, of Branksome, though what brings him
+up here tonight is more than I can understand. However, as you are to be
+neighbours, I can't do better than take the opportunity to introduce you to
+each other. Mr. West, this is General Heatherstone, who is about to take a
+lease of Cloomber Hall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I held out my hand to the tall man, who took it in a hesitating, half-reluctant
+fashion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I came up,&rdquo; I explained, &ldquo;because I saw your lights in the
+windows, and I thought that something might be wrong. I am very glad I did so,
+since it has given me the chance of making the general's acquaintance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whilst I was talking, I was conscious that the new tenant of Cloomber Hall was
+peering at me very closely through the darkness. As I concluded, he stretched
+out a long, tremulous arm, and turned the gig-lamp in such a way as to throw a
+flood of light upon my face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good Heavens, McNeil!&rdquo; he cried, in the same quivering voice as
+before, &ldquo;the fellow's as brown as chocolate. He's not an Englishman.
+You're not an Englishman&mdash;you, sir?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm a Scotchman, born and bred,&rdquo; said I, with an inclination to
+laugh, which was only checked by my new acquaintance's obvious terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A Scotchman, eh?&rdquo; said he, with a sigh of relief. &ldquo;It's all
+one nowadays. You must excuse me, Mr.&mdash;Mr. West. I'm nervous, infernally
+nervous. Come along, McNeil, we must be back in Wigtown in less than an hour.
+Good-night, gentlemen, good-night!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two clambered into their places; the factor cracked his whip, and the high
+dog-cart clattered away through the darkness, casting a brilliant tunnel of
+yellow light on either side of it, until the rumble of its wheels died away in
+the distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you think of our new neighbour, Jamieson?&rdquo; I asked, after
+a long silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Deed, Mr. West, he seems, as he says himsel', to be vera nervous. Maybe
+his conscience is oot o' order.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;His liver, more likely,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;He looks as if he had
+tried his constitution a bit. But it's blowing chill, Seth, my lad, and it's
+time both of us were indoors.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I bade my companion good-night, and struck off across the moors for the cheery,
+ruddy light which marked the parlour windows of Branksome.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"></a>
+CHAPTER III.<br />
+OF OUR FURTHER ACQUAINTANCE WITH MAJOR-GENERAL J. B. HEATHERSTONE</h2>
+
+<p>
+There was, as may well be imagined, much stir amongst our small community at
+the news that the Hall was to be inhabited once more, and considerable
+speculation as to the new tenants, and their object in choosing this particular
+part of the country for their residence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It speedily became apparent that, whatever their motives might be, they had
+definitely determined upon a lengthy stay, for relays of plumbers and of
+joiners came down from Wigtown, and there was hammering and repairing going on
+from morning till night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was surprising how quickly the signs of the wind and weather were effaced,
+until the great, square-set house was all as spick-and-span as though it had
+been erected yesterday. There were abundant signs that money was no
+consideration to General Heatherstone, and that it was not on the score of
+retrenchment that he had taken up his abode among us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may be that he is devoted to study,&rdquo; suggested my father, as we
+discussed the question round the breakfast table. &ldquo;Perhaps he has chosen
+this secluded spot to finish some magnum opus upon which he is engaged. If that
+is the case I should be happy to let him have the run of my library.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Esther and I laughed at the grandiloquent manner in which he spoke of the two
+potato-sacksful of books.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may be as you say,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;but the general did not
+strike me during our short interview as being a man who was likely to have any
+very pronounced literary tastes. If I might hazard a guess, I should say that
+he is here upon medical advice, in the hope that the complete quiet and fresh
+air may restore his shattered nervous system. If you had seen how he glared at
+me, and the twitching of his fingers, you would have thought it needed some
+restoring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do wonder whether he has a wife and a family,&rdquo; said my sister.
+&ldquo;Poor souls, how lonely they will be! Why, excepting ourselves, there is
+not a family that they could speak to for seven miles and more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;General Heatherstone is a very distinguished soldier,&rdquo; remarked my
+father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, papa, however came you to know anything about him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, my dears,&rdquo; said my father, smiling at us over his coffee-cup,
+&ldquo;you were laughing at my library just now, but you see it may be very
+useful at times.&rdquo; As he spoke he took a red-covered volume from a shelf
+and turned over the pages. &ldquo;This is an Indian Army List of three years
+back,&rdquo; he explained, &ldquo;and here is the very gentleman we
+want&mdash;'Heatherstone, J. B., Commander of the Bath,' my dears, and 'V.C.', think
+of that, 'V.C.'&mdash;'formerly colonel in the Indian Infantry, 41st Bengal
+Foot, but now retired with the rank of major-general.' In this other column is
+a record of his services&mdash;'capture of Ghuznee and defence of Jellalabad,
+Sobraon 1848, Indian Mutiny and reduction of Oudh. Five times mentioned in
+dispatches.' I think, my dears, that we have cause to be proud of our new
+neighbour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It doesn't mention there whether he is married or not, I suppose?&rdquo;
+asked Esther.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said my father, wagging his white head with a keen
+appreciation of his own humour. &ldquo;It doesn't include that under the
+heading of 'daring actions'&mdash;though it very well might, my dear, it very
+well might.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All our doubts, however, upon this head were very soon set at rest, for on the
+very day that the repairing and the furnishing had been completed I had
+occasion to ride into Wigtown, and I met upon the way a carriage which was
+bearing General Heatherstone and his family to their new home. An elderly lady,
+worn and sickly-looking, was by his side, and opposite him sat a young fellow
+about my own age and a girl who appeared to be a couple of years younger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I raised my hat, and was about to pass them, when the general shouted to his
+coachman to pull up, and held out his hand to me. I could see now in the
+daylight that his face, although harsh and stern, was capable of assuming a not
+unkindly expression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How are you, Mr. Fothergill West?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I must
+apologise to you if I was a little brusque the other night&mdash;you will
+excuse an old soldier who has spent the best part of his life in
+harness&mdash;All the same, you must confess that you are rather dark-skinned
+for a Scotchman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have a Spanish strain in our blood,&rdquo; said I, wondering at his
+recurrence to the topic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That would, of course, account for it,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;My
+dear,&rdquo; to his wife, &ldquo;allow me to introduce Mr. Fothergill West to
+you. This is my son and my daughter. We have come here in search of rest, Mr.
+West&mdash;complete rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you could not possibly have come to a better place,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, you think so?&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I suppose it is very quiet
+indeed, and very lonely. You might walk through these country lanes at night, I
+dare say, and never meet a soul, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, there are not many about after dark,&rdquo; I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you are not much troubled with vagrants or wandering beggars, eh?
+Not many tinkers or tramps or rascally gipsies&mdash;no vermin of that sort
+about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I find it rather cold,&rdquo; said Mrs. Heatherstone, drawing her thick
+sealskin mantle tighter round her figure. &ldquo;We are detaining Mr. West,
+too.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So we are, my dear, so we are. Drive on, coachman. Good-day, Mr.
+West.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The carriage rattled away towards the Hall, and I trotted thoughtfully onwards
+to the little country metropolis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I passed up the High Street, Mr. McNeil ran out from his office and beckoned
+to me to stop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Our new tenants have gone out,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;They drove over
+this morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I met them on the way,&rdquo; I answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I looked down at the little factor, I could see that his face was flushed
+and that he bore every appearance of having had an extra glass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give me a real gentleman to do business with,&rdquo; he said, with a
+burst of laughter. &ldquo;They understand me and I understand them. 'What shall
+I fill it up for?' says the general, taking a blank cheque out o' his pouch and
+laying it on the table. 'Two hundred,' says I, leaving a bit o' a margin for my
+own time and trouble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought that the landlord had paid you for that,&rdquo; I remarked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aye, aye, but it's well to have a bit margin. He filled it up and threw
+it over to me as if it had been an auld postage stamp. That's the way business
+should be done between honest men&mdash;though it wouldna do if one was
+inclined to take an advantage. Will ye not come in, Mr. West, and have a taste
+of my whisky?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, thank you,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I have business to do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well, business is the chief thing. It's well not to drink in the
+morning, too. For my own part, except a drop before breakfast to give me an
+appetite, and maybe a glass, or even twa, afterwards to promote digestion, I
+never touch spirits before noon. What d'ye think o' the general, Mr.
+West?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, I have hardly had an opportunity of judging,&rdquo; I answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. McNeil tapped his forehead with his forefinger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's what I think of him,&rdquo; he said in a confidential whisper,
+shaking his head at me. &ldquo;He's gone, sir, gone, in my estimation. Now what
+would you take to be a proof of madness, Mr. West?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, offering a blank cheque to a Wigtown house-agent,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, you're aye at your jokes. But between oorsel's now, if a man asked
+ye how many miles it was frae a seaport, and whether ships come there from the
+East, and whether there were tramps on the road, and whether it was against the
+lease for him to build a high wall round the grounds, what would ye make of it,
+eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should certainly think him eccentric,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If every man had his due, our friend would find himsel' in a house with
+a high wall round the grounds, and that without costing him a farthing,&rdquo;
+said the agent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where then?&rdquo; I asked, humouring his joke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, in the Wigtown County Lunatic Asylum,&rdquo; cried the little man,
+with a bubble of laughter, in the midst of which I rode on my way, leaving him
+still chuckling over his own facetiousness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The arrival of the new family at Cloomber Hall had no perceptible effect in
+relieving the monotony of our secluded district, for instead of entering into
+such simple pleasures as the country had to offer, or interesting themselves,
+as we had hoped, in our attempts to improve the lot of our poor crofters and
+fisherfolk, they seemed to shun all observation, and hardly ever to venture
+beyond the avenue gates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We soon found, too, that the factor's words as to the inclosing of the grounds
+were founded upon fact, for gangs of workmen were kept hard at work from early
+in the morning until late at night in erecting a high, wooden fence round the
+whole estate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When this was finished and topped with spikes, Cloomber Park became impregnable
+to any one but an exceptionally daring climber. It was as if the old soldier
+had been so imbued with military ideas that, like my Uncle Toby, he could not
+refrain even in times of peace from standing upon the defensive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stranger still, he had victualled the house as if for a siege, for Begbie, the
+chief grocer of Wigtown, told me himself in a rapture of delight and amazement
+that the general had sent him an order for hundreds of dozens of every
+imaginable potted meat and vegetable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may be imagined that all these unusual incidents were not allowed to pass
+without malicious comment. Over the whole countryside and as far away as the
+English border there was nothing but gossip about the new tenants of Cloomber
+Hall and the reasons which had led them to come among us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The only hypothesis, however, which the bucolic mind could evolve, was that
+which had already occurred to Mr. McNeil, the factor&mdash;namely, that the old
+general and his family were one and all afflicted with madness, or, as an
+alternative conclusion, that he had committed some heinous offence and was
+endeavouring to escape the consequences of his misdeeds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These were both natural suppositions under the circumstances, but neither of
+them appeared to me to commend itself as a true explanation of the facts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is true that General Heatherstone's behaviour on the occasion of our first
+interview was such as to suggest some suspicion of mental disease, but no man
+could have been more reasonable or more courteous than he had afterwards shown
+himself to be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, again, his wife and children led the same secluded life that he did
+himself, so that the reason could not be one peculiar to his own health.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to the possibility of his being a fugitive from justice, that theory was
+even more untenable. Wigtownshire was bleak and lonely, but it was not such an
+obscure corner of the world that a well-known soldier could hope to conceal
+himself there, nor would a man who feared publicity set every one's tongue
+wagging as the general had done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the whole, I was inclined to believe that the true solution of the enigma
+lay in his own allusion to the love of quiet, and that they had taken shelter
+here with an almost morbid craving for solitude and repose. We very soon had an
+instance of the great lengths to which this desire for isolation would carry
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My father had come down one morning with the weight of a great determination
+upon his brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must put on your pink frock to-day, Esther,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;and you, John, you must make yourself smart, for I have determined that
+the three of us shall drive round this afternoon and pay our respects to Mrs.
+Heatherstone and the general.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A visit to Cloomber,&rdquo; cried Esther, clapping her hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am here,&rdquo; said my father, with dignity, &ldquo;not only as the
+laird's factor, but also as his kinsman. In that capacity I am convinced that
+he would wish me to call upon these newcomers and offer them any politeness
+which is in our power. At present they must feel lonely and friendless. What
+says the great Firdousi? 'The choicest ornaments to a man's house are his
+friends.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My sister and I knew by experience that when the old man began to justify his
+resolution by quotations from the Persian poets there was no chance of shaking
+it. Sure enough that afternoon saw the phaeton at the door, with my father
+perched upon the seat, with his second-best coat on and a pair of new
+driving-gloves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Jump in, my dears,&rdquo; he cried, cracking his whip briskly, &ldquo;we
+shall show the general that he has no cause to be ashamed of his
+neighbours.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas! pride always goes before a fall. Our well-fed ponies and shining harness
+were not destined that day to impress the tenants of Cloomber with a sense of
+our importance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We had reached the avenue gate, and I was about to get out and open it, when
+our attention was arrested by a very large wooden placard, which was attached
+to one of the trees in such a manner that no one could possibly pass without
+seeing it. On the white surface of this board was printed in big, black letters
+the following hospitable inscription:
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+GENERAL AND MRS. HEATHERSTONE<br />
+HAVE NO WISH<br />
+TO INCREASE<br />
+THE CIRCLE OF THEIR ACQUAINTANCE.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We all sat gazing at this announcement for some moments in silent astonishment.
+Then Esther and I, tickled by the absurdity of the thing, burst out laughing,
+but my father pulled the ponies' heads round, and drove home with compressed
+lips and the cloud of much wrath upon his brow. I have never seen the good man
+so thoroughly moved, and I am convinced that his anger did not arise from any
+petty feeling of injured vanity upon his own part, but from the thought that a
+slight had been offered to the Laird of Branksome, whose dignity he
+represented.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"></a>
+CHAPTER IV.<br />
+OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A GREY HEAD</h2>
+
+<p>
+If I had any personal soreness on account of this family snub, it was a very
+passing emotion, and one which was soon effaced from my mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It chanced that on the very next day after the episode I had occasion to pass
+that way, and stopped to have another look at the obnoxious placard. I was
+standing staring at it and wondering what could have induced our neighbours to
+take such an outrageous step, when I became suddenly aware of a sweet, girlish
+face which peeped out at me from between the bars of the gate, and of a white
+hand which eagerly beckoned me to approach. As I advanced to her I saw that it
+was the same young lady whom I had seen in the carriage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. West,&rdquo; she said, in a quick whisper, glancing from side to
+side as she spoke in a nervous, hasty manner, &ldquo;I wish to apologise to you
+for the indignity to which you and your family were subjected yesterday. My
+brother was in the avenue and saw it all, but he is powerless to interfere. I
+assure you, Mr. West, that if that hateful thing,&rdquo; pointing up at the
+placard, &ldquo;has given you any annoyance, it has given my brother and myself
+far more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, Miss Heatherstone,&rdquo; said I, putting the matter off with a
+laugh, &ldquo;Britain is a free country, and if a man chooses to warn off
+visitors from his premises there is no reason why he should not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is nothing less than brutal,&rdquo; she broke out, with a petulant
+stamp of the foot. &ldquo;To think that your sister, too, should have such an
+unprovoked insult offered to her! I am ready to sink with shame at the very
+thought.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pray do not give yourself one moment's uneasiness upon the
+subject,&rdquo; said I earnestly, for I was grieved at her evident distress.
+&ldquo;I am sure that your father has some reason unknown to us for taking this
+step.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Heaven knows he has!&rdquo; she answered, with ineffable sadness in her
+voice, &ldquo;and yet I think it would be more manly to face a danger than to
+fly from it. However, he knows best, and it is impossible for us to judge. But
+who is this?&rdquo; she exclaimed, anxiously, peering up the dark avenue.
+&ldquo;Oh, it is my brother Mordaunt. Mordaunt,&rdquo; she said, as the young
+man approached us, &ldquo;I have been apologising to Mr. West for what happened
+yesterday, in your name as well as my own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am very, very glad to have the opportunity of doing it in
+person,&rdquo; said he courteously. &ldquo;I only wish that I could see your
+sister and your father as well as yourself, to tell them how sorry I am. I
+think you had better run up to the house, little one, for it's getting near
+tiffin-time. No&mdash;don't you go Mr. West. I want to have a word with
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Heatherstone waved her hand to me with a bright smile, and tripped up the
+avenue, while her brother unbolted the gate, and, passing through, closed it
+again, locking it upon the outside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll have a stroll down the road with you, if you have no objection.
+Have a manilla.&rdquo; He drew a couple of cheroots from his pocket and handed
+one to me. &ldquo;You'll find they are not bad,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I became
+a connoisseur in tobacco when I was in India. I hope I am not interfering with
+your business in coming along with you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;I am very glad to have your
+company.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll tell you a secret,&rdquo; said my companion. &ldquo;This is the
+first time that I have been outside the grounds since we have been down
+here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your sister?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She has never been out, either,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I have given
+the governor the slip to-day, but he wouldn't half like it if he knew. It's a
+whim of his that we should keep ourselves entirely to ourselves. At least, some
+people would call it a whim, for my own part I have reason to believe that he
+has solid grounds for all that he does&mdash;though perhaps in this matter he
+may be a little too exacting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must surely find it very lonely,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;Couldn't you
+manage to slip down at times and have a smoke with me? That house over yonder
+is Branksome.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, you are very kind,&rdquo; he answered, with sparkling eyes.
+&ldquo;I should dearly like to run over now and again. With the exception of
+Israel Stakes, our old coachman and gardener, I have not a soul that I can
+speak to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your sister&mdash;she must feel it even more,&rdquo; said I,
+thinking in my heart that my new acquaintance made rather too much of his own
+troubles and too little of those of his companion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; poor Gabriel feels it, no doubt,&rdquo; he answered carelessly,
+&ldquo;but it's a more unnatural thing for a young man of my age to be cooped
+up in this way than for a woman. Look at me, now. I am three-and-twenty next
+March, and yet I have never been to a university, nor to a school for that
+matter. I am as complete an ignoramus as any of these clodhoppers. It seems
+strange to you, no doubt, and yet it is so. Now, don't you think I deserve a
+better fate?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stopped as he spoke, and faced round to me, throwing his palms forward in
+appeal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I looked at him, with the sun shining upon his face, he certainly did seem a
+strange bird to be cooped up in such a cage. Tall and muscular, with a keen,
+dark face, and sharp, finely cut features, he might have stepped out of a
+canvas of Murillo or Velasquez. There were latent energy and power in his
+firm-set mouth, his square eyebrows, and the whole pose of his elastic,
+well-knit figure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is the learning to be got from books and the learning to be got
+from experience,&rdquo; said I sententiously. &ldquo;If you have less of your
+share of the one, perhaps you have more of the other. I cannot believe you have
+spent all your life in mere idleness and pleasure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pleasure!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Pleasure! Look at this!&rdquo; He
+pulled off his hat, and I saw that his black hair was all decked and dashed
+with streaks of grey. &ldquo;Do you imagine that this came from
+pleasure?&rdquo; he asked, with a bitter laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must have had some great shock,&rdquo; I said, astonished at the
+sight, &ldquo;some terrible illness in your youth. Or perhaps it arises from a
+more chronic cause&mdash;a constant gnawing anxiety. I have known men as young
+as you whose hair was as grey.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor brutes!&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;I pity them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you can manage to slip down to Branksome at times,&rdquo; I said,
+&ldquo;perhaps you could bring Miss Heatherstone with you. I know that my
+father and my sister would be delighted to see her, and a change, if only for
+an hour or two, might do her good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be rather hard for us both to get away together,&rdquo; he
+answered. &ldquo;However, if I see a chance I shall bring her down. It might be
+managed some afternoon perhaps, for the old man indulges in a siesta
+occasionally.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We had reached the head of the winding lane which branches off from the high
+road and leads to the laird's house, so my companion pulled up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must go back,&rdquo; he said abruptly, &ldquo;or they will miss me.
+It's very kind of you, West, to take this interest in us. I am very grateful to
+you, and so will Gabriel be when she hears of your kind invitation. It's a real
+heaping of coals of fire after that infernal placard of my father's.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook my hand and set off down the road, but he came running after me
+presently, calling me to stop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was just thinking,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that you must consider us a
+great mystery up there at Cloomber. I dare say you have come to look upon it as
+a private lunatic asylum, and I can't blame you. If you are interested in the
+matter, I feel it is unfriendly upon my part not to satisfy your curiosity, but
+I have promised my father to be silent about it. And indeed if I were to tell
+you all that I know you might not be very much the wiser after all. I would
+have you understand this, however&mdash;that my father is as sane as you or I,
+and that he has very good reasons for living the life which he does. I may add
+that his wish to remain secluded does not arise from any unworthy or
+dishonourable motives, but merely from the instinct of
+self-preservation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is in danger, then?&rdquo; I ejaculated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; he is in constant danger.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why does he not apply to the magistrates for protection?&rdquo; I
+asked. &ldquo;If he is afraid of any one, he has only to name him and they will
+bind him over to keep the peace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear West,&rdquo; said young Heatherstone, &ldquo;the danger with
+which my father is threatened is one that cannot be averted by any human
+intervention. It is none the less very real, and possibly very imminent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don't mean to assert that it is supernatural,&rdquo; I said
+incredulously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, hardly that, either,&rdquo; he answered with hesitation.
+&ldquo;There,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;I have said rather more than I
+should, but I know that you will not abuse my confidence. Good-bye!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took to his heels and was soon out of sight round a curve in the country
+road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A danger which was real and imminent, not to be averted by human means, and yet
+hardly supernatural&mdash;here was a conundrum indeed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had come to look upon the inhabitants of the Hall as mere eccentrics, but
+after what young Mordaunt Heatherstone had just told me, I could no longer
+doubt that some dark and sinister meaning underlay all their actions. The more
+I pondered over the problem, the more unanswerable did it appear, and yet I
+could not get the matter out of my thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lonely, isolated Hall, and the strange, impending catastrophe which hung
+over its inmates, appealed forcibly to my imagination. All that evening, and
+late into the night, I sat moodily by the fire, pondering over what I had
+heard, and revolving in my mind the various incidents which might furnish me
+with some clue to the mystery.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></a>
+CHAPTER V.<br />
+HOW FOUR OF US CAME TO BE UNDER THE SHADOW OF CLOOMBER</h2>
+
+<p>
+I trust that my readers will not set me down as an inquisitive busybody when I
+say that as the days and weeks went by I found my attention and my thoughts
+more and more attracted to General Heatherstone and the mystery which
+surrounded him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was in vain that I endeavoured by hard work and a strict attention to the
+laird's affairs to direct my mind into some more healthy channel. Do what I
+would, on land or on the water, I would still find myself puzzling over this
+one question, until it obtained such a hold upon me that I felt it was useless
+for me to attempt to apply myself to anything until I had come to some
+satisfactory solution of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could never pass the dark line of five-foot fencing, and the great iron gate,
+with its massive lock, without pausing and racking my brain as to what the
+secret might be which was shut in by that inscrutable barrier. Yet, with all my
+conjectures and all my observations, I could never come to any conclusion which
+could for a moment be accepted as an explanation of the facts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My sister had been out for a stroll one night, visiting a sick peasant or
+performing some other of the numerous acts of charity by which she had made
+herself beloved by the whole countryside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;John,&rdquo; she said when she returned, &ldquo;have you seen Cloomber
+Hall at night?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I answered, laying down the book which I was reading.
+&ldquo;Not since that memorable evening when the general and Mr. McNeil came
+over to make an inspection.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, John, will you put your hat on and come a little walk with
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see by her manner that something had agitated or frightened her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, bless the girl!&rdquo; cried I boisterously, &ldquo;what is the
+matter? The old Hall is not on fire, surely? You look as grave as if all
+Wigtown were in a blaze.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not quite so bad as that,&rdquo; she said, smiling. &ldquo;But do come
+out, Jack. I should very much like you to see it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had always refrained from saying anything which might alarm my sister, so
+that she knew nothing of the interest which our neighbours' doings had for me.
+At her request I took my hat and followed her out into the darkness. She led
+the way along a little footpath over the moor, which brought us to some rising
+ground, from which we could look down upon the Hall without our view being
+obstructed by any of the fir-trees which had been planted round it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look at that!&rdquo; said my sister, pausing at the summit of this
+little eminence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cloomber lay beneath us in a blaze of light. In the lower floors the shutters
+obscured the illumination, but above, from the broad windows of the second
+storey to the thin slits at the summit of the tower, there was not a chink or
+an aperture which did not send forth a stream of radiance. So dazzling was the
+effect that for a moment I was persuaded that the house was on fire, but the
+steadiness and clearness of the light soon freed me from that apprehension. It
+was clearly the result of many lamps placed systematically all over the
+building.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It added to the strange effect that all these brilliantly illuminated rooms
+were apparently untenanted, and some of them, so far as we could judge, were
+not even furnished. Through the whole great house there was no sign of movement
+or of life&mdash;nothing but the clear, unwinking flood of yellow light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was still lost in wonder at the sight when I heard a short, quick sob at my
+side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it, Esther, dear?&rdquo; I asked, looking down at my companion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I feel so frightened. Oh, John, John, take me home, I feel so
+frightened!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She clung to my arm, and pulled at my coat in a perfect frenzy of fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's all safe, darling,&rdquo; I said soothingly. &ldquo;There is
+nothing to fear. What has upset you so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid of them, John; I am afraid of the Heatherstones. Why is
+their house lit up like this every night? I have heard from others that it is
+always so. And why does the old man run like a frightened hare if any one comes
+upon him. There is something wrong about it, John, and it frightens me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I pacified her as well as I could, and led her home with me, where I took care
+that she should have some hot port negus before going to bed. I avoided the
+subject of the Heatherstones for fear of exciting her, and she did not recur to
+it of her own accord. I was convinced, however, from what I had heard from her,
+that she had for some time back been making her own observations upon our
+neighbours, and that in doing so she had put a considerable strain upon her
+nerves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see that the mere fact of the Hall being illuminated at night was not
+enough to account for her extreme agitation, and that it must have derived its
+importance in her eyes from being one in a chain of incidents, all of which had
+left a weird or unpleasant impression upon her mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was the conclusion which I came to at the time, and I have reason to know
+now that I was right, and that my sister had even more cause than I had myself
+for believing that there was something uncanny about the tenants of Cloomber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our interest in the matter may have arisen at first from nothing higher than
+curiosity, but events soon took a turn which associated us more closely with
+the fortunes of the Heatherstone family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mordaunt had taken advantage of my invitation to come down to the laird's
+house, and on several occasions he brought with him his beautiful sister. The
+four of us would wander over the moors together, or perhaps if the day were
+fine set sail upon our little skiff and stand off into the Irish Sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On such excursions the brother and sister would be as merry and as happy as two
+children. It was a keen pleasure to them to escape from their dull fortress,
+and to see, if only for a few hours, friendly and sympathetic faces round them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There could be but one result when four young people were brought together in
+sweet, forbidden intercourse. Acquaintance-ship warmed into friendship, and
+friendship flamed suddenly into love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gabriel sits beside me now as I write, and she agrees with me that, dear as is
+the subject to ourselves, the whole story of our mutual affection is of too
+personal a nature to be more than touched upon in this statement. Suffice it to
+say that, within a few weeks of our first meeting Mordaunt Heatherstone had won
+the heart of my dear sister, and Gabriel had given me that pledge which death
+itself will not be able to break.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have alluded in this brief way to the double tie which sprang up between the
+two families, because I have no wish that this narrative should degenerate into
+anything approaching to romance, or that I should lose the thread of the facts
+which I have set myself to chronicle. These are connected with General
+Heatherstone, and only indirectly with my own personal history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is enough if I say that after our engagement the visits to Branksome became
+more frequent, and that our friends were able sometimes to spend a whole day
+with us when business had called the general to Wigtown, or when his gout
+confined him to his room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to our good father, he was ever ready to greet us with many small jests and
+tags of Oriental poems appropriate to the occasion, for we had no secrets from
+him, and he already looked upon us all as his children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were times when on account of some peculiarly dark or restless fit of the
+general's it was impossible for weeks on end for either Gabriel or Mordaunt to
+get away from the grounds. The old man would even stand on guard, a gloomy and
+silent sentinel, at the avenue gate, or pace up and down the drive as though he
+suspected that attempts had been made to penetrate his seclusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Passing of an evening I have seen his dark, grim figure flitting about in the
+shadow of the trees, or caught a glimpse of his hard, angular, swarthy face
+peering out suspiciously at me from behind the bars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My heart would often sadden for him as I noticed his uncouth, nervous
+movements, his furtive glances and twitching features. Who would have believed
+that this slinking, cowering creature had once been a dashing officer, who had
+fought the battles of his country and had won the palm of bravery among the
+host of brave men around him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In spite of the old soldier's vigilance, we managed to hold communication with
+our friends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately behind the Hall there was a spot where the fencing had been so
+carelessly erected that two of the rails could be removed without difficulty,
+leaving a broad gap, which gave us the opportunity for many a stolen interview,
+though they were necessarily short, for the general's movements were erratic,
+and no part of the grounds was secure from his visitations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How vividly one of these hurried meetings rises before me! It stands out clear,
+peaceful, and distinct amid the wild, mysterious incidents which were destined
+to lead up to the terrible catastrophe which has cast a shade over our lives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I can remember that as I walked through the fields the grass was damp with the
+rain of the morning, and the air was heavy with the smell of the fresh-turned
+earth. Gabriel was waiting for me under the hawthorn tree outside the gap, and
+we stood hand-in-hand looking down at the long sweep of moorland and at the
+broad blue channel which encircled it with its fringe of foam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Far away in the north-west the sun glinted upon the high peak of Mount
+Throston. From where we stood we could see the smoke of the steamers as they
+ploughed along the busy water-way which leads to Belfast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it not magnificent?&rdquo; Gabriel cried, clasping her hands round my
+arm. &ldquo;Ah, John, why are we not free to sail away over these waves
+together, and leave all our troubles behind us on the shore?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what are the troubles which you would leave behind you, dear
+one?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;May I not know them, and help you to bear
+them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no secrets from you, John,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Our chief
+trouble is, as you may guess, our poor father's strange behaviour. Is it not a
+sad thing for all of us that a man who has played such a distinguished part in
+the world should skulk from one obscure corner of the country to another, and
+should defend himself with locks and barriers as though he were a common thief
+flying from justice? This is a trouble, John, which it is out of your power to
+alleviate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why does he do it, Gabriel?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I cannot tell,&rdquo; she answered frankly. &ldquo;I only know that he
+imagines some deadly danger to be hanging over his head, and that this danger
+was incurred by him during his stay in India. What its nature may be I have no
+more idea than you have.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then your brother has,&rdquo; I remarked. &ldquo;I am sure from the way
+in which he spoke to me about it one day that he knows what it is, and that he
+looks upon it as real.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, he knows, and so does my mother,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;but
+they have always kept it secret from me. My poor father is very excited at
+present. Day and night he is in an agony of apprehension, but it will soon be
+the fifth of October, and after that he will be at peace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How do you know that?&rdquo; I asked in surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By experience,&rdquo; she answered gravely. &ldquo;On the fifth of
+October these fears of his come to a crisis. For years back he has been in the
+habit of locking Mordaunt and myself up in our rooms on that date, so that we
+have no idea what occurs, but we have always found that he has been much
+relieved afterwards, and has continued to be comparatively in peace until that
+day begins to draw round again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you have only ten days or so to wait,&rdquo; I remarked, for
+September was drawing to a close. &ldquo;By the way, dearest, why is it that
+you light up all your rooms at night?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have noticed it, then?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It comes also from my
+father's fears. He does not like to have one dark corner in the whole house. He
+walks about a good deal at night, and inspects everything, from the attics
+right down to the cellars. He has large lamps in every room and corridor, even
+the empty ones, and he orders the servants to light them all at dusk.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am rather surprised that you manage to keep your servants,&rdquo; I
+said, laughing. &ldquo;The maids in these parts are a superstitious class, and
+their imaginations are easily excited by anything which they don't
+understand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The cook and both housemaids are from London, and are used to our ways.
+We pay them on a very high scale to make up for any inconvenience to which they
+may be put. Israel Stakes, the coachman, is the only one who comes from this
+part of the country, and he seems to be a stolid, honest fellow, who is not
+easily scared.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor little girl,&rdquo; I exclaimed, looking down at the slim, graceful
+figure by my side. &ldquo;This is no atmosphere for you to live in. Why will
+you not let me rescue you from it? Why won't you allow me to go straight and
+ask the general for your hand? At the worst he could only refuse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned quite haggard and pale at the very thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For Heaven's sake, John,&rdquo; she cried earnestly, &ldquo;do nothing
+of the kind. He would whip us all away in the dead of the night, and within a
+week we should be settling down again in some wilderness where we might never
+have a chance of seeing or hearing from you again. Besides, he never would
+forgive us for venturing out of the grounds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think that he is a hard-hearted man,&rdquo; I remarked. &ldquo;I
+have seen a kindly look in his eyes, for all his stern face.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He can be the kindest of fathers,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;But he is
+terrible when opposed or thwarted. You have never seen him so, and I trust you
+never will. It was that strength of will and impatience of opposition which
+made him such a splendid officer. I assure you that in India every one thought
+a great deal of him. The soldiers were afraid of him, but they would have
+followed him anywhere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And had he these nervous attacks then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Occasionally, but not nearly so acutely. He seems to think that the
+danger&mdash;whatever it may be&mdash;becomes more imminent every year. Oh,
+John, it is terrible to be waiting like this with a sword over our
+heads&mdash;and all the more terrible to me since I have no idea where the blow
+is to come from.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear Gabriel,&rdquo; I said, taking her hand and drawing her to my side,
+&ldquo;look over all this pleasant countryside and the broad blue sea. Is it
+not all peaceful and beautiful? In these cottages, with their red-tiled roofs
+peeping out from the grey moor, there live none but simple, God-fearing men,
+who toil hard at their crafts and bear enmity to no man. Within seven miles of
+us is a large town, with every civilised appliance for the preservation of
+order. Ten miles farther there is a garrison quartered, and a telegram would at
+any time bring down a company of soldiers. Now, I ask you, dear, in the name of
+common-sense, what conceivable danger could threaten you in this secluded
+neighbourhood, with the means of help so near? You assure me that the peril is
+not connected with your father's health?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I am sure of that. It is true that Dr. Easterling, of Stranraer, has
+been over to see him once or twice, but that was merely for some small
+indisposition. I can assure you that the danger is not to be looked for in that
+direction.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I can assure you,&rdquo; said I, laughing, &ldquo;that there is no
+danger at all. It must be some strange monomania or hallucination. No other
+hypothesis will cover the facts.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would my father's monomania account for the fact of my brother's hair
+turning grey and my mother wasting away to a mere shadow?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Undoubtedly,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;The long continued worry of the
+general's restlessness and irritability would produce those effects on
+sensitive natures.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; said she, shaking her head sadly, &ldquo;I have been
+exposed to his restlessness and irritability, but they have had no such effect
+upon me. The difference between us lies in the fact that they know this awful
+secret and I do not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear girl,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;the days of family apparitions and
+that kind of thing are gone. Nobody is haunted nowadays, so we can put that
+supposition out of the question. Having done so, what remains? There is
+absolutely no other theory which could even be suggested. Believe me, the whole
+mystery is that the heat of India has been too much for your poor father's
+brain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What she would have answered I cannot tell, for at that moment she gave a start
+as if some sound had fallen upon her ear. As she looked round apprehensively, I
+suddenly saw her features become rigid and her eyes fixed and dilated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Following the direction of her gaze, I felt a sudden thrill of fear pass
+through me as I perceived a human face surveying us from behind one of the
+trees&mdash;a man's face, every feature of which was distorted by the most
+malignant hatred and anger. Finding himself observed, he stepped out and
+advanced towards us, when I saw that it was none other than the general
+himself. His beard was all a-bristle with fury, and his deepset eyes glowed
+from under their heavily veined lids with a most sinister and demoniacal
+brightness.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></a>
+CHAPTER VI.<br />
+HOW I CAME TO BE ENLISTED AS ONE OF THE GARRISON OF CLOOMBER</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To your room, girl!&rdquo; he cried in a hoarse, harsh voice, stepping
+in between us and pointing authoritatively towards the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He waited until Gabriel, with a last frightened glance at me, had passed
+through the gap, and then he turned upon me with an expression so murderous
+that I stepped back a pace or two, and tightened my grasp upon my oak stick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You-you&mdash;&rdquo; he spluttered, with his hand twitching at his
+throat, as though his fury were choking him. &ldquo;You have dared to intrude
+upon my privacy! Do you think I built this fence that all the vermin in the
+country might congregate round it? Oh, you have been very near your death, my
+fine fellow! You will never be nearer until your time comes. Look at
+this!&rdquo; He pulled a squat, thick pistol out of his bosom. &ldquo;If you
+had passed through that gap and set foot on my land I'd have let daylight into
+you. I'll have no vagabonds here. I know how to treat gentry of that sort,
+whether their faces are black or white.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I meant no harm by coming here, and I do not
+know how I have deserved this extraordinary outburst. Allow me to observe,
+however, that you are still covering me with your pistol, and that, as your
+hand is rather tremulous, it is more than possible that it may go off. If you
+don't turn the muzzle down I shall be compelled in self-defence to strike you
+over the wrist with my stick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What the deuce brought you here, then?&rdquo; he asked, in a more
+composed voice, putting his weapon back into his bosom. &ldquo;Can't a
+gentleman live quietly without your coming to peep and pry? Have you no
+business of your own to look after, eh? And my daughter? how came you to know
+anything of her? and what have you been trying to squeeze out of her? It wasn't
+chance that brought you here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said I boldly, &ldquo;it was not chance which brought me
+here. I have had several opportunities of seeing your daughter and of
+appreciating her many noble qualities. We are engaged to be married to each
+other, and I came up with the express intention of seeing her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instead of blazing into a fury, as I had expected, the general gave a long
+whistle of astonishment, and then leant up against the railings, laughing
+softly to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;English terriers are fond of nosing worms,&rdquo; he remarked at last.
+&ldquo;When we brought them out to India they used to trot off into the jungle
+and begin sniffing at what they imagined to be worms there. But the worm turned
+out to be a venomous snake, and so poor doggy played no more. I think you'll
+find yourself in a somewhat analogous position if you don't look out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You surely don't mean to cast an aspersion upon your own
+daughter?&rdquo; I said, flushing with indignation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Gabriel is all right,&rdquo; he answered carelessly. &ldquo;Our
+family is not exactly one, however, which I should recommend a young fellow to
+marry into. And pray how is it that I was not informed of this snug little
+arrangement of yours?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We were afraid, sir, that you might separate us,&rdquo; I replied,
+feeling that perfect candour was the best policy under the circumstances.
+&ldquo;It is possible that we were mistaken. Before coming to any final
+decision, I implore you to remember that the happiness of both of us is at
+stake. It is in your power to divide our bodies, but our souls shall be for
+ever united.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My good fellow,&rdquo; said the general, in a not unkindly tone,
+&ldquo;you don't know what you are asking for. There is a gulf between you and
+any one of the blood of Heatherstone which can never be bridged over.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All trace of anger had vanished now from his manner, and given place to an air
+of somewhat contemptuous amusement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My family pride took fire at his words. &ldquo;The gulf may be less than you
+imagine,&rdquo; I said coldly. &ldquo;We are not clodhoppers because we live in
+this out-of-the-way place. I am of noble descent on one side, and my mother was
+a Buchan of Buchan. I assure you that there is no such disparity between us as
+you seem to imagine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You misunderstand me,&rdquo; the general answered. &ldquo;It is on our
+side that the disparity lies. There are reasons why my daughter Gabriel should
+live and die single. It would not be to your advantage to marry her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But surely, sir,&rdquo; I persisted, &ldquo;I am the best judge of my
+own interests and advantages. Since you take this ground all becomes easy, for
+I do assure you that the one interest which overrides all others is that I
+should have the woman I love for my wife. If this is your only objection to our
+match you may surely give us your consent, for any danger or trial which I may
+incur in marrying Gabriel will not weigh with me one featherweight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here's a young bantam!&rdquo; exclaimed the old soldier, smiling at my
+warmth. &ldquo;It's easy to defy danger when you don't know what the danger
+is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it, then?&rdquo; I asked, hotly. &ldquo;There is no earthly
+peril which will drive me from Gabriel's side. Let me know what it is and test
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no. That would never do,&rdquo; he answered with a sigh, and then,
+thoughtfully, as if speaking his mind aloud: &ldquo;He has plenty of pluck and
+is a well-grown lad, too. We might do worse than make use of him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went on mumbling to himself with a vacant stare in his eyes as if he had
+forgotten my presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look here, West,&rdquo; he said presently. &ldquo;You'll excuse me if I
+spoke hastily a little time ago. It is the second time that I have had occasion
+to apologise to you for the same offence. It shan't occur again. I am rather
+over-particular, no doubt, in my desire for complete isolation, but I have good
+reasons for insisting on the point. Rightly or wrongly, I have got it into my
+head that some day there might be an organised raid upon my grounds. If
+anything of the sort should occur I suppose I might reckon upon your
+assistance?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;With all my heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So that if ever you got a message such as 'Come up,' or even 'Cloomber,'
+you would know that it was an appeal for help, and would hurry up immediately,
+even if it were in the dead of the night?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Most certainly I should,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;But might I ask you
+what the nature of the danger is which you apprehend?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There would be nothing gained by your knowing. Indeed, you would hardly
+understand it if I told you. I must bid you good day now, for I have stayed
+with you too long. Remember, I count upon you as one of the Cloomber garrison
+now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One other thing, sir,&rdquo; I said hurriedly, for he was turning away,
+&ldquo;I hope that you will not be angry with your daughter for anything which
+I have told you. It was for my sake that she kept it all secret from
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; he said, with his cold, inscrutable smile. &ldquo;I am
+not such an ogre in the bosom of my family as you seem to think. As to this
+marriage question, I should advise you as a friend to let it drop altogether,
+but if that is impossible I must insist that it stand over completely for the
+present. It is impossible to say what unexpected turn events may take.
+Good-bye.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He plunged into the wood and was quickly out of sight among the dense
+plantation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus ended this extraordinary interview, in which this strange man had begun by
+pointing a loaded pistol at my breast and had ended, by partially acknowledging
+the possibility of my becoming his future son-in-law. I hardly knew whether to
+be cast down or elated over it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the one hand he was likely, by keeping a closer watch over his daughter, to
+prevent us from communicating as freely as we had done hitherto. Against this
+there was the advantage of having obtained an implied consent to the renewal of
+my suit at some future date. On the whole, I came to the conclusion as I walked
+thoughtfully home that I had improved my position by the incident.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this danger&mdash;this shadowy, unspeakable danger&mdash;which appeared to
+rise up at every turn, and to hang day and night over the towers of Cloomber!
+Rack my brain as I would, I could not conjure up any solution to the problem
+which was not puerile and inadequate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One fact struck me as being significant. Both the father and the son had
+assured me, independently of each other, that if I were told what the peril
+was, I would hardly realise its significance. How strange and bizarre must the
+fear be which can scarcely be expressed in intelligible language!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I held up my hand in the darkness before I turned to sleep that night, and I
+swore that no power of man or devil should ever weaken my love for the woman
+whose pure heart I had had the good fortune to win.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"></a>
+CHAPTER VII.<br />
+OF CORPORAL RUFUS SMITH AND HIS COMING TO CLOOMBER</h2>
+
+<p>
+In making this statement I have purposely couched it in bald and simple
+language, for fear I should be accused of colouring my narrative for the sake
+of effect. If, however, I have told my story with any approach to realism, the
+reader will understand me when I say that by this time the succession of
+dramatic incidents which had occurred had arrested my attention and excited my
+imagination to the exclusion of all minor topics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How could I plod through the dull routine of an agent's work, or interest
+myself in the thatch of this tenant's bothy or the sails of that one's boat,
+when my mind was taken up by the chain of events which I have described, and
+was still busy seeking an explanation for them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Go where I would over the countryside, I could see the square, white tower
+shooting out from among the trees, and beneath that tower this ill-fated family
+were watching and waiting, waiting and watching&mdash;and for what? That was
+still the question which stood like an impassable barrier at the end of every
+train of thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Regarded merely as an abstract problem, this mystery of the Heatherstone family
+had a lurid fascination about it, but when the woman whom I loved a
+thousandfold better than I did myself proved to be so deeply interested in the
+solution, I felt that it was impossible to turn my thoughts to anything else
+until it had been finally cleared up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My good father had received a letter from the laird, dated from Naples, which
+told us that he had derived much benefit from the change, and that he had no
+intention of returning to Scotland for some time. This was satisfactory to all
+of us, for my father had found Branksome such an excellent place for study that
+it would have been a sore trial to him to return to the noise and tumult of a
+city. As to my dear sister and myself, there were, as I have shown, stronger
+reasons still to make us love the Wigtownshire moors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In spite of my interview with the general&mdash;or perhaps I might say on
+account of it&mdash;I took occasion at least twice a day to walk towards
+Cloomber and satisfy myself that all was well there. He had begun by resenting
+my intrusion, but he had ended by taking me into a sort of half-confidence, and
+even by asking my assistance, so I felt that I stood upon a different footing
+with him than I had done formerly, and that he was less likely to be annoyed by
+my presence. Indeed, I met him pacing round the inclosure a few days
+afterwards, and his manner towards me was civil, though he made no allusion to
+our former conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He appeared to be still in an extreme state of nervousness, starting from time
+to time, and gazing furtively about him, with little frightened, darting
+glances to the right and the left. I hoped that his daughter was right in
+naming the fifth of October as the turning point of his complaint, for it was
+evident to me as I looked at his gleaming eyes and quivering hands, that a man
+could not live long in such a state of nervous tension.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I found on examination that he had had the loose rails securely fastened so as
+to block up our former trysting-place, and though I prowled round the whole
+long line of fencing, I was unable to find any other place where an entrance
+could be effected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here and there between the few chinks left in the barrier I could catch
+glimpses of the Hall, and once I saw a rough-looking, middle-aged man standing
+at a window on the lower floor, whom I supposed to be Israel Stakes, the
+coachman. There was no sign, however, of Gabriel or of Mordaunt, and their
+absence alarmed me. I was convinced that, unless they were under some
+restraint, they would have managed to communicate with my sister or myself. My
+fears became more and more acute as day followed day without our seeing or
+hearing anything of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One morning&mdash;it was the second day of October&mdash;I was walking towards
+the Hall, hoping that I might be fortunate enough to learn some news of my
+darling, when I observed a man perched upon a stone at the side of the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I came nearer to him I could see that he was a stranger, and from his dusty
+clothes and dilapidated appearance he seemed to have come from a distance. He
+had a great hunk of bread on his knee and a clasp-knife in his hand, but he
+had apparently just finished his breakfast, for he brushed the crumbs off his
+lap and rose to his feet when he perceived me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Noticing the great height of the fellow and that he still held his weapon, I
+kept well to the other side of the road, for I knew that destitution makes men
+desperate and that the chain that glittered on my waistcoat might be too great
+a temptation to him upon this lonely highway. I was confirmed in my fears when
+I saw him step out into the centre of the road and bar my progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, my lad,&rdquo; I said, affecting an ease which I by no means felt,
+&ldquo;what can I do for you this morning?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fellow's face was the colour of mahogany with exposure to the weather, and
+he had a deep scar from the corner of his mouth to his ear, which by no means
+improved his appearance. His hair was grizzled, but his figure was stalwart,
+and his fur cap was cocked on one side so as to give him a rakish,
+semi-military appearance. Altogether he gave me the impression of being one of
+the most dangerous types of tramp that I had ever fallen in with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instead of replying to my question, he eyed me for some time in silence with
+sullen, yellow-shot eyes, and then closed his knife with a loud snick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You're not a beak,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;too young for that, I guess.
+They had me in chokey at Paisley and they had me in chokey at Wigtown, but by
+the living thunder if another of them lays a hand on me I'll make him remember
+Corporal Rufus Smith! It's a darned fine country this, where they won't give a
+man work, and then lay him by the heels for having no visible means of
+subsistence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sorry to see an old soldier so reduced,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;What
+corps did you serve in?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;H Battery, Royal Horse Artillery. Bad cess to the Service and every one
+in it! Here I am nigh sixty years of age, with a beggarly pension of
+thirty-eight pound ten&mdash;not enough to keep me in beer and baccy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should have thought thirty-eight pound ten a year would have been a
+nice help to you in your old age,&rdquo; I remarked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you, though?&rdquo; he answered with a sneer, pushing his
+weather-beaten face forward until it was within a foot of my own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How much d'ye think that slash with a tulwar is worth? And my foot with
+all the bones rattling about like a bagful of dice where the trail of the gun
+went across it. What's that worth, eh? And a liver like a sponge, and ague
+whenever the wind comes round to the east&mdash;what's the market value of
+that? Would you take the lot for a dirty forty pound a year&mdash;would you
+now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are poor folk in this part of the country,&rdquo; I answered.
+&ldquo;You would pass for a rich man down here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are fool folk and they have fool tastes,&rdquo; said he, drawing a
+black pipe from his pocket and stuffing it with tobacco. &ldquo;I know what
+good living is, and, by cripes! while I have a shilling in my pocket I like to
+spend it as a shilling should be spent. I've fought for my country and my
+country has done darned little for me. I'll go to the Rooshians, so help me! I
+could show them how to cross the Himalayas so that it would puzzle either
+Afghans or British to stop 'em. What's that secret worth in St. Petersburg, eh,
+mister?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am ashamed to hear an old soldier speak so, even in jest,&rdquo; said
+I sternly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Jest, indeed!&rdquo; he cried, with a great, roaring oath. &ldquo;I'd
+have done it years ago if the Rooshians had been game to take it up. Skobeloff
+was the best of the bunch, but he's been snuffed out. However, that's neither
+here nor there. What I want to ask you is whether you've ever heard anything in
+this quarter of a man called Heatherstone, the same who used to be colonel of
+the 41st Bengalis? They told me at Wigtown that he lived somewhere down this
+way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He lives in that large house over yonder,&rdquo; said I, pointing to
+Cloomber Tower. &ldquo;You'll find the avenue gate a little way down the road,
+but the general isn't over fond of visitors.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last part of my speech was lost upon Corporal Rufus Smith; for the instant
+that I pointed out the gate he set off hopping down the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His mode of progression was the most singular I have ever seen, for he would
+only put his right foot to the ground once in every half-dozen strides, while
+he worked so hard and attained such a momentum with the other limb that he got
+over the ground at an astonishing speed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was so surprised that I stood in the roadway gazing after this hulking figure
+until the thought suddenly struck me that some serious result might come from a
+meeting between a man of such blunt speech and the choleric, hot-headed
+general. I therefore followed him as he hopped along like some great, clumsy
+bird, and overtook him at the avenue gate, where he stood grasping the ironwork
+and peering through at the dark carriage-drive beyond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He's a sly old jackal,&rdquo; he said, looking round at me and nodding
+his head in the direction of the Hall. &ldquo;He's a deep old dog. And that's
+his bungalow, is it, among the trees?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is his house,&rdquo; I answered; &ldquo;but I should advise you to
+keep a more civil tongue in your head if you intend to speak with the general.
+He is not a man to stand any nonsense.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Right you are. He was always a hard nut to crack. But isn't this him
+coming down the avenue?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked through the gate and saw that it was indeed the general, who, having
+either seen us or been attracted by our voices, was hurrying down towards us.
+As he advanced he would stop from time to time and peer at us through the dark
+shadow thrown by the trees, as if he were irresolute whether to come on or no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He's reconnoitering!&rdquo; whispered my companion with a hoarse
+chuckle. &ldquo;He's afraid&mdash;and I know what he's afraid of. He won't be
+caught in a trap if he can help it, the old 'un. He's about as fly as they make
+'em, you bet!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then suddenly standing on his tip-toes and waving his hand through the bars of
+the gate, he shouted at the top of his voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come on, my gallant commandant! Come on! The coast's clear, and no enemy
+in sight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This familiar address had the effect of reassuring the general, for he came
+right for us, though I could tell by his heightened colour that his temper was
+at boiling point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, you here, Mr. West?&rdquo; he said, as his eye fell upon me.
+&ldquo;What is it you want, and why have you brought this fellow with
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have not brought him with me, sir,&rdquo; I answered, feeling rather
+disgusted at being made responsible for the presence of the
+disreputable-looking vagabond beside me. &ldquo;I found him on the road here,
+and he desired to be directed to you, so I showed him the way. I know nothing
+of him myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you want with me, then?&rdquo; the general asked sternly,
+turning to my companion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you please, sir,&rdquo; said the ex-corporal, speaking in a whining
+voice, and touching his moleskin cap with a humility which contrasted strangely
+with the previous rough independence of his bearing, &ldquo;I'm an old gunner
+in the Queen's service, sir, and knowing your name by hearing it in India I
+thought that maybe you would take me as your groom or gardener, or give me any
+other place as happened to be vacant.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sorry that I cannot do anything for you, my man,&rdquo; the old
+soldier answered impressively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you'll give me a little just to help me on my way, sir,&rdquo; said
+the cringing mendicant. &ldquo;You won't see an old comrade go to the bad for
+the sake of a few rupees? I was with Sale's brigade in the Passes, sir, and I
+was at the second taking of Cabul.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+General Heatherstone looked keenly at the supplicant, but was silent to his
+appeal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was in Ghuznee with you when the walls were all shook down by an
+earthquake, and when we found forty thousand Afghans within gunshot of us. You
+ask me about it, and you'll see whether I'm lying or not. We went through all
+this when we were young, and now that we are old you are to live in a fine
+bungalow, and I am to starve by the roadside. It don't seem to me to be
+fair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are an impertinent scoundrel,&rdquo; said the general. &ldquo;If you
+had been a good soldier you would never need to ask for help. I shall not give
+you a farthing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One word more, sir,&rdquo; cried the tramp, for the other was turning
+away, &ldquo;I've been in the Tarada Pass.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old soldier sprang round as if the words had been a pistol-shot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&mdash;what d'ye mean?&rdquo; he stammered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I've been in the Tarada Pass, sir, and I knew a man there called Ghoolab
+Shah.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These last were hissed out in an undertone, and a malicious grin overspread the
+face of the speaker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their effect upon the general was extraordinary. He fairly staggered back from
+the gateway, and his yellow countenance blanched to a livid, mottled grey. For
+a moment he was too overcome to speak. At last he gasped out:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ghoolab Shah? Who are you who know Ghoolab Shah?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take another look,&rdquo; said the tramp, &ldquo;your sight is not as
+keen as it was forty years ago.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The general took a long, earnest look at the unkempt wanderer in front of him,
+and as he gazed I saw the light of recognition spring up in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God bless my soul!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Why, it's Corporal Rufus
+Smith.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You've come on it at last,&rdquo; said the other, chuckling to himself.
+&ldquo;I was wondering how long it would be before you knew me. And, first of
+all, just unlock this gate, will you? It's hard to talk through a grating. It's
+too much like ten minutes with a visitor in the cells.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The general, whose face still bore evidences of his agitation, undid the bolts
+with nervous, trembling fingers. The recognition of Corporal Rufus Smith had, I
+fancied, been a relief to him, and yet he plainly showed by his manner that he
+regarded his presence as by no means an unmixed blessing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, Corporal,&rdquo; he said, as the gate swung open, &ldquo;I have
+often wondered whether you were dead or alive, but I never expected to see you
+again. How have you been all these long years?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How have I been?&rdquo; the corporal answered gruffly. &ldquo;Why, I
+have been drunk for the most part. When I draw my money I lay it out in liquor,
+and as long as that lasts I get some peace in life. When I'm cleaned out I go
+upon tramp, partly in the hope of picking up the price of a dram, and partly in
+order to look for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You'll excuse us talking about these private matters, West,&rdquo; the
+general said, looking round at me, for I was beginning to move away.
+&ldquo;Don't leave us. You know something of this matter already, and may find
+yourself entirely in the swim with us some of these days.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Corporal Rufus Smith looked round at me in blank astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the swim with us?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;However did he get
+there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Voluntarily, voluntarily,&rdquo; the general explained, hurriedly
+sinking his voice. &ldquo;He is a neighbour of mine, and he has volunteered his
+help in case I should ever need it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This explanation seemed, if anything, to increase the big stranger's surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if that don't lick cock-fighting!&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+contemplating me with admiration. &ldquo;I never heard tell of such a
+thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And now you have found me, Corporal Smith,&rdquo; said the tenant of
+Cloomber, &ldquo;what is it that you want of me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, everything. I want a roof to cover me, and clothes to wear, and
+food to eat, and, above all, brandy to drink.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I'll take you in and do what I can for you,&rdquo; said the
+general slowly. &ldquo;But look here, Smith, we must have discipline. I'm the
+general and you are the corporal; I am the master and you are the man. Now,
+don't let me have to remind you of that again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tramp drew himself up to his full height and raised his right hand with the
+palm forward in a military salute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can take you on as gardener and get rid of the fellow I have got. As
+to brandy, you shall have an allowance and no more. We are not deep drinkers at
+the Hall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you take opium, or brandy, or nothing yourself, sir?&rdquo; asked
+Corporal Rufus Smith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; the general said firmly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, all I can say is, that you've got more nerve and pluck than I
+shall ever have. I don't wonder now at your winning that Cross in the Mutiny.
+If I was to go on listening night after night to them things without ever
+taking a drop of something to cheer my heart&mdash;why, it would drive me
+silly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+General Heatherstone put his hand up, as though afraid that his companion might
+say too much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must thank you, Mr. West,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for having shown this
+man my door. I would not willingly allow an old comrade, however humble, to go
+to the bad, and if I did not acknowledge his claim more readily it was simply
+because I had my doubts as to whether he was really what he represented himself
+to be. Just walk up to the Hall, Corporal, and I shall follow you in a
+minute.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor fellow!&rdquo; he continued, as he watched the newcomer hobbling up
+the avenue in the ungainly manner which I have described. &ldquo;He got a gun
+over his foot, and it crushed the bones, but the obstinate fool would not let
+the doctors take it off. I remember him now as a smart young soldier in
+Afghanistan. He and I were associated in some queer adventures, which I may
+tell you of some day, and I naturally feel sympathy towards him, and would
+befriend him. Did he tell you anything about me before I came?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a word,&rdquo; I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said the general carelessly, but with an evident expression
+of relief, &ldquo;I thought perhaps he might have said something of old times.
+Well, I must go and look after him, or the servants will be frightened, for he
+isn't a beauty to look at. Good-bye!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a wave of the hand the old man turned away from me and hurried up the
+drive after this unexpected addition to his household, while I strolled on
+round the high, black paling, peering through every chink between the planks,
+but without seeing a trace either of Mordaunt or of his sister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have now brought this statement down to the coming of Corporal Rufus Smith,
+which will prove to be the beginning of the end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have set down soberly and in order the events which brought us to
+Wigtownshire, the arrival of the Heatherstones at Cloomber, the many strange
+incidents which excited first our curiosity and finally our intense interest in
+that family, and I have briefly touched upon the circumstances which brought my
+sister and myself into a closer and more personal relationship with them. I
+think that there cannot be a better moment than this to hand the narrative over
+to those who had means of knowing something of what was going on inside
+Cloomber during the months that I was observing it from without.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Israel Stakes, the coachman, proved to be unable to read or write, but Mr.
+Mathew Clark, the Presbyterian Minister of Stoneykirk, has copied down his
+deposition, duly attested by the cross set opposite to his name. The good
+clergyman has, I fancy, put some slight polish upon the narrator's story, which
+I rather regret, as it might have been more interesting, if less intelligible,
+when reported verbatim. It still preserves, however, considerable traces of
+Israel's individuality, and may be regarded as an exact record of what he saw
+and did while in General Heatherstone's service.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"></a>
+CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+STATEMENT OF ISRAEL STAKES</h2>
+
+<p>
+(Copied and authenticated by the Reverend Mathew Clark, Presbyterian Minister
+of Stoneykirk, in Wigtownshire)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maister Fothergill West and the meenister say that I maun tell all I can aboot
+General Heatherstone and his hoose, but that I maunna say muckle aboot mysel'
+because the readers wouldna care to hear aboot me or my affairs. I am na sae
+sure o' that, for the Stakes is a family weel kenned and respecked on baith
+sides o' the Border, and there's mony in Nithsdale and Annandale as would be
+gey pleased to hear news o' the son o' Archie Stakes, o' Ecclefechan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I maun e'en do as I'm tauld, however, for Mr. West's sake, hoping he'll no
+forget me when I chance to hae a favour tae ask.(<a href="#ft_1">1</a>) I'm no able tae write
+mysel' because my feyther sent me oot to scare craws instead o' sendin' me tae
+school, but on the ither hond he brought me up in the preenciples and practice
+o' the real kirk o' the Covenant, for which may the Lord be praised!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It way last May twel'month that the factor body, Maister McNeil, cam ower tae
+me in the street and speered whether I was in want o' a place as a coachman and
+gairdner. As it fell oot I chanced tae be on the look oot for something o' the
+sort mysel' at the time, but I wasna ower quick to let him see that I wanted
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ye can tak it or leave it,&rdquo; says he sharp like. &ldquo;It's a guid
+place, and there's mony would be glad o't. If ye want it ye can come up tae my
+office at twa the morn and put your ain questions tae the gentleman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was a' I could get frae him, for he's a close man and a hard one at a
+bargain&mdash;which shall profit him leetle in the next life, though he lay by
+a store o' siller in this. When the day comes there'll be a hantle o' factors
+on the left hand o' the throne, and I shouldna be surprised if Maister McNeil
+found himsel' amang them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Weel, on the morn I gaed up to the office and there I foond the factor and a
+lang, thin, dour man wi' grey hair and a face as brown and crinkled as a
+walnut. He looked hard at me wi' a pair o' een that glowed like twa spunks, and
+then he says, says he:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You've been born in these pairts, I understan'?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;and never left them neither.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never been oot o' Scotland?&rdquo; he speers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Twice to Carlisle fair,&rdquo; says I, for I am a man wha loves the
+truth; and besides I kenned that the factor would mind my gaeing there, for I
+bargained fur twa steers and a stirk that he wanted for the stockin' o' the
+Drumleugh Fairm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I learn frae Maister McNeil,&rdquo; says General Heatherstone&mdash;for
+him it was and nane ither&mdash;&ldquo;that ye canna write.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Na,&rdquo; says I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor read?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Na,&rdquo; says I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems tae me,&rdquo; says he, turnin' tae the factor, &ldquo;that
+this is the vera man I want. Servants is spoilt noo-a-days,&rdquo; says he,
+&ldquo;by ower muckle eddication. I hae nae doobt, Stakes, that ye will suit me
+well enough. Ye'll hae three pund a month and a' foond, but I shall resairve
+the right o' givin' ye twenty-four hoors' notice at any time. How will that
+suit ye?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's vera different frae my last place,&rdquo; says I,
+discontented-like.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the words were true enough, for auld Fairmer Scott only gave me a pund a
+month and parritch twice a day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Weel, weel,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;maybe we'll gie ye a rise if ye suit.
+Meanwhile here's the han'sel shillin' that Maister McNeil tells me it's the
+custom tae give, and I shall expec' tae see ye at Cloomber on Monday.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the Monday cam roond I walked oot tae Cloomber, and a great muckle hoose
+it is, wi' a hunderd windows or mair, and space enough tae hide awa' half the
+parish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As tae gairdening, there was no gairden for me tae work at, and the horse was
+never taken oot o' the stables frae week's end tae week's end. I was busy
+enough for a' that, for there was a deal o' fencing tae be put up, and one
+thing or anither, forbye cleanin' the knives and brushin' the boots and
+such-like jobs as is mair fit for an auld wife than for a grown man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was twa besides mysel' in the kitchen, the cook Eliza, and Mary the
+hoosemaid, puir, benighted beings baith o' them, wha had wasted a' their lives
+in London, and kenned leetle aboot the warld or the ways o' the flesh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hadna muckle tae say to them, for they were simple folk who could scarce
+understand English, and had hardly mair regard for their ain souls than the
+tods on the moor. When the cook said she didna think muckle o' John Knox, and
+the ither that she wouldna give saxpence tae hear the discourse o' Maister
+Donald McSnaw o' the true kirk, I kenned it was time for me tae leave them tae
+a higher Judge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was four in family, the general, my leddy, Maister Mordaunt, and Miss
+Gabriel, and it wasna long before I found that a' wasna just exactly as it
+should be. My leddy was as thin and as white as a ghaist, and many's the time
+as I've come on her and found her yammerin' and greetin' all by hersel'. I've
+watched her walkin' up and doon in the wood where she thought nane could see
+her and wringin' her honds like one demented.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was the young gentleman, tae, and his sister&mdash;they baith seemed to
+hae some trouble on their minds, and the general maist of a', for the ithers
+were up ane day and down anither; but he was aye the same, wi' a face as dour
+and sad as a felon when he feels the tow roond his neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I speered o' the hussies in the kitchen whether they kenned what was amiss wi'
+the family, but the cook she answered me back that it wasna for her tae inquire
+into the affairs o' her superiors, and that it was naething to her as long as
+she did her work and had her wages. They were puir, feckless bodies, the twa o'
+them, and would scarce gie an answer tae a ceevil question, though they could
+clack lood eneugh when they had a mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Weel, weeks passed into months and a' things grew waur instead o' better in the
+Hall. The general he got mair nairvous, and his leddy mair melancholy every
+day, and yet there wasna any quarrel or bickering between them, for when
+they've been togither in the breakfast room I used often tae gang round and
+prune the rose-tree alongside o' the window, so that I couldna help hearin' a
+great pairt o' their conversation, though sair against the grain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the young folk were wi' them they would speak little, but when they had
+gone they would aye talk as if some waefu' trial ere aboot to fa' upon them,
+though I could never gather from their words what it was that they were afeared
+o'.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I've heard the general say mair than ance that he wasna frighted o' death, or
+any danger that he could face and have done wi', but that it was the lang,
+weary waitin' and the uncertainty that had taken a' the strength and the mettle
+oot o' him. Then my leddy would console him and tell him that maybe it wasna as
+bad as he thocht, and that a' would come richt in the end&mdash;but a' her
+cheery words were clean throwed away upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As tae the young folks, I kenned weel that they didna bide in the groonds, and
+that they were awa' whenever they got a chance wi' Maister Fothergill West tae
+Branksome, but the general was too fu' o' his ain troubles tae ken aboot it,
+and it didna seem tae me that it was pairt o' my duties either as coachman or
+as gairdner tae mind the bairns. He should have lairnt that if ye forbid a
+lassie and a laddie to dae anything it's just the surest way o' bringin' it
+aboot. The Lord foond that oot in the gairden o' Paradise, and there's no
+muckle change between the folk in Eden and the folk in Wigtown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There's ane thing that I havena spoke aboot yet, but that should be set doon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The general didna share his room wi' his wife, but slept a' alane in a chamber
+at the far end o' the hoose, as distant as possible frae every one else. This
+room was aye lockit when he wasna in it, and naebody was ever allowed tae gang
+into it. He would mak' his ain bed, and red it up and dust it a' by himsel',
+but he wouldna so much as allow one o' us to set fut on the passage that led
+tae it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At nicht he would walk a' ower the hoose, and he had lamps hung in every room
+and corner, so that no pairt should be dark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many's the time frae my room in the garret I've heard his futsteps comin' and
+gangin', comin' and gangin' doon one passage and up anither frae midnight till
+cockcraw. It was weary wark to lie listenin' tae his clatter and wonderin'
+whether he was clean daft, or whether maybe he'd lairnt pagan and idolatrous
+tricks oot in India, and that his conscience noo was like the worm which
+gnaweth and dieth not. I'd ha' speered frae him whether it wouldna ease him to
+speak wi' the holy Donald McSnaw, but it might ha' been a mistake, and the
+general wasna a man that you'd care tae mak' a mistake wi'.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ane day I was workin' at the grass border when he comes up and he says, says
+he:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did ye ever have occasion tae fire a pistol, Israel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Godsakes!&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;I never had siccan a thing in my honds
+in my life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you'd best not begin noo,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;Every man tae his
+ain weepon,&rdquo; he says. &ldquo;Now I warrant ye could do something wi' a
+guid crab-tree cudgel!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aye, could I,&rdquo; I answered blithely, &ldquo;as well as ony lad on
+the Border.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is a lonely hoose,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;and we might be molested
+by some rascals. It's weel tae be ready for whatever may come. Me and you and
+my son Mordaunt and Mr. Fothergill West of Branksome, who would come if he was
+required, ought tae be able tae show a bauld face&mdash;what think ye?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Deed, sir,&rdquo; I says, &ldquo;feastin' is aye better than
+fechtin'&mdash;but if ye'll raise me a pund a month, I'll no' shirk my share o'
+either.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We won't quarrel ower that,&rdquo; says he, and agreed tae the extra
+twal' pund a year as easy as though it were as many bawbees. Far be it frae me
+tae think evil, but I couldna help surmisin' at the time that money that was so
+lightly pairted wi' was maybe no' so very honestly cam by.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I'm no' a curious or a pryin' mun by nature, but I was sair puzzled in my ain
+mind tae tell why it was that the general walked aboot at nicht and what kept
+him frae his sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Weel, ane day I was cleanin' doon the passages when my e'e fell on a great
+muckle heap o' curtains and auld cairpets and sic' like things that were piled
+away in a corner, no vera far frae the door o' the general's room. A' o' a
+sudden a thocht came intae my heid and I says tae mysel':
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Israel, laddie,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;what's tae stop ye frae hidin'
+behind that this vera nicht and seein' the auld mun when he doesna ken human
+e'e is on him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mair I thocht o't the mair seemple it appeared, and I made up my mind tae
+put the idea intae instant execution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the nicht cam roond I tauld the women-folk that I was bad wi' the jawache,
+and would gang airly tae my room. I kenned fine when ance I got there that
+there was na chance o' ony ane disturbin' me, so I waited a wee while, and then
+when a' was quiet, I slippit aff my boots and ran doon the ither stair until I
+cam tae the heap o' auld clothes, and there I lay doon wi' ane e'e peepin'
+through a kink and a' the rest covered up wi' a great, ragged cairpet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There I bided as quiet as a mouse until the general passed me on his road tae
+bed, and a' was still in the hoose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My certie! I wouldna gang through wi' it again for a' the siller at the Union
+Bank of Dumfries, I canna think o't noo withoot feelin' cauld a' the way doon
+my back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was just awfu' lyin' there in the deid silence, waitin' and waitin' wi'
+never a soond tae break the monotony, except the heavy tickin' o' an auld clock
+somewhere doon the passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First I would look doon the corridor in the one way, and syne I'd look doon in
+t'ither, but it aye seemed to me as though there was something coming up frae
+the side that I wasna lookin' at. I had a cauld sweat on my broo, and my hairt
+was beatin' twice tae ilka tick o' the clock, and what feared me most of a' was
+that the dust frae the curtains and things was aye gettin' doon intae my lungs,
+and it was a' I could dae tae keep mysel' frae coughin'.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Godsakes! I wonder my hair wasna grey wi' a' that I went through. I wouldna dae
+it again to be made Lord Provost o' Glasgie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Weel, it may have been twa o'clock in the mornin' or maybe a little mair, and I
+was just thinkin' that I wasna tae see onything after a'&mdash;and I wasna very
+sorry neither&mdash;when all o' a sudden a soond cam tae my ears clear and
+distinct through the stillness o' the nicht.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I've been asked afore noo tae describe that soond, but I've aye foond that it's
+no' vera easy tae gie a clear idea o't, though it was unlike any other soond
+that ever I hearkened tae. It was a shairp, ringin' clang, like what could be
+caused by flippin' the rim o' a wineglass, but it was far higher and thinner
+than that, and had in it, tae, a kind o' splash, like the tinkle o' a rain-drop
+intae a water-butt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In my fear I sat up amang my cairpets, like a puddock among gowan-leaves, and I
+listened wi' a' my ears. A' was still again noo, except for the dull tickin' o'
+the distant clock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly the soond cam again, as clear, as shrill, as shairp as ever, and this
+time the general heard it, for I heard him gie a kind o' groan, as a tired man
+might wha has been roosed oot o' his sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He got up frae his bed, and I could make oot a rustling noise, as though he
+were dressin' himsel', and presently his footfa' as he began tae walk up and
+doon in his room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mysakes! it didna tak lang for me tae drap doon amang the cairpets again and
+cover mysel' ower. There I lay tremblin' in every limb, and sayin' as mony
+prayers as I could mind, wi' my e'e still peepin' through the keek-hole, and
+fixed upon the door o' the general's room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I heard the rattle o' the handle presently, and the door swung slowly open.
+There was a licht burnin' in the room beyond, an' I could just catch a glimpse
+o' what seemed tae me like a row o' swords stuck alang the side o' the wa',
+when the general stepped oot and shut the door behind him. He was dressed in a
+dressin' goon, wi' a red smokin'-cap on his heid, and a pair o' slippers wi'
+the heels cut off and the taes turned up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment it cam into my held that maybe he was walkin' in his sleep, but as
+he cam towards me I could see the glint o' the licht in his e'en, and his face
+was a' twistin', like a man that's in sair distress o' mind. On my conscience,
+it gies me the shakes noo when I think o' his tall figure and his yelley face
+comin' sae solemn and silent doon the lang, lone passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I haud my breath and lay close watchin' him, but just as he cam tae where I was
+my vera hairt stood still in my breast, for &ldquo;ting!&rdquo;&mdash;loud and
+clear, within a yaird o' me cam the ringin', clangin' soond that I had a'ready
+hairkened tae.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where it cam frae is mair than I can tell or what was the cause o't. It might
+ha' been that the general made it, but I was sair puzzled tae tell hoo, for his
+honds were baith doon by his side as he passed me. It cam frae his direction,
+certainly, but it appeared tae me tae come frae ower his heid, but it was
+siccan a thin, eerie, high-pitched, uncanny kind o' soond that it wasna easy
+tae say just exactly where it did come frae.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The general tuk nae heed o't, but walked on and was soon oot o' sicht, and I
+didna lose a minute in creepin' oot frae my hidin' place and scamperin' awa'
+back tae my room, and if a' the bogies in the Red Sea were trapesin' up and
+doon the hale nicht through, I wud never put my heid oot again tae hae a
+glimpse o' them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I didna say a word tae anybody aboot what I'd seen, but I made up my mind that
+I wudna stay muckle langer at Cloomber Ha'. Four pund a month is a good wage,
+but it isna enough tae pay a man for the loss o' his peace o' mind, and maybe
+the loss o' his soul as weel, for when the deil is aboot ye canna tell what
+sort o' a trap he may lay for ye, and though they say that Providence is
+stronger than him, it's maybe as weel no' to risk it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was clear tae me that the general and his hoose were baith under some curse,
+and it was fit that that curse should fa' on them that had earned it, and no'
+on a righteous Presbyterian, wha had ever trod the narrow path.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My hairt was sair for young Miss Gabriel&mdash;for she was a bonnie and winsome
+lassie&mdash;but for a' that, I felt that my duty was tae mysel' and that I
+should gang forth, even as Lot ganged oot o' the wicked cities o' the plain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That awfu' cling-clang was aye dingin' in my lugs, and I couldna bear to be
+alane in the passages for fear o' hearin' it ance again. I only wanted a chance
+or an excuse tae gie the general notice, and tae gang back to some place where
+I could see Christian folk, and have the kirk within a stone-cast tae fa' back
+upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it proved tae be ordained that, instead o' my saying the word, it should
+come frae the general himsel'.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was ane day aboot the beginning of October, I was comin' oot o' the stable,
+after giein' its oats tae the horse, when I seed a great muckle loon come
+hoppin' on ane leg up the drive, mair like a big, ill-faured craw than a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I clapped my een on him I thocht that maybe this was ane of the rascals
+that the maister had been speakin' aboot, so withoot mair ado I fetched oot my
+bit stick with the intention o' tryin' it upon the limmer's heid. He seed me
+comin' towards him, and readin' my intention frae my look maybe, or frae the
+stick in my hand, he pu'ed oot a lang knife frae his pocket and swore wi' the
+most awfu' oaths that if I didna stan' back he'd be the death o' me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ma conscience! the words the chiel used was eneugh tae mak' the hair stand
+straight on your heid. I wonder he wasna struck deid where he stood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were still standin' opposite each ither&mdash;he wi' his knife and me wi'
+the stick&mdash;when the general he cam up the drive and foond us. Tae my
+surprise he began tae talk tae the stranger as if he'd kenned him a' his days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Put your knife in your pocket, Corporal,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;Your
+fears have turned your brain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Blood an' wounds!&rdquo; says the other. &ldquo;He'd ha' turned my brain
+tae some purpose wi' that muckle stick o' his if I hadna drawn my snickersnee.
+You shouldna keep siccan an auld savage on your premises.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The maister he frooned and looked black at him, as though he didna relish
+advice comin' frae such a source. Then turnin' tae me&mdash;&ldquo;You won't be
+wanted after to-day, Israel,&rdquo; he says; &ldquo;you have been a guid
+servant, and I ha' naething tae complain of wi' ye, but circumstances have
+arisen which will cause me tae change my arrangements.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Vera guid, sir,&rdquo; says I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You can go this evening,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;and you shall have an
+extra month's pay tae mak up t'ye for this short notice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wi' that he went intae the hoose, followed by the man that he ca'ed the
+corporal, and frae that day tae this I have never clapped een either on the ane
+or the ither. My money was sent oot tae me in an envelope, and havin' said a
+few pairtin' words tae the cook and the wench wi' reference tae the wrath tae
+come and the treasure that is richer than rubies, I shook the dust o' Cloomber
+frae my feet for ever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maister Fothergill West says I maunna express an opeenion as tae what cam aboot
+afterwards, but maun confine mysel' tae what I saw mysel'. Nae doubt he has his
+reasons for this&mdash;and far be it frae me tae hint that they are no' guid
+anes&mdash;but I maun say this, that what happened didna surprise me. It was
+just as I expeckit, and so I said tae Maister Donald McSnaw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I've tauld ye a' aboot it noo, and I havena a word tae add or tae withdraw. I'm
+muckle obleeged tae Maister Mathew Clairk for puttin' it a' doon in writin' for
+me, and if there's ony would wish tae speer onything mair o' me I'm well kenned
+and respeckit in Ecclefechan, and Maister McNeil, the factor o' Wigtown, can
+aye tell where I am tae be foond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(<a name="ft_1" id="ft_1"></a>1) The old rascal was well paid for his trouble, so he need not have made such
+a favour of it.&mdash;J.F.W.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"></a>
+CHAPTER IX.<br />
+NARRATIVE OF JOHN EASTERLING, F.R.C.P.EDIN.</h2>
+
+<p>
+Having given the statement of Israel Stakes <i>in extenso</i>, I shall append a
+short memorandum from Dr. Easterling, now practising at Stranraer. It is true
+that the doctor was only once within the walls of Cloomber during its tenancy
+by General Heatherstone, but there were some circumstances connected with this
+visit which made it valuable, especially when considered as a supplement to the
+experiences which I have just submitted to the reader.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor has found time amid the calls of a busy country practice to jot down
+his recollections, and I feel that I cannot do better than subjoin them exactly
+as they stand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have very much pleasure in furnishing Mr. Fothergill West with an account of
+my solitary visit to Cloomber Hall, not only on account of the esteem which I
+have formed for that gentleman ever since his residence at Branksome, but also
+because it is my conviction that the facts in the case of General Heatherstone
+are of such a singular nature that it is of the highest importance that they
+should be placed before the public in a trustworthy manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was about the beginning of September of last year that I received a note
+from Mrs. Heatherstone, of Cloomber Hall, desiring me to make a professional
+call upon her husband, whose health, she said, had been for some time in a very
+unsatisfactory state.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had heard something of the Heatherstones and of the strange seclusion in
+which they lived, so that I was very much pleased at this opportunity of making
+their closer acquaintance, and lost no time in complying with her request.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had known the Hall in the old days of Mr. McVittie, the original proprietor,
+and I was astonished on arriving at the avenue gate to observe the changes
+which had taken place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gate itself, which used to yawn so hospitably upon the road, was now barred
+and locked, and a high wooden fence, with nails upon the top, encircled the
+whole grounds. The drive itself was leaf-strewn and uncared-for, and the whole
+place had a depressing air of neglect and decay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had to knock twice before a servant-maid opened the door and showed me
+through a dingy hall into a small room, where sat an elderly, careworn lady,
+who introduced herself as Mrs. Heatherstone. With her pale face, her grey hair,
+her sad, colourless eyes, and her faded silk dress, she was in perfect keeping
+with her melancholy surroundings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You find us in much trouble, doctor,&rdquo; she said, in a quiet,
+refined voice. &ldquo;My poor husband has had a great deal to worry him, and
+his nervous system for a long time has been in a very weak state. We came to
+this part of the country in the hope that the bracing air and the quiet would
+have a good effect upon him. Instead of improving, however, he has seemed to
+grow weaker, and this morning he is in a high fever and a little inclined to be
+delirious. The children and I were so frightened that we sent for you at once.
+If you will follow me I will take you to the general's bedroom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She led the way down a series of corridors to the chamber of the sick man,
+which was situated in the extreme wing of the building.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a carpetless, bleak-looking room, scantily furnished with a small
+truckle bed, a campaigning chair, and a plain deal table, on which were
+scattered numerous papers and books. In the centre of this table there stood a
+large object of irregular outline, which was covered over with a sheet of
+linen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All round the walls and in the corners were arranged a very choice and varied
+collection of arms, principally swords, some of which were of the straight
+pattern in common use in the British Army, while among the others were
+scimitars, tulwars, cuchurries, and a score of other specimens of Oriental
+workmanship. Many of these were richly mounted, with inlaid sheaths and hilts
+sparkling with precious stones, so that there was a piquant contrast between
+the simplicity of the apartment and the wealth which glittered on the walls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had little time, however, to observe the general's collection, since the
+general himself lay upon the couch and was evidently in sore need of my
+services.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was lying with his head turned half away from us. Breathing heavily, and
+apparently unconscious of our presence. His bright, staring eyes and the deep,
+hectic flush upon his cheek showed that his fever was at its height.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I advanced to the bedside, and, stooping over him, I placed my fingers upon his
+pulse, when immediately he sprang up into the sitting position and struck at me
+frenziedly with his clenched hands. I have never seen such intensity of fear
+and horror stamped upon a human face as appeared upon that which was now
+glaring up at me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bloodhound!&rdquo; he yelled; &ldquo;let me go&mdash;let me go, I say!
+Keep your hands off me! Is it not enough that my life has been ruined? When is
+it all to end? How long am I to endure it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hush, dear, hush!&rdquo; said his wife in a soothing voice, passing her
+cool hand over his heated forehead. &ldquo;This is Doctor Easterling, from
+Stranraer. He has not come to harm you, but to do you good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The general dropped wearily back upon his pillow, and I could see by the
+changed expression of his face that his delirium had left him, and that he
+understood what had been said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I slipped my clinical thermometer into his armpit and counted his pulse rate.
+It amounted to 120 per minute, and his temperature proved to be 104 degrees.
+Clearly it was a case of remittent fever, such as occurs in men who have spent
+a great part of their lives in the tropics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no danger,&rdquo; I remarked. &ldquo;With a little quinine and
+arsenic we shall very soon overcome the attack and restore his health.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No danger, eh?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;There never is any danger for me.
+I am as hard to kill as the Wandering Jew. I am quite clear in the head now,
+Mary; so you may leave me with the doctor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Heatherstone left the room&mdash;rather unwillingly, as I
+thought&mdash;and I sat down by the bedside to listen to anything which my
+patient might have to communicate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want you to examine my liver,&rdquo; he said when the door was closed.
+&ldquo;I used to have an abscess there, and Brodie, the staff-surgeon, said
+that it was ten to one that it would carry me off. I have not felt much of it
+since I left the East. This is where it used to be, just under the angle of the
+ribs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can find the place,&rdquo; said I, after making a careful examination;
+&ldquo;but I am happy to tell you that the abscess has either been entirely
+absorbed, or has turned calcareous, as these solitary abscesses will. There is
+no fear of its doing you any harm now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seemed to be by no means overjoyed at the intelligence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Things always happen so with me,&rdquo; he said moodily. &ldquo;Now, if
+another fellow was feverish and delirious he would surely be in some danger,
+and yet you will tell me that I am in none. Look at this, now.&rdquo; He bared
+his chest and showed me a puckered wound over the region of the heart.
+&ldquo;That's where the jezail bullet of a Hillman went in. You would think
+that was in the right spot to settle a man, and yet what does it do but glance
+upon a rib, and go clean round and out at the back, without so much as
+penetrating what you medicos call the pleura. Did ever you hear of such a
+thing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You were certainly born under a lucky star,&rdquo; I observed, with a
+smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's a matter of opinion,&rdquo; he answered, shaking his head.
+&ldquo;Death has no terrors for me, if it will but come in some familiar form,
+but I confess that the anticipation of some strange, some preternatural form of
+death is very terrible and unnerving.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You mean,&rdquo; said I, rather puzzled at his remark, &ldquo;that you
+would prefer a natural death to a death by violence?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I don't mean that exactly,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I am too
+familiar with cold steel and lead to be afraid of either. Do you know anything
+about odyllic force, doctor?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I do not,&rdquo; I replied, glancing sharply at him to see if there
+were any signs of his delirium returning. His expression was intelligent,
+however, and the feverish flush had faded from his cheeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, you Western scientific men are very much behind the day in some
+things,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;In all that is material and conducive to the
+comfort of the body you are pre-eminent, but in what concerns the subtle forces
+of Nature and the latent powers of the human spirit your best men are centuries
+behind the humblest coolies of India. Countless generations of beef-eating,
+comfort loving ancestors have given our animal instincts the command over our
+spiritual ones. The body, which should have been a mere tool for the use of the
+soul, has now become a degrading prison in which it is confined. The Oriental
+soul and body are not so welded together as ours are, and there is far less
+wrench when they part in death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They do not appear to derive much benefit from this peculiarity in their
+organisation,&rdquo; I remarked incredulously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Merely the benefit of superior knowledge,&rdquo; the general answered.
+&ldquo;If you were to go to India, probably the very first thing you would see
+in the way of amusement would be a native doing what is called the mango trick.
+Of course you have heard or read of it. The fellow plants a mango seed, and
+makes passes over it until it sprouts and bears leaves and fruit&mdash;all in
+the space of half-an-hour. It is not really a trick&mdash;it is a power. These
+men know more than your Tyndalls or Huxleys do about Nature's processes, and
+they can accelerate or retard her workings by subtle means of which we have no
+conception. These low-caste conjurers&mdash;as they are called&mdash;are mere
+vulgar dabblers, but the men who have trod the higher path are as far superior
+to us in knowledge as we are to the Hottentots or Patagonians.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You speak as if you were well acquainted with them,&rdquo; I remarked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To my cost, I am,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I have been brought in
+contact with them in a way in which I trust no other poor chap ever will be.
+But, really, as regards odyllic force, you ought to know something of it, for
+it has a great future before it in your profession. You should read
+Reichenbach's 'Researches on Magnetism and Vital Force,' and Gregory's 'Letters
+on Animal Magnetism.' These, supplemented by the twenty-seven Aphorisms of
+Mesmer, and the works of Dr. Justinus Kerner, of Weinsberg, would enlarge your
+ideas.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I did not particularly relish having a course of reading prescribed for me on a
+subject connected with my own profession, so I made no comment, but rose to
+take my departure. Before doing so I felt his pulse once more, and found that
+the fever had entirely left him in the sudden, unaccountable fashion which is
+peculiar to these malarious types of disease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned my face towards him to congratulate him upon his improvement, and
+stretched out my hand at the same time to pick my gloves from the table, with
+the result that I raised not only my own property, but also the linen cloth
+which was arranged over some object in the centre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I might not have noticed what I had done had I not seen an angry look upon the
+invalid's face and heard him utter an impatient exclamation. I at once turned,
+and replaced the cloth so promptly that I should have been unable to say what
+was underneath it, beyond having a general impression that it looked like a
+bride-cake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, doctor,&rdquo; the general said good-humouredly, perceiving
+how entirely accidental the incident was. &ldquo;There is no reason why you
+should not see it,&rdquo; and stretching out his hand, he pulled away the linen
+covering for the second time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then perceived that what I had taken for a bride-cake was really an admirably
+executed model of a lofty range of mountains, whose snow-clad peaks were not
+unlike the familiar sugar pinnacles and minarets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;These are the Himalayas, or at least the Surinam branch of them,&rdquo;
+he remarked, &ldquo;showing the principal passes between India and Afghanistan.
+It is an excellent model. This ground has a special interest for me, because it
+is the scene of my first campaign. There is the pass opposite Kalabagh and the
+Thul valley, where I was engaged during the summer of 1841 in protecting the
+convoys and keeping the Afridis in order. It wasn't a sinecure, I promise
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And this,&rdquo; said I, indicating a blood-red spot which had been
+marked on one side of the pass which he had pointed out&mdash;&ldquo;this is
+the scene of some fight in which you were engaged.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, we had a skirmish there,&rdquo; he answered, leaning forward and
+looking at the red mark. &ldquo;We were attacked by&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this moment he fell back upon his pillow as if he had been shot, while the
+same look of horror came over his face which I had observed when I first
+entered the room. At the same instant there came, apparently from the air
+immediately above his bed, a sharp, ringing, tinkling sound, which I can only
+compare with the noise made by a bicycle alarm, though it differed from this in
+having a distinctly throbbing character. I have never, before or since, heard
+any sound which could be confounded with it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stared round in astonishment, wondering where it could have come from, but
+without perceiving anything to which it could be ascribed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's all right, doctor,&rdquo; the general said with a ghastly smile.
+&ldquo;It's only my private gong. Perhaps you had better step downstairs and
+write my prescription in the dining-room.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was evidently anxious to get rid of me, so I was forced to take my
+departure, though I would gladly have stayed a little longer, in the hope of
+learning something as to the origin of the mysterious sound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I drove away from the house with the full determination of calling again upon
+my interesting patient, and endeavouring to elicit some further particulars as
+to his past life and his present circumstances. I was destined, however, to be
+disappointed, for I received that very evening a note from the general himself,
+enclosing a handsome fee for my single visit, and informing me that my
+treatment had done him so much good that he considered himself to be
+convalescent, and would not trouble me to see him again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was the last and only communication which I ever received from the tenant
+of Cloomber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have been asked frequently by neighbours and others who were interested in
+the matter whether he gave me the impression of insanity. To this I must
+unhesitatingly answer in the negative. On the contrary, his remarks gave me the
+idea of a man who had both read and thought deeply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I observed, however, during our single interview, that his reflexes were
+feeble, his arcus senilis well marked, and his arteries atheromatous&mdash;all
+signs that his constitution was in an unsatisfactory condition, and that a
+sudden crisis might be apprehended.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"></a>
+CHAPTER X.<br />
+OF THE LETTER WHICH CAME FROM THE HALL</h2>
+
+<p>
+Having thrown this side-light upon my narrative, I can now resume the statement
+of my own personal experiences. These I had brought down, as the reader will
+doubtless remember, to the date of the arrival of the savage-looking wanderer
+who called himself Corporal Rufus Smith. This incident occurred about the
+beginning of the month of October, and I find upon a comparison of dates that
+Dr. Easterling's visit to Cloomber preceded it by three weeks or more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During all this time I was in sore distress of mind, for I had never seen
+anything either of Gabriel or of her brother since the interview in which the
+general had discovered the communication which was kept up between us. I had no
+doubt that some sort of restraint had been placed upon them; and the thought
+that we had brought trouble on their heads was a bitter one both to my sister
+and myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our anxiety, however, was considerably mitigated by the receipt, a couple of
+days after my last talk with the general, of a note from Mordaunt Heatherstone.
+This was brought us by a little, ragged urchin, the son of one of the
+fishermen, who informed us that it had been handed to him at the avenue gate by
+an old woman&mdash;who, I expect, must have been the Cloomber cook.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">My Dearest Friends</span>,&rdquo; it ran, &ldquo;Gabriel and I have grieved to
+think how concerned you must be at having neither heard from nor seen us. The
+fact is that we are compelled to remain in the house. And this compulsion is
+not physical but moral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Our poor father, who gets more and more nervous every day, has entreated
+us to promise him that we will not go out until after the fifth of October, and
+to allay his fears we have given him the desired pledge. On the other hand, he
+has promised us that after the fifth&mdash;that is, in less than a
+week&mdash;we shall be as free as air to come or go as we please, so we have
+something to look forward to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gabriel says that she has explained to you that the governor is always a
+changed man after this particular date, on which his fears reach a crisis. He
+apparently has more reason than usual this year to anticipate that trouble is
+brewing for this unfortunate family, for I have never known him to take so many
+elaborate precautions or appear so thoroughly unnerved. Who would ever think,
+to see his bent form and his shaking hands, that he is the same man who used
+some few short years ago to shoot tigers on foot among the jungles of the
+Terai, and would laugh at the more timid sportsmen who sought the protection of
+their elephant's howdah?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know that he has the Victoria Cross, which he won in the streets of
+Delhi, and yet here he is shivering with terror and starting at every noise, in
+the most peaceful corner of the world. Oh, the pity of it. West! Remember what
+I have already told you&mdash;that it is no fanciful or imaginary peril, but
+one which we have every reason to suppose to be most real. It is, however, of
+such a nature that it can neither be averted nor can it profitably be expressed
+in words. If all goes well, you will see us at Branksome on the sixth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;With our fondest love to both of you, I am ever, my dear friends, your
+attached
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;MORDAUNT.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This letter was a great relief to us as letting us know that the brother and
+sister were under no physical restraint, but our powerlessness and inability
+even to comprehend what the danger was which threatened those whom we had come
+to love better than ourselves was little short of maddening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fifty times a day we asked ourselves and asked each other from what possible
+quarter this peril was to be expected, but the more we thought of it the more
+hopeless did any solution appear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In vain we combined our experiences and pieced together every word which had
+fallen from the lips of any inmate of Cloomber which might be supposed to bear
+directly or indirectly upon the subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, weary with fruitless speculation, we were fain to try to drive the
+matter from our thoughts, consoling ourselves with the reflection that in a few
+more days all restrictions would be removed, and we should be able to learn
+from our friends' own lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Those few intervening days, however, would, we feared, be dreary, long ones.
+And so they would have been, had it not been for a new and most unexpected
+incident, which diverted our minds from our own troubles and gave them
+something fresh with which to occupy themselves.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"></a>
+CHAPTER XI.<br />
+OF THE CASTING AWAY OF THE BARQUE &ldquo;BELINDA&rdquo;</h2>
+
+<p>
+The third of October had broken auspiciously with a bright sun and a cloudless
+sky. There had in the morning been a slight breeze, and a few little white
+wreaths of vapour drifted here and there like the scattered feathers of some
+gigantic bird, but, as the day wore on, such wind as there was fell completely
+away, and the air became close and stagnant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun blazed down with a degree of heat which was remarkable so late in the
+season, and a shimmering haze lay upon the upland moors and concealed the Irish
+mountains on the other side of the Channel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sea itself rose and fell in a long, heavy, oily roll, sweeping slowly
+landward, and breaking sullenly with a dull, monotonous booming upon the
+rock-girt shore. To the inexperienced all seemed calm and peaceful, but to
+those who are accustomed to read Nature's warnings there was a dark menace in
+air and sky and sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My sister and I walked out in the afternoon, sauntering slowly along the margin
+of the great, sandy spit which shoots out into the Irish Sea, flanking upon one
+side the magnificent Bay of Luce, and on the other the more obscure inlet of
+Kirkmaiden, on the shores of which the Branksome property is situated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was too sultry to go far, so we soon seated ourselves upon one of the sandy
+hillocks, overgrown with faded grass-tufts, which extend along the coast-line,
+and which form Nature's dykes against the encroachments of the ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our rest was soon interrupted by the scrunching of heavy boots upon the
+shingle, and Jamieson, the old man-o'-war's man whom I have already had
+occasion to mention, made his appearance, with the flat, circular net upon his
+back which he used for shrimp-catching. He came towards us upon seeing us, and
+said in his rough, kindly way that he hoped we would not take it amiss if he
+sent us up a dish of shrimps for our tea at Branksome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I aye make a good catch before a storm,&rdquo; he remarked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You think there is going to be a storm, then?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, even a marine could see that,&rdquo; he answered, sticking a great
+wedge of tobacco into his cheek. &ldquo;The moors over near Cloomber are just
+white wi' gulls and kittiewakes. What d'ye think they come ashore for except to
+escape having all the feathers blown out o' them? I mind a day like this when I
+was wi' Charlie Napier off Cronstadt. It well-nigh blew us under the guns of
+the forts, for all our engines and propellers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you ever known a wreck in these parts?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord love ye, sir, it's a famous place for wrecks. Why, in that very bay
+down there two o' King Philip's first-rates foundered wi' all hands in the days
+o' the Spanish war. If that sheet o' water and the Bay o' Luce round the corner
+could tell their ain tale they'd have a gey lot to speak of. When the Jedgment
+Day comes round that water will be just bubbling wi' the number o' folks that
+will be coming up frae the bottom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I trust that there will be no wrecks while we are here,&rdquo; said
+Esther earnestly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man shook his grizzled head and looked distrustfully at the hazy
+horizon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If it blows from the west,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;some o' these sailing
+ships may find it no joke to be caught without sea-room in the North Channel.
+There's that barque out yonder&mdash;I daresay her maister would be glad enough
+to find himsel' safe in the Clyde.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She seems to be absolutely motionless,&rdquo; I remarked, looking at the
+vessel in question, whose black hull and gleaming sails rose and fell slowly
+with the throbbing of the giant pulse beneath her. &ldquo;Perhaps, Jamieson, we
+are wrong, and there will be no storm after all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old sailor chuckled to himself with an air of superior knowledge, and
+shuffled away with his shrimp-net, while my sister and I walked slowly
+homewards through the hot and stagnant air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went up to my father's study to see if the old gentleman had any instructions
+as to the estate, for he had become engrossed in a new work upon Oriental
+literature, and the practical management of the property had in consequence
+devolved entirely upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I found him seated at his square library table, which was so heaped with books
+and papers that nothing of him was visible from the door except a tuft of white
+hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear son,&rdquo; he said to me as I entered, &ldquo;it is a great
+grief to me that you are not more conversant with Sanscrit. When I was your
+age, I could converse not only in that noble language, but also in the Tamulic,
+Lohitic, Gangelic, Taic, and Malaic dialects, which are all offshoots from the
+Turanian branch.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I regret extremely, sir,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;that I have not
+inherited your wonderful talents as a polyglot.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have set myself a task,&rdquo; he explained, &ldquo;which, if it could
+only be continued from generation to generation in our own family until it was
+completed, would make the name of West immortal. This is nothing less than to
+publish an English translation of the Buddhist Djarmas, with a preface giving
+an idea of the position of Brahminism before the coming of Sakyamuni. With
+diligence it is possible that I might be able myself to complete part of the
+preface before I die.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And pray, sir,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;how long would the whole work be
+when it was finished?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The abridged edition in the Imperial Library of Pekin,&rdquo; said my
+father, rubbing his hands together, &ldquo;consists of 325 volumes of an
+average weight of five pounds. Then the preface, which must embrace some
+account of the Rig-veda, the Sama-veda, the Yagur-veda, and the Atharva-veda,
+with the Brahmanas, could hardly be completed in less than ten volumes. Now, if
+we apportion one volume to each year, there is every prospect of the family
+coming to an end of its task about the date 2250, the twelfth generation
+completing the work, while the thirteenth might occupy itself upon the
+index.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how are our descendants to live, sir,&rdquo; I asked, with a smile,
+&ldquo;during the progress of this great undertaking:&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's the worst of you, Jack,&rdquo; my father cried petulantly.
+&ldquo;There is nothing practical about you. Instead of confining your
+attention to the working out of my noble scheme, you begin raising all sorts of
+absurd objections. It is a mere matter of detail how our descendants live, so
+long as they stick to the Djarmas. Now, I want you to go up to the bothy of
+Fergus McDonald and see about the thatch, and Willie Fullerton has written to
+say that his milk-cow is bad. You might took in upon your way and ask after
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I started off upon my errands, but before doing so I took a look at the
+barometer upon the wall. The mercury had sunk to the phenomenal point of
+twenty-eight inches. Clearly the old sailor had not been wrong in his
+interpretation of Nature's signs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I returned over the moors in the evening, the wind was blowing in short,
+angry puffs, and the western horizon was heaped with sombre clouds which
+stretched their long, ragged tentacles right up to the zenith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Against their dark background one or two livid, sulphur-coloured splotches
+showed up malignant and menacing, while the surface of the sea had changed from
+the appearance of burnished quicksilver to that of ground glass. A low, moaning
+sound rose up from the ocean as if it knew that trouble was in store for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Far out in the Channel I saw a single panting, eager steam vessel making its
+way to Belfast Lough, and the large barque which I had observed in the morning
+still beating about in the offing, endeavouring to pass to the northward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At nine o'clock a sharp breeze was blowing, at ten it had freshened into a
+gale, and before midnight the most furious storm was raging which I can
+remember upon that weather-beaten coast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I sat for some time in our small, oak-panelled sitting-room listening to the
+screeching and howling of the blast and to the rattle of the gravel and pebbles
+as they pattered against the window. Nature's grim orchestra was playing its
+world-old piece with a compass which ranged from the deep diapason of the
+thundering surge to the thin shriek of the scattered shingle and the keen
+piping of frightened sea birds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once for an instant I opened the lattice window, but a gust of wind and rain
+came blustering through, bearing with it a great sheet of seaweed, which
+flapped down upon the table. It was all I could do to close it again with a
+thrust of my shoulder in the face of the blast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My sister and father had retired to their rooms, but my thoughts were too
+active for sleep, so I continued to sit and to smoke by the smouldering fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was going on in the Hall now, I wondered? What did Gabriel think of the
+storm, and how did it affect the old man who wandered about in the night? Did
+he welcome these dread forces of Nature as being of the same order of things as
+his own tumultuous thoughts?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was only two days now from the date which I had been assured was to mark a
+crisis in his fortunes. Would he regard this sudden tempest as being in any way
+connected with the mysterious fate which threatened him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Over all these things and many more I pondered as I sat by the glowing embers
+until they died gradually out, and the chill night air warned me that it was
+time to retire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I may have slept a couple of hours when I was awakened by someone tugging
+furiously at my shoulder. Sitting up in bed, I saw by the dim light that my
+father was standing half-clad by my bedside, and that it was his grasp which I
+felt on my night-shirt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get up, Jack, get up!&rdquo; he was crying excitedly. &ldquo;There's a
+great ship ashore in the bay, and the poor folk will all be drowned. Come down,
+my boy, and let us see what we can do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The good old man seemed to be nearly beside himself with excitement and
+impatience. I sprang from my bed, and was huddling on a few clothes, when a
+dull, booming sound made itself heard above the howling of the wind and the
+thunder of the breakers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There it is again!&rdquo; cried my father. &ldquo;It is their signal
+gun, poor creatures! Jamieson and the fishermen are below. Put your oil-skin
+coat on and the Glengarry hat. Come, come, every second may mean a human
+life!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We hurried down together and made our way to the beach, accompanied by a dozen
+or so of the inhabitants of Branksome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gale had increased rather than moderated, and the wind screamed all round
+us with an infernal clamour. So great was its force that we had to put our
+shoulders against it, and bore our way through it, while the sand and gravel
+tingled up against our faces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was just light enough to make out the scudding clouds and the white gleam
+of the breakers, but beyond that all was absolute darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We stood ankle deep in the shingle and seaweed, shading our eyes with our hands
+and peering out into the inky obscurity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed to me as I listened that I could hear human voices loud in intreaty
+and terror, but amid the wild turmoil of Nature it was difficult to distinguish
+one sound from another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly, however, a light glimmered in the heart of the tempest, and next
+instant the beach and sea and wide, tossing bay were brilliantly illuminated by
+the wild glare of a signal light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ship lay on her beam-ends right in the centre of the terrible Hansel reef,
+hurled over to such an angle that I could see all the planking of her deck. I
+recognised her at once as being the same three-masted barque which I had
+observed in the Channel in the morning, and the Union Jack which was nailed
+upside down to the jagged slump of her mizzen proclaimed her nationality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every spar and rope and writhing piece of cordage showed up hard and clear
+under the vivid light which spluttered and flickered from the highest portion
+of the forecastle. Beyond the doomed ship, out of the great darkness came the
+long, rolling lines of big waves, never ending, never tiring, with a petulant
+tuft of foam here and there upon their crests. Each as it reached the broad
+circle of unnatural light appeared to gather strength and volume and to hurry
+on more impetuously until with a roar and a jarring crash it sprang upon its
+victim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clinging to the weather shrouds we could distinctly see ten or a dozen
+frightened seamen who, when the light revealed our presence, turned their white
+faces towards us and waved their hands imploringly. The poor wretches had
+evidently taken fresh hope from our presence, though it was clear that their
+own boats had either been washed away or so damaged as to render them useless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors who clung to the rigging were not, however, the only unfortunates
+on board. On the breaking poop there stood three men who appeared to be both of
+a different race and nature from the cowering wretches who implored our
+assistance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leaning upon the shattered taff-rail they seemed to be conversing together as
+quietly and unconcernedly as though they were unconscious of the deadly peril
+which surrounded them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the signal light flickered over them, we could see from the shore that these
+immutable strangers wore red fezes, and that their faces were of a swarthy,
+large-featured type, which proclaimed an Eastern origin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was little time, however, for us to take note of such details. The ship
+was breaking rapidly, and some effort must be made to save the poor, sodden
+group of humanity who implored our assistance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nearest lifeboat was in the Bay of Luce, ten long miles away, but here was
+our own broad, roomy craft upon the shingle, and plenty of brave fisher lads to
+form a crew. Six of us sprang to the oars, the others pushed us off, and we
+fought our way through the swirling, raging waters, staggering and recoiling
+before the great, sweeping billows, but still steadily decreasing the distance
+between the barque and ourselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed, however, that our efforts were fated to be in vain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we mounted upon a surge I saw a giant wave, topping all the others, and
+coming after them like a driver following a flock, sweep down upon the vessel,
+curling its great, green arch over the breaking deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a rending, riving sound the ship split in two where the terrible, serrated
+back of the Hansel reef was sawing into her keel. The after-part, with the
+broken mizzen and the three Orientals, sank backwards into deep water and
+vanished, while the fore-half oscillated helplessly about, retaining its
+precarious balance upon the rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A wail of fear went up from the wreck and was echoed from the beach, but by the
+blessing of Providence she kept afloat until we made our way under her bowsprit
+and rescued every man of the crew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We had not got half-way upon our return, however, when another great wave swept
+the shattered forecastle off the reef, and, extinguishing the signal light, hid
+the wild denouement from our view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our friends upon the shore were loud in congratulation and praise, nor were
+they backward in welcoming and comforting the castaways. They were thirteen in
+all, as cold and cowed a set of mortals as ever slipped through Death's
+fingers, save, indeed, their captain, who was a hardy, robust man, and who made
+light of the affair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some were taken off to this cottage and some to that, but the greater part came
+back to Branksome with us, where we gave them such dry clothes as we could lay
+our hands on, and served them with beef and beer by the kitchen fire. The
+captain, whose name was Meadows, compressed his bulky form into a suit of my
+own, and came down to the parlour, where he mixed himself some grog and gave my
+father and myself an account of the disaster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If it hadn't been for you, sir, and your brave fellows,&rdquo; he said,
+smiling across at me, &ldquo;we should be ten fathoms deep by this time. As to
+the <i>Belinda</i>, she was a leaky old tub and well insured, so neither the
+owners nor I are likely to break our hearts over her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid,&rdquo; said my father sadly, &ldquo;that we shall never see
+your three passengers again. I have left men upon the beach in case they should
+be washed up, but I fear it is hopeless. I saw them go down when the vessel
+split, and no man could have lived for a moment among that terrible
+surge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who were they?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;I could not have believed that it
+was possible for men to appear so unconcerned in the face of such imminent
+peril.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As to who they are or were,&rdquo; the captain answered, puffing
+thoughtfully at his pipe, &ldquo;that is by no means easy to say. Our last port
+was Kurrachee, in the north of India, and there we took them aboard as
+passengers for Glasgow. Ram Singh was the name of the younger, and it is only
+with him that I have come in contact, but they all appeared to be quiet,
+inoffensive gentlemen. I never inquired their business, but I should judge that
+they were Parsee merchants from Hyderabad whose trade took them to Europe. I
+could never see why the crew should fear them, and the mate, too, he should
+have had more sense.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fear them!&rdquo; I ejaculated in surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, they had some preposterous idea that they were dangerous shipmates.
+I have no doubt if you were to go down into the kitchen now you would find that
+they are all agreed that our passengers were the cause of the whole
+disaster.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the captain was speaking the parlour door opened and the mate of the barque,
+a tall, red-bearded sailor, stepped in. He had obtained a complete rig-out from
+some kind-hearted fisherman, and looked in his comfortable jersey and
+well-greased seaboots a very favourable specimen of a shipwrecked mariner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a few words of grateful acknowledgment of our hospitality, he drew a chair
+up to the fire and warmed his great, brown hands before the blaze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What d'ye think now, Captain Meadows?&rdquo; he asked presently,
+glancing up at his superior officer. &ldquo;Didn't I warn you what would be the
+upshot of having those niggers on board the <i>Belinda</i>?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain leant back in his chair and laughed heartily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Didn't I tell you?&rdquo; he cried, appealing to us. &ldquo;Didn't I
+tell you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It might have been no laughing matter for us,&rdquo; the other remarked
+petulantly. &ldquo;I have lost a good sea-kit and nearly my life into the
+bargain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do I understand you to say,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;that you attribute
+your misfortunes to your ill-fated passengers?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mate opened his eyes at the adjective.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why ill-fated, sir?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because they are most certainly drowned,&rdquo; I answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sniffed incredulously and went on warming his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Men of that kind are never drowned,&rdquo; he said, after a pause.
+&ldquo;Their father, the devil, looks after them. Did you see them standing on
+the poop and rolling cigarettes at the time when the mizzen was carried away
+and the quarter-boats stove? That was enough for me. I'm not surprised at you
+landsmen not being able to take it in, but the captain here, who's been sailing
+since he was the height of the binnacle, ought to know by this time that a cat
+and a priest are the worst cargo you can carry. If a Christian priest is bad, I
+guess an idolatrous pagan one is fifty times worse. I stand by the old
+religion, and be d&mdash;d to it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My father and I could not help laughing at the rough sailor's very unorthodox
+way of proclaiming his orthodoxy. The mate, however, was evidently in deadly
+earnest, and proceeded to state his case, marking off the different points upon
+the rough, red fingers of his left hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was at Kurrachee, directly after they come that I warned ye,&rdquo;
+he said reproachfully to the captain. &ldquo;There was three Buddhist Lascars
+in my watch, and what did they do when them chaps come aboard? Why, they down
+on their stomachs and rubbed their noses on the deck&mdash;that's what they
+did. They wouldn't ha' done as much for an admiral of the R'yal Navy. They know
+who's who&mdash;these niggers do; and I smelt mischief the moment I saw them on
+their faces. I asked them afterwards in your presence, Captain, why they had
+done it, and they answered that the passengers were holy men. You heard 'em
+yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, there's no harm in that, Hawkins,&rdquo; said Captain Meadows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't know that,&rdquo; the mate said doubtfully. &ldquo;The holiest
+Christian is the one that's nearest God, but the holiest nigger is, in my
+opinion, the one that's nearest the devil. Then you saw yourself, Captain
+Meadows, how they went on during the voyage, reading books that was writ on
+wood instead o' paper, and sitting up right through the night to jabber
+together on the quarter-deck. What did they want to have a chart of their own
+for and to mark the course of the vessel every day?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They didn't,&rdquo; said the captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed they did, and if I did not tell you sooner it was because you
+were always ready to laugh at what I said about them. They had instruments o'
+their own&mdash;when they used them I can't say&mdash;but every day at noon
+they worked out the latitude and longitude, and marked out the vessel's
+position on a chart that was pinned on their cabin table. I saw them at it, and
+so did the steward from his pantry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I don't see what you prove from that,&rdquo; the captain remarked,
+&ldquo;though I confess it is a strange thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll tell you another strange thing,&rdquo; said the mate impressively.
+&ldquo;Do you know the name of this bay in which we are cast away?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have learnt from our kind friends here that we are upon the
+Wigtownshire coast,&rdquo; the captain answered, &ldquo;but I have not heard
+the name of the bay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mate leant forward with a grave face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is the Bay of Kirkmaiden,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If he expected to astonish Captain Meadows he certainly succeeded, for that
+gentleman was fairly bereft of speech for a minute or more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is really marvellous,&rdquo; he said, after a time, turning to us.
+&ldquo;These passengers of ours cross-questioned us early in the voyage as to
+the existence of a bay of that name. Hawkins here and I denied all knowledge of
+one, for on the chart it is included in the Bay of Luce. That we should
+eventually be blown into it and destroyed is an extraordinary
+coincidence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Too extraordinary to be a coincidence,&rdquo; growled the mate. &ldquo;I
+saw them during the calm yesterday morning, pointing to the land over our
+starboard quarter. They knew well enough that that was the port they were
+making for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you make of it all, then, Hawkins?&rdquo; asked the captain,
+with a troubled face. &ldquo;What is your own theory on the matter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, in my opinion,&rdquo; the mate answered, &ldquo;them three swabs
+have no more difficulty in raising a gale o' wind than I should have in
+swallowing this here grog. They had reasons o' their own for coming to this
+God-forsaken&mdash;saving your presence, sirs&mdash;this God-forsaken bay, and
+they took a short cut to it by arranging to be blown ashore there. That's my
+idea o' the matter, though what three Buddhist priests could find to do in the
+Bay of Kirkmaiden is clean past my comprehension.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My father raised his eyebrows to indicate the doubt which his hospitality
+forbade him from putting into words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think, gentlemen,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that you are both sorely in
+need of rest after your perilous adventures. If you will follow me I shall lead
+you to your rooms.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He conducted them with old-fashioned ceremony to the laird's best spare
+bedroom, and then, returning to me in the parlour, proposed that we should go
+down together to the beach and learn whether anything fresh had occurred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first pale light of dawn was just appearing in the east when we made our
+way for the second time to the scene of the shipwreck. The gale had blown
+itself out, but the sea was still very high, and all inside the breakers was a
+seething, gleaming line of foam, as though the fierce old ocean were gnashing
+its white fangs at the victims who had escaped from its clutches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All along the beach fishermen and crofters were hard at work hauling up spars
+and barrels as fast as they were tossed ashore. None of them had seen any
+bodies, however, and they explained to us that only such things as could float
+had any chance of coming ashore, for the undercurrent was so strong that
+whatever was beneath the surface must infallibly be swept out to sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to the possibility of the unfortunate passengers having been able to reach
+the shore, these practical men would not hear of it for a moment, and showed us
+conclusively that if they had not been drowned they must have been dashed to
+pieces upon the rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We did all that could be done,&rdquo; my father said sadly, as we
+returned home. &ldquo;I am afraid that the poor mate has had his reason
+affected by the suddenness of the disaster. Did you hear what he said about
+Buddhist priests raising a gale?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I heard him,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;It was very painful to listen to
+him,&rdquo; said my father. &ldquo;I wonder if he would object to my putting a
+small mustard plaster under each of his ears. It would relieve any congestion
+of the brain. Or perhaps it would be best to wake him up and give him two
+antibilious pills. What do you think, Jack?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said I, with a yawn, &ldquo;that you had best let him
+sleep, and go to sleep yourself. You can physic him in the morning if he needs
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So saying I stumbled off to my bedroom, and throwing myself upon the couch was
+soon in a dreamless slumber.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"></a>
+CHAPTER XII.<br />
+OF THE THREE FOREIGN MEN UPON THE COAST</h2>
+
+<p>
+It must have been eleven or twelve o'clock before I awoke, and it seemed to me
+in the flood of golden light which streamed into my chamber that the wild,
+tumultuous episodes of the night before must have formed part of some fantastic
+dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was hard to believe that the gentle breeze which whispered so softly among
+the ivy-leaves around my window was caused by the same element which had shaken
+the very house a few short hours before. It was as if Nature had repented of
+her momentary passion and was endeavouring to make amends to an injured world
+by its warmth and its sunshine. A chorus of birds in the garden below filled
+the whole air with their wonder and congratulations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Down in the hall I found a number of the shipwrecked sailors, looking all the
+better for their night's repose, who set up a buzz of pleasure and gratitude
+upon seeing me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arrangements had been made to drive them to Wigtown, whence they were to
+proceed to Glasgow by the evening train, and my father had given orders that
+each should be served with a packet of sandwiches and hard-boiled eggs to
+sustain him on the way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Captain Meadows thanked us warmly in the name of his employers for the manner
+in which we had treated them, and he called for three cheers from his crew,
+which were very heartily given. He and the mate walked down with us after we
+had broken our fast to have a last look at the scene of the disaster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great bosom of the bay was still heaving convulsively, and its waves were
+breaking into sobs against the rocks, but there was none of that wild turmoil
+which we had seen in the early morning. The long, emerald ridges, with their
+little, white crests of foam, rolled slowly and majestically in, to break with
+a regular rhythm&mdash;the panting of a tired monster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A cable length from the shore we could see the mainmast of the barque floating
+upon the waves, disappearing at times in the trough of the sea, and then
+shooting up towards Heaven like a giant javelin, shining and dripping as the
+rollers tossed it about. Other smaller pieces of wreckage dotted the waters,
+while innumerable spars and packages were littered over the sands. These were
+being drawn up and collected in a place of safety by gangs of peasants. I
+noticed that a couple of broad-winged gulls were hovering and skimming over the
+scene of the shipwreck, as though many strange things were visible to them
+beneath the waves. At times we could hear their raucous voices as they cried to
+one another of what they saw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She was a leaky old craft,&rdquo; said the captain, looking sadly out to
+sea, &ldquo;but there's always a feeling of sorrow when we see the last of a
+ship we have sailed in. Well, well, she would have been broken up in any case,
+and sold for firewood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It looks a peaceful scene,&rdquo; I remarked. &ldquo;Who would imagine
+that three men lost their lives last night in those very waters?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor fellows,&rdquo; said the captain, with feeling. &ldquo;Should they
+be cast up after our departure, I am sure, Mr. West, that you will have them
+decently interred.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was about to make some reply when the mate burst into a loud guffaw, slapping
+his thigh and choking with merriment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you want to bury them,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you had best look
+sharp, or they may clear out of the country. You remember what I said last
+night? Just look at the top of that 'ere hillock, and tell me whether I was in
+the right or not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a high sand dune some little distance along the coast, and upon the
+summit of this the figure was standing which had attracted the mate's
+attention. The captain threw up his hands in astonishment as his eyes rested
+upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By the eternal,&rdquo; he shouted, &ldquo;it's Ram Singh himself! Let us
+overhaul him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taking to his heels in his excitement he raced along the beach, followed by the
+mate and myself, as well as by one or two of the fishermen who had observed the
+presence of the stranger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The latter, perceiving our approach, came down from his post of observation and
+walked quietly in our direction, with his head sunk upon his breast, like one
+who is absorbed in thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not help contrasting our hurried and tumultuous advance with the
+gravity and dignity of this lonely Oriental, nor was the matter mended when he
+raised a pair of steady, thoughtful dark eyes and inclined his head in a
+graceful, sweeping salutation. It seemed to me that we were like a pack of
+schoolboys in the presence of a master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger's broad, unruffled brow, his clear, searching gaze, firm-set yet
+sensitive mouth, and clean-cut, resolute expression, all combined to form the
+most imposing and noble presence which I had ever known. I could not have
+imagined that such imperturbable calm and at the same time such a consciousness
+of latent strength could have been expressed by any human face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was dressed in a brown velveteen coat, loose, dark trousers, with a shirt
+that was cut low in the collar, so as to show the muscular, brown neck, and he
+still wore the red fez which I had noticed the night before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I observed with a feeling of surprise, as we approached him, that none of these
+garments showed the slightest indication of the rough treatment and wetting
+which they must have received during their wearer's submersion and struggle to
+the shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So you are none the worse for your ducking,&rdquo; he said in a
+pleasant, musical voice, looking from the captain to the mate. &ldquo;I hope
+that your poor sailors have found pleasant quarters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are all safe,&rdquo; the captain answered. &ldquo;But we had given
+you up for lost&mdash;you and your two friends. Indeed, I was just making
+arrangements for your burial with Mr. West here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger looked at me and smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We won't give Mr. West that trouble for a little time yet,&rdquo; he
+remarked; &ldquo;my friends and I came ashore all safe, and we have found
+shelter in a hut a mile or so along the coast. It is lonely down there, but we
+have everything which we can desire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We start for Glasgow this afternoon,&rdquo; said the captain; &ldquo;I
+shall be very glad if you will come with us. If you have not been in England
+before you may find it awkward travelling alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are very much indebted to you for your thoughtfulness,&rdquo; Ram
+Singh answered; &ldquo;but we will not take advantage of your kind offer. Since
+Nature has driven us here we intend to have a look about us before we
+leave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As you like,&rdquo; the captain said, shrugging his shoulders. &ldquo;I
+don't think you are likely to find very much to interest you in this hole of a
+place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very possibly not,&rdquo; Ram Singh answered with an amused smile.
+&ldquo;You remember Milton's lines:
+</p>
+
+<div class="poetry"><div class="poem">
+'The mind is its own place, and in itself<br />
+Can make a hell of Heaven, a heaven of Hell.'
+</div></div>
+
+<p>
+I dare say we can spend a few days here comfortably enough. Indeed, I think you
+must be wrong in considering this to be a barbarous locality. I am much
+mistaken if this young gentleman's father is not Mr. James Hunter West, whose
+name is known and honoured by the pundits of India.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My father is, indeed, a well-known Sanscrit scholar,&rdquo; I answered
+in astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The presence of such a man,&rdquo; observed the stranger slowly,
+&ldquo;changes a wilderness into a city. One great mind is surely a higher
+indication of civilisation than are incalculable leagues of bricks and mortar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your father is hardly so profound as Sir William Jones, or so universal
+as the Baron Von Hammer-Purgstall, but he combines many of the virtues of each.
+You may tell him, however, from me that he is mistaken in the analogy which he
+has traced between the Samoyede and Tamulic word roots.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you have determined to honour our neighbourhood by a short
+stay,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you will offend my father very much if you do not
+put up with him. He represents the laird here, and it is the laird's privilege,
+according to our Scottish custom, to entertain all strangers of repute who
+visit this parish.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My sense of hospitality prompted me to deliver this invitation, though I could
+feel the mate twitching at my sleeves as if to warn me that the offer was, for
+some reason, an objectionable one. His fears were, however, unnecessary, for
+the stranger signified by a shake of the head that it was impossible for him to
+accept it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My friends and I are very much obliged to you,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;but we have our own reasons for remaining where we are. The hut which we
+occupy is deserted and partly ruined, but we Easterns have trained ourselves to
+do without most of those things which are looked upon as necessaries in Europe,
+believing firmly in that wise axiom that a man is rich, not in proportion to
+what he has, but in proportion to what he can dispense with. A good fisherman
+supplies us with bread and with herbs, we have clean, dry straw for our
+couches; what could man wish for more?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you must feel the cold at night, coming straight from the
+tropics,&rdquo; remarked the captain. &ldquo;Perhaps our bodies are cold
+sometimes. We have not noticed it. We have all three spent many years in the
+Upper Himalayas on the border of the region of eternal snow, so we are not very
+sensitive to inconveniences of the sort.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At least,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you must allow me to send you over some
+fish and some meat from our larder.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are not Christians,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;but Buddhists of the
+higher school. We do not recognise that man has a moral right to slay an ox or
+a fish for the gross use of his body. He has not put life into them, and has
+assuredly no mandate from the Almighty to take life from them save under most
+pressing need. We could not, therefore, use your gift if you were to send
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, sir,&rdquo; I remonstrated, &ldquo;if in this changeable and
+inhospitable climate you refuse all nourishing food your vitality will fail
+you&mdash;you will die.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall die then,&rdquo; he answered, with an amused smile. &ldquo;And
+now, Captain Meadows, I must bid you adieu, thanking you for your kindness
+during the voyage, and you, too, good-bye&mdash;you will command a ship of your
+own before the year is out. I trust, Mr. West, that I may see you again before
+I leave this part of the country. Farewell!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He raised his red fez, inclined his noble head with the stately grace which
+characterised all his actions, and strode away in the direction from which he
+had come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me congratulate you, Mr. Hawkins,&rdquo; said the captain to the
+mate as we walked homewards. &ldquo;You are to command your own ship within the
+year.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No such luck!&rdquo; the mate answered, with a pleased smile upon his
+mahogany face, &ldquo;still, there's no saying how things may come out. What
+d'ye think of him, Mr. West?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I am very much interested in him. What a
+magnificent head and bearing he has for a young man. I suppose he cannot be
+more than thirty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Forty,&rdquo; said the mate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sixty, if he is a day,&rdquo; remarked Captain Meadows. &ldquo;Why, I
+have heard him talk quite familiarly of the first Afghan war. He was a man
+then, and that is close on forty years ago.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wonderful!&rdquo; I ejaculated. &ldquo;His skin is as smooth and his
+eyes are as clear as mine are. He is the superior priest of the three, no
+doubt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The inferior,&rdquo; said the captain confidently. &ldquo;That is why he
+does all the talking for them. Their minds are too elevated to descend to mere
+worldly chatter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are the strangest pieces of flotsam and jetsam that were ever
+thrown upon this coast,&rdquo; I remarked. &ldquo;My father will be mightily
+interested in them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, I think the less you have to do with them the better for
+you,&rdquo; said the mate. &ldquo;If I do command my own ship I'll promise you
+that I never carry live stock of that sort on board of her. But here we are all
+aboard and the anchor tripped, so we must bid you good-bye.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wagonette had just finished loading up when we arrived, and the chief
+places, on either side of the driver, had been reserved for my two companions,
+who speedily sprang into them. With a chorus of cheers the good fellows whirled
+away down the road, while my father, Esther, and I stood upon the lawn and
+waved our hands to them until they disappeared behind the Cloomber woods, <i>en
+route</i> for the Wigtown railway station. Barque and crew had both vanished
+now from our little world, the only relic of either being the heaps of
+<i>débris</i> upon the beach, which were to lie there until the arrival of an
+agent from Lloyd's.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"></a>
+CHAPTER XIII.<br />
+IN WHICH I SEE THAT WHICH HAS BEEN SEEN BY FEW</h2>
+
+<p>
+At dinner that evening I mentioned to my father the episode of the three
+Buddhist priests, and found, as I had expected, that he was very much
+interested by my account of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, however, he heard of the high manner in which Ram Singh had spoken of
+him, and the distinguished position which he had assigned him among
+philologists, he became so excited that it was all we could do to prevent him
+from setting off then and there to make his acquaintance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Esther and I were relieved and glad when we at last succeeded in abstracting
+his boots and manoeuvring him to his bedroom, for the exciting events of the
+last twenty-four hours had been too much for his weak frame and delicate
+nerves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was sitting at the open porch in the gloaming, turning over in my mind the
+unexpected events which had occurred so rapidly&mdash;the gale, the wreck, the
+rescue, and the strange character of the castaways&mdash;when my sister came
+quietly over to me and put her hand in mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you think, Jack,&rdquo; she said, in her low, sweet voice,
+&ldquo;that we are forgetting our friends over at Cloomber? Hasn't all this
+excitement driven their fears and their danger out of our heads?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Out of our heads, but never out of our hearts,&rdquo; said I, laughing.
+&ldquo;However, you are right, little one, for our attention has certainly been
+distracted from them. I shall walk up in the morning and see if I can see
+anything of them. By the way, to-morrow is the fateful 5th of October&mdash;one
+more day, and all will be well with us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or ill,&rdquo; said my sister gloomily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, what a little croaker you are, to be sure!&rdquo; I cried.
+&ldquo;What in the world is coming over you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I feel nervous and low-spirited,&rdquo; she answered, drawing closer to
+my side and shivering. &ldquo;I feel as if some great peril were hanging over
+the heads of those we love. Why should these strange men wish to stay upon the
+coast?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, the Buddhists?&rdquo; I said lightly. &ldquo;Oh, these fellows
+have continual feast-days and religious rites of all sorts. They have some very
+good reason for staying, you may be sure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you think,&rdquo; said Esther, in an awe-struck whisper,
+&ldquo;that it is very strange that these priests should arrive here all the
+way from India just at the present moment? Have you not gathered from all you
+have heard that the general's fears are in some way connected with India and
+the Indians?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The remark made me thoughtful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, now that you mention it,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;I have some
+vague impression that the mystery is connected with some incident which
+occurred in that country. I am sure, however, that your fears would vanish if
+you saw Ram Singh. He is the very personification of wisdom and benevolence. He
+was shocked at the idea of our killing a sheep, or even a fish for his
+benefit&mdash;said he would rather die than have a hand in taking the life of
+an animal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is very foolish of me to be so nervous,&rdquo; said my sister
+bravely. &ldquo;But you must promise me one thing, Jack. You will go up to
+Cloomber in the morning, and if you can see any of them you must tell them of
+these strange neighbours of ours. They are better able to judge than we are
+whether their presence has any significance or not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, little one,&rdquo; I answered, as we went indoors. &ldquo;You
+have been over-excited by all these wild doings, and you need a sound night's
+rest to compose you. I'll do what you suggest, however, and our friends shall
+judge for themselves whether these poor fellows should be sent about their
+business or not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made the promise to allay my sister's apprehensions, but in the bright
+sunlight of morning it appeared less than absurd to imagine that our poor
+vegetarian castaways could have any sinister intentions, or that their advent
+could have any effect upon the tenant of Cloomber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was anxious, myself, however, to see whether I could see anything of the
+Heatherstones, so after breakfast I walked up to the Hall. In their seclusion
+it was impossible for them to have learnt anything of the recent events. I
+felt, therefore, that even if I should meet the general he could hardly regard
+me as an intruder while I had so much news to communicate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The place had the same dreary and melancholy appearance which always
+characterised it. Looking through between the thick iron bars of the main
+gateway there was nothing to be seen of any of the occupants. One of the great
+Scotch firs had been blown down in the gale, and its long, ruddy trunk lay
+right across the grass-grown avenue; but no attempt had been made to remove it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Everything about the property had the same air of desolation and neglect, with
+the solitary exception of the massive and impenetrable fencing, which presented
+as unbroken and formidable an obstacle as ever to the would-be trespasser.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I walked round this barrier as far as our old trysting-place without finding
+any flaw through which I could get a glimpse of the house, for the fence had
+been repaired with each rail overlapping the last, so as to secure absolute
+privacy for those inside, and to block those peep-holes which I had formerly
+used.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the old spot, however, where I had had the memorable interview with the
+general on the occasion when he surprised me with his daughter, I found that
+the two loose rails had been refixed in such a manner that there was a gap of
+two inches or more between them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through this I had a view of the house and of part of the lawn in front of it,
+and, though I could see no signs of life outside or at any of the windows, I
+settled down with the intention of sticking to my post until I had a chance of
+speaking to one or other of the inmates. Indeed, the cold, dead aspect of the
+house had struck such a chill into my heart that I determined to scale the
+fence at whatever risk of incurring the general's displeasure rather than
+return without news of the Heatherstones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Happily there was no need of this extreme expedient, for I had not been there
+half-an-hour before I heard the harsh sound of an opening lock, and the general
+himself emerged from the main door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To my surprise he was dressed in a military uniform, and that not the uniform
+in ordinary use in the British Army. The red coat was strangely cut and stained
+with the weather. The trousers had originally been white, but had now faded to
+a dirty yellow. With a red sash across his chest and a straight sword hanging
+from his side, he stood the living example of a bygone type&mdash;the John
+Company's officer of forty years ago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was followed by the ex-tramp, Corporal Rufus Smith, now well-clad and
+prosperous, who limped along beside his master, the two pacing up and down the
+lawn absorbed in conversation. I observed that from time to time one or other
+of them would pause and glance furtively all about them, as though guarding
+keenly against a surprise. I should have preferred communicating with the
+general alone, but since there was no dissociating him from his companion, I
+beat loudly on the fencing with my stick to attract their attention. They both
+faced round in a moment, and I could see from their gestures that they were
+disturbed and alarmed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then elevated my stick above the barrier to show them where the sound
+proceeded from. At this the general began to walk in my direction with the air
+of a man who is bracing himself up for an effort, but the other caught him by
+the wrist and endeavoured to dissuade him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was only when I shouted out my name and assured them that I was alone that I
+could prevail upon them to approach. Once assured of my identity the general
+ran eagerly towards me and greeted me with the utmost cordiality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is truly kind of you, West,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is only at
+such times as these that one can judge who is a friend and who not. It would
+not be fair to you to ask you to come inside or to stay any time, but I am none
+the less very glad to see you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have been anxious about you all,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;for it is some
+little time since I have seen or heard from any of you. How have you all been
+keeping?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, as well as could be expected. But we will be better
+tomorrow&mdash;we will be different men to-morrow, eh, Corporal?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; said the corporal, raising his hand to his forehead in
+a military salute. &ldquo;We'll be right as the bank to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The corporal and I are a little disturbed in our minds just now,&rdquo;
+the general explained, &ldquo;but I have no doubt that all will come right.
+After all, there is nothing higher than Providence, and we are all in His
+hands. And how have you been, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have been very busy for one thing,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I suppose
+you have heard nothing of the great shipwreck?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a word,&rdquo; the general answered listlessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought the noise of the wind would prevent you hearing the signal
+guns. She came ashore in the bay the night before last&mdash;a great barque
+from India.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;From India!&rdquo; ejaculated the general.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. Her crew were saved, fortunately, and have all been sent on to
+Glasgow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All sent on!&rdquo; cried the general, with a face as bloodless as a
+corpse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All except three rather strange characters who claim to be Buddhist
+priests. They have decided to remain for a few days upon the coast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The words were hardly out of my mouth when the general dropped upon his knees
+with his long, thin arms extended to Heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thy will be done!&rdquo; he cried in a cracking voice. &ldquo;Thy
+blessed will be done!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see through the crack that Corporal Rufus Smith's face had turned to a
+sickly yellow shade, and that he was wiping the perspiration from his brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's like my luck!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;After all these years, to come
+when I have got a snug billet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never mind, my lad,&rdquo; the general said, rising, and squaring his
+shoulders like a man who braces himself up for an effort. &ldquo;Be it what it
+may we'll face it as British soldiers should. D'ye remember at Chillianwallah,
+when you had to run from your guns to our square, and the Sikh horse came
+thundering down on our bayonets? We didn't flinch then, and we won't flinch
+now. It seems to me that I feel better than I have done for years. It was the
+uncertainty that was killing me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And the infernal jingle-jangle,&rdquo; said the corporal. &ldquo;Well,
+we all go together&mdash;that's some consolation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-bye, West,&rdquo; said the general. &ldquo;Be a good husband to
+Gabriel, and give my poor wife a home. I don't think she will trouble you long.
+Good-bye! God bless you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look here, General,&rdquo; I said, peremptorily breaking off a piece of
+wood to make communication more easy, &ldquo;this sort of thing has been going
+on too long. What are these hints and allusions and innuendoes? It is time we
+had a little plain speaking. What is it you fear? Out with it! Are you in dread
+of these Hindoos? If you are, I am able, on my father's authority, to have them
+arrested as rogues and vagabonds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, that would never do,&rdquo; he answered, shaking his head.
+&ldquo;You will learn about the wretched business soon enough. Mordaunt knows
+where to lay his hand upon the papers bearing on the matter. You can consult
+him about it to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But surely,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;if the peril is so imminent something
+may be done to avert it. If you would but tell me what you fear I should know
+how to act.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear friend,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;there is nothing to be done, so
+calm yourself, and let things take their course. It has been folly on my part
+to shelter myself behind mere barriers of wood and stone. The fact is, that
+inaction was terrible to me, and I felt that to do anything, however futile, in
+the nature of a precaution, was better than passive resignation. My humble
+friend here and I have placed ourselves in a position in which, I trust, no
+poor fellow will ever find himself again. We can only recommend ourselves to
+the unfailing goodness of the Almighty, and trust that what we have endured in
+this world may lessen our atonement in the world to come. I must leave you now,
+for I have many papers to destroy and much to arrange. Good-bye!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pushed his hand through the hole which I had made, and grasped mine in a
+solemn farewell, after which he walked back to the Hall with a firm and decided
+step, still followed by the crippled and sinister corporal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I walked back to Branksome much disturbed by this interview, and extremely
+puzzled as to what course I should pursue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was evident now that my sister's suspicions were correct, and that there was
+some very intimate connection between the presence of the three Orientals and
+the mysterious peril which hung over the towers of Cloomber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was difficult for me to associate the noble-faced Ram Singh's gentle,
+refined manner and words of wisdom with any deed of violence, yet now that I
+thought of it I could see that a terrible capacity for wrath lay behind his
+shaggy brows and dark, piercing eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I felt that of all men whom I had ever met he was the one whose displeasure I
+should least care to face. But how could two men so widely dissociated as the
+foul-mouthed old corporal of artillery and the distinguished Anglo-Indian
+general have each earned the ill-will of these strange castaways? And if the
+danger were a positive physical one, why should he not consent to my proposal
+to have the three men placed under custody&mdash;though I confess it would have
+gone much against my grain to act in so inhospitable a manner upon such vague
+and shadowy grounds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These questions were absolutely unanswerable, and yet the solemn words and the
+terrible gravity which I had seen in the faces of both the old soldiers forbade
+me from thinking that their fears were entirely unfounded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was all a puzzle&mdash;an absolutely insoluble puzzle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One thing at least was clear to me&mdash;and that was that in the present state
+of my knowledge, and after the general's distinct prohibition, it was
+impossible for me to interfere in any way. I could only wait and pray that,
+whatever the danger might be, it might pass over, or at least that my dear
+Gabriel and her brother might be protected against it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was walking down the lane lost in thought, and had got as far as the wicket
+gate which opens upon the Branksome lawn, when I was surprised to hear my
+father's voice raised in most animated and excited converse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man had been of late so abstracted from the daily affairs of the world,
+and so absorbed in his own special studies, that it was difficult to engage his
+attention upon any ordinary, mundane topic. Curious to know what it was that
+had drawn him so far out of himself, I opened the gate softly, and walking
+quietly round the laurel bushes, found him sitting, to my astonishment, with
+none other than the very man who was occupying my thoughts, Ram Singh, the
+Buddhist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two were sitting upon a garden bench, and the Oriental appeared to be
+laying down some weighty proposition, checking every point upon his long,
+quivering, brown fingers, while my father, with his hands thrown abroad and his
+face awry, was loud in protestation and in argument.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So absorbed were they in their controversy, that I stood within a hand-touch of
+them for a minute or more before they became conscious of my presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On observing me the priest sprang to his feet and greeted me with the same
+lofty courtesy and dignified grace which had so impressed me the day before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I promised myself yesterday,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the pleasure of
+calling upon your father. You see I have kept my word. I have even been daring
+enough to question his views upon some points in connection with the Sanscrit
+and Hindoo tongues, with the result that we have been arguing for an hour or
+more without either of us convincing the other. Without pretending to as deep a
+theoretical knowledge as that which has made the name of James Hunter West a
+household word among Oriental scholars, I happen to have given considerable
+attention to this one point, and indeed I am in a position to say that I know
+his views to be unsound. I assure you, sir, that up to the year 700, or even
+later, Sanscrit was the ordinary language of the great bulk of the inhabitants
+of India.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I assure you, sir,&rdquo; said my father warmly, &ldquo;that it was
+dead and forgotten at that date, save by the learned, who used it as a vehicle
+for scientific and religious works&mdash;just as Latin was used in the Middle
+Ages long after it had ceased to be spoken by any European nation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you consult the puranas you will find,&rdquo; said Ram Singh,
+&ldquo;that this theory, though commonly received, is entirely
+untenable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if you will consult the Ramayana, and more particularly the
+canonical books on Buddhist discipline,&rdquo; cried my father, &ldquo;you will
+find that the theory is unassailable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But look at the Kullavagga,&rdquo; said our visitor earnestly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And look at King Asoka,&rdquo; shouted my father triumphantly.
+&ldquo;When, in the year 300 before the Christian era&mdash;before, mind
+you&mdash;he ordered the laws of Buddha to be engraved upon the rocks, what
+language did he employ, eh? Was it Sanscrit?&mdash;no! And why was it not
+Sanscrit? Because the lower orders of his subjects would not have been able to
+understand a word of it. Ha, ha! That was the reason. How are you going to get
+round King Asoka's edicts, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He carved them in the various dialects,&rdquo; Ram Singh answered.
+&ldquo;But energy is too precious a thing to be wasted in mere wind in this
+style. The sun has passed its meridian, and I must return to my
+companions.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sorry that you have not brought them to see us,&rdquo; said my
+father courteously. He was, I could see, uneasy lest in the eagerness of debate
+he had overstepped the bounds of hospitality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They do not mix with the world,&rdquo; Ram Singh answered, rising to his
+feet. &ldquo;They are of a higher grade than I, and more sensitive to
+contaminating influences. They are immersed in a six months' meditation upon
+the mystery of the third incarnation, which has lasted with few intermissions
+from the time that we left the Himalayas. I shall not see you again, Mr. Hunter
+West, and I therefore bid you farewell. Your old age will be a happy one, as it
+deserves to be, and your Eastern studies will have a lasting effect upon the
+knowledge and literature of your own country. Farewell!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And am I also to see no more of you?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Unless you will walk with me along the sea-shore,&rdquo; he answered.
+&ldquo;But you have already been out this morning, and may be tired. I ask too
+much of you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, I should be delighted to come,&rdquo; I responded from my heart,
+and we set off together, accompanied for some little distance by my father, who
+would gladly, I could see, have reopened the Sanscrit controversy, had not his
+stock of breath been too limited to allow of his talking and walking at the
+same time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is a learned man,&rdquo; Ram Singh remarked, after we had left him
+behind, &ldquo;but, like many another, he is intolerant towards opinions which
+differ from his own. He will know better some day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made no answer to this observation, and we trudged along for a time in
+silence, keeping well down to the water's edge, where the sands afforded a good
+foothold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sand dunes which lined the coast formed a continuous ridge upon our left,
+cutting us off entirely from all human observation, while on the right the
+broad Channel stretched away with hardly a sail to break its silvery
+uniformity. The Buddhist priest and I were absolutely alone with Nature.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not help reflecting that if he were really the dangerous man that the
+mate affected to consider him, or that might be inferred from the words of
+General Heatherstone, I had placed myself completely in his power.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet such was the majestic benignity of the man's aspect, and the unruffled
+serenity of his deep, dark eyes, that I could afford in his presence to let
+fear and suspicion blow past me as lightly as the breeze which whistled round
+us. His face might be stern, and even terrible, but I felt that he could never
+be unjust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I glanced from time to time at his noble profile and the sweep of his
+jet-black beard, his rough-spun tweed travelling suit struck me with an almost
+painful sense of incongruity, and I re-clothed him in my imagination with the
+grand, sweeping Oriental costume which is the fitting and proper frame for such
+a picture&mdash;the only garb which does not detract from the dignity and grace
+of the wearer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The place to which he led me was a small fisher cottage which had been deserted
+some years before by its tenant, but still stood gaunt and bare, with the
+thatch partly blown away and the windows and doors in sad disrepair. This
+dwelling, which the poorest Scotch beggar would have shrunk from, was the one
+which these singular men had preferred to the proffered hospitality of the
+laird's house. A small garden, now a mass of tangled brambles, stood round it,
+and through this my acquaintance picked his way to the ruined door. He glanced
+into the house and then waved his hand for me to follow him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have now an opportunity,&rdquo; he said, in a subdued, reverential
+voice, &ldquo;of seeing a spectacle which few Europeans have had the privilege
+of beholding. Inside that cottage you will find two Yogis&mdash;men who are
+only one remove from the highest plane of adeptship. They are both wrapped in
+an ecstatic trance, otherwise I should not venture to obtrude your presence
+upon them. Their astral bodies have departed from them, to be present at the
+feast of lamps in the holy Lamasery of Rudok in Tibet. Tread lightly lest by
+stimulating their corporeal functions you recall them before their devotions
+are completed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Walking slowly and on tiptoe, I picked my way through the weed-grown garden,
+and peered through the open doorway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no furniture in the dreary interior, nor anything to cover the uneven
+floor save a litter of fresh straw in a corner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among this straw two men were crouching, the one small and wizened, the other
+large-boned and gaunt, with their legs crossed in Oriental fashion and their
+heads sunk upon their breasts. Neither of them looked up, or took the smallest
+notice of our presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were so still and silent that they might have been two bronze statues but
+for the slow and measured rhythm of their breathing. Their faces, however, had
+a peculiar, ashen-grey colour, very different from the healthy brown of my
+companion's, and I observed, on stooping my head, that only the whites of their
+eyes were visible, the balls being turned upwards beneath the lids.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In front of them upon a small mat lay an earthenware pitcher of water and
+half-a-loaf of bread, together with a sheet of paper inscribed with certain
+cabalistic characters. Ram Singh glanced at these, and then, motioning to me to
+withdraw, followed me out into the garden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not to disturb them until ten o'clock,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You
+have now seen in operation one of the grandest results of our occult
+philosophy, the dissociation of spirit from body. Not only are the spirits of
+these holy men standing at the present moment by the banks of the Ganges, but
+those spirits are clothed in a material covering so identical with their real
+bodies that none of the faithful will ever doubt that Lal Hoomi and Mowdar Khan
+are actually among them. This is accomplished by our power of resolving an
+object into its chemical atoms, of conveying these atoms with a speed which
+exceeds that of lightning to any given spot, and of there re-precipitating them
+and compelling them to retake their original form. Of old, in the days of our
+ignorance, it was necessary to convey the whole body in this way, but we have
+since found that it was as easy and more convenient to transmit material enough
+merely to build up an outside shell or semblance. This we have termed the
+astral body.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if you can transmit your spirits so readily,&rdquo; I observed,
+&ldquo;why should they be accompanied by any body at all?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In communicating with brother initiates we are able to employ our
+spirits only, but when we wish to come in contact with ordinary mankind it is
+essential that we should appear in some form which they can see and
+comprehend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have interested me deeply in all that you have told me,&rdquo; I
+said, grasping the hand which Ram Singh had held out to me as a sign that our
+interview was at an end. &ldquo;I shall often think of our short
+acquaintance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will derive much benefit from it,&rdquo; he said slowly, still
+holding my hand and looking gravely and sadly into my eyes. &ldquo;You must
+remember that what will happen in the future is not necessarily bad because it
+does not fall in with your preconceived ideas of right. Be not hasty in your
+judgments. There are certain great rules which must be carried out, at whatever
+cost to individuals. Their operation may appear to you to be harsh and cruel,
+but that is as nothing compared with the dangerous precedent which would be
+established by not enforcing them. The ox and the sheep are safe from us, but
+the man with the blood of the highest upon his hands should not and shall not
+live.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He threw up his arms at the last words with a fierce, threatening gesture, and,
+turning away from me, strode back to the ruined hut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood gazing after him until he disappeared through the doorway, and then
+started off for home, revolving in my mind all that I had heard, and more
+particularly this last outburst of the occult philosopher.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Far on the right I could see the tall, white tower of Cloomber standing out
+clear-cut and sharp against a dark cloud-bank which rose behind it. I thought
+how any traveller who chanced to pass that way would envy in his heart the
+tenant of that magnificent building, and how little they would guess the
+strange terrors, the nameless dangers, which were gathering about his head. The
+black cloud-wrack was but the image, I reflected, of the darker, more sombre
+storm which was about to burst.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whatever it all means, and however it happens,&rdquo; I ejaculated,
+&ldquo;God grant that the innocent be not confounded with the guilty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My father, when I reached home, was still in a ferment over his learned
+disputation with the stranger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I trust, Jack,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that I did not handle him too
+roughly. I should remember that I am <i>in loco magistri</i>, and be less prone
+to argue with my guests. Yet, when he took up this most untenable position, I
+could not refrain from attacking him and hurling him out of it, which indeed I
+did, though you, who are ignorant of the niceties of the question, may have
+failed to perceive it. You observed, however, that my reference to King Asoka's
+edicts was so conclusive that he at once rose and took his leave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You held your own bravely,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;but what is your
+impression of the man now that you have seen him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said my father, &ldquo;he is one of those holy men who,
+under the various names of Sannasis, Yogis, Sevras, Qualanders, Hakims, and
+Cufis have devoted their lives to the study of the mysteries of the Buddhist
+faith. He is, I take it, a theosophist, or worshipper of the God of knowledge,
+the highest grade of which is the adept. This man and his companions have not
+attained this high position or they could not have crossed the sea without
+contamination. It is probable that they are all advanced chelas who hope in
+time to attain to the supreme honour of adeptship.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, father,&rdquo; interrupted my sister, &ldquo;this does not explain
+why men of such sanctity and attainments should choose to take up their
+quarters on the shores of a desolate Scotch bay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, there you get beyond me,&rdquo; my father answered. &ldquo;I may
+suggest, however, that it is nobody's business but their own, so long as they
+keep the peace and are amenable to the law of the land.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you ever heard,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;that these higher priests of
+whom you speak have powers which are unknown to us?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, Eastern literature is full of it. The Bible is an Eastern book, and
+is it not full of the record of such powers from cover to cover? It is
+unquestionable that they have in the past known many of Nature's secrets which
+are lost to us. I cannot say, however, from my own knowledge that the modern
+theosophists really possess the powers that they claim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are they a vindictive class of people?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Is there
+any offence among them which can only be expiated by death?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I know of,&rdquo; my father answered, raising his white
+eyebrows in surprise. &ldquo;You appear to be in an inquisitive humour this
+afternoon&mdash;what is the object of all these questions? Have our Eastern
+neighbours aroused your curiosity or suspicion in any way?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I parried the question as best I might, for I was unwilling to let the old man
+know what was in my mind. No good purpose could come from his enlightenment;
+his age and his health demanded rest rather than anxiety; and indeed, with the
+best will in the world I should have found it difficult to explain to another
+what was so very obscure to myself. For every reason I felt that it was best
+that he should be kept in the dark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never in all my experience had I known a day pass so slowly as did that
+eventful 5th of October. In every possible manner I endeavoured to while away
+the tedious hours, and yet it seemed as if darkness would never arrive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I tried to read, I tried to write, I paced about the lawn, I walked to the end
+of the lane, I put new flies upon my fishing-hooks, I began to index my
+father's library&mdash;in a dozen ways I endeavoured to relieve the suspense
+which was becoming intolerable. My sister, I could see, was suffering from the
+same feverish restlessness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again and again our good father remonstrated with us in his mild way for our
+erratic behaviour and the continual interruption of his work which arose from
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, however, the tea was brought, and the tea was taken, the curtains were
+drawn, the lamps lit, and after another interminable interval the prayers were
+read and the servants dismissed to their rooms. My father compounded and
+swallowed his nightly jorum of toddy, and then shuffled off to his room,
+leaving the two of us in the parlour with our nerves in a tingle and our minds
+full of the most vague and yet terrible apprehensions.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"></a>
+CHAPTER XIV.<br />
+OF THE VISITOR WHO RAN DOWN THE ROAD IN THE NIGHT-TIME</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was a quarter past ten o'clock by the parlour timepiece when my father went
+off to his room, and left Esther and myself together. We heard his slow steps
+dying away up the creaking staircase, until the distant slamming of a door
+announced that he had reached his sanctum.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The simple oil lamp upon the table threw a weird, uncertain light over the old
+room, flickering upon the carved oak panelling, and casting strange, fantastic
+shadows from the high-elbowed, straight-backed furniture. My sister's white,
+anxious face stood out in the obscurity with a startling exactness of profile
+like one of Rembrandt's portraits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We sat opposite to each other on either side of the table with no sound
+breaking the silence save the measured ticking of the clock and the
+intermittent chirping of a cricket beneath the grate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was something awe-inspiring in the absolute stillness. The whistling of a
+belated peasant upon the high road was a relief to us, and we strained our ears
+to catch the last of his notes as he plodded steadily homewards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At first we had made some pretence&mdash;she of knitting and I of
+reading&mdash;but we soon abandoned the useless deception, and sat uneasily
+waiting, starting and glancing at each other with questioning eyes whenever the
+faggot crackled in the fire or a rat scampered behind the wainscot. There was a
+heavy electrical feeling in the air, which weighed us down with a foreboding of
+disaster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rose and flung the hall door open to admit the fresh breeze of the night.
+Ragged clouds swept across the sky, and the moon peeped out at times between
+their hurrying fringes, bathing the whole countryside in its cold, white
+radiance. From where I stood in the doorway I could see the edge of the
+Cloomber wood, though the house itself was only visible from the rising ground
+some little distance off. At my sister's suggestion we walked together, she
+with her shawl over her head, as far as the summit of this elevation, and
+looked out in the direction of the Hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no illumination of the windows tonight. From roof to basement not a
+light twinkled in any part of the great building. Its huge mass loomed up dark
+and sullen amid the trees which surrounded it, looking more like some giant
+sarcophagus than a human habitation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To our overwrought nerves there was something of terror in its mere bulk and
+its silence. We stood for some little time peering at it through the darkness,
+and then we made our way back to the parlour again, where we sat
+waiting&mdash;waiting, we knew not for what, and yet with absolute conviction
+that some terrible experience was in store for us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was twelve o'clock or thereabout when my sister suddenly sprang to her feet
+and held up her fingers to bespeak attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you hear nothing?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I strained my ears, but without success.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come to the door,&rdquo; she cried, with a trembling voice. &ldquo;Now
+can you hear anything?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the deep silence of the night I distinctly heard a dull, murmuring,
+clattering sound, continuous apparently, but very faint and low.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; I asked, in a subdued voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's the sound of a man running towards us,&rdquo; she answered, and
+then, suddenly dropping the last semblance of self-command, she fell upon her
+knees beside the table and began praying aloud with that frenzied earnestness
+which intense, overpowering fear can produce, breaking off now and again into
+half-hysterical whimperings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could distinguish the sound clearly enough now to know that her quick,
+feminine perception had not deceived her, and that it was indeed caused by a
+running man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On he came, and on down the high road, his footfalls ringing out clearer and
+sharper every moment. An urgent messenger he must be, for he neither paused nor
+slackened his pace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The quick, crisp rattle was changed suddenly to a dull, muffled murmur. He had
+reached the point where sand had been recently laid down for a hundred yards or
+so. In a few moments, however, he was back on hard ground again and his flying
+feet came nearer and ever nearer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He must, I reflected, be abreast of the head of the lane now. Would he hold on?
+Or would he turn down to Branksome?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thought had hardly crossed my mind when I heard by the difference of the
+sound that the runner had turned the corner, and that his goal was beyond all
+question the laird's house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rushing down to the gate of the lawn, I reached it just as our visitor dashed
+it open and fell into my arms. I could see in the moonlight that it was none
+other than Mordaunt Heatherstone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What has happened?&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;What is amiss,
+Mordaunt?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My father!&rdquo; he gasped&mdash;&ldquo;my father!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His hat was gone, his eyes dilated with terror, and his face as bloodless as
+that of a corpse. I could feel that the hands which clasped my arms were
+quivering and shaking with emotion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are exhausted,&rdquo; I said, leading him into the parlour.
+&ldquo;Give yourself a moment's rest before you speak to us. Be calm, man, you
+are with your best friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I laid him on the old horsehair sofa, while Esther, whose fears had all flown
+to the winds now that something practical was to be done, dashed some brandy
+into a tumbler and brought it to him. The stimulant had a marvellous effect
+upon him, for the colour began to come back into his pale cheeks and the light
+of recognition in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat up and took Esther's hand in both of his, like a man who is waking out
+of some bad dream and wishes to assure himself that he is really in safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your father?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;What of him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is gone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; he is gone; and so is Corporal Rufus Smith. We shall never set eyes
+upon them again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But where have they gone?&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;This is unworthy of
+you, Mordaunt. What right have we to sit here, allowing our private feelings to
+overcome us, while there is a possibility of succouring your father? Up, man!
+Let us follow him. Tell me only what direction he took.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's no use,&rdquo; young Heatherstone answered, burying his face in his
+hands. &ldquo;Don't reproach me, West, for you don't know all the
+circumstances. What can we do to reverse the tremendous and unknown laws which
+are acting against us? The blow has long been hanging over us, and now it has
+fallen. God help us!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In Heaven's name tell me what has happened?&rdquo; said I excitedly.
+&ldquo;We must not yield to despair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We can do nothing until daybreak,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;We shall
+then endeavour to obtain some trace of them. It is hopeless at present.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how about Gabriel and Mrs. Heatherstone?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Can
+we not bring them down from the Hall at once? Your poor sister must be
+distracted with terror.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She knows nothing of it,&rdquo; Mordaunt answered. &ldquo;She sleeps at
+the other side of the house, and has not heard or seen anything. As to my poor
+mother, she has expected some such event for so long a time that it has not
+come upon her as a surprise. She is, of course, overwhelmed with grief, but
+would, I think, prefer to be left to herself for the present. Her firmness and
+composure should be a lesson to me, but I am constitutionally excitable, and
+this catastrophe coming after our long period of suspense deprived me of my
+very reason for a time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If we can do nothing until the morning,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;you have
+time to tell us all that has occurred.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will do so,&rdquo; he answered, rising and holding his shaking hands
+to the fire. &ldquo;You know already that we have had reason for some
+time&mdash;for many years in fact&mdash;to fear that a terrible retribution was
+hanging over my father's head for a certain action of his early life. In this
+action he was associated with the man known as Corporal Rufus Smith, so that
+the fact of the latter finding his way to my father was a warning to us that
+the time had come, and that this 5th of October&mdash;the anniversary of the
+misdeed&mdash;would be the day of its atonement. I told you of our fears in my
+letter, and, if I am not mistaken, my father also had some conversation with
+you, John, upon the subject. When I saw yesterday morning that he had hunted
+out the old uniform which he had always retained since he wore it in the Afghan
+war, I was sure that the end was at hand, and that our forebodings would be
+realised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He appeared to be more composed in the afternoon than I have seen him
+for years, and spoke freely of his life in India and of the incidents of his
+youth. About nine o'clock he requested us to go up to our own rooms, and locked
+us in there&mdash;a precaution which he frequently took when the dark fit was
+upon him. It was always his endeavour, poor soul, to keep us clear of the curse
+which had fallen upon his own unfortunate head. Before parting from us he
+tenderly embraced my mother and Gabriel, and he afterwards followed me to my
+room, where he clasped my hand affectionately and gave into my charge a small
+packet addressed to yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To me?&rdquo; I interrupted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To you. I shall fulfill my commission when I have told you my story. I
+conjured him to allow me to sit up with him and share any danger which might
+arise, but he implored me with irresistible earnestness not to add to his
+troubles by thwarting his arrangements. Seeing that I was really distressing
+him by my pertinacity, I at last allowed him to close the door and to turn the
+key upon the outside. I shall always reproach myself for my want of firmness.
+But what can you do when your own father refuses your assistance or
+co-operation? You cannot force yourself upon him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sure that you did all you could do,&rdquo; my sister said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I meant to, dear Esther, but, God help me, it was hard to tell what was
+right. He left me, and I heard his footsteps die away down the long corridor.
+It was then about ten o'clock, or a little after. For a time I paced up and
+down the room, and then, carrying the lamp to the head of my bed, I lay down
+without undressing, reading St. Thomas a Kempis, and praying from my heart that
+the night might pass safely over us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I had at last fallen into a troubled sleep when I was suddenly aroused
+by a loud, sonorous sound ringing in my ears. I sat up bewildered, but all was
+silent again. The lamp was burning low, and my watch showed me that it was
+going on to midnight. I blundered to my feet, and was striking a match with the
+intention of lighting the candles, when the sharp, vehement cry broke out again
+so loud and so clear that it might have been in the very room with me. My
+chamber is in the front of the house, while those of my mother and sister are
+at the back, so that I am the only one who commands a view of the avenue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rushing to the window I drew the blind aside and looked out. You know
+that the gravel-drive opens up so as to form a broad stretch immediately in
+front of the house. Just in the centre of this clear space there stood three
+men looking up at the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The moon shone full upon them, glistening on their upturned eyeballs,
+and by its light I could see that they were swarthy-faced and black-haired, of
+a type that I was familiar with among the Sikhs and Afridis. Two of them were
+thin, with eager, aesthetic countenances, while the third was kinglike and
+majestic, with a noble figure and flowing beard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ram Singh!&rdquo; I ejaculated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, you know of them?&rdquo; exclaimed Mordaunt in great surprise.
+&ldquo;You have met them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know of them. They are Buddhist priests,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;but
+go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They stood in a line,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;sweeping their arms
+upwards and downwards, while their lips moved as if repeating some prayer or
+incantation. Suddenly they ceased to gesticulate, and broke out for the third
+time into the wild, weird, piercing cry which had roused me from my slumber.
+Never shall I forget that shrill, dreadful summons swelling and reverberating
+through the silent night with an intensity of sound which is still ringing in
+my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As it died slowly away, there was a rasping and creaking as of keys and
+bolts, followed by the clang of an opening door and the clatter of hurrying
+feet. From my window I saw my father and Corporal Rufus Smith rush frantically
+out of the house hatless and unkempt, like men who are obeying a sudden and
+overpowering impulse. The three strangers laid no hands on them, but all five
+swept swiftly away down the avenue and vanished among the trees. I am positive
+that no force was used, or constraint of any visible kind, and yet I am as sure
+that my poor father and his companion were helpless prisoners as if I had seen
+them dragged away in manacles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All this took little time in the acting. From the first summons which
+disturbed my sleep to the last shadowy glimpse which I had of them between the
+tree trunks could hardly have occupied more than five minutes of actual time.
+So sudden was it, and so strange, that when the drama was over and they were
+gone I could have believed that it was all some terrible nightmare, some
+delusion, had I not felt that the impression was too real, too vivid, to be
+imputed to fancy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I threw my whole weight against my bedroom door in the hope of forcing
+the lock. It stood firm for a while, but I flung myself upon it again and
+again, until something snapped and I found myself in the passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My first thought was for my mother. I rushed to her room and turned the
+key in her door. The moment that I did so she stepped out into the corridor in
+her dressing-gown, and held up a warning finger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'No noise,' she said, 'Gabriel is asleep. They have been called away?'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'They have,' I answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'God's will be done!' she cried. 'Your poor father will be happier in
+the next world than he has ever been in this. Thank Heaven that Gabriel is
+asleep. I gave her chloral in her cocoa.'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'What am I to do?' I said distractedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Where have they gone? How can I help him? We cannot let him go from us
+like this, or leave these men to do what they will with him. Shall I ride into
+Wigtown and arouse the police?'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Anything rather than that,' my mother said earnestly. 'He has begged me
+again and again to avoid it. My son, we shall never set eyes upon your father
+again. You may marvel at my dry eyes, but if you knew as I know the peace which
+death would bring him, you could not find it in your heart to mourn for him.
+All pursuit is, I feel, vain, and yet some pursuit there must be. Let it be as
+private as possible. We cannot serve him better than by consulting his wishes.'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;'But every minute is precious,' I cried. 'Even now he may be calling
+upon us to rescue him from the clutches of those dark-skinned fiends.'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The thought so maddened me that I rushed out of the house and down to
+the high road, but once there I had no indication in which direction to turn.
+The whole wide moor lay before me, without a sign of movement upon its broad
+expanse. I listened, but not a sound broke the perfect stillness of the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was then, my dear friends, as I stood, not knowing in which direction
+to turn, that the horror and responsibility broke full upon me. I felt that I
+was combating against forces of which I knew nothing. All was strange and dark
+and terrible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The thought of you, and of the help which I might look for from your
+advice and assistance, was a beacon of hope to me. At Branksome, at least, I
+should receive sympathy, and, above all, directions as to what I should do, for
+my mind is in such a whirl that I cannot trust my own judgment. My mother was
+content to be alone, my sister asleep, and no prospect of being able to do
+anything until daybreak. Under those circumstances what more natural than that
+I should fly to you as fast as my feet would carry me? You have a clear head,
+Jack; speak out, man, and tell me what I should do. Esther, what should I
+do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned from one to the other of us with outstretched hands and eager,
+questioning eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You can do nothing while the darkness lasts,&rdquo; I answered.
+&ldquo;We must report the matter to the Wigtown police, but we need not send
+our message to them until we are actually starting upon the search, so as to
+comply with the law and yet have a private investigation, as your mother
+wishes. John Fullarton, over the hill, has a lurcher dog which is as good as a
+bloodhound. If we set him on the general's trail he will run him down if he had
+to follow him to John o' Groat's.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is terrible to wait calmly here while he may need our
+assistance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear our assistance could under any circumstances do him little good.
+There are forces at work here which are beyond human intervention. Besides,
+there is no alternative. We have, apparently, no possible clue as to the
+direction which they have taken, and for us to wander aimlessly over the moor
+in the darkness would be to waste the strength which may be more profitably
+used in the morning. It will be daylight by five o'clock. In an hour or so we
+can walk over the hill together and get Fullarton's dog.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Another hour!&rdquo; Mordaunt groaned, &ldquo;every minute seems an
+age.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lie down on the sofa and rest yourself,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;You cannot
+serve your father better than by laying up all the strength you can, for we may
+have a weary trudge before us. But you mentioned a packet which the general had
+intended for me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is here,&rdquo; he answered, drawing a small, flat parcel from his
+pocket and handing it over to me, &ldquo;you will find, no doubt, that it will
+explain all which has been so mysterious.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The packet was sealed at each end with black wax, bearing the impress of the
+flying griffin, which I knew to be the general's crest. It was further secured
+by a band of broad tape, which I cut with my pocket-knife. Across the outside
+was written in bold handwriting: &ldquo;J. Fothergill West, Esq.,&rdquo; and
+underneath: &ldquo;To be handed to that gentleman in the event of the
+disappearance or decease of Major-General J. B. Heatherstone, V.C., C.B., late
+of the Indian Army.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So at last I was to know the dark secret which had cast a shadow over our
+lives. Here in my hands I held the solution of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With eager fingers I broke the seals and undid the wrapper. A note and a small
+bundle of discoloured paper lay within. I drew the lamp over to me and opened
+the former. It was dated the preceding afternoon, and ran in this way:
+</p>
+<p>&#160; </p>
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">My Dear West</span>,&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I should have satisfied your very natural curiosity on the subject which we
+have had occasion to talk of more than once, but I refrained for your own sake.
+I knew by sad experience how unsettling and unnerving it is to be for ever
+waiting for a catastrophe which you are convinced must befall, and which you
+can neither avert nor accelerate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though it affects me specially, as being the person most concerned, I am still
+conscious that the natural sympathy which I have observed in you, and your
+regard for Gabriel's father, would both combine to render you unhappy if you
+knew the hopelessness and yet the vagueness of the fate which threatens me. I
+feared to disturb your mind, and I was therefore silent, though at some cost to
+myself, for my isolation has not been the least of the troubles which have
+weighed me down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many signs, however, and chief among them the presence of the Buddhists upon
+the coast as described by you this morning, have convinced me that the weary
+waiting is at last over and that the hour of retribution is at hand. Why I
+should have been allowed to live nearly forty years after my offence is more
+than I can understand, but it is possible that those who had command over my
+fate know that such a life is the greatest of all penalties to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never for an hour, night or day, have they suffered me to forget that they have
+marked me down as their victim. Their accursed astral bell has been ringing my
+knell for two-score years, reminding me ever that there is no spot upon earth
+where I can hope to be in safety. Oh, the peace, the blessed peace of
+dissolution! Come what may on the other side of the tomb, I shall at least be
+quit of that thrice terrible sound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is no need for me to enter into the wretched business again, or to detail
+at any length the events of October 5th, 1841, and the various circumstances
+which led up to the death of Ghoolab Shah, the arch adept.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have torn a sheaf of leaves from my old journal, in which you will find a
+bald account of the matter, and an independent narrative was furnished by Sir
+Edward Elliott, of the Artillery, to the Star of India some years ago&mdash;in
+which, however, the names were suppressed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have reason to believe that many people, even among those who knew India
+well, thought that Sir Edward was romancing, and that he had evolved his
+incidents from his imagination. The few faded sheets which I send you will show
+you that this is not the case, and that our men of science must recognise
+powers and laws which can and have been used by man, but which are unknown to
+European civilisation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not wish to whine or to whimper, but I cannot help feeling that I have had
+hard measure dealt me in this world. I would not, God knows, take the life of
+any man, far less an aged one, in cold blood. My temper and nature, however,
+were always fiery and headstrong, and in action when my blood is up, I have no
+knowledge of what I am about. Neither the corporal nor I would have laid a
+finger upon Ghoolab Shah had we not seen that the tribesmen were rallying
+behind him. Well, well, it is an old story now, and there is no profit in
+discussing it. May no other poor fellow ever have the same evil fortune!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have written a short supplement to the statements contained in my journal for
+your information and that of any one else who may chance to be interested in
+the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now, adieu! Be a good husband to Gabriel, and, if your sister be brave
+enough to marry into such a devil-ridden family as ours, by all means let her
+do so. I have left enough to keep my poor wife in comfort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she rejoins me I should wish it to be equally divided between the
+children. If you hear that I am gone, do not pity, but congratulate
+</p>
+
+<p class="c">
+Your unfortunate friend,
+</p>
+
+<p class="r"><span class="smcap">
+John Berthier Heatherstone.</span>
+</p>
+<p>&#160; </p>
+<p>
+I threw aside the letter and picked up the roll of blue foolscap which
+contained the solution of the mystery. It was all ragged and frayed at the
+inner edge, with traces of gum and thread still adhering to it, to show that it
+had been torn out of a strongly bound volume. The ink with which it had been
+written was faded somewhat, but across the head of the first page was inscribed
+in bold, clear characters, evidently of later date than the rest:
+&ldquo;Journal of Lieutenant J. B. Heatherstone in the Thull Valley during the
+autumn of 1841,&rdquo; and then underneath:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This extract contains some account of the events of the first week of October
+of that year, including the skirmish of the Terada ravine and the death of the
+man Ghoolab Shah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have the narrative lying before me now, and I copy it verbatim. If it
+contains some matter which has no direct bearing upon the question at issue, I
+can only say that I thought it better to publish what is irrelevant than by
+cutting and clipping to lay the whole statement open to the charge of having
+been tampered with.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"></a>
+CHAPTER XV.<br />
+THE DAY-BOOK OF JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Thull Valley, Oct. 1, 1841.&mdash;The Fifth Bengal and Thirty-third Queen's
+passed through this morning on their way to the Front. Had tiffin with the
+Bengalese. Latest news from home that two attempts had been made on the Queen's
+life by semi-maniacs named Francis and Bean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It promises to be a hard winter. The snow-line has descended a thousand feet
+upon the peaks, but the passes will be open for weeks to come, and, even if
+they were blocked, we have established so many depots in the country that
+Pollock and Nott will have no difficulty in holding their own. They shall not
+meet with the fate of Elphinstone's army. One such tragedy is enough for a
+century.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elliott of the Artillery, and I, are answerable for the safety of the
+communications for a distance of twenty miles or more, from the mouth of the
+valley to this side of the wooden bridge over the Lotar. Goodenough, of the
+Rifles, is responsible on the other side, and Lieutenant-Colonel Sidney Herbert
+of the Engineers, has a general supervision over both sections.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our force is not strong enough for the work which has to be done. I have a
+company and a half of our own regiment, and a squadron of Sowars, who are of no
+use at all among the rocks. Elliott has three guns, but several of his men are
+down with cholera, and I doubt if he has enough to serve more than two.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(Note: capsicum for cholera&mdash;tried it)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the other hand, each convoy is usually provided with some guard of its own,
+though it is often absurdly inefficient. These valleys and ravines which branch
+out of the main pass are alive with Afridis and Pathans, who are keen robbers
+as well as religious fanatics. I wonder they don't swoop down on some of our
+caravans. They could plunder them and get back to their mountain fastnesses
+before we could interfere or overtake them. Nothing but fear will restrain
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If I had my way I would hang one at the mouth of every ravine as a warning to
+the gang. They are personifications of the devil to look at, hawk-nosed,
+full-lipped, with a mane of tangled hair, and most Satanic sneer. No news today
+from the Front.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+October 2.&mdash;I must really ask Herbert for another company at the very
+least. I am convinced that the communications would be cut off if any serious
+attack were made upon us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, this morning two urgent messages were sent me from two different points
+more than sixteen miles apart, to say that there were signs of a descent of the
+tribes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elliott, with one gun and the Sowars, went to the farther ravine, while I, with
+the infantry, hurried to the other, but we found it was a false alarm. I saw no
+signs of the Hillmen, and though we were greeted by a splutter of jezail
+bullets we were unable to capture any of the rascals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Woe betide them if they fall into my hands. I would give them as short a shrift
+as ever a Highland cateran got from a Glasgow judge. These continued alarms may
+mean nothing or they may be an indication that the Hillmen are assembling and
+have some plan in view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have had no news from the Front for some time, but to-day a convoy of
+wounded came through with the intelligence that Nott had taken Ghuznee. I hope
+he warmed up any of the black rascals that fell into his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No word of Pollock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An elephant battery came up from the Punjab, looking in very good condition.
+There were several convalescents with it going up to rejoin their regiments.
+Knew none of them except Mostyn of the Hussars and young Blakesley, who was my
+fag at Charterhouse, and whom I have never seen since.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Punch and cigars <i>al fresco</i> up to eleven o'clock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Letters to-day from Wills &amp; Co. about their little bill forwarded on from
+Delhi. Thought a campaign freed a man from these annoyances. Wills says in his
+note that, since his written applications have been in vain, he must call upon
+me in person. If he calls upon me now he will assuredly be the boldest and most
+persevering of tailors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A line from Calcutta Daisy and another from Hobhouse to say that Matilda comes
+in for all the money under the will. I am glad of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+October 3.&mdash;Glorious news from the Front today. Barclay, of the Madras
+Cavalry, galloped through with dispatches. Pollock entered Cabul triumphantly
+on the 16th of last month, and, better still, Lady Sale has been rescued by
+Shakespear, and brought safe into the British camp, together with the other
+hostages. <i>Te Deum laudamus!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This should end the whole wretched business&mdash;this and the sack of the
+city. I hope Pollock won't be squeamish, or truckle to the hysterical party at
+home. The towns should be laid in ashes and the fields sown with salt. Above
+all, the Residency and the Palace must come down. So shall Burnes, McNaghten,
+and many another gallant fellow know that his countrymen could avenge if they
+could not save him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is hard when others are gaining glory and experience to be stuck in this
+miserable valley. I have been out of it completely, bar a few petty skirmishes.
+However, we may see some service yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A jemidar of ours brought in a Hillman today, who says that the tribes are
+massing in the Terada ravine, ten miles to the north of us, and intend
+attacking the next convoy. We can't rely on information of this sort, but there
+may prove to be some truth in it. Proposed to shoot our informant, so as to
+prevent his playing the double traitor and reporting our proceedings. Elliott
+demurred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If you are making war you should throw no chance away. I hate half-and-half
+measures. The Children of Israel seem to have been the only people who ever
+carried war to its logical conclusion&mdash;except Cromwell in Ireland. Made a
+compromise at last by which the man is to be detained as a prisoner and
+executed if his information prove to be false. I only hope we get a fair chance
+of showing what we can do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No doubt these fellows at the Front will have C.B.'s and knighthoods showering
+upon them thick and fast, while we poor devils, who have had most of the
+responsibility and anxiety, will be passed over completely. Elliott has a
+whitlow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last convoy left us a large packet of sauces, but as they forgot to leave
+anything to eat with them, we have handed them over to the Sowars, who drink
+them out of their pannikins as if they were liqueurs. We hear that another
+large convoy may be expected from the plains in the course of a day or two.
+Took nine to four on Cleopatra for the Calcutta Cup.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+October 4.&mdash;The Hillmen really mean business this time, I think. We have
+had two of our spies come in this morning with the same account about the
+gathering in the Terada quarter. That old rascal Zemaun is at the head of it,
+and I had recommended the Government to present him with a telescope in return
+for his neutrality! There will be no Zemaun to present it to if I can but lay
+hands upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We expect the convoy tomorrow morning, and need anticipate no attack until it
+comes up, for these fellows fight for plunder, not for glory, though, to do
+them justice, they have plenty of pluck when they get started. I have devised
+an excellent plan, and it has Elliott's hearty support. By Jove! if we can only
+manage it, it will be as pretty a ruse as ever I heard of.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our intention is to give out that we are going down the valley to meet the
+convoy and to block the mouth of a pass from which we profess to expect an
+attack. Very good. We shall make a night-march to-night and reach their camp.
+Once there I shall conceal my two hundred men in the waggons and travel up with
+the convoy again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our friends the enemy, having heard that we intended to go south, and seeing
+the caravan going north without us, will naturally swoop down upon it under the
+impression that we are twenty miles away. We shall teach them such a lesson
+that they would as soon think of stopping a thunderbolt as of interfering again
+with one of Her Britannic Majesty's provision trains. I am all on thorns to be
+off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elliott has rigged up two of his guns so ingeniously that they look more like
+costermongers' barrows than anything else. To see artillery ready for action in
+the convoy might arouse suspicion. The artillerymen will be in the waggons next
+the guns, all ready to unlimber and open fire. Infantry in front and rear. Have
+told our confidential and discreet Sepoy servants the plan which we do not
+intend to adopt. N.B.&mdash;If you wish a thing to be noised over a whole
+province always whisper it under a vow of secrecy to your confidential native
+servant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+8.45 P.M.&mdash;Just starting for the convoy. May luck go with us!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+October 5.&mdash;Seven o'clock in the evening. <i>Io triumphe!</i> Crown us
+with laurel&mdash;Elliott and myself! Who can compare with us as vermin
+killers?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have only just got back, tired and weary, stained with blood and dust, but I
+have sat down before either washing or changing to have the satisfaction of
+seeing our deeds set forth in black and white&mdash;if only in my private log
+for no eye but my own. I shall describe it all fully as a preparation for an
+official account, which must be drawn up when Elliott gets back. Billy Dawson
+used to say that there were three degrees of comparison&mdash;a prevarication,
+a lie, and an official account. We at least cannot exaggerate our success, for
+it would be impossible to add anything to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We set out, then, as per programme, and came upon the camp near the head of the
+valley. They had two weak companies of the 54th with them who might no doubt
+have held their own with warning, but an unexpected rush of wild Hillmen is a
+very difficult thing to stand against. With our reinforcements, however, and on
+our guard, we might defy the rascals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Chamberlain was in command&mdash;a fine young fellow. We soon made him
+understand the situation, and were all ready for a start by daybreak though his
+waggons were so full that we were compelled to leave several tons of fodder
+behind in order to make room for my Sepoys and for the artillery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About five o'clock we inspanned, to use an Africanism, and by six we were well
+on our way, with our escort as straggling and unconcerned as possible&mdash;as
+helpless-looking a caravan as ever invited attack.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could soon see that it was to be no false alarm this time, and that the
+tribes really meant business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From my post of observation, under the canvas screens of one of the waggons, I
+could make out turbaned heads popping up to have a look at us from among the
+rocks, and an occasional scout hurrying northward with the news of our
+approach.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not, however, until we came abreast of the Terada Pass, a gloomy defile
+bounded by gigantic cliffs, that the Afridis began to show in force, though
+they had ambushed themselves so cleverly that, had we not been keenly on the
+look-out for them, we might have walked right into the trap. As it was, the
+convoy halted, upon which the Hillmen, seeing that they were observed, opened a
+heavy but ill-directed fire upon us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had asked Chamberlain to throw out his men in skirmishing order, and to give
+them directions to retreat slowly upon the waggons so as to draw the Afridis
+on. The ruse succeeded to perfection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the redcoats steadily retired, keeping behind cover as much as possible, the
+enemy followed them up with yells of exultation, springing from rock to rock,
+waving their jezails in the air, and howling like a pack of demons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With their black, contorted, mocking faces, their fierce gestures, and their
+fluttering garments, they would have made a study for any painter who wished to
+portray Milton's conception of the army of the damned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From every side they pressed in until, seeing, as they thought, nothing between
+them and victory, they left the shelter of the rocks and came rushing down, a
+furious, howling throng, with the green banner of the Prophet in their van.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now was our chance, and gloriously we utilised it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From every cranny and slit of the waggons came a blaze of fire, every shot of
+which told among the close-packed mob. Two or three score rolled over like
+rabbits and the rest reeled for a moment, and then, with their chiefs at their
+head, came on again in a magnificent rush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was useless, however, for undisciplined men to attempt to face such a
+well-directed fire. The leaders were bowled over, and the others, after
+hesitating for a few moments, turned and made for the rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was our turn now to assume the offensive. The guns were unlimbered and grape
+poured into them, while our little infantry force advanced at the double,
+shooting and stabbing all whom they overtook.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never had I known the tide of battle turn so rapidly and so decisively. The
+sullen retreat became a flight, and the flight a panic-stricken rout, until
+there was nothing left of the tribesmen except a scattered, demoralised rabble
+flying wildly to their native fastnesses for shelter and protection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was by no means inclined to let them off cheaply now that I had them in my
+power. On the contrary, I determined to teach them such a lesson that the sight
+of a single scarlet uniform would in future be a passport in itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We followed hard upon the track of the fugitives and entered the Terada defile
+at their very heels. Having detached Chamberlain and Elliott with a company on
+either side to protect my wings, I pushed on with my Sepoys and a handful of
+artillerymen, giving the enemy no time to rally or to recover themselves. We
+were so handicapped, however, by our stiff European uniforms and by our want of
+practice in climbing, that we should have been unable to overtake any of the
+mountaineers had it not been for a fortunate accident.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is a smaller ravine which opens into the main pass, and in their hurry
+and confusion some of the fugitives rushed down this. I saw sixty or seventy of
+them turn down, but I should have passed them by and continued in pursuit of
+the main body had not one of my scouts come rustling up to inform me that the
+smaller ravine was a <i>cul-de-sac</i>, and that the Afridis who had gone up it
+had no possible means of getting out again except by cutting their way through
+our ranks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here was an opportunity of striking terror into the tribes. Leaving Chamberlain
+and Elliott to continue the pursuit of the main body, I wheeled my Sepoys into
+the narrow path and proceeded slowly down it in extended order, covering the
+whole ground from cliff to cliff. Not a jackal could have passed us unseen. The
+rebels were caught like rats in a trap.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The defile in which we found ourselves was the most gloomy and majestic that I
+have ever seen. On either side naked precipices rose sheer up for a thousand
+feet or more, converging upon each other so as to leave a very narrow slit of
+daylight above us, which was further reduced by the feathery fringe of palm
+trees and aloes which hung over each lip of the chasm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cliffs were not more than a couple of hundred yards apart at the entrance,
+but as we advanced they grew nearer and nearer, until a half company in close
+order could hardly march abreast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sort of twilight reigned in this strange valley, and the dim, uncertain light
+made the great, basalt rocks loom up vague and fantastic. There was no path,
+and the ground was most uneven, but I pushed on briskly, cautioning my fellows
+to have their fingers on their triggers, for I could see that we were nearing
+the point where the two cliffs would form an acute angle with each other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last we came in sight of the place. A great pile of boulders was heaped up
+at the very end of the pass, and among these our fugitives were skulking,
+entirely demoralised apparently, and incapable of resistance. They were useless
+as prisoners, and it was out of the question to let them go, so there was no
+choice but to polish them off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Waving my sword, I was leading my men on, when we had a most dramatic
+interruption of a sort which I have seen once or twice on the boards of Drury
+Lane, but never in real life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the side of the cliff, close to the pile of stones where the Hillmen were
+making their last stand, there was a cave which looked more like the lair of
+some wild beast than a human habitation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of this dark archway there suddenly emerged an old man&mdash;such a very,
+very old man that all the other veterans whom I have seen were as chickens
+compared with him. His hair and beard were both as white as snow, and each
+reached more than half-way to his waist. His face was wrinkled and brown and
+ebony, a cross between a monkey and a mummy, and so thin and emaciated were his
+shrivelled limbs that you would hardly have given him credit for having any
+vitality left, were it not for his eyes, which glittered and sparkled with
+excitement, like two diamonds in a setting of mahogany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This apparition came rushing out of the cave, and, throwing himself between the
+fugitives and our fellows, motioned us back with as imperious a sweep of the
+hand as ever an emperor used to his slaves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Men of blood,&rdquo; he cried, in a voice of thunder, speaking excellent
+English, too&mdash;&ldquo;this is a place for prayer and meditation, not for
+murder. Desist, lest the wrath of the gods fall upon you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stand aside, old man,&rdquo; I shouted. &ldquo;You will meet with a hurt
+if you don't get out of the way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see that the Hillmen were taking heart, and that some of my Sepoys were
+flinching, as if they did not relish this new enemy. Clearly, I must act
+promptly if I wished to complete our success.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I dashed forward at the head of the white artillerymen who had stuck to me. The
+old fellow rushed at us with his arms out as if to stop us, but it was not time
+to stick at trifles, so I passed my sword through his body at the same moment
+that one of the gunners brought his carbine down upon his head. He dropped
+instantly, and the Hillmen, at the sight of his fall, set up the most unearthly
+howl of horror and consternation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Sepoys, who had been inclined to hang back, came on again the moment he was
+disposed of, and it did not take us long to consummate our victory. Hardly a
+man of the enemy got out of the defile alive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What could Hannibal or Caesar have done more? Our own loss in the whole affair
+has been insignificant&mdash;three killed and about fifteen wounded. Got their
+banner, a green wisp of a thing with a sentence of the Koran engraved upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked, after the action, for the old chap, but his body had disappeared,
+though how or whither I have no conception. His blood be upon his own head! He
+would be alive now if he had not interfered, as the constables say at home,
+&ldquo;with an officer in the execution of his duty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scouts tell me that his name was Ghoolab Shah, and that he was one of the
+highest and holiest of the Buddhists. He had great fame in the district as a
+prophet and worker of miracles&mdash;hence the hubbub when he was cut down.
+They tell me that he was living in this very cave when Tamerlane passed this
+way in 1399, with a lot more bosh of that sort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went into the cave, and how any man could live in it a week is a mystery to
+me, for it was little more than four feet high, and as damp and dismal a grotto
+as ever was seen. A wooden settle and a rough table were the sole furniture,
+with a lot of parchment scrolls with hieroglyphics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, he has gone where he will learn that the gospel of peace and good will is
+superior to all his Pagan lore. Peace go with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elliott and Chamberlain never caught the main body&mdash;I knew they
+wouldn't&mdash;so the honours of the day rest with me. I ought to get a step
+for it, anyhow, and perhaps, who knows? some mention in the <i>Gazette</i>.
+What a lucky chance! I think Zemaun deserves his telescope after all for giving
+it to me. Shall have something to eat now, for I am half starved. Glory is an
+excellent thing, but you cannot live upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+October 6, 11 A.M.&mdash;Let me try to set down as calmly and as accurately as
+I can all that occurred last night. I have never been a dreamer or a visionary,
+so I can rely upon my own senses, though I am bound to say that if any other
+fellow had told me the same thing I should have doubted him. I might even have
+suspected that I was deceived at the time had I not heard the bell since.
+However, I must narrate what happened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elliott was in my tent with me having a quiet cheroot until about ten o'clock.
+I then walked the rounds with my jemidar, and having seen that all was right I
+turned in a little before eleven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was just dropping off to sleep, for I was dog-tired after the day's work,
+when I was aroused by some slight noise, and, looking round, I saw a man
+dressed in Asiatic costume standing at the entrance of my tent. He was
+motionless when I saw him, and he had his eyes fixed upon me with a solemn and
+stern expression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My first thought was that the fellow was some Ghazi or Afghan fanatic who had
+stolen in with the intention of stabbing me, and with this idea in my mind I
+had all the will to spring from my couch and defend myself, but the power was
+unaccountably lacking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An overpowering languor and want of energy possessed me. Had I seen the dagger
+descending upon my breast I could not have made an effort to avert it. I
+suppose a bird when it is under the influence of a snake feels very much as I
+did in the presence of this gloomy-faced stranger. My mind was clear enough,
+but my body was as torpid as though I were still asleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shut my eyes once or twice and tried to persuade myself that the whole thing
+was a delusion, but every time that I opened them there was the man still
+regarding me with the same stony, menacing stare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The silence became unendurable. I felt that I must overcome my languor so far
+as to address him. I am not a nervous man, and I never knew before what Virgil
+meant when he wrote &ldquo;adhoesit faucibus ora.&rdquo; At last I managed to
+stammer out a few words, asking the intruder who he was and what he wanted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lieutenant Heatherstone,&rdquo; he answered, speaking slowly and
+gravely, &ldquo;you have committed this day the foulest sacrilege and the
+greatest crime which it is possible for man to do. You have slain one of the
+thrice blessed and reverend ones, an arch adept of the first degree, an elder
+brother who has trod the higher path for more years than you have numbered
+months. You have cut him off at a time when his labours promised to reach a
+climax and when he was about to attain a height of occult knowledge which would
+have brought man one step nearer to his Creator. All this you have done without
+excuse, without provocation, at a time when he was pleading the cause of the
+helpless and distressed. Listen now to me, John Heatherstone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When first the occult sciences were pursued many thousands of years ago,
+it was found by the learned that the short tenure of human existence was too
+limited to allow a man to attain the loftiest heights of inner life. The
+inquirers of those days directed their energies in the first place, therefore,
+to the lengthening of their own days in order that they might have more scope
+for improvement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By their knowledge of the secret laws of Nature they were enabled to
+fortify their bodies against disease and old age. It only remained to protect
+themselves against the assaults of wicked and violent men who are ever ready to
+destroy what is wiser and nobler than themselves. There was no direct means by
+which this protection could be effected, but it was in some measure attained by
+arranging the occult forces in such a way that a terrible and unavoidable
+retribution should await the offender.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was irrevocably ordained by laws which cannot be reversed that any
+one who should shed the blood of a brother who had attained a certain degree of
+sanctity should be a doomed man. Those laws are extant to this day, John
+Heatherstone, and you have placed yourself in their power. King or emperor
+would be helpless before the forces which you have called into play. What hope,
+then, is there for you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In former days these laws acted so instantaneously that the slayer
+perished with his victim. It was judged afterwards that this prompt retribution
+prevented the offender from having time to realise the enormity of his offence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was therefore ordained that in all such cases the retribution should
+be left in the hands of the <i>chelas</i>, or immediate disciples of the holy
+man, with power to extend or shorten it at their will, exacting it either at
+the time or at any future anniversary of the day when the crime was committed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why punishment should come on those days only it does not concern you to
+know. Suffice it that you are the murderer of Ghoolab Shah, the thrice blessed,
+and that I am the senior of his three <i>chelas</i> commissioned to avenge his
+death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is no personal matter between us. Amid our studies we have no leisure
+or inclination for personal matters. It is an immutable law, and it is as
+impossible for us to relax it as it is for you to escape from it. Sooner or
+later we shall come to you and claim your life in atonement for the one which
+you have taken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The same fate shall be meted out to the wretched soldier, Smith, who,
+though less guilty than yourself, has incurred the same penalty by raising his
+sacrilegious hand against the chosen of Buddha. If your life is prolonged, it
+is merely that you may have time to repent of your misdeed and to feel the full
+force of your punishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And lest you should be tempted to cast it out of your mind and to forget
+it, our bell&mdash;our astral bell, the use of which is one of our occult
+secrets&mdash;shall ever remind you of what have been and what is to be. You
+shall hear it by day and you shall hear it by night, and it will be a sign to
+you that do what you may and go where you will, you can never shake yourself
+clear of the <i>chelas</i> of Ghoolab Shah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will never see me more, accursed one, until the day when we come for
+you. Live in fear, and in that anticipation which is worse than death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a menacing wave of the hand the figure turned and swept out of my tent
+into the darkness. The instant that the fellow disappeared from my sight I
+recovered from my lethargy which had fallen upon me. Springing to my feet, I
+rushed to the opening and looked out. A Sepoy sentry was standing leaning upon
+his musket, a few paces off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You dog,&rdquo; I said in Hindustani. &ldquo;What do you mean by letting
+people disturb me in this way?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man stared at me in amazement. &ldquo;Has any one disturbed the
+sahib?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This instant&mdash;this moment. You must have seen him pass out of my
+tent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Surely the Burra Sahib is mistaken,&rdquo; the man answered,
+respectfully but firmly. &ldquo;I have been here for an hour, and no one has
+passed from the tent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Puzzled and disconcerted, I was sitting by the side of my couch wondering
+whether the whole thing were a delusion, brought on by the nervous excitement
+of our skirmish, when a new marvel overtook me. From over my head there
+suddenly sounded a sharp, tinkling sound, like that produced by an empty glass
+when flipped by the nail, only louder and more intense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked up, but nothing was to be seen. I examined the whole interior of the
+tent carefully, but without discovering any cause for the strange sound. At
+last, worn out with fatigue, I gave the mystery up, and throwing myself on the
+couch was soon fast asleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I awoke this morning I was inclined to put the whole of my yesternight's
+experiences down to imagination, but I was soon disabused of the idea, for I
+had hardly risen before the same strange sound was repeated in my very ear as
+loudly, and to all appearance as causelesly, as before. What it is or where it
+comes from I cannot conceive. I have not heard it since.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Can the fellow's threats have something in them and this be the warning bell of
+which he spoke? Surely it is impossible. Yet his manner was indescribably
+impressive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have tried to set down what he said as accurately as I can, but I fear I have
+omitted a good deal. What is to be the end of this strange affair? I must go in
+for a course of religion and holy water. Not a word to Chamberlain or Elliott.
+They tell me I am looking like a ghost this morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Evening</i>.&mdash;Have managed to compare notes with Gunner Rufus Smith of
+the Artillery, who knocked the old fellow over with the butt of his gun. His
+experience has been the same as mine. He has heard the sound, too. What is the
+meaning of it all? My brain is in a whirl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oct. 10 (four days later).&mdash;God help us!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This last laconic entry terminated the journal. It seemed to me that, coming as
+it did after four days' complete silence, it told a clearer tale of shaken
+nerve and a broken spirit than could any more elaborate narrative. Pinned on to
+the journal was a supplementary statement which had evidently been recently
+added by the general.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;From that day to this,&rdquo; it said, &ldquo;I have had no night or day
+free from the intrusion of that dreadful sound with its accompanying train of
+thought. Time and custom have brought me no relief, but on the contrary, as the
+years pass over my head my physical strength decreases and my nerves become
+less able to bear up against the continual strain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am a broken man in mind and body. I live in a state of tension, always
+straining my ears for the hated sound, afraid to converse with my fellows for
+fear of exposing my dreadful condition to them, with no comfort or hope of
+comfort on this side of the grave. I should be willing, Heaven knows, to die,
+and yet as each 5th of October comes round, I am prostrated with fear because I
+do not know what strange and terrible experience may be in store for me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Forty years have passed since I slew Ghoolab Shah, and forty times I
+have gone through all the horrors of death, without attaining the blessed peace
+which lies beyond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no means of knowing in what shape my fate will come upon me. I
+have immured myself in this lonely country, and surrounded myself with
+barriers, because in my weaker moments my instincts urge me to take some steps
+for self-protection, but I know well in my heart how futile it all is. They
+must come quickly now, for I grow old, and Nature will forestall them unless
+they make haste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I take credit to myself that I have kept my hands off the prussic-acid
+or opium bottle. It has always been in my power to checkmate my occult
+persecutors in that way, but I have ever held that a man in this world cannot
+desert his post until he has been relieved in due course by the authorities. I
+have had no scruples, however, about exposing myself to danger, and, during the
+Sikh and Sepoy wars, I did all that a man could do to court Death. He passed me
+by, however, and picked out many a young fellow to whom life was only opening
+and who had everything to live for, while I survived to win crosses and honours
+which had lost all relish for me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well, these things cannot depend upon chance, and there is no
+doubt some deep reason for it all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One compensation Providence has made me in the shape of a true and
+faithful wife, to whom I told my dreadful secret before the wedding, and who
+nobly consented to share my lot. She has lifted half the burden from my
+shoulders, but with the effect, poor soul, of crushing her own life beneath its
+weight!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My children, too, have been a comfort to me. Mordaunt knows all, or
+nearly all. Gabriel we have endeavoured to keep in the dark, though we cannot
+prevent her from knowing that there is something amiss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should like this statement to be shown to Dr. John Easterling of
+Stranraer. He heard on one occasion this haunting sound. My sad experience may
+show him that I spoke truth when I said that there was much knowledge in the
+world which has never found its way to England.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;J. B. HEATHERSTONE.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was going on for dawn by the time that I had finished this extraordinary
+narrative, to which my sister and Mordaunt Heatherstone listened with the most
+absorbed attention. Already we could see through the window that the stars had
+begun to fade and a grey light to appear in the east. The crofter who owned the
+lurcher dog lived a couple of miles off, so it was time for us to be on foot.
+Leaving Esther to tell my father the story in such fashion as she might, we
+thrust some food in our pockets and set off upon our solemn and eventful
+errand.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"></a>
+CHAPTER XVI.<br />
+AT THE HOLE OF CREE</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was dark enough when we started to make it no easy matter to find our way
+across the moors, but as we advanced it grew lighter and lighter, until by the
+time we reached Fullarton's cabin it was broad daylight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Early as it was, he was up and about, for the Wigtown peasants are an early
+rising race. We explained our mission to him in as few words as possible, and
+having made his bargain&mdash;what Scot ever neglected that
+preliminary?&mdash;he agreed not only to let us have the use of his dog but to
+come with us himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mordaunt, in his desire for privacy, would have demurred at this arrangement,
+but I pointed out to him that we had no idea what was in store for us, and the
+addition of a strong, able-bodied man to our party might prove to be of the
+utmost consequence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again, the dog was less likely to give us trouble if we had its master to
+control it. My arguments carried the day, and the biped accompanied us as well
+as his four-footed companion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was some little similarity between the two, for the man was a
+towsy-headed fellow with a great mop of yellow hair and a straggling beard,
+while the dog was of the long-haired, unkempt breed looking like an animated
+bundle of oakum.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All our way to the Hall its owner kept retailing instances of the creature's
+sagacity and powers of scent, which, according to his account, were little less
+than miraculous. His anecdotes had a poor audience, I fear, for my mind was
+filled with the strange story which I had been reading, while Mordaunt strode
+on with wild eyes and feverish cheeks, without a thought for anything but the
+problem which we had to solve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again and again as we topped an eminence I saw him look eagerly round him in
+the faint hope of seeing some trace of the absentee, but over the whole expanse
+of moorland there was no sign of movement or of life. All was dead and silent
+and deserted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our visit to the Hall was a very brief one, for every minute now was of
+importance. Mordaunt rushed in and emerged with an old coat of his father's,
+which he handed to Fullarton, who held it out to the dog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The intelligent brute sniffed at it all over, then ran whining a little way
+down the avenue, came back to sniff the coat again, and finally elevating its
+stump of a tail in triumph, uttered a succession of sharp yelps to show that it
+was satisfied that it had struck the trail. Its owner tied a long cord to its
+collar to prevent it from going too fast for us, and we all set off upon our
+search, the dog tugging and straining at its leash in its excitement as it
+followed in the general's footsteps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our way lay for a couple of hundred yards along the high road, and then passed
+through a gap in the hedge and on to the moor, across which we were led in a
+bee-line to the northward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun had by this time risen above the horizon, and the whole countryside
+looked so fresh and sweet, from the blue, sparkling sea to the purple
+mountains, that it was difficult to realise how weird and uncanny was the
+enterprise upon which we were engaged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scent must have lain strongly upon the ground, for the dog never hesitated
+nor stopped, dragging its master along at a pace which rendered conversation
+impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At one place, in crossing a small stream, we seemed to get off the trail for a
+few minutes, but our keen-nosed ally soon picked it up on the other side and
+followed it over the trackless moor, whining and yelping all the time in its
+eagerness. Had we not all three been fleet of foot and long of wind, we could
+not have persisted in the continuous, rapid journey over the roughest of
+ground, with the heather often well-nigh up to our waists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For my own part, I have no idea now, looking back, what goal it was which I
+expected to reach at the end of our pursuit. I can remember that my mind was
+full of the vaguest and most varying speculations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Could it be that the three Buddhists had had a craft in readiness off the
+coast, and had embarked with their prisoners for the East? The direction of
+their track seemed at first to favour this supposition, for it lay in the line
+of the upper end of the bay, but it ended by branching off and striking
+directly inland. Clearly the ocean was not to be our terminus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By ten o'clock we had walked close upon twelve miles, and were compelled to
+call a halt for a few minutes to recover our breath, for the last mile or two
+we had been breasting the long, wearying slope of the Wigtown hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the summit of this range, which is nowhere more than a thousand feet in
+height, we could see, looking northward, such a scene of bleakness and
+desolation as can hardly be matched in any country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Right away to the horizon stretched the broad expanse of mud and of water,
+mingled and mixed together in the wildest chaos, like a portion of some world
+in the process of formation. Here and there on the dun-coloured surface of this
+great marsh there had burst out patches of sickly yellow reeds and of livid,
+greenish scum, which only served to heighten and intensify the gloomy effect of
+the dull, melancholy expanse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the side nearest to us some abandoned peat-cuttings showed that ubiquitous
+man had been at work there, but beyond these few petty scars there was no sign
+anywhere of human life. Not even a crow nor a seagull flapped its way over that
+hideous desert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is the great Bog of Cree. It is a salt-water marsh formed by an inroad of
+the sea, and so intersected is it with dangerous swamps and treacherous
+pitfalls of liquid mud, that no man would venture through it unless he had the
+guidance of one of the few peasants who retain the secret of its paths.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we approached the fringe of rushes which marked its border, a foul, dank
+smell rose up from the stagnant wilderness, as from impure water and decaying
+vegetation&mdash;an earthy, noisome smell which poisoned the fresh upland air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So forbidding and gloomy was the aspect of the place that our stout crofter
+hesitated, and it was all that we could do to persuade him to proceed. Our
+lurcher, however, not being subject to the delicate impressions of our higher
+organisation, still ran yelping along with its nose on the ground and every
+fibre of its body quivering with excitement and eagerness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no difficulty about picking our way through the morass, for wherever
+the five could go we three could follow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If we could have had any doubts as to our dog's guidance they would all have
+been removed now, for in the soft, black, oozing soil we could distinctly trace
+the tracks of the whole party. From these we could see that they had walked
+abreast, and, furthermore, that each was about equidistant from the other.
+Clearly, then, no physical force had been used in taking the general and his
+companion along. The compulsion had been psychical and not material.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once within the swamp, we had to be careful not to deviate from the narrow
+track, which offered a firm foothold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On each side lay shallow sheets of stagnant water overlying a treacherous
+bottom of semi-fluid mud, which rose above the surface here and there in moist,
+sweltering banks, mottled over with occasional patches of unhealthy vegetation.
+Great purple and yellow fungi had broken out in a dense eruption, as though
+Nature were afflicted with a foul disease, which manifested itself by this crop
+of plague spots.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here and there dark, crab-like creatures scuttled across our path, and hideous,
+flesh-coloured worms wriggled and writhed amid the sickly reeds. Swarms of
+buzzing, piping insects rose up at every step and formed a dense cloud around
+our heads, settling on our hands and faces and inoculating us with their filthy
+venom. Never had I ventured into so pestilent and forbidding a place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mordaunt Heatherstone strode on, however, with a set purpose upon his swarthy
+brow, and we could but follow him, determined to stand by him to the end of the
+adventure. As we advanced, the path grew narrower and narrower until, as we saw
+by the tracks, our predecessors had been compelled to walk in single file.
+Fullarton was leading us with the dog, Mordaunt behind him, while I brought up
+the rear. The peasant had been sulky and surly for a little time back, hardly
+answering when spoken to, but he now stopped short and positively refused to go
+a step farther.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's no' canny,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;besides I ken where it will lead
+us tae.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where, then?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tae the Hole o' Cree,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;It's no far frae here,
+I'm thinking.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Hole of Cree! What is that, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's a great, muckle hole in the ground that gangs awa' doon so deep
+that naebody could ever reach the bottom. Indeed there are folk wha says that
+it's just a door leadin' intae the bottomless pit itsel'.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have been there, then?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Been there!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;What would I be doin' at the Hole o'
+Cree? No, I've never been there, nor any other man in his senses.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How do you know about it, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My great-grandfeyther had been there, and that's how I ken,&rdquo;
+Fullarton answered. &ldquo;He was fou' one Saturday nicht and he went for a
+bet. He didna like tae talk aboot it afterwards, and he wouldna tell a' what
+befell him, but he was aye feared o' the very name. He's the first Fullarton
+that's been at the Hole o' Cree, and he'll be the last for me. If ye'll tak' my
+advice ye'll just gie the matter up and gang hame again, for there's na guid
+tae be got oot o' this place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall go on with you or without you,&rdquo; Mordaunt answered.
+&ldquo;Let us have your dog and we can pick you up on our way back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Na, na,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;I'll no' hae my dog scaret wi' bogles,
+and running down Auld Nick as if he were a hare. The dog shall bide wi'
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The dog shall go with us,&rdquo; said my companion, with his eyes
+blazing. &ldquo;We have no time to argue with you. Here's a five-pound note.
+Let us have the dog, or, by Heaven, I shall take it by force and throw you in
+the bog if you hinder us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could realise the Heatherstone of forty years ago when I saw the fierce and
+sudden wrath which lit up the features of his son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Either the bribe or the threat had the desired effect, for the fellow grabbed
+at the money with one hand while with the other he surrendered the leash which
+held the lurcher. Leaving him to retrace his steps, we continued to make our
+way into the utmost recesses of the great swamp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tortuous path grew less and less defined as we proceeded, and was even
+covered in places with water, but the increasing excitement of the hound and
+the sight of the deep footmarks in the mud stimulated us to push on. At last,
+after struggling through a grove of high bulrushes, we came on a spot the
+gloomy horror of which might have furnished Dante with a fresh terror for his
+&ldquo;Inferno.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The whole bog in this part appeared to have sunk in, forming a great,
+funnel-shaped depression, which terminated in the centre in a circular rift or
+opening about forty feet in diameter. It was a whirlpool&mdash;a perfect
+maelstrom of mud, sloping down on every side to this silent and awful chasm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clearly this was the spot which, under the name of the Hole of Cree, bore such
+a sinister reputation among the rustics. I could not wonder at its impressing
+their imagination, for a more weird or gloomy scene, or one more worthy of the
+avenue which led to it, could not be conceived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The steps passed down the declivity which surrounded the abyss, and we followed
+them with a sinking feeling in our hearts, as we realised that this was the end
+of our search.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little way from the downward path was the return trail made by the feet of
+those who had come back from the chasm's edge. Our eyes fell upon these tracks
+at the same moment, and we each gave a cry of horror, and stood gazing
+speechlessly at them. For there, in those blurred footmarks, the whole drama
+was revealed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Five had gone down, but only three had returned</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+None shall ever know the details of that strange tragedy. There was no mark of
+struggle nor sign of attempt at escape. We knelt at the edge of the Hole and
+endeavoured to pierce the unfathomable gloom which shrouded it. A faint, sickly
+exhalation seemed to rise from its depths, and there was a distant hurrying,
+clattering sound as of waters in the bowels of the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A great stone lay embedded in the mud, and this I hurled over, but we never
+heard thud or splash to show that it had reached the bottom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we hung over the noisome chasm a sound did at last rise to our ears out of
+its murky depths. High, clear, and throbbing, it tinkled for an instant out of
+the abyss, to be succeeded by the same deadly stillness which had preceded it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I did not wish to appear superstitious, or to put down to extraordinary causes
+that which may have a natural explanation. That one keen note may have been
+some strange water sound produced far down in the bowels of the earth. It may
+have been that or it may have been that sinister bell of which I had heard so
+much. Be this as it may, it was the only sign that rose to us from the last
+terrible resting-place of the two who had paid the debt which had so long been
+owing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We joined our voices in a call with the unreasoning obstinacy with which men
+will cling to hope, but no answer came back to us save a hollow moaning from
+the depths beneath. Footsore and heart-sick, we retraced our steps and climbed
+the slimy slope once more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What shall we do, Mordaunt?&rdquo; I asked, in a subdued voice.
+&ldquo;We can but pray that their souls may rest in peace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Young Heatherstone looked at me with flashing eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This may be all according to occult laws,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;but we
+shall see what the laws of England have to say upon it. I suppose a
+<i>chela</i> may be hanged as well as any other man. It may not be too late yet
+to run them down. Here, good dog, good dog--here!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pulled the hound over and set it on the track of the three men. The creature
+sniffed at it once or twice, and then, falling upon its stomach, with bristling
+hair and protruding tongue, it lay shivering and trembling, a very embodiment
+of canine terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;it is no use contending against those who
+have powers at their command to which we cannot even give a name. There is
+nothing for it but to accept the inevitable, and to hope that these poor men
+may meet with some compensation in another world for all that they have
+suffered in this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And be free from all devilish religions and their murderous
+worshippers!&rdquo; Mordaunt cried furiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Justice compelled me to acknowledge in my own heart that the murderous spirit
+had been set on foot by the Christian before it was taken up by the Buddhists,
+but I forbore to remark upon it, for fear of irritating my companion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a long time I could not draw him away from the scene of his father's death,
+but at last, by repeated arguments and reasonings, I succeeded in making him
+realise how useless and unprofitable any further efforts on our part must
+necessarily prove, and in inducing him to return with me to Cloomber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oh, the wearisome, tedious journey! It had seemed long enough when we had some
+slight flicker of hope, or at least of expectation, before us, but now that our
+worst fears were fulfilled it appeared interminable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We picked up our peasant guide at the outskirts of the marsh, and having
+restored his dog we let him find his own way home, without telling him anything
+of the results of our expedition. We ourselves plodded all day over the moors
+with heavy feet and heavier hearts until we saw the ill-omened tower of
+Cloomber, and at last, as the sun was setting, found ourselves once more
+beneath its roof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is no need for me to enter into further details, nor to describe the
+grief which our tidings conveyed to mother and to daughter. Their long
+expectation of some calamity was not sufficient to prepare them for the
+terrible reality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For weeks my poor Gabriel hovered between life and death, and though she came
+round at last, thanks to the nursing of my sister and the professional skill of
+Dr. John Easterling, she has never to this day entirely recovered her former
+vigour. Mordaunt, too, suffered much for some time, and it was only after our
+removal to Edinburgh that he rallied from the shock which he had undergone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to poor Mrs. Heatherstone, neither medical attention nor change of air can
+ever have a permanent effect upon her. Slowly and surely, but very placidly,
+she has declined in health and strength, until it is evident that in a very few
+weeks at the most she will have rejoined her husband and restored to him the
+one thing which he must have grudged to leave behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Laird of Branksome came home from Italy restored in health, with the result
+that we were compelled to return once more to Edinburgh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The change was agreeable to us, for recent events had cast a cloud over our
+country life and had surrounded us with unpleasant associations. Besides, a
+highly honourable and remunerative appointment in connection with the
+University library had become vacant, and had, through the kindness of the late
+Sir Alexander Grant, been offered to my father, who, as may be imagined, lost
+no time in accepting so congenial a post.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this way we came back to Edinburgh very much more important people than we
+left it, and with no further reason to be uneasy about the details of
+housekeeping. But, in truth, the whole household has been dissolved, for I have
+been married for some months to my dear Gabriel, and Esther is to become Mrs.
+Heatherstone upon the 23rd of the month. If she makes him as good a wife as his
+sister has made me, we may both set ourselves down as fortunate men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These mere domestic episodes are, as I have already explained, introduced only
+because I cannot avoid alluding to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My object in drawing up this statement and publishing the evidence which
+corroborates it, was certainly not to parade my private affairs before the
+public, but to leave on record an authentic narrative of a most remarkable
+series of events. This I have endeavoured to do in as methodical a manner as
+possible, exaggerating nothing and suppressing nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The reader has now the evidence before him, and can form his own opinions
+unaided by me as to the causes of the disappearance and death of Rufus Smith
+and of John Berthier Heatherstone, V.C., C.B.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is only one point which is still dark to me. Why the <i>chelas</i> of
+Ghoolab Shah should have removed their victims to the desolate Hole of Cree
+instead of taking their lives at Cloomber, is, I confess, a mystery to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In dealing with occult laws, however, we must allow for our own complete
+ignorance of the subject. Did we know more we might see that there was some
+analogy between that foul bog and the sacrilege which had been committed, and
+that their ritual and customs demanded that just such a death was the one
+appropriate to the crime.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On this point I should be sorry to be dogmatic, but at least we must allow that
+the Buddhist priests must have had some very good cause for the course of
+action which they so deliberately carried out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Months afterwards I saw a short paragraph in the <i>Star of India</i>
+announcing that three eminent Buddhists&mdash;Lal Hoomi, Mowdar Khan, and Ram
+Singh&mdash;had just returned in the steamship <i>Deccan</i> from a short trip
+to Europe. The very next item was devoted to an account of the life and
+services of Major-General Heatherstone, &ldquo;who has lately disappeared from
+his country house in Wigtownshire, and who, there is too much reason to fear,
+has been drowned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wonder if by chance there was any other human eye but mine which traced a
+connection between these paragraphs. I never showed them to my wife or to
+Mordaunt, and they will only know of their existence when they read these
+pages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I don't know that there is any other point which needs clearing up. The
+intelligent reader will have already seen the reasons for the general's fear of
+dark faces, of wandering men (not knowing how his pursuers might come after
+him), and of visitors (from the same cause and because his hateful bell was
+liable to sound at all times).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His broken sleep led him to wander about the house at night, and the lamps
+which he burnt in every room were no doubt to prevent his imagination from
+peopling the darkness with terrors. Lastly, his elaborate precautions were, as
+he has himself explained, rather the result of a feverish desire to do
+something than in the expectation that he could really ward off his fate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Science will tell you that there are no such powers as those claimed by the
+Eastern mystics. I, John Fothergill West, can confidently answer that science
+is wrong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For what is science? Science is the consensus of opinion of scientific men, and
+history has shown that it is slow to accept a truth. Science sneered at Newton
+for twenty years. Science proved mathematically that an iron ship could not
+swim, and science declared that a steamship could not cross the Atlantic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like Goethe's Mephistopheles, our wise professor's forte is &ldquo;stets
+verneinen.&rdquo; Thomas Didymus is, to use his own jargon, his prototype. Let
+him learn that if he will but cease to believe in the infallibility of his own
+methods, and will look to the East, from which all great movements come, he
+will find there a school of philosophers and of savants who, working on
+different lines from his own, are many thousand years ahead of him in all the
+essentials of knowledge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+THE END
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER ***</div>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #7964 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/7964)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery of Cloomber, by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mystery of Cloomber
+
+Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+Posting Date: March 11, 2009 [EBook #7964]
+Release Date: April, 2005
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Lionel G. Sear
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER
+
+By Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+I THE HEGIRA OF THE WESTS FROM EDINBURGH
+
+II OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH A TENANT CAME TO CLOOMBER
+
+III OF OUR FURTHER ACQUAINTANCE WITH MAJOR-GENERAL J. B. HEATHERSTONE
+
+IV OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A GREY HEAD
+
+V HOW FOUR OF US CAME TO BE UNDER THE SHADOW OF CLOOMBER
+
+VI HOW I CAME TO BE ENLISTED AS ONE OF THE GARRISON OF CLOOMBER
+
+VII OF CORPORAL RUFUS SMITH AND HIS COMING TO CLOOMBER
+
+VIII STATEMENT OF ISRAEL STAKES
+
+IX NARRATIVE OF JOHN EASTERLING, F.R.C.P. EDIN.
+
+X OF THE LETTER WHICH CAME FROM THE HALL
+
+XI OF THE CASTING AWAY OF THE BARQUE "BELINDA"
+
+XII OF THE THREE FOREIGN MEN UPON THE COAST
+
+XIII IN WHICH I SEE THAT WHICH HAS BEEN SEEN BY FEW
+
+XIV OF THE VISITOR WHO RAN DOWN THE ROAD IN THE NIGHT-TIME
+
+XV THE DAY-BOOK OF JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE
+
+XVI AT THE HOLE OF CREE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE HEGIRA OF THE WESTS FROM EDINBURGH
+
+I John Fothergill West, student of law in the University of St. Andrews,
+have endeavoured in the ensuing pages to lay my statement before the
+public in a concise and business-like fashion.
+
+It is not my wish to achieve literary success, nor have I any desire by
+the graces of my style, or by the artistic ordering of my incidents, to
+throw a deeper shadow over the strange passages of which I shall have
+to speak. My highest ambition is that those who know something of the
+matter should, after reading my account, be able to conscientiously
+indorse it without finding a single paragraph in which I have either
+added to or detracted from the truth.
+
+Should I attain this result, I shall rest amply satisfied with the
+outcome of my first, and probably my last, venture in literature.
+
+It was my intention to write out the sequence of events in due order,
+depending on trustworthy hearsay when I was describing that which was
+beyond my own personal knowledge. I have now, however, through the
+kind cooperation of friends, hit upon a plan which promises to be less
+onerous to me and more satisfactory to the reader. This is nothing less
+than to make use of the various manuscripts which I have by me bearing
+upon the subject, and to add to them the first-hand evidence contributed
+by those who had the best opportunities of knowing Major-General J. B.
+Heatherstone.
+
+In pursuance of this design I shall lay before the public the testimony
+of Israel Stakes, formerly coachman at Cloomber Hall, and of
+John Easterling, F.R.C.P. Edin., now practising at Stranraer, in
+Wigtownshire. To these I shall add a verbatim account extracted from
+the journal of the late John Berthier Heatherstone, of the events which
+occurred in the Thul Valley in the autumn of '41 towards the end of
+the first Afghan War, with a description of the skirmish in the Terada
+defile, and of the death of the man Ghoolab Shah.
+
+To myself I reserve the duty of filling up all the gaps and chinks which
+may be left in the narrative. By this arrangement I have sunk from the
+position of an author to that of a compiler, but on the other hand
+my work has ceased to be a story and has expanded into a series of
+affidavits.
+
+My Father, John Hunter West, was a well known Oriental and Sanskrit
+scholar, and his name is still of weight with those who are interested
+in such matters. He it was who first after Sir William Jones called
+attention to the great value of early Persian literature, and his
+translations from the Hafiz and from Ferideddin Atar have earned the
+warmest commendations from the Baron von Hammer-Purgstall, of Vienna,
+and other distinguished Continental critics.
+
+In the issue of the _Orientalisches Scienzblatt_ for January, 1861,
+he is described as _"Der beruhmte und sehr gelhernte Hunter West von
+Edinburgh"_--a passage which I well remember that he cut out and stowed
+away, with a pardonable vanity, among the most revered family archives.
+
+He had been brought up to be a solicitor, or Writer to the Signet, as
+it is termed in Scotland, but his learned hobby absorbed so much of his
+time that he had little to devote to the pursuit of his profession.
+
+When his clients were seeking him at his chambers in George Street, he
+was buried in the recesses of the Advocates' Library, or poring over
+some mouldy manuscript at the Philosophical Institution, with his brain
+more exercised over the code which Menu propounded six hundred years
+before the birth of Christ than over the knotty problems of Scottish law
+in the nineteenth century. Hence it can hardly be wondered at that
+as his learning accumulated his practice dissolved, until at the very
+moment when he had attained the zenith of his celebrity he had also
+reached the nadir of his fortunes.
+
+There being no chair of Sanscrit in any of his native universities, and
+no demand anywhere for the only mental wares which he had to dispose
+of, we should have been forced to retire into genteel poverty, consoling
+ourselves with the aphorisms and precepts of Firdousi, Omar Khayyam, and
+others of his Eastern favourites, had it not been for the kindness
+and liberality of his half-brother William Farintosh, the Laird of
+Branksome, in Wigtownshire.
+
+This William Farintosh was the proprietor of a landed estate, the
+acreage which bore, unfortunately, a most disproportional relation to
+its value, for it formed the bleakest and most barren tract of land
+in the whole of a bleak and barren shire. As a bachelor, however, his
+expenses had been small, and he had contrived from the rents of his
+scattered cottages, and the sale of the Galloway nags, which he bred
+upon the moors, not only to live as a laird should, but to put by a
+considerable sum in the bank.
+
+We had heard little from our kinsman during the days of our comparative
+prosperity, but just as we were at our wit's end, there came a letter
+like a ministering angel, giving us assurance of sympathy and succour.
+In it the Laird of Branksome told us that one of his lungs had been
+growing weaker for some time, and that Dr. Easterling, of Stranraer, had
+strongly advised him to spend the few years which were left to him in
+some more genial climate. He had determined, therefore to set out for
+the South of Italy, and he begged that we should take up our residence
+at Branksome in his absence, and that my father should act as his land
+steward and agent at a salary which placed us above all fear of want.
+
+Our mother had been dead for some years, so that there were only myself,
+my father, and my sister Esther to consult, and it may be readily
+imagined that it did not take us long to decide upon the acceptance
+of the laird's generous offer. My father started for Wigtown that very
+night, while Esther and I followed a few days afterwards, bearing with
+us two potato-sacksful of learned books, and such other of our household
+effects that were worth the trouble and expense of transport.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH A TENANT CAME TO CLOOMBER
+
+Branksome might have appeared a poor dwelling-place when compared with
+the house of an English squire, but to us, after our long residence in
+stuffy apartments, it was of regal magnificence.
+
+The building was broad-spread and low, with red-tiled roof,
+diamond-paned windows, and a profusion of dwelling rooms with
+smoke-blackened ceilings and oaken wainscots. In front was a small lawn,
+girt round with a thin fringe of haggard and ill grown beeches, all
+gnarled and withered from the effects of the sea-spray. Behind lay the
+scattered hamlet of Branksome-Bere--a dozen cottages at most--inhabited
+by rude fisher-folk who looked upon the laird as their natural
+protector.
+
+To the west was the broad, yellow beach and the Irish Sea, while in all
+other directions the desolate moors, greyish-green in the foreground
+and purple in the distance, stretched away in long, low curves to the
+horizon.
+
+Very bleak and lonely it was upon this Wigtown coast. A man might
+walk many a weary mile and never see a living thing except the white,
+heavy-flapping kittiwakes, which screamed and cried to each other with
+their shrill, sad voices.
+
+Very lonely and very bleak! Once out of sight of Branksome and there
+was no sign of the works of man save only where the high, white tower of
+Cloomber Hall shot up, like a headstone of some giant grave, from amid
+the firs and larches which girt it round.
+
+This great house, a mile or more from our dwelling, had been built by a
+wealthy Glasgow merchant of strange tastes and lonely habits, but at
+the time of our arrival it had been untenanted for many years, and stood
+with weather-blotched walls and vacant, staring windows looking blankly
+out over the hill side.
+
+Empty and mildewed, it served only as a landmark to the fishermen, for
+they had found by experience that by keeping the laird's chimney and the
+white tower of Cloomber in a line they could steer their way through
+the ugly reef which raises its jagged back, like that of some sleeping
+monster, above the troubled waters of the wind-swept bay.
+
+To this wild spot it was that Fate had brought my father, my sister,
+and myself. For us its loneliness had no terrors. After the hubbub and
+bustle of a great city, and the weary task of upholding appearances upon
+a slender income, there was a grand, soul-soothing serenity in the long
+sky-line and the eager air. Here at least there was no neighbour to pry
+and chatter.
+
+The laird had left his phaeton and two ponies behind him, with the aid
+of which my father and I would go the round of the estate doing such
+light duties as fall to an agent, or "factor" as it was there called,
+while our gentle Esther looked to our household needs, and brightened
+the dark old building.
+
+Such was our simple, uneventful existence, until the summer night when
+an unlooked-for incident occurred which proved to be the herald of those
+strange doings which I have taken up my pen to describe.
+
+It had been my habit to pull out of an evening in the laird's skiff
+and to catch a few whiting which might serve for our supper. On this
+well-remembered occasion my sister came with me, sitting with her book
+in the stern-sheets of the boat, while I hung my lines over the bows.
+
+The sun had sunk down behind the rugged Irish coast, but a long bank of
+flushed cloud still marked the spot, and cast a glory upon the waters.
+The whole broad ocean was seamed and scarred with crimson streaks. I had
+risen in the boat, and was gazing round in delight at the broad panorama
+of shore and sea and sky, when my sister plucked at my sleeve with a
+little, sharp cry of surprise.
+
+"See, John," she cried, "there is a light in Cloomber Tower!"
+
+I turned my head and stared back at the tall, white turret which peeped
+out above the belt of trees. As I gazed I distinctly saw at one of the
+windows the glint of a light, which suddenly vanished, and then shone
+out once more from another higher up. There it flickered for some time,
+and finally flashed past two successive windows underneath before the
+trees obscured our view of it. It was clear that some one bearing a lamp
+or a candle had climbed up the tower stairs and had then returned into
+the body of the house.
+
+"Who in the world can it be?" I exclaimed, speaking rather to myself
+than to Esther, for I could see by the surprise upon her face that she
+had no solution to offer. "Maybe some of the folk from Branksome-Bere
+have wanted to look over the place."
+
+My sister shook her head.
+
+"There is not one of them would dare to set foot within the avenue
+gates," she said. "Besides, John, the keys are kept by the house-agent
+at Wigtown. Were they ever so curious, none of our people could find
+their way in."
+
+When I reflected upon the massive door and ponderous shutters which
+guarded the lower storey of Cloomber, I could not but admit the force
+of my sister's objection. The untimely visitor must either have used
+considerable violence in order to force his way in, or he must have
+obtained possession of the keys.
+
+Piqued by the little mystery, I pulled for the beach, with the
+determination to see for myself who the intruder might be, and what
+were his intentions. Leaving my sister at Branksome, and summoning
+Seth Jamieson, an old man-o'-war's-man and one of the stoutest of the
+fishermen, I set off across the moor with him through the gathering
+darkness.
+
+"It hasna a guid name after dark, yon hoose," remarked my companion,
+slackening his pace perceptibly as I explained to him the nature of our
+errand. "It's no for naething that him wha owns it wunna gang within a
+Scotch mile o't."
+
+"Well, Seth, there is some one who has no fears about going into it,"
+said I, pointing to the great, white building which flickered up in
+front of us through the gloom.
+
+The light which I had observed from the sea was moving backwards and
+forward past the lower floor windows, the shutters of which had been
+removed. I could now see that a second fainter light followed a few
+paces behind the other. Evidently two individuals, the one with a
+lamp and the other with a candle or rushlight, were making a careful
+examination of the building.
+
+"Let ilka man blaw his ain parritch," said Seth Jamieson doggedly,
+coming to a dead stop. "What is it tae us if a wraith or a bogle
+minds tae tak' a fancy tae Cloomber? It's no canny tae meddle wi' such
+things."
+
+"Why, man," I cried, "you don't suppose a wraith came here in a gig?
+What are those lights away yonder by the avenue gates?"
+
+"The lamps o' a gig, sure enough!" exclaimed my companion in a less
+lugubrious voice. "Let's steer for it, Master West, and speer where she
+hails frae."
+
+By this time night had closed in save for a single long, narrow slit in
+the westward. Stumbling across the moor together, we made our way into
+the Wigtown Road, at the point where the high stone pillars mark the
+entrance to the Cloomber avenue. A tall dog-cart stood in front of the
+gateway, the horse browsing upon the thin border of grass which skirted
+the road.
+
+"It's a' richt!" said Jamieson, taking a close look at the deserted
+vehicle. "I ken it weel. It belongs tae Maister McNeil, the factor body
+frae Wigtown--him wha keeps the keys."
+
+"Then we may as well have speech with him now that we are here," I
+answered. "They are coming down, if I am not mistaken."
+
+As I spoke we heard the slam of the heavy door and within a few minutes
+two figures, the one tall and angular, the other short and thick came
+towards us through the darkness. They were talking so earnestly that
+they did not observe us until they had passed through the avenue gate.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. McNeil," said I, stepping forward and addressing the
+Wigtown factor, with whom I had some slight acquaintance.
+
+The smaller of the two turned his face towards me as I spoke, and showed
+me that I was not mistaken in his identity, but his taller companion
+sprang back and showed every sign of violent agitation.
+
+"What is this, McNeil?" I heard him say, in a gasping, choking voice.
+"Is this your promise? What is the meaning of it?"
+
+"Don't be alarmed, General! Don't be alarmed!" said the little fat
+factor in a soothing fashion, as one might speak to a frightened child.
+"This is young Mr. Fothergill West, of Branksome, though what brings him
+up here tonight is more than I can understand. However, as you are to be
+neighbours, I can't do better than take the opportunity to introduce you
+to each other. Mr. West, this is General Heatherstone, who is about to
+take a lease of Cloomber Hall."
+
+I held out my hand to the tall man, who took it in a hesitating,
+half-reluctant fashion.
+
+"I came up," I explained, "because I saw your lights in the windows, and
+I thought that something might be wrong. I am very glad I did so, since
+it has given me the chance of making the general's acquaintance."
+
+Whilst I was talking, I was conscious that the new tenant of Cloomber
+Hall was peering at me very closely through the darkness. As I
+concluded, he stretched out a long, tremulous arm, and turned the
+gig-lamp in such a way as to throw a flood of light upon my face.
+
+"Good Heavens, McNeil!" he cried, in the same quivering voice as before,
+"the fellow's as brown as chocolate. He's not an Englishman. You're not
+an Englishman--you, sir?"
+
+"I'm a Scotchman, born and bred," said I, with an inclination to laugh,
+which was only checked by my new acquaintance's obvious terror.
+
+"A Scotchman, eh?" said he, with a sigh of relief. "It's all one
+nowadays. You must excuse me, Mr.--Mr. West. I'm nervous, infernally
+nervous. Come along, McNeil, we must be back in Wigtown in less than an
+hour. Good-night, gentlemen, good-night!"
+
+The two clambered into their places; the factor cracked his whip,
+and the high dog-cart clattered away through the darkness, casting a
+brilliant tunnel of yellow light on either side of it, until the rumble
+of its wheels died away in the distance.
+
+"What do you think of our new neighbour, Jamieson?" I asked, after a
+long silence.
+
+"'Deed, Mr. West, he seems, as he says himsel', to be vera nervous.
+Maybe his conscience is oot o' order."
+
+"His liver, more likely," said I. "He looks as if he had tried his
+constitution a bit. But it's blowing chill, Seth, my lad, and it's time
+both of us were indoors."
+
+I bade my companion good-night, and struck off across the moors for the
+cheery, ruddy light which marked the parlour windows of Branksome.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. OF OUR FURTHER ACQUAINTANCE WITH MAJOR-GENERAL J. B. HEATHERSTONE
+
+There was, as may well be imagined, much stir amongst our small
+community at the news that the Hall was to be inhabited once more, and
+considerable speculation as to the new tenants, and their object in
+choosing this particular part of the country for their residence.
+
+It speedily became apparent that, whatever their motives might be, they
+had definitely determined upon a lengthy stay, for relays of plumbers
+and of joiners came down from Wigtown, and there was hammering and
+repairing going on from morning till night.
+
+It was surprising how quickly the signs of the wind and weather were
+effaced, until the great, square-set house was all as spick-and-span
+as though it had been erected yesterday. There were abundant signs that
+money was no consideration to General Heatherstone, and that it was not
+on the score of retrenchment that he had taken up his abode among us.
+
+"It may be that he is devoted to study," suggested my father, as we
+discussed the question round the breakfast table. "Perhaps he has chosen
+this secluded spot to finish some magnum opus upon which he is engaged.
+If that is the case I should be happy to let him have the run of my
+library."
+
+Esther and I laughed at the grandiloquent manner in which he spoke of
+the two potato-sacksful of books.
+
+"It may be as you say," said I, "but the general did not strike me
+during our short interview as being a man who was likely to have any
+very pronounced literary tastes. If I might hazard a guess, I should say
+that he is here upon medical advice, in the hope that the complete quiet
+and fresh air may restore his shattered nervous system. If you had seen
+how he glared at me, and the twitching of his fingers, you would have
+thought it needed some restoring."
+
+"I do wonder whether he has a wife and a family," said my sister. "Poor
+souls, how lonely they will be! Why, excepting ourselves, there is not a
+family that they could speak to for seven miles and more."
+
+"General Heatherstone is a very distinguished soldier," remarked my
+father.
+
+"Why, papa, however came you to know anything about him?"
+
+"Ah, my dears," said my father, smiling at us over his coffee-cup, "you
+were laughing at my library just now, but you see it may be very useful
+at times." As he spoke he took a red-covered volume from a shelf and
+turned over the pages. "This is an Indian Army List of three
+years back," he explained, "and here is the very gentleman we
+want-'Heatherstone, J. B., Commander of the Bath,' my dears, and 'V.C.',
+think of that, 'V.C.'--'formerly colonel in the Indian Infantry, 41st
+Bengal Foot, but now retired with the rank of major-general.' In this
+other column is a record of his services--'capture of Ghuznee and
+defence of Jellalabad, Sobraon 1848, Indian Mutiny and reduction of
+Oudh. Five times mentioned in dispatches.' I think, my dears, that we
+have cause to be proud of our new neighbour."
+
+"It doesn't mention there whether he is married or not, I suppose?"
+asked Esther.
+
+"No," said my father, wagging his white head with a keen appreciation
+of his own humour. "It doesn't include that under the heading of 'daring
+actions'--though it very well might, my dear, it very well might."
+
+All our doubts, however, upon this head were very soon set at rest, for
+on the very day that the repairing and the furnishing had been completed
+I had occasion to ride into Wigtown, and I met upon the way a carriage
+which was bearing General Heatherstone and his family to their new home.
+An elderly lady, worn and sickly-looking, was by his side, and opposite
+him sat a young fellow about my own age and a girl who appeared to be a
+couple of years younger.
+
+I raised my hat, and was about to pass them, when the general shouted to
+his coachman to pull up, and held out his hand to me. I could see now
+in the daylight that his face, although harsh and stern, was capable of
+assuming a not unkindly expression.
+
+"How are you, Mr. Fothergill West?" he cried. "I must apologise to
+you if I was a little brusque the other night--you will excuse an old
+soldier who has spent the best part of his life in harness--All
+the same, you must confess that you are rather dark-skinned for a
+Scotchman."
+
+"We have a Spanish strain in our blood," said I, wondering at his
+recurrence to the topic.
+
+"That would, of course, account for it," he remarked. "My dear," to his
+wife, "allow me to introduce Mr. Fothergill West to you. This is my son
+and my daughter. We have come here in search of rest, Mr. West--complete
+rest."
+
+"And you could not possibly have come to a better place," said I.
+
+"Oh, you think so?" he answered. "I suppose it is very quiet indeed, and
+very lonely. You might walk through these country lanes at night, I dare
+say, and never meet a soul, eh?"
+
+"Well, there are not many about after dark," I said.
+
+"And you are not much troubled with vagrants or wandering beggars, eh?
+Not many tinkers or tramps or rascally gipsies--no vermin of that sort
+about?"
+
+"I find it rather cold," said Mrs. Heatherstone, drawing her thick
+sealskin mantle tighter round her figure. "We are detaining Mr. West,
+too."
+
+"So we are, my dear, so we are. Drive on, coachman. Good-day, Mr. West."
+
+The carriage rattled away towards the Hall, and I trotted thoughtfully
+onwards to the little country metropolis.
+
+As I passed up the High Street, Mr. McNeil ran out from his office and
+beckoned to me to stop.
+
+"Our new tenants have gone out," he said. "They drove over this
+morning."
+
+"I met them on the way," I answered.
+
+As I looked down at the little factor, I could see that his face was
+flushed and that he bore every appearance of having had an extra glass.
+
+"Give me a real gentleman to do business with," he said, with a burst of
+laughter. "They understand me and I understand them. 'What shall I fill
+it up for?' says the general, taking a blank cheque out o' his pouch and
+laying it on the table. 'Two hundred,' says I, leaving a bit o' a margin
+for my own time and trouble."
+
+"I thought that the landlord had paid you for that," I remarked.
+
+"Aye, aye, but it's well to have a bit margin. He filled it up and threw
+it over to me as if it had been an auld postage stamp. That's the way
+business should be done between honest men--though it wouldna do if one
+was inclined to take an advantage. Will ye not come in, Mr. West, and
+have a taste of my whisky?"
+
+"No, thank you," said I, "I have business to do."
+
+"Well, well, business is the chief thing. It's well not to drink in the
+morning, too. For my own part, except a drop before breakfast to give
+me an appetite, and maybe a glass, or even twa, afterwards to promote
+digestion, I never touch spirits before noon. What d'ye think o' the
+general, Mr. West?"
+
+"Why, I have hardly had an opportunity of judging," I answered.
+
+Mr. McNeil tapped his forehead with his forefinger.
+
+"That's what I think of him," he said in a confidential whisper, shaking
+his head at me. "He's gone, sir, gone, in my estimation. Now what would
+you take to be a proof of madness, Mr. West?"
+
+"Why, offering a blank cheque to a Wigtown house-agent," said I.
+
+"Ah, you're aye at your jokes. But between oorsel's now, if a man asked
+ye how many miles it was frae a seaport, and whether ships come there
+from the East, and whether there were tramps on the road, and whether
+it was against the lease for him to build a high wall round the grounds,
+what would ye make of it, eh?"
+
+"I should certainly think him eccentric," said I.
+
+"If every man had his due, our friend would find himsel' in a house with
+a high wall round the grounds, and that without costing him a farthing,"
+said the agent.
+
+"Where then?" I asked, humouring his joke.
+
+"Why, in the Wigtown County Lunatic Asylum," cried the little man, with
+a bubble of laughter, in the midst of which I rode on my way, leaving
+him still chuckling over his own facetiousness.
+
+The arrival of the new family at Cloomber Hall had no perceptible effect
+in relieving the monotony of our secluded district, for instead of
+entering into such simple pleasures as the country had to offer, or
+interesting themselves, as we had hoped, in our attempts to improve
+the lot of our poor crofters and fisherfolk, they seemed to shun all
+observation, and hardly ever to venture beyond the avenue gates.
+
+We soon found, too, that the factor's words as to the inclosing of the
+grounds were founded upon fact, for gangs of workmen were kept hard at
+work from early in the morning until late at night in erecting a high,
+wooden fence round the whole estate.
+
+When this was finished and topped with spikes, Cloomber Park became
+impregnable to any one but an exceptionally daring climber. It was as
+if the old soldier had been so imbued with military ideas that, like my
+Uncle Toby, he could not refrain even in times of peace from standing
+upon the defensive.
+
+Stranger still, he had victualled the house as if for a siege, for
+Begbie, the chief grocer of Wigtown, told me himself in a rapture
+of delight and amazement that the general had sent him an order for
+hundreds of dozens of every imaginable potted meat and vegetable.
+
+It may be imagined that all these unusual incidents were not allowed to
+pass without malicious comment. Over the whole countryside and as far
+away as the English border there was nothing but gossip about the new
+tenants of Cloomber Hall and the reasons which had led them to come
+among us.
+
+The only hypothesis, however, which the bucolic mind could evolve, was
+that which had already occurred to Mr. McNeil, the factor--namely, that
+the old general and his family were one and all afflicted with madness,
+or, as an alternative conclusion, that he had committed some heinous
+offence and was endeavouring to escape the consequences of his misdeeds.
+
+These were both natural suppositions under the circumstances, but
+neither of them appeared to me to commend itself as a true explanation
+of the facts.
+
+It is true that General Heatherstone's behaviour on the occasion of our
+first interview was such as to suggest some suspicion of mental disease,
+but no man could have been more reasonable or more courteous than he had
+afterwards shown himself to be.
+
+Then, again, his wife and children led the same secluded life that he
+did himself, so that the reason could not be one peculiar to his own
+health.
+
+As to the possibility of his being a fugitive from justice, that theory
+was even more untenable. Wigtownshire was bleak and lonely, but it was
+not such an obscure corner of the world that a well-known soldier could
+hope to conceal himself there, nor would a man who feared publicity set
+every one's tongue wagging as the general had done.
+
+On the whole, I was inclined to believe that the true solution of the
+enigma lay in his own allusion to the love of quiet, and that they
+had taken shelter here with an almost morbid craving for solitude and
+repose. We very soon had an instance of the great lengths to which this
+desire for isolation would carry them.
+
+My father had come down one morning with the weight of a great
+determination upon his brow.
+
+"You must put on your pink frock to-day, Esther," said he, "and you,
+John, you must make yourself smart, for I have determined that the three
+of us shall drive round this afternoon and pay our respects to Mrs.
+Heatherstone and the general."
+
+"A visit to Cloomber," cried Esther, clapping her hands.
+
+"I am here," said my father, with dignity, "not only as the laird's
+factor, but also as his kinsman. In that capacity I am convinced that he
+would wish me to call upon these newcomers and offer them any politeness
+which is in our power. At present they must feel lonely and friendless.
+What says the great Firdousi? 'The choicest ornaments to a man's house
+are his friends.'"
+
+My sister and I knew by experience that when the old man began to
+justify his resolution by quotations from the Persian poets there was no
+chance of shaking it. Sure enough that afternoon saw the phaeton at the
+door, with my father perched upon the seat, with his second-best coat on
+and a pair of new driving-gloves.
+
+"Jump in, my dears," he cried, cracking his whip briskly, "we shall show
+the general that he has no cause to be ashamed of his neighbours."
+
+Alas! pride always goes before a fall. Our well-fed ponies and shining
+harness were not destined that day to impress the tenants of Cloomber
+with a sense of our importance.
+
+We had reached the avenue gate, and I was about to get out and open it,
+when our attention was arrested by a very large wooden placard, which
+was attached to one of the trees in such a manner that no one could
+possibly pass without seeing it. On the white surface of this board was
+printed in big, black letters the following hospitable inscription:
+
+ GENERAL AND MRS. HEATHERSTONE
+ HAVE NO WISH
+ TO INCREASE
+ THE CIRCLE OF THEIR ACQUAINTANCE.
+
+We all sat gazing at this announcement for some moments in silent
+astonishment. Then Esther and I, tickled by the absurdity of the thing,
+burst out laughing, but my father pulled the ponies' heads round, and
+drove home with compressed lips and the cloud of much wrath upon his
+brow. I have never seen the good man so thoroughly moved, and I am
+convinced that his anger did not arise from any petty feeling of injured
+vanity upon his own part, but from the thought that a slight had been
+offered to the Laird of Branksome, whose dignity he represented.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A GREY HEAD
+
+If I had any personal soreness on account of this family snub, it was a
+very passing emotion, and one which was soon effaced from my mind.
+
+It chanced that on the very next day after the episode I had occasion
+to pass that way, and stopped to have another look at the obnoxious
+placard. I was standing staring at it and wondering what could have
+induced our neighbours to take such an outrageous step, when I became
+suddenly aware of a sweet, girlish face which peeped out at me from
+between the bars of the gate, and of a white hand which eagerly beckoned
+me to approach. As I advanced to her I saw that it was the same young
+lady whom I had seen in the carriage.
+
+"Mr. West," she said, in a quick whisper, glancing from side to side as
+she spoke in a nervous, hasty manner, "I wish to apologise to you for
+the indignity to which you and your family were subjected yesterday.
+My brother was in the avenue and saw it all, but he is powerless to
+interfere. I assure you, Mr. West, that if that hateful thing," pointing
+up at the placard, "has given you any annoyance, it has given my brother
+and myself far more."
+
+"Why, Miss Heatherstone," said I, putting the matter off with a laugh,
+"Britain is a free country, and if a man chooses to warn off visitors
+from his premises there is no reason why he should not."
+
+"It is nothing less than brutal," she broke out, with a petulant
+stamp of the foot. "To think that your sister, too, should have such an
+unprovoked insult offered to her! I am ready to sink with shame at the
+very thought."
+
+"Pray do not give yourself one moment's uneasiness upon the subject,"
+said I earnestly, for I was grieved at her evident distress. "I am sure
+that your father has some reason unknown to us for taking this step."
+
+"Heaven knows he has!" she answered, with ineffable sadness in her
+voice, "and yet I think it would be more manly to face a danger than
+to fly from it. However, he knows best, and it is impossible for us to
+judge. But who is this?" she exclaimed, anxiously, peering up the dark
+avenue. "Oh, it is my brother Mordaunt. Mordaunt," she said, as the
+young man approached us, "I have been apologising to Mr. West for what
+happened yesterday, in your name as well as my own."
+
+"I am very, very glad to have the opportunity of doing it in person,"
+said he courteously. "I only wish that I could see your sister and your
+father as well as yourself, to tell them how sorry I am. I think you
+had better run up to the house, little one, for it's getting near
+tiffin-time. No--don't you go Mr. West. I want to have a word with you."
+
+Miss Heatherstone waved her hand to me with a bright smile, and tripped
+up the avenue, while her brother unbolted the gate, and, passing
+through, closed it again, locking it upon the outside.
+
+"I'll have a stroll down the road with you, if you have no objection.
+Have a manilla." He drew a couple of cheroots from his pocket and
+handed one to me. "You'll find they are not bad," he said. "I became a
+connoisseur in tobacco when I was in India. I hope I am not interfering
+with your business in coming along with you?"
+
+"Not at all," I answered, "I am very glad to have your company."
+
+"I'll tell you a secret," said my companion. "This is the first time
+that I have been outside the grounds since we have been down here."
+
+"And your sister?"
+
+"She has never been out, either," he answered. "I have given the
+governor the slip to-day, but he wouldn't half like it if he knew. It's
+a whim of his that we should keep ourselves entirely to ourselves. At
+least, some people would call it a whim, for my own part I have reason
+to believe that he has solid grounds for all that he does--though
+perhaps in this matter he may be a little too exacting."
+
+"You must surely find it very lonely," said I. "Couldn't you manage to
+slip down at times and have a smoke with me? That house over yonder is
+Branksome."
+
+"Indeed, you are very kind," he answered, with sparkling eyes. "I should
+dearly like to run over now and again. With the exception of Israel
+Stakes, our old coachman and gardener, I have not a soul that I can
+speak to."
+
+"And your sister--she must feel it even more," said I, thinking in my
+heart that my new acquaintance made rather too much of his own troubles
+and too little of those of his companion.
+
+"Yes; poor Gabriel feels it, no doubt," he answered carelessly, "but
+it's a more unnatural thing for a young man of my age to be cooped up in
+this way than for a woman. Look at me, now. I am three-and-twenty next
+March, and yet I have never been to a university, nor to a school for
+that matter. I am as complete an ignoramus as any of these clodhoppers.
+It seems strange to you, no doubt, and yet it is so. Now, don't you
+think I deserve a better fate?"
+
+He stopped as he spoke, and faced round to me, throwing his palms
+forward in appeal.
+
+As I looked at him, with the sun shining upon his face, he certainly did
+seem a strange bird to be cooped up in such a cage. Tall and muscular,
+with a keen, dark face, and sharp, finely cut features, he might have
+stepped out of a canvas of Murillo or Velasquez. There were latent
+energy and power in his firm-set mouth, his square eyebrows, and the
+whole pose of his elastic, well-knit figure.
+
+"There is the learning to be got from books and the learning to be got
+from experience," said I sententiously. "If you have less of your share
+of the one, perhaps you have more of the other. I cannot believe you
+have spent all your life in mere idleness and pleasure."
+
+"Pleasure!" he cried. "Pleasure! Look at this!" He pulled off his hat,
+and I saw that his black hair was all decked and dashed with streaks of
+grey. "Do you imagine that this came from pleasure?" he asked, with a
+bitter laugh.
+
+"You must have had some great shock," I said, astonished at the sight,
+"some terrible illness in your youth. Or perhaps it arises from a more
+chronic cause--a constant gnawing anxiety. I have known men as young as
+you whose hair was as grey."
+
+"Poor brutes!" he muttered. "I pity them."
+
+"If you can manage to slip down to Branksome at times," I said, "perhaps
+you could bring Miss Heatherstone with you. I know that my father and my
+sister would be delighted to see her, and a change, if only for an hour
+or two, might do her good."
+
+"It would be rather hard for us both to get away together," he answered.
+"However, if I see a chance I shall bring her down. It might be
+managed some afternoon perhaps, for the old man indulges in a siesta
+occasionally."
+
+We had reached the head of the winding lane which branches off from the
+high road and leads to the laird's house, so my companion pulled up.
+
+"I must go back," he said abruptly, "or they will miss me. It's very
+kind of you, West, to take this interest in us. I am very grateful to
+you, and so will Gabriel be when she hears of your kind invitation.
+It's a real heaping of coals of fire after that infernal placard of my
+father's."
+
+He shook my hand and set off down the road, but he came running after me
+presently, calling me to stop.
+
+"I was just thinking," he said, "that you must consider us a great
+mystery up there at Cloomber. I dare say you have come to look upon
+it as a private lunatic asylum, and I can't blame you. If you are
+interested in the matter, I feel it is unfriendly upon my part not to
+satisfy your curiosity, but I have promised my father to be silent about
+it. And indeed if I were to tell you all that I know you might not
+be very much the wiser after all. I would have you understand this,
+however--that my father is as sane as you or I, and that he has very
+good reasons for living the life which he does. I may add that his wish
+to remain secluded does not arise from any unworthy or dishonourable
+motives, but merely from the instinct of self-preservation."
+
+"He is in danger, then?" I ejaculated.
+
+"Yes; he is in constant danger."
+
+"But why does he not apply to the magistrates for protection?" I asked.
+"If he is afraid of any one, he has only to name him and they will bind
+him over to keep the peace."
+
+"My dear West," said young Heatherstone, "the danger with which
+my father is threatened is one that cannot be averted by any human
+intervention. It is none the less very real, and possibly very
+imminent."
+
+"You don't mean to assert that it is supernatural," I said
+incredulously.
+
+"Well, hardly that, either," he answered with hesitation. "There," he
+continued, "I have said rather more than I should, but I know that you
+will not abuse my confidence. Good-bye!"
+
+He took to his heels and was soon out of sight round a curve in the
+country road.
+
+A danger which was real and imminent, not to be averted by human means,
+and yet hardly supernatural--here was a conundrum indeed!
+
+I had come to look upon the inhabitants of the Hall as mere eccentrics,
+but after what young Mordaunt Heatherstone had just told me, I could
+no longer doubt that some dark and sinister meaning underlay all their
+actions. The more I pondered over the problem, the more unanswerable did
+it appear, and yet I could not get the matter out of my thoughts.
+
+The lonely, isolated Hall, and the strange, impending catastrophe which
+hung over its inmates, appealed forcibly to my imagination. All that
+evening, and late into the night, I sat moodily by the fire, pondering
+over what I had heard, and revolving in my mind the various incidents
+which might furnish me with some clue to the mystery.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. HOW FOUR OF US CAME TO BE UNDER THE SHADOW OF CLOOMBER
+
+I trust that my readers will not set me down as an inquisitive busybody
+when I say that as the days and weeks went by I found my attention and
+my thoughts more and more attracted to General Heatherstone and the
+mystery which surrounded him.
+
+It was in vain that I endeavoured by hard work and a strict attention to
+the laird's affairs to direct my mind into some more healthy channel.
+Do what I would, on land or on the water, I would still find myself
+puzzling over this one question, until it obtained such a hold upon me
+that I felt it was useless for me to attempt to apply myself to anything
+until I had come to some satisfactory solution of it.
+
+I could never pass the dark line of five-foot fencing, and the great
+iron gate, with its massive lock, without pausing and racking my brain
+as to what the secret might be which was shut in by that inscrutable
+barrier. Yet, with all my conjectures and all my observations, I could
+never come to any conclusion which could for a moment be accepted as an
+explanation of the facts.
+
+My sister had been out for a stroll one night, visiting a sick peasant
+or performing some other of the numerous acts of charity by which she
+had made herself beloved by the whole countryside.
+
+"John," she said when she returned, "have you seen Cloomber Hall at
+night?"
+
+"No," I answered, laying down the book which I was reading. "Not since
+that memorable evening when the general and Mr. McNeil came over to make
+an inspection."
+
+"Well, John, will you put your hat on and come a little walk with me?"
+
+I could see by her manner that something had agitated or frightened her.
+
+"Why, bless the girl!" cried I boisterously, "what is the matter? The
+old Hall is not on fire, surely? You look as grave as if all Wigtown
+were in a blaze."
+
+"Not quite so bad as that," she said, smiling. "But do come out, Jack. I
+should very much like you to see it."
+
+I had always refrained from saying anything which might alarm my sister,
+so that she knew nothing of the interest which our neighbours' doings
+had for me. At her request I took my hat and followed her out into the
+darkness. She led the way along a little footpath over the moor, which
+brought us to some rising ground, from which we could look down upon the
+Hall without our view being obstructed by any of the fir-trees which had
+been planted round it.
+
+"Look at that!" said my sister, pausing at the summit of this little
+eminence.
+
+Cloomber lay beneath us in a blaze of light. In the lower floors the
+shutters obscured the illumination, but above, from the broad windows
+of the second storey to the thin slits at the summit of the tower, there
+was not a chink or an aperture which did not send forth a stream of
+radiance. So dazzling was the effect that for a moment I was persuaded
+that the house was on fire, but the steadiness and clearness of the
+light soon freed me from that apprehension. It was clearly the result of
+many lamps placed systematically all over the building.
+
+It added to the strange effect that all these brilliantly illuminated
+rooms were apparently untenanted, and some of them, so far as we could
+judge, were not even furnished. Through the whole great house there was
+no sign of movement or of life--nothing but the clear, unwinking flood
+of yellow light.
+
+I was still lost in wonder at the sight when I heard a short, quick sob
+at my side.
+
+"What is it, Esther, dear?" I asked, looking down at my companion.
+
+"I feel so frightened. Oh, John, John, take me home, I feel so
+frightened!"
+
+She clung to my arm, and pulled at my coat in a perfect frenzy of fear.
+
+"It's all safe, darling," I said soothingly. "There is nothing to fear.
+What has upset you so?"
+
+"I am afraid of them, John; I am afraid of the Heatherstones. Why is
+their house lit up like this every night? I have heard from others that
+it is always so. And why does the old man run like a frightened hare if
+any one comes upon him. There is something wrong about it, John, and it
+frightens me."
+
+I pacified her as well as I could, and led her home with me, where I
+took care that she should have some hot port negus before going to bed.
+I avoided the subject of the Heatherstones for fear of exciting her,
+and she did not recur to it of her own accord. I was convinced, however,
+from what I had heard from her, that she had for some time back been
+making her own observations upon our neighbours, and that in doing so
+she had put a considerable strain upon her nerves.
+
+I could see that the mere fact of the Hall being illuminated at night
+was not enough to account for her extreme agitation, and that it must
+have derived its importance in her eyes from being one in a chain of
+incidents, all of which had left a weird or unpleasant impression upon
+her mind.
+
+That was the conclusion which I came to at the time, and I have reason
+to know now that I was right, and that my sister had even more cause
+than I had myself for believing that there was something uncanny about
+the tenants of Cloomber.
+
+Our interest in the matter may have arisen at first from nothing higher
+than curiosity, but events soon look a turn which associated us more
+closely with the fortunes of the Heatherstone family.
+
+Mordaunt had taken advantage of my invitation to come down to the
+laird's house, and on several occasions he brought with him his
+beautiful sister. The four of us would wander over the moors together,
+or perhaps if the day were fine set sail upon our little skiff and stand
+off into the Irish Sea.
+
+On such excursions the brother and sister would be as merry and as happy
+as two children. It was a keen pleasure to them to escape from their
+dull fortress, and to see, if only for a few hours, friendly and
+sympathetic faces round them.
+
+There could be but one result when four young people were brought
+together in sweet, forbidden intercourse. Acquaintance-ship warmed into
+friendship, and friendship flamed suddenly into love.
+
+Gabriel sits beside me now as I write, and she agrees with me that, dear
+as is the subject to ourselves, the whole story of our mutual affection
+is of too personal a nature to be more than touched upon in this
+statement. Suffice it to say that, within a few weeks of our first
+meeting Mordaunt Heatherstone had won the heart of my dear sister, and
+Gabriel had given me that pledge which death itself will not be able to
+break.
+
+I have alluded in this brief way to the double tie which sprang up
+between the two families, because I have no wish that this narrative
+should degenerate into anything approaching to romance, or that I should
+lose the thread of the facts which I have set myself to chronicle. These
+are connected with General Heatherstone, and only indirectly with my own
+personal history.
+
+It is enough if I say that after our engagement the visits to Branksome
+became more frequent, and that our friends were able sometimes to spend
+a whole day with us when business had called the general to Wigtown, or
+when his gout confined him to his room.
+
+As to our good father, he was ever ready to greet us with many small
+jests and tags of Oriental poems appropriate to the occasion, for we had
+no secrets from him, and he already looked upon us all as his children.
+
+There were times when on account of some peculiarly dark or restless fit
+of the general's it was impossible for weeks on end for either Gabriel
+or Mordaunt to get away from the grounds. The old man would even stand
+on guard, a gloomy and silent sentinel, at the avenue gate, or pace up
+and down the drive as though he suspected that attempts had been made to
+penetrate his seclusion.
+
+Passing of an evening I have seen his dark, grim figure flitting about
+in the shadow of the trees, or caught a glimpse of his hard, angular,
+swarthy face peering out suspiciously at me from behind the bars.
+
+My heart would often sadden for him as I noticed his uncouth, nervous
+movements, his furtive glances and twitching features. Who would have
+believed that this slinking, cowering creature had once been a dashing
+officer, who had fought the battles of his country and had won the palm
+of bravery among the host of brave men around him?
+
+In spite of the old soldier's vigilance, we managed to hold
+communication with our friends.
+
+Immediately behind the Hall there was a spot where the fencing had been
+so carelessly erected that two of the rails could be removed without
+difficulty, leaving a broad gap, which gave us the opportunity for
+many a stolen interview, though they were necessarily short, for the
+general's movements were erratic, and no part of the grounds was secure
+from his visitations.
+
+How vividly one of these hurried meetings rises before me! It stands out
+clear, peaceful, and distinct amid the wild, mysterious incidents which
+were destined to lead up to the terrible catastrophe which has cast a
+shade over our lives.
+
+I can remember that as I walked through the fields the grass was damp
+with the rain of the morning, and the air was heavy with the smell of
+the fresh-turned earth. Gabriel was waiting for me under the hawthorn
+tree outside the gap, and we stood hand-in-hand looking down at the long
+sweep of moorland and at the broad blue channel which encircled it with
+its fringe of foam.
+
+Far away in the north-west the sun glinted upon the high peak of Mount
+Throston. From where we stood we could see the smoke of the steamers as
+they ploughed along the busy water-way which leads to Belfast.
+
+"Is it not magnificent?" Gabriel cried, clasping her hands round my arm.
+"Ah, John, why are we not free to sail away over these waves together,
+and leave all our troubles behind us on the shore?"
+
+"And what are the troubles which you would leave behind you, dear one?"
+I asked. "May I not know them, and help you to bear them?"
+
+"I have no secrets from you, John," she answered. "Our chief trouble is,
+as you may guess, our poor father's strange behaviour. Is it not a sad
+thing for all of us that a man who has played such a distinguished part
+in the world should skulk from one obscure corner of the country to
+another, and should defend himself with locks and barriers as though he
+were a common thief flying from justice? This is a trouble, John, which
+it is out of your power to alleviate."
+
+"But why does he do it, Gabriel?" I asked.
+
+"I cannot tell," she answered frankly. "I only know that he imagines
+some deadly danger to be hanging over his head, and that this danger was
+incurred by him during his stay in India. What its nature may be I have
+no more idea than you have."
+
+"Then your brother has," I remarked. "I am sure from the way in which he
+spoke to me about it one day that he knows what it is, and that he looks
+upon it as real."
+
+"Yes, he knows, and so does my mother," she answered, "but they have
+always kept it secret from me. My poor father is very excited at
+present. Day and night he is in an agony of apprehension, but it will
+soon be the fifth of October, and after that he will be at peace."
+
+"How do you know that?" I asked in surprise.
+
+"By experience," she answered gravely. "On the fifth of October these
+fears of his come to a crisis. For years back he has been in the habit
+of locking Mordaunt and myself up in our rooms on that date, so that we
+have no idea what occurs, but we have always found that he has been
+much relieved afterwards, and has continued to be comparatively in peace
+until that day begins to draw round again."
+
+"Then you have only ten days or so to wait," I remarked, for September
+was drawing to a close. "By the way, dearest, why is it that you light
+up all your rooms at night?"
+
+"You have noticed it, then?" she said. "It comes also from my father's
+fears. He does not like to have one dark corner in the whole house.
+He walks about a good deal at night, and inspects everything, from the
+attics right down to the cellars. He has large lamps in every room and
+corridor, even the empty ones, and he orders the servants to light them
+all at dusk."
+
+"I am rather surprised that you manage to keep your servants," I said,
+laughing. "The maids in these parts are a superstitious class, and
+their imaginations are easily excited by anything which they don't
+understand."
+
+"The cook and both housemaids are from London, and are used to our
+ways. We pay them on a very high scale to make up for any inconvenience to
+which they may be put. Israel Stakes, the coachman, is the only one who
+comes from this part of the country, and he seems to be a stolid, honest
+fellow, who is not easily scared."
+
+"Poor little girl," I exclaimed, looking down at the slim, graceful
+figure by my side. "This is no atmosphere for you to live in. Why will
+you not let me rescue you from it? Why won't you allow me to go straight
+and ask the general for your hand? At the worst he could only refuse."
+
+She turned quite haggard and pale at the very thought.
+
+"For Heaven's sake, John," she cried earnestly, "do nothing of the kind.
+He would whip us all away in the dead of the night, and within a week
+we should be settling down again in some wilderness where we might never
+have a chance of seeing or hearing from you again. Besides, he never
+would forgive us for venturing out of the grounds."
+
+"I don't think that he is a hard-hearted man," I remarked. "I have seen
+a kindly look in his eyes, for all his stern face."
+
+"He can be the kindest of fathers," she answered. "But he is terrible
+when opposed or thwarted. You have never seen him so, and I trust you
+never will. It was that strength of will and impatience of opposition
+which made him such a splendid officer. I assure you that in India every
+one thought a great deal of him. The soldiers were afraid of him, but
+they would have followed him anywhere."
+
+"And had he these nervous attacks then?"
+
+"Occasionally, but not nearly so acutely. He seems to think that the
+danger--whatever it may be--becomes more imminent every year. Oh, John,
+it is terrible to be waiting like this with a sword over our heads--and
+all the more terrible to me since I have no idea where the blow is to
+come from."
+
+"Dear Gabriel," I said, taking her hand and drawing her to my side,
+"look over all this pleasant countryside and the broad blue sea. Is it
+not all peaceful and beautiful? In these cottages, with their red-tiled
+roofs peeping out from the grey moor, there live none but simple,
+God-fearing men, who toil hard at their crafts and bear enmity to no
+man. Within seven miles of us is a large town, with every civilised
+appliance for the preservation of order. Ten miles farther there is
+a garrison quartered, and a telegram would at any time bring down a
+company of soldiers. Now, I ask you, dear, in the name of common-sense,
+what conceivable danger could threaten you in this secluded
+neighbourhood, with the means of help so near? You assure me that the
+peril is not connected with your father's health?"
+
+"No, I am sure of that. It is true that Dr. Easterling, of Stranraer,
+has been over to see him once or twice, but that was merely for some
+small indisposition. I can assure you that the danger is not to be
+looked for in that direction."
+
+"Then I can assure you," said I, laughing, "that there is no danger
+at all. It must be some strange monomania or hallucination. No other
+hypothesis will cover the facts."
+
+"Would my father's monomania account for the fact of my brother's hair
+turning grey and my mother wasting away to a mere shadow?"
+
+"Undoubtedly," I answered. "The long continued worry of the general's
+restlessness and irritability would produce those effects on sensitive
+natures."
+
+"No, no!" said she, shaking her head sadly, "I have been exposed to his
+restlessness and irritability, but they have had no such effect upon
+me. The difference between us lies in the fact that they know this awful
+secret and I do not."
+
+"My dear girl," said I, "the days of family apparitions and that kind
+of thing are gone. Nobody is haunted nowadays, so we can put that
+supposition out of the question. Having done so, what remains? There is
+absolutely no other theory which could even be suggested. Believe me,
+the whole mystery is that the heat of India has been too much for your
+poor father's brain."
+
+What she would have answered I cannot tell, for at that moment she gave
+a start as if some sound had fallen upon her ear. As she looked round
+apprehensively, I suddenly saw her features become rigid and her eyes
+fixed and dilated.
+
+Following the direction of her gaze, I felt a sudden thrill of fear pass
+through me as I perceived a human face surveying us from behind one of
+the trees--a man's face, every feature of which was distorted by the
+most malignant hatred and anger. Finding himself observed, he stepped
+out and advanced towards us, when I saw that it was none other than the
+general himself. His beard was all a-bristle with fury, and his deepset
+eyes glowed from under their heavily veined lids with a most sinister
+and demoniacal brightness.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. HOW I CAME TO BE ENLISTED AS ONE OF THE GARRISON OF CLOOMBER
+
+"To your room, girl!" he cried in a hoarse, harsh voice, stepping in
+between us and pointing authoritatively towards the house.
+
+He waited until Gabriel, with a last frightened glance at me, had
+passed through the gap, and then he turned upon me with an expression so
+murderous that I stepped back a pace or two, and tightened my grasp upon
+my oak stick.
+
+"You-you--" he spluttered, with his hand twitching at his throat, as
+though his fury were choking him. "You have dared to intrude upon my
+privacy! Do you think I built this fence that all the vermin in the
+country might congregate round it? Oh, you have been very near your
+death, my fine fellow! You will never be nearer until your time comes.
+Look at this!" He pulled a squat, thick pistol out of his bosom. "If
+you had passed through that gap and set foot on my land I'd have let
+daylight into you. I'll have no vagabonds here. I know how to treat
+gentry of that sort, whether their faces are black or white."
+
+"Sir," said I, "I meant no harm by coming here, and I do not know how I
+have deserved this extraordinary outburst. Allow me to observe, however,
+that you are still covering me with your pistol, and that, as your hand
+is rather tremulous, it is more than possible that it may go off. If
+you don't turn the muzzle down I shall be compelled in self-defence to
+strike you over the wrist with my stick."
+
+"What the deuce brought you here, then?" he asked, in a more composed
+voice, putting his weapon back into his bosom. "Can't a gentleman live
+quietly without your coming to peep and pry? Have you no business
+of your own to look after, eh? And my daughter? how came you to know
+anything of her? and what have you been trying to squeeze out of her? It
+wasn't chance that brought you here."
+
+"No," said I boldly, "it was not chance which brought me here. I have
+had several opportunities of seeing your daughter and of appreciating
+her many noble qualities. We are engaged to be married to each other,
+and I came up with the express intention of seeing her."
+
+Instead of blazing into a fury, as I had expected, the general gave a
+long whistle of astonishment, and then leant up against the railings,
+laughing softly to himself.
+
+"English terriers are fond of nosing worms," he remarked at last. "When
+we brought them out to India they used to trot off into the jungle and
+begin sniffing at what they imagined to be worms there. But the worm
+turned out to be a venomous snake, and so poor doggy played no more. I
+think you'll find yourself in a somewhat analogous position if you don't
+look out."
+
+"You surely don't mean to cast an aspersion upon your own daughter?" I
+said, flushing with indignation.
+
+"Oh, Gabriel is all right," he answered carelessly. "Our family is not
+exactly one, however, which I should recommend a young fellow to marry
+into. And pray how is it that I was not informed of this snug little
+arrangement of yours?"
+
+"We were afraid, sir, that you might separate us," I replied, feeling
+that perfect candour was the best policy under the circumstances. "It is
+possible that we were mistaken. Before coming to any final decision, I
+implore you to remember that the happiness of both of us is at stake. It
+is in your power to divide our bodies, but our souls shall be for ever
+united."
+
+"My good fellow," said the general, in a not unkindly tone, "you don't
+know what you are asking for. There is a gulf between you and any one of
+the blood of Heatherstone which can never be bridged over."
+
+All trace of anger had vanished now from his manner, and given place to
+an air of somewhat contemptuous amusement.
+
+My family pride took fire at his words. "The gulf may be less than you
+imagine," I said coldly. "We are not clodhoppers because we live in this
+out-of-the-way place. I am of noble descent on one side, and my mother
+was a Buchan of Buchan. I assure you that there is no such disparity
+between us as you seem to imagine."
+
+"You misunderstand me," the general answered. "It is on our side that
+the disparity lies. There are reasons why my daughter Gabriel should
+live and die single. It would not be to your advantage to marry her."
+
+"But surely, sir," I persisted, "I am the best judge of my own interests
+and advantages. Since you take this ground all becomes easy, for I do
+assure you that the one interest which overrides all others is that I
+should have the woman I love for my wife. If this is your only objection
+to our match you may surely give us your consent, for any danger or
+trial which I may incur in marrying Gabriel will not weigh with me one
+featherweight."
+
+"Here's a young bantam!" exclaimed the old soldier, smiling at my
+warmth. "It's easy to defy danger when you don't know what the danger
+is."
+
+"What is it, then?" I asked, hotly. "There is no earthly peril which
+will drive me from Gabriel's side. Let me know what it is and test me."
+
+"No, no. That would never do," he answered with a sigh, and then,
+thoughtfully, as if speaking his mind aloud: "He has plenty of pluck and
+is a well-grown lad, too. We might do worse than make use of him."
+
+He went on mumbling to himself with a vacant stare in his eyes as if he
+had forgotten my presence.
+
+"Look here, West," he said presently. "You'll excuse me if I spoke
+hastily a little time ago. It is the second time that I have had
+occasion to apologise to you for the same offence. It shan't occur
+again. I am rather over-particular, no doubt, in my desire for complete
+isolation, but I have good reasons for insisting on the point. Rightly
+or wrongly, I have got it into my head that some day there might be an
+organised raid upon my grounds. If anything of the sort should occur I
+suppose I might reckon upon your assistance?"
+
+"With all my heart."
+
+"So that if ever you got a message such as 'Come up,' or even
+'Cloomber,' you would know that it was an appeal for help, and would
+hurry up immediately, even if it were in the dead of the night?"
+
+"Most certainly I should," I answered. "But might I ask you what the
+nature of the danger is which you apprehend?"
+
+"There would be nothing gained by your knowing. Indeed, you would hardly
+understand it if I told you. I must bid you good day now, for I have
+stayed with you too long. Remember, I count upon you as one of the
+Cloomber garrison now."
+
+"One other thing, sir," I said hurriedly, for he was turning away, "I
+hope that you will not be angry with your daughter for anything which I
+have told you. It was for my sake that she kept it all secret from you."
+
+"All right," he said, with his cold, inscrutable smile. "I am not such
+an ogre in the bosom of my family as you seem to think. As to this
+marriage question, I should advise you as a friend to let it drop
+altogether, but if that is impossible I must insist that it stand over
+completely for the present. It is impossible to say what unexpected turn
+events may take. Good-bye."
+
+He plunged into the wood and was quickly out of sight among the dense
+plantation.
+
+Thus ended this extraordinary interview, in which this strange man
+had begun by pointing a loaded pistol at my breast and had ended,
+by partially acknowledging the possibility of my becoming his future
+son-in-law. I hardly knew whether to be cast down or elated over it.
+
+On the one hand he was likely, by keeping a closer watch over his
+daughter, to prevent us from communicating as freely as we had done
+hitherto. Against this there was the advantage of having obtained an
+implied consent to the renewal of my suit at some future date. On the
+whole, I came to the conclusion as I walked thoughtfully home that I had
+improved my position by the incident.
+
+But this danger--this shadowy, unspeakable danger--which appeared to
+rise up at every turn, and to hang day and night over the towers of
+Cloomber! Rack my brain as I would, I could not conjure up any solution
+to the problem which was not puerile and inadequate.
+
+One fact struck me as being significant. Both the father and the son had
+assured me, independently of each other, that if I were told what the
+peril was, I would hardly realise its significance. How strange and
+bizarre must the fear be which can scarcely be expressed in intelligible
+language!
+
+I held up my hand in the darkness before I turned to sleep that night,
+and I swore that no power of man or devil should ever weaken my love for
+the woman whose pure heart I had had the good fortune to win.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. OF CORPORAL RUFUS SMITH AND HIS COMING TO CLOOMBER
+
+In making this statement I have purposely couched it in bald and simple
+language, for fear I should be accused of colouring my narrative for the
+sake of effect. If, however, I have told my story with any approach to
+realism, the reader will understand me when I say that by this time
+the succession of dramatic incidents which had occurred had arrested
+my attention and excited my imagination to the exclusion of all minor
+topics.
+
+How could I plod through the dull routine of an agent's work, or
+interest myself in the thatch of this tenant's bothy or the sails of
+that one's boat, when my mind was taken up by the chain of events which
+I have described, and was still busy seeking an explanation for them.
+
+Go where I would over the countryside, I could see the square, white
+tower shooting out from among the trees, and beneath that tower this
+ill-fated family were watching and waiting, waiting and watching--and
+for what? That was still the question which stood like an impassable
+barrier at the end of every train of thought.
+
+Regarded merely as an abstract problem, this mystery of the Heatherstone
+family had a lurid fascination about it, but when the woman whom I
+loved a thousandfold better than I did myself proved to be so deeply
+interested in the solution, I felt that it was impossible to turn my
+thoughts to anything else until it had been finally cleared up.
+
+My good father had received a letter from the laird, dated from Naples,
+which told us that he had derived much benefit from the change, and that
+he had no intention of returning to Scotland for some time. This was
+satisfactory to all of us, for my father had found Branksome such an
+excellent place for study that it would have been a sore trial to him
+to return to the noise and tumult of a city. As to my dear sister and
+myself, there were, as I have shown, stronger reasons still to make us
+love the Wigtownshire moors.
+
+In spite of my interview with the general--or perhaps I might say on
+account of it--I took occasion at least twice a day to walk towards
+Cloomber and satisfy myself that all was well there. He had begun by
+resenting my intrusion, but he had ended by taking me into a sort of
+half-confidence, and even by asking my assistance, so I felt that I
+stood upon a different footing with him than I had done formerly, and
+that he was less likely to be annoyed by my presence. Indeed, I met him
+pacing round the inclosure a few days afterwards, and his manner towards
+me was civil, though he made no allusion to our former conversation.
+
+He appeared to be still in an extreme state of nervousness, starting
+from time to time, and gazing furtively about him, with little
+frightened, darting glances to the right and the left. I hoped that his
+daughter was right in naming the fifth of October as the turning point
+of his complaint, for it was evident to me as I looked at his gleaming
+eyes and quivering hands, that a man could not live long in such a state
+of nervous tension.
+
+I found on examination that he had had the loose rails securely fastened
+so as to block up our former trysting-place, and though I prowled round
+the whole long line of fencing, I was unable to find any other place
+where an entrance could be effected.
+
+Here and there between the few chinks left in the barrier I could catch
+glimpses of the Hall, and once I saw a rough-looking, middle-aged man
+standing at a window on the lower floor, whom I supposed to be Israel
+Stakes, the coachman. There was no sign, however, of Gabriel or of
+Mordaunt, and their absence alarmed me. I was convinced that, unless
+they were under some restraint, they would have managed to communicate
+with my sister or myself. My fears became more and more acute as day
+followed day without our seeing or hearing anything of them.
+
+One morning--it was the second day of October--I was walking towards the
+Hall, hoping that I might be fortunate enough to learn some news of my
+darling, when I observed a man perched upon a stone at the side of the
+road.
+
+As I came nearer to him I could see that he was a stranger, and from his
+dusty clothes and dilapidated appearance he seemed to have come from a
+distance. He had a great hunch of bread on his knee and a clasp-knife
+in his hand, but he had apparently just finished his breakfast, for he
+brushed the crumbs off his lap and rose to his feet when he perceived
+me.
+
+Noticing the great height of the fellow and that he still held his
+weapon, I kept well to the other side of the road, for I knew that
+destitution makes men desperate and that the chain that glittered on
+my waistcoat might be too great a temptation to him upon this lonely
+highway. I was confirmed in my fears when I saw him step out into the
+centre of the road and bar my progress.
+
+"Well, my lad," I said, affecting an ease which I by no means felt,
+"what can I do for you this morning?"
+
+The fellow's face was the colour of mahogany with exposure to the
+weather, and he had a deep scar from the corner of his mouth to his ear,
+which by no means improved his appearance. His hair was grizzled, but
+his figure was stalwart, and his fur cap was cocked on one side so as to
+give him a rakish, semi-military appearance. Altogether he gave me the
+impression of being one of the most dangerous types of tramp that I had
+ever fallen in with.
+
+Instead of replying to my question, he eyed me for some time in silence
+with sullen, yellow-shot eyes, and then closed his knife with a loud
+snick.
+
+"You're not a beak," he said, "too young for that, I guess. They had me
+in chokey at Paisley and they had me in chokey at Wigtown, but by
+the living thunder if another of them lays a hand on me I'll make him
+remember Corporal Rufus Smith! It's a darned fine country this, where
+they won't give a man work, and then lay him by the heels for having no
+visible means of subsistence."
+
+"I am sorry to see an old soldier so reduced," said I. "What corps did
+you serve in?"
+
+"H Battery, Royal Horse Artillery. Bad cess to the Service and every
+one in it! Here I am nigh sixty years of age, with a beggarly pension of
+thirty-eight pound ten--not enough to keep me in beer and baccy."
+
+"I should have thought thirty-eight pound ten a year would have been a
+nice help to you in your old age," I remarked.
+
+"Would you, though?" he answered with a sneer, pushing his
+weather-beaten face forward until it was within a foot of my own.
+
+"How much d'ye think that slash with a tulwar is worth? And my foot with
+all the bones rattling about like a bagful of dice where the trail
+of the gun went across it. What's that worth, eh? And a liver like a
+sponge, and ague whenever the wind comes round to the east--what's the
+market value of that? Would you take the lot for a dirty forty pound a
+year--would you now?"
+
+"We are poor folk in this part of the country," I answered. "You would
+pass for a rich man down here."
+
+"They are fool folk and they have fool tastes," said he, drawing a black
+pipe from his pocket and stuffing it with tobacco. "I know what good
+living is, and, by cripes! while I have a shilling in my pocket I like
+to spend it as a shilling should be spent. I've fought for my country
+and my country has done darned little for me. I'll go to the Rooshians,
+so help me! I could show them how to cross the Himalayas so that it
+would puzzle either Afghans or British to stop 'em. What's that secret
+worth in St. Petersburg, eh, mister?"
+
+"I am ashamed to hear an old soldier speak so, even in jest," said I
+sternly.
+
+"Jest, indeed!" he cried, with a great, roaring oath. "I'd have done it
+years ago if the Rooshians had been game to take it up. Skobeloff
+was the best of the bunch, but he's been snuffed out. However, that's
+neither here nor there. What I want to ask you is whether you've ever
+heard anything in this quarter of a man called Heatherstone, the same
+who used to be colonel of the 41st Bengalis? They told me at Wigtown
+that he lived somewhere down this way."
+
+"He lives in that large house over yonder," said I, pointing to Cloomber
+Tower. "You'll find the avenue gate a little way down the road, but the
+general isn't over fond of visitors."
+
+The last part of my speech was lost upon Corporal Rufus Smith; for the
+instant that I pointed out the gate he set off hopping down the road.
+
+His mode of progression was the most singular I have ever seen, for he
+would only put his right foot to the ground once in every half-dozen
+strides, while he worked so hard and attained such a momentum with the
+other limb that he got over the ground at an astonishing speed.
+
+I was so surprised that I stood in the roadway gazing after this hulking
+figure until the thought suddenly struck me that some serious result
+might come from a meeting between a man of such blunt speech and the
+choleric, hot-headed general. I therefore followed him as he hopped
+along like some great, clumsy bird, and overtook him at the avenue gate,
+where he stood grasping the ironwork and peering through at the dark
+carriage-drive beyond.
+
+"He's a sly old jackal," he said, looking round at me and nodding his
+head in the direction of the Hall. "He's a deep old dog. And that's his
+bungalow, is it, among the trees?"
+
+"That is his house," I answered; "but I should advise you to keep a more
+civil tongue in your head if you intend to speak with the general. He is
+not a man to stand any nonsense."
+
+"Right you are. He was always a hard nut to crack. But isn't this him
+coming down the avenue?"
+
+I looked through the gate and saw that it was indeed the general, who,
+having either seen us or been attracted by our voices, was hurrying down
+towards us. As he advanced he would stop from time to time and peer at
+us through the dark shadow thrown by the trees, as if he were irresolute
+whether to come on or no.
+
+"He's reconnoitering!" whispered my companion with a hoarse chuckle.
+"He's afraid--and I know what he's afraid of. He won't be caught in a
+trap if he can help it, the old 'un. He's about as fly as they make 'em,
+you bet!"
+
+Then suddenly standing on his tip-toes and waving his hand through the
+bars of the gate, he shouted at the top of his voice:
+
+"Come on, my gallant commandant! Come on! The coast's clear, and no
+enemy in sight."
+
+This familiar address had the effect of reassuring the general, for he
+came right for us, though I could tell by his heightened colour that his
+temper was at boiling point.
+
+"What, you here, Mr. West?" he said, as his eye fell upon me. "What is
+it you want, and why have you brought this fellow with you?"
+
+"I have not brought him with me, sir," I answered, feeling rather
+disgusted at being made responsible for the presence of the
+disreputable-looking vagabond beside me. "I found him on the road here,
+and he desired to be directed to you, so I showed him the way. I know
+nothing of him myself."
+
+"What do you want with me, then?" the general asked sternly, turning to
+my companion.
+
+"If you please, sir," said the ex-corporal, speaking in a whining voice,
+and touching his moleskin cap with a humility which contrasted strangely
+with the previous rough independence of his bearing, "I'm an old gunner
+in the Queen's service, sir, and knowing your name by hearing it in
+India I thought that maybe you would take me as your groom or gardener,
+or give me any other place as happened to be vacant."
+
+"I am sorry that I cannot do anything for you, my man," the old soldier
+answered impressively.
+
+"Then you'll give me a little just to help me on my way, sir," said the
+cringing mendicant. "You won't see an old comrade go to the bad for the
+sake of a few rupees? I was with Sale's brigade in the Passes, sir, and
+I was at the second taking of Cabul."
+
+General Heatherstone looked keenly at the supplicant, but was silent
+to his appeal.
+
+"I was in Ghuznee with you when the walls were all shook down by an
+earthquake, and when we found forty thousand Afghans within gunshot of
+us. You ask me about it, and you'll see whether I'm lying or not. We
+went through all this when we were young, and now that we are old you
+are to live in a fine bungalow, and I am to starve by the roadside. It
+don't seem to me to be fair."
+
+"You are an impertinent scoundrel," said the general. "If you had been a
+good soldier you would never need to ask for help. I shall not give you
+a farthing."
+
+"One word more, sir," cried the tramp, for the other was turning away,
+"I've been in the Tarada Pass."
+
+The old soldier sprang round as if the words had been a pistol-shot.
+
+"What--what d'ye mean?" he stammered.
+
+"I've been in the Tarada Pass, sir, and I knew a man there called
+Ghoolab Shah."
+
+These last were hissed out in an undertone, and a malicious grin
+overspread the face of the speaker.
+
+Their effect upon the general was extraordinary. He fairly staggered
+back from the gateway, and his yellow countenance blanched to a livid,
+mottled grey. For a moment he was too overcome to speak. At last he
+gasped out:
+
+"Ghoolab Shah? Who are you who know Ghoolab Shah?"
+
+"Take another look," said the tramp, "your sight is not as keen as it
+was forty years ago."
+
+The general took a long, earnest look at the unkempt wanderer in front
+of him, and as he gazed I saw the light of recognition spring up in his
+eyes.
+
+"God bless my soul!" he cried. "Why, it's Corporal Rufus Smith."
+
+"You've come on it at last," said the other, chuckling to himself. "I
+was wondering how long it would be before you knew me. And, first
+of all, just unlock this gate, will you? It's hard to talk through a
+grating. It's too much like ten minutes with a visitor in the cells."
+
+The general, whose face still bore evidences of his agitation, undid the
+bolts with nervous, trembling fingers. The recognition of Corporal Rufus
+Smith had, I fancied, been a relief to him, and yet he plainly showed
+by his manner that he regarded his presence as by no means an unmixed
+blessing.
+
+"Why, Corporal," he said, as the gate swung open, "I have often wondered
+whether you were dead or alive, but I never expected to see you again.
+How have you been all these long years?"
+
+"How have I been?" the corporal answered gruffly. "Why, I have been
+drunk for the most part. When I draw my money I lay it out in liquor,
+and as long as that lasts I get some peace in life. When I'm cleaned out
+I go upon tramp, partly in the hope of picking up the price of a dram,
+and partly in order to look for you."
+
+"You'll excuse us talking about these private matters, West," the
+general said, looking round at me, for I was beginning to move away.
+"Don't leave us. You know something of this matter already, and may find
+yourself entirely in the swim with us some of these days."
+
+Corporal Rufus Smith looked round at me in blank astonishment.
+
+"In the swim with us?" he said. "However did he get there?"
+
+"Voluntarily, voluntarily," the general explained, hurriedly sinking his
+voice. "He is a neighbour of mine, and he has volunteered his help in
+case I should ever need it."
+
+This explanation seemed, if anything, to increase the big stranger's
+surprise.
+
+"Well, if that don't lick cock-fighting!" he exclaimed, contemplating me
+with admiration. "I never heard tell of such a thing."
+
+"And now you have found me, Corporal Smith," said the tenant of
+Cloomber, "what is it that you want of me?"
+
+"Why, everything. I want a roof to cover me, and clothes to wear, and
+food to eat, and, above all, brandy to drink."
+
+"Well, I'll take you in and do what I can for you," said the general
+slowly. "But look here, Smith, we must have discipline. I'm the general
+and you are the corporal; I am the master and you are the man. Now,
+don't let me have to remind you of that again."
+
+The tramp drew himself up to his full height and raised his right hand
+with the palm forward in a military salute.
+
+"I can take you on as gardener and get rid of the fellow I have got.
+As to brandy, you shall have an allowance and no more. We are not deep
+drinkers at the Hall."
+
+"Don't you take opium, or brandy, or nothing yourself, sir?" asked
+Corporal Rufus Smith.
+
+"Nothing," the general said firmly.
+
+"Well, all I can say is, that you've got more nerve and pluck than I
+shall ever have. I don't wonder now at your winning that Cross in the
+Mutiny. If I was to go on listening night after night to them things
+without ever taking a drop of something to cheer my heart--why, it would
+drive me silly."
+
+General Heatherstone put his hand up, as though afraid that his
+companion might say too much.
+
+"I must thank you, Mr. West," he said, "for having shown this man my
+door. I would not willingly allow an old comrade, however humble, to go
+to the bad, and if I did not acknowledge his claim more readily it
+was simply because I had my doubts as to whether he was really what he
+represented himself to be. Just walk up to the Hall, Corporal, and I
+shall follow you in a minute."
+
+"Poor fellow!" he continued, as he watched the newcomer hobbling up the
+avenue in the ungainly manner which I have described. "He got a gun over
+his foot, and it crushed the bones, but the obstinate fool would not let
+the doctors take it off. I remember him now as a smart young soldier in
+Afghanistan. He and I were associated in some queer adventures, which I
+may tell you of some day, and I naturally feel sympathy towards him, and
+would befriend him. Did he tell you anything about me before I came?"
+
+"Not a word," I replied.
+
+"Oh," said the general carelessly, but with an evident expression of
+relief, "I thought perhaps he might have said something of old times.
+Well, I must go and look after him, or the servants will be frightened,
+for he isn't a beauty to look at. Good-bye!"
+
+With a wave of the hand the old man turned away from me and hurried
+up the drive after this unexpected addition to his household, while I
+strolled on round the high, black paling, peering through every chink
+between the planks, but without seeing a trace either of Mordaunt or of
+his sister.
+
+I have now brought this statement down to the coming of Corporal Rufus
+Smith, which will prove to be the beginning of the end.
+
+I have set down soberly and in order the events which brought us to
+Wigtownshire, the arrival of the Heatherstones at Cloomber, the many
+strange incidents which excited first our curiosity and finally our
+intense interest in that family, and I have briefly touched upon the
+circumstances which brought my sister and myself into a closer and more
+personal relationship with them. I think that there cannot be a better
+moment than this to hand the narrative over to those who had means of
+knowing something of what was going on inside Cloomber during the months
+that I was observing it from without.
+
+Israel Stakes, the coachman, proved to be unable to read or write, but
+Mr. Mathew Clark, the Presbyterian Minister of Stoneykirk, has copied
+down his deposition, duly attested by the cross set opposite to his
+name. The good clergyman has, I fancy, put some slight polish upon the
+narrator's story, which I rather regret, as it might have been more
+interesting, if less intelligible, when reported verbatim. It still
+preserves, however, considerable traces of Israel's individuality,
+and may be regarded as an exact record of what he saw and did while in
+General Heatherstone's service.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. STATEMENT OF ISRAEL STAKES
+
+
+(Copied and authenticated by the Reverend Mathew Clark, Presbyterian
+Minister of Stoneykirk, in Wigtownshire)
+
+Maister Fothergill West and the meenister say that I maun tell all I can
+aboot General Heatherstone and his hoose, but that I maunna say muckle
+aboot mysel' because the readers wouldna care to hear aboot me or my
+affairs. I am na sae sure o' that, for the Stakes is a family weel
+kenned and respecked on baith sides o' the Border, and there's mony in
+Nithsdale and Annandale as would be gey pleased to hear news o' the son
+o' Archie Stakes, o' Ecclefechan.
+
+I maun e'en do as I'm tauld, however, for Mr. West's sake, hoping he'll
+no forget me when I chance to hae a favour tae ask.(1) I'm no able tae
+write mysel' because my feyther sent me oot to scare craws instead o'
+sendin' me tae school, but on the ither hond he brought me up in the
+preenciples and practice o' the real kirk o' the Covenant, for which may
+the Lord be praised!
+
+It way last May twel'month that the factor body, Maister McNeil, cam
+ower tae me in the street and speered whether I was in want o' a place
+as a coachman and gairdner. As it fell oot I chanced tae be on the look
+oot for something o' the sort mysel' at the time, but I wasna ower quick
+to let him see that I wanted it.
+
+"Ye can tak it or leave it," says he sharp like. "It's a guid place,
+and there's mony would be glad o't. If ye want it ye can come up tae my
+office at twa the morn and put your ain questions tae the gentleman."
+
+That was a' I could get frae him, for he's a close man and a hard one at
+a bargain--which shall profit him leetle in the next life, though he lay
+by a store o' siller in this. When the day comes there'll be a hantle o'
+factors on the left hand o' the throne, and I shouldna be surprised if
+Maister McNeil found himsel' amang them.
+
+Weel, on the morn I gaed up to the office and there I foond the factor
+and a lang, thin, dour man wi' grey hair and a face as brown and
+crinkled as a walnut. He looked hard at me wi' a pair o' een that glowed
+like twa spunks, and then he says, says he:
+
+"You've been born in these pairts, I understan'?"
+
+"Aye," says I, "and never left them neither."
+
+"Never been oot o' Scotland?" he speers.
+
+"Twice to Carlisle fair," says I, for I am a man wha loves the truth;
+and besides I kenned that the factor would mind my gaeing there, for I
+bargained fur twa steers and a stirk that he wanted for the stockin' o'
+the Drumleugh Fairm.
+
+"I learn frae Maister McNeil," says General Heatherstone--for him it was
+and nane ither--"that ye canna write."
+
+"Na," says I.
+
+"Nor read?"
+
+"Na," says I.
+
+"It seems tae me," says he, turnin' tae the factor, "that this is the
+vera man I want. Servants is spoilt noo-a-days," says he, "by ower
+muckle eddication. I hae nae doobt, Stakes, that ye will suit me well
+enough. Ye'll hae three pund a month and a' foond, but I shall resairve
+the right o' givin' ye twenty-four hoors' notice at any time. How will
+that suit ye?"
+
+"It's vera different frae my last place," says I, discontented-like.
+
+And the words were true enough, for auld Fairmer Scott only gave me a
+pund a month and parritch twice a day.
+
+"Weel, weel," says he, "maybe we'll gie ye a rise if ye suit. Meanwhile
+here's the han'sel shillin' that Maister McNeil tells me it's the custom
+tae give, and I shall expec' tae see ye at Cloomber on Monday."
+
+When the Monday cam roond I walked oot tae Cloomber, and a great muckle
+hoose it is, wi' a hunderd windows or mair, and space enough tae hide
+awa' half the parish.
+
+As tae gairdening, there was no gairden for me tae work at, and the
+horse was never taken oot o' the stables frae week's end tae week's end.
+I was busy enough for a' that, for there was a deal o' fencing tae
+be put up, and one thing or anither, forbye cleanin' the knives and
+brushin' the boots and such-like jobs as is mair fit for an auld wife
+than for a grown man.
+
+There was twa besides mysel' in the kitchen, the cook Eliza, and Mary
+the hoosemaid, puir, benighted beings baith o' them, wha had wasted a'
+their lives in London, and kenned leetle aboot the warld or the ways o'
+the flesh.
+
+I hadna muckle tae say to them, for they were simple folk who could
+scarce understand English, and had hardly mair regard for their ain
+souls than the tods on the moor. When the cook said she didna think
+muckle o' John Knox, and the ither that she wouldna give saxpence tae
+hear the discourse o' Maister Donald McSnaw o' the true kirk, I kenned
+it was time for me tae leave them tae a higher Judge.
+
+There was four in family, the general, my leddy, Maister Mordaunt,
+and Miss Gabriel, and it wasna long before I found that a' wasna just
+exactly as it should be. My leddy was as thin and as white as a ghaist,
+and many's the time as I've come on her and found her yammerin' and
+greetin' all by hersel'. I've watched her walkin' up and doon in the
+wood where she thought nane could see her and wringin' her honds like
+one demented.
+
+There was the young gentleman, tae, and his sister--they baith seemed
+to hae some trouble on their minds, and the general maist of a', for the
+ithers were up ane day and down anither; but he was aye the same, wi' a
+face as dour and sad as a felon when he feels the tow roond his neck.
+
+I speered o' the hussies in the kitchen whether they kenned what was
+amiss wi' the family, but the cook she answered me back that it wasna
+for her tae inquire into the affairs o' her superiors, and that it was
+naething to her as long as she did her work and had her wages. They were
+puir, feckless bodies, the twa o' them, and would scarce gie an answer
+tae a ceevil question, though they could clack lood eneugh when they had
+a mind.
+
+Weel, weeks passed into months and a' things grew waur instead o'
+better in the Hall. The general he got mair nairvous, and his leddy
+mair melancholy every day, and yet there wasna any quarrel or bickering
+between them, for when they've been togither in the breakfast room
+I used often tae gang round and prune the rose-tree alongside o'
+the window, so that I couldna help hearin' a great pairt o' their
+conversation, though sair against the grain.
+
+When the young folk were wi' them they would speak little, but when they
+had gone they would aye talk as if some waefu' trial ere aboot to fa'
+upon them, though I could never gather from their words what it was that
+they were afeared o'.
+
+I've heard the general say mair than ance that he wasna frighted o'
+death, or any danger that he could face and have done wi', but that it
+was the lang, weary waitin' and the uncertainty that had taken a' the
+strength and the mettle oot o' him. Then my leddy would console him and
+tell him that maybe it wasna as bad as he thocht, and that a' would come
+richt in the end--but a' her cheery words were clean throwed away upon
+him.
+
+As tae the young folks, I kenned weel that they didna bide in the
+groonds, and that they were awa' whenever they got a chance wi' Maister
+Fothergill West tae Branksome, but the general was too fu' o' his ain
+troubles tae ken aboot it, and it didna seem tae me that it was pairt
+o' my duties either as coachman or as gairdner tae mind the bairns.
+He should have lairnt that if ye forbid a lassie and a laddie to dae
+anything it's just the surest way o' bringin' it aboot. The Lord foond
+that oot in the gairden o' Paradise, and there's no muckle change
+between the folk in Eden and the folk in Wigtown.
+
+There's ane thing that I havena spoke aboot yet, but that should be set
+doon.
+
+The general didna share his room wi' his wife, but slept a' alane in a
+chamber at the far end o' the hoose, as distant as possible frae every
+one else. This room was aye lockit when he wasna in it, and naebody was
+ever allowed tae gang into it. He would mak' his ain bed, and red it up
+and dust it a' by himsel', but he wouldna so much as allow one o' us to
+set fut on the passage that led tae it.
+
+At nicht he would walk a' ower the hoose, and he had lamps hung in every
+room and corner, so that no pairt should be dark.
+
+Many's the time frae my room in the garret I've heard his futsteps
+comin' and gangin', comin' and gangin' doon one passage and up anither
+frae midnight till cockcraw. It was weary wark to lie listenin' tae his
+clatter and wonderin' whether he was clean daft, or whether maybe he'd
+lairnt pagan and idolatrous tricks oot in India, and that his conscience
+noo was like the worm which gnaweth and dieth not. I'd ha' speered frae
+him whether it wouldna ease him to speak wi' the holy Donald McSnaw, but
+it might ha' been a mistake, and the general wasna a man that you'd care
+tae mak' a mistake wi'.
+
+Ane day I was workin' at the grass border when he comes up and he says,
+says he:
+
+"Did ye ever have occasion tae fire a pistol, Israel?"
+
+"Godsakes!" says I, "I never had siccan a thing in my honds in my life."
+
+"Then you'd best not begin noo," says he. "Every man tae his ain
+weepon," he says. "Now I warrant ye could do something wi' a guid
+crab-tree cudgel!"
+
+"Aye, could I," I answered blithely, "as well as ony lad on the Border."
+
+"This is a lonely hoose," says he, "and we might be molested by some
+rascals. It's weel tae be ready for whatever may come. Me and you and my
+son Mordaunt and Mr. Fothergill West of Branksome, who would come if he
+was required, ought tae be able tae show a bauld face--what think ye?"
+
+"'Deed, sir," I says, "feastin' is aye better than fechtin'--but if
+ye'll raise me a pund a month, I'll no' shirk my share o' either."
+
+"We won't quarrel ower that," says he, and agreed tae the extra twal'
+pund a year as easy as though it were as many bawbees. Far be it frae me
+tae think evil, but I couldna help surmisin' at the time that money that
+was so lightly pairted wi' was maybe no' so very honestly cam by.
+
+I'm no' a curious or a pryin' mun by nature, but I was sair puzzled in
+my ain mind tae tell why it was that the general walked aboot at nicht
+and what kept him frae his sleep.
+
+Weel, ane day I was cleanin' doon the passages when my e'e fell on a
+great muckle heap o' curtains and auld cairpets and sic' like things
+that were piled away in a corner, no vera far frae the door o' the
+general's room. A' o' a sudden a thocht came intae my heid and I says
+tae mysel':
+
+"Israel, laddie," says I, "what's tae stop ye frae hidin' behind that
+this vera nicht and seein' the auld mun when he doesna ken human e'e is
+on him?"
+
+The mair I thocht o't the mair seemple it appeared, and I made up my
+mind tae put the idea intae instant execution.
+
+When the nicht cam roond I tauld the women-folk that I was bad wi' the
+jawache, and would gang airly tae my room. I kenned fine when ance I got
+there that there was na chance o' ony ane disturbin' me, so I waited a
+wee while, and then when a' was quiet, I slippit aff my boots and ran
+doon the ither stair until I cam tae the heap o' auld clothes, and there
+I lay doon wi' ane e'e peepin' through a kink and a' the rest covered up
+wi' a great, ragged cairpet.
+
+There I bided as quiet as a mouse until the general passed me on his
+road tae bed, and a' was still in the hoose.
+
+My certie! I wouldna gang through wi' it again for a' the siller at the
+Union Bank of Dumfries, I canna think o't noo withoot feelin' cauld a'
+the way doon my back.
+
+It was just awfu' lyin' there in the deid silence, waitin' and waitin'
+wi' never a soond tae break the monotony, except the heavy tickin' o' an
+auld clock somewhere doon the passage.
+
+First I would look doon the corridor in the one way, and syne I'd look
+doon in t'ither, but it aye seemed to me as though there was something
+coming up frae the side that I wasna lookin' at. I had a cauld sweat on
+my broo, and my hairt was beatin' twice tae ilka tick o' the clock, and
+what feared me most of a' was that the dust frae the curtains and things
+was aye gettin' doon intae my lungs, and it was a' I could dae tae keep
+mysel' frae coughin'.
+
+Godsakes! I wonder my hair wasna grey wi' a' that I went through. I
+wouldna dae it again to be made Lord Provost o' Glasgie.
+
+Weel, it may have been twa o'clock in the mornin' or maybe a little
+mair, and I was just thinkin' that I wasna tae see onything after
+a'--and I wasna very sorry neither--when all o' a sudden a soond cam tae
+my ears clear and distinct through the stillness o' the nicht.
+
+I've been asked afore noo tae describe that soond, but I've aye foond
+that it's no' vera easy tae gie a clear idea o't, though it was unlike
+any other soond that ever I hearkened tae. It was a shairp, ringin'
+clang, like what could be caused by flippin' the rim o' a wineglass, but
+it was far higher and thinner than that, and had in it, tae, a kind o'
+splash, like the tinkle o' a rain-drop intae a water-butt.
+
+In my fear I sat up amang my cairpets, like a puddock among
+gowan-leaves, and I listened wi' a' my ears. A' was still again noo,
+except for the dull tickin' o' the distant clock.
+
+Suddenly the soond cam again, as clear, as shrill, as shairp as ever,
+and this time the general heard it, for I heard him gie a kind o' groan,
+as a tired man might wha has been roosed oot o' his sleep.
+
+He got up frae his bed, and I could make oot a rustling noise, as though
+he were dressin' himsel', and presently his footfa' as he began tae walk
+up and doon in his room.
+
+Mysakes! it didna tak lang for me tae drap doon amang the cairpets again
+and cover mysel' ower. There I lay tremblin' in every limb, and sayin'
+as mony prayers as I could mind, wi' my e'e still peepin' through the
+keek-hole, and fixed upon the door o' the general's room.
+
+I heard the rattle o' the handle presently, and the door swung slowly
+open. There was a licht burnin' in the room beyond, an' I could just
+catch a glimpse o' what seemed tae me like a row o' swords stuck alang
+the side o' the wa', when the general stepped oot and shut the door
+behind him. He was dressed in a dressin' goon, wi' a red smokin'-cap
+on his heid, and a pair o' slippers wi' the heels cut off and the taes
+turned up.
+
+For a moment it cam into my held that maybe he was walkin' in his sleep,
+but as he cam towards me I could see the glint o' the licht in his e'en,
+and his face was a' twistin', like a man that's in sair distress o'
+mind. On my conscience, it gies me the shakes noo when I think o' his
+tall figure and his yelley face comin' sae solemn and silent doon the
+lang, lone passage.
+
+I haud my breath and lay close watchin' him, but just as he cam tae
+where I was my vera hairt stood still in my breast, for "ting!"--loud
+and clear, within a yaird o' me cam the ringin', clangin' soond that I
+had a'ready hairkened tae.
+
+Where it cam frae is mair than I can tell or what was the cause o't. It
+might ha' been that the general made it, but I was sair puzzled tae tell
+hoo, for his honds were baith doon by his side as he passed me. It cam
+frae his direction, certainly, but it appeared tae me tae come frae ower
+his heid, but it was siccan a thin, eerie, high-pitched, uncanny kind o'
+soond that it wasna easy tae say just exactly where it did come frae.
+
+The general tuk nae heed o't, but walked on and was soon oot o' sicht,
+and I didna lose a minute in creepin' oot frae my hidin' place and
+scamperin' awa' back tae my room, and if a' the bogies in the Red Sea
+were trapesin' up and doon the hale nicht through, I wud never put my
+heid oot again tae hae a glimpse o' them.
+
+I didna say a word tae anybody aboot what I'd seen, but I made up my
+mind that I wudna stay muckle langer at Cloomber Ha'. Four pund a month
+is a good wage, but it isna enough tae pay a man for the loss o' his
+peace o' mind, and maybe the loss o' his soul as weel, for when the deil
+is aboot ye canna tell what sort o' a trap he may lay for ye, and though
+they say that Providence is stronger than him, it's maybe as weel no' to
+risk it.
+
+It was clear tae me that the general and his hoose were baith under some
+curse, and it was fit that that curse should fa' on them that had earned
+it, and no' on a righteous Presbyterian, wha had ever trod the narrow
+path.
+
+My hairt was sair for young Miss Gabriel--for she was a bonnie and
+winsome lassie--but for a' that, I felt that my duty was tae mysel' and
+that I should gang forth, even as Lot ganged oot o' the wicked cities o'
+the plain.
+
+That awfu' cling-clang was aye dingin' in my lugs, and I couldna bear
+to be alane in the passages for fear o' hearin' it ance again. I only
+wanted a chance or an excuse tae gie the general notice, and tae gang
+back to some place where I could see Christian folk, and have the kirk
+within a stone-cast tae fa' back upon.
+
+But it proved tae be ordained that, instead o' my saying the word, it
+should come frae the general himsel'.
+
+It was ane day aboot the beginning of October, I was comin' oot o' the
+stable, after giein' its oats tae the horse, when I seed a great muckle
+loon come hoppin' on ane leg up the drive, mair like a big, ill-faured
+craw than a man.
+
+When I clapped my een on him I thocht that maybe this was ane of the
+rascals that the maister had been speakin' aboot, so withoot mair ado
+I fetched oot my bit stick with the intention o' tryin' it upon the
+limmer's heid. He seed me comin' towards him, and readin' my intention
+frae my look maybe, or frae the stick in my hand, he pu'ed oot a lang
+knife frae his pocket and swore wi' the most awfu' oaths that if I didna
+stan' back he'd be the death o' me.
+
+Ma conscience! the words the chiel used was eneugh tae mak' the hair
+stand straight on your heid. I wonder he wasna struck deid where he
+stood.
+
+We were still standin' opposite each ither--he wi' his knife and me wi'
+the stick--when the general he cam up the drive and foond us. Tae my
+surprise he began tae talk tae the stranger as if he'd kenned him a' his
+days.
+
+"Put your knife in your pocket, Corporal," says he. "Your fears have
+turned your brain."
+
+"Blood an' wounds!" says the other. "He'd ha' turned my brain tae some
+purpose wi' that muckle stick o' his if I hadna drawn my snickersnee.
+You shouldna keep siccan an auld savage on your premises."
+
+The maister he frooned and looked black at him, as though he didna
+relish advice comin' frae such a source. Then turnin' tae me--"You won't
+be wanted after to-day, Israel," he says; "you have been a guid servant,
+and I ha' naething tae complain of wi' ye, but circumstances have arisen
+which will cause me tae change my arrangements."
+
+"Vera guid, sir," says I.
+
+"You can go this evening," says he, "and you shall have an extra month's
+pay tae mak up t'ye for this short notice."
+
+Wi' that he went intae the hoose, followed by the man that he ca'ed the
+corporal, and frae that day tae this I have never clapped een either on
+the ane or the ither. My money was sent oot tae me in an envelope,
+and havin' said a few pairtin' words tae the cook and the wench wi'
+reference tae the wrath tae come and the treasure that is richer than
+rubies, I shook the dust o' Cloomber frae my feet for ever.
+
+Maister Fothergill West says I maunna express an opeenion as tae what
+cam aboot afterwards, but maun confine mysel' tae what I saw mysel'. Nae
+doubt he has his reasons for this--and far be it frae me tae hint that
+they are no' guid anes--but I maun say this, that what happened didna
+surprise me. It was just as I expeckit, and so I said tae Maister Donald
+McSnaw.
+
+I've tauld ye a' aboot it noo, and I havena a word tae add or tae
+withdraw. I'm muckle obleeged tae Maister Mathew Clairk for puttin'
+it a' doon in writin' for me, and if there's ony would wish tae speer
+onything mair o' me I'm well kenned and respeckit in Ecclefechan, and
+Maister McNeil, the factor o' Wigtown, can aye tell where I am tae be
+foond.
+
+
+(1) The old rascal was well paid for his trouble, so he need not have
+made such a favour of it.--J.F.W.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. NARRATIVE OF JOHN EASTERLING, F.R.C.P.EDIN.
+
+
+Having given the statement of Israel Stakes _in extenso_, I shall append
+a short memorandum from Dr. Easterling, now practising at Stranraer.
+It is true that the doctor was only once within the walls of Cloomber
+during its tenancy by General Heatherstone, but there were some
+circumstances connected with this visit which made it valuable,
+especially when considered as a supplement to the experiences which I
+have just submitted to the reader.
+
+The doctor has found time amid the calls of a busy country practice
+to jot down his recollections, and I feel that I cannot do better than
+subjoin them exactly as they stand.
+
+I have very much pleasure in furnishing Mr. Fothergill West with an
+account of my solitary visit to Cloomber Hall, not only on account
+of the esteem which I have formed for that gentleman ever since his
+residence at Branksome, but also because it is my conviction that the
+facts in the case of General Heatherstone are of such a singular nature
+that it is of the highest importance that they should be placed before
+the public in a trustworthy manner.
+
+It was about the beginning of September of last year that I received
+a note from Mrs. Heatherstone, of Cloomber Hall, desiring me to make a
+professional call upon her husband, whose health, she said, had been for
+some time in a very unsatisfactory state.
+
+I had heard something of the Heatherstones and of the strange seclusion
+in which they lived, so that I was very much pleased at this opportunity
+of making their closer acquaintance, and lost no time in complying with
+her request.
+
+I had known the Hall in the old days of Mr. McVittie, the original
+proprietor, and I was astonished on arriving at the avenue gate to
+observe the changes which had taken place.
+
+The gate itself, which used to yawn so hospitably upon the road, was
+now barred and locked, and a high wooden fence, with nails upon the
+top, encircled the whole grounds. The drive itself was leaf-strewn and
+uncared-for, and the whole place had a depressing air of neglect and
+decay.
+
+I had to knock twice before a servant-maid opened the door and showed me
+through a dingy hall into a small room, where sat an elderly, careworn
+lady, who introduced herself as Mrs. Heatherstone. With her pale face,
+her grey hair, her sad, colourless eyes, and her faded silk dress, she
+was in perfect keeping with her melancholy surroundings.
+
+"You find us in much trouble, doctor," she said, in a quiet, refined
+voice. "My poor husband has had a great deal to worry him, and his
+nervous system for a long time has been in a very weak state. We came to
+this part of the country in the hope that the bracing air and the quiet
+would have a good effect upon him. Instead of improving, however, he
+has seemed to grow weaker, and this morning he is in a high fever and a
+little inclined to be delirious. The children and I were so frightened
+that we sent for you at once. If you will follow me I will take you to
+the general's bedroom."
+
+She led the way down a series of corridors to the chamber of the sick
+man, which was situated in the extreme wing of the building.
+
+It was a carpetless, bleak-looking room, scantily furnished with a small
+truckle bed, a campaigning chair, and a plain deal table, on which were
+scattered numerous papers and books. In the centre of this table there
+stood a large object of irregular outline, which was covered over with a
+sheet of linen.
+
+All round the walls and in the corners were arranged a very choice and
+varied collection of arms, principally swords, some of which were of
+the straight pattern in common use in the British Army, while among
+the others were scimitars, tulwars, cuchurries, and a score of other
+specimens of Oriental workmanship. Many of these were richly mounted,
+with inlaid sheaths and hilts sparkling with precious stones, so that
+there was a piquant contrast between the simplicity of the apartment and
+the wealth which glittered on the walls.
+
+I had little time, however, to observe the general's collection, since
+the general himself lay upon the couch and was evidently in sore need of
+my services.
+
+He was lying with his head turned half away from us. Breathing heavily,
+and apparently unconscious of our presence. His bright, staring eyes and
+the deep, hectic flush upon his cheek showed that his fever was at its
+height.
+
+I advanced to the bedside, and, stooping over him, I placed my fingers
+upon his pulse, when immediately he sprang up into the sitting position
+and struck at me frenziedly with his clenched hands. I have never seen
+such intensity of fear and horror stamped upon a human face as appeared
+upon that which was now glaring up at me.
+
+"Bloodhound!" he yelled; "let me go--let me go, I say! Keep your hands
+off me! Is it not enough that my life has been ruined? When is it all to
+end? How long am I to endure it?"
+
+"Hush, dear, hush!" said his wife in a soothing voice, passing her
+cool hand over his heated forehead. "This is Doctor Easterling, from
+Stranraer. He has not come to harm you, but to do you good."
+
+The general dropped wearily back upon his pillow, and I could see by the
+changed expression of his face that his delirium had left him, and that
+he understood what had been said.
+
+I slipped my clinical thermometer into his armpit and counted his pulse
+rate. It amounted to 120 per minute, and his temperature proved to be
+104 degrees. Clearly it was a case of remittent fever, such as occurs in
+men who have spent a great part of their lives in the tropics.
+
+"There is no danger," I remarked. "With a little quinine and arsenic we
+shall very soon overcome the attack and restore his health."
+
+"No danger, eh?" he said. "There never is any danger for me. I am as
+hard to kill as the Wandering Jew. I am quite clear in the head now,
+Mary; so you may leave me with the doctor."
+
+Mrs. Heatherstone left the room--rather unwillingly, as I thought--and
+I sat down by the bedside to listen to anything which my patient might
+have to communicate.
+
+"I want you to examine my liver," he said when the door was closed. "I
+used to have an abscess there, and Brodie, the staff-surgeon, said that
+it was ten to one that it would carry me off. I have not felt much of it
+since I left the East. This is where it used to be, just under the angle
+of the ribs."
+
+"I can find the place," said I, after making a careful examination;
+"but I am happy to tell you that the abscess has either been entirely
+absorbed, or has turned calcareous, as these solitary abscesses will.
+There is no fear of its doing you any harm now."
+
+He seemed to be by no means overjoyed at the intelligence.
+
+"Things always happen so with me," he said moodily. "Now, if another
+fellow was feverish and delirious he would surely be in some danger, and
+yet you will tell me that I am in none. Look at this, now." He bared
+his chest and showed me a puckered wound over the region of the heart.
+"That's where the jezail bullet of a Hillman went in. You would think
+that was in the right spot to settle a man, and yet what does it do but
+glance upon a rib, and go clean round and out at the back, without so
+much as penetrating what you medicos call the pleura. Did ever you hear
+of such a thing?"
+
+"You were certainly born under a lucky star," I observed, with a smile.
+
+"That's a matter of opinion," he answered, shaking his head. "Death
+has no terrors for me, if it will but come in some familiar form, but I
+confess that the anticipation of some strange, some preternatural form
+of death is very terrible and unnerving."
+
+"You mean," said I, rather puzzled at his remark, "that you would prefer
+a natural death to a death by violence?"
+
+"No, I don't mean that exactly," he answered. "I am too familiar with
+cold steel and lead to be afraid of either. Do you know anything about
+odyllic force, doctor?"
+
+"No, I do not," I replied, glancing sharply at him to see if there were
+any signs of his delirium returning. His expression was intelligent,
+however, and the feverish flush had faded from his cheeks.
+
+"Ah, you Western scientific men are very much behind the day in some
+things," he remarked. "In all that is material and conducive to the
+comfort of the body you are pre-eminent, but in what concerns the subtle
+forces of Nature and the latent powers of the human spirit your best
+men are centuries behind the humblest coolies of India. Countless
+generations of beef-eating, comfort loving ancestors have given our
+animal instincts the command over our spiritual ones. The body, which
+should have been a mere tool for the use of the soul, has now become a
+degrading prison in which it is confined. The Oriental soul and body are
+not so welded together as ours are, and there is far less wrench when
+they part in death."
+
+"They do not appear to derive much benefit from this peculiarity in
+their organisation," I remarked incredulously.
+
+"Merely the benefit of superior knowledge," the general answered. "If
+you were to go to India, probably the very first thing you would see in
+the way of amusement would be a native doing what is called the mango
+trick. Of course you have heard or read of it. The fellow plants a mango
+seed, and makes passes over it until it sprouts and bears leaves and
+fruit--all in the space of half-an-hour. It is not really a trick--it
+is a power. These men know more than your Tyndalls or Huxleys do about
+Nature's processes, and they can accelerate or retard her workings
+by subtle means of which we have no conception. These low-caste
+conjurers--as they are called--are mere vulgar dabblers, but the men who
+have trod the higher path are as far superior to us in knowledge as we
+are to the Hottentots or Patagonians."
+
+"You speak as if you were well acquainted with them," I remarked.
+
+"To my cost, I am," he answered. "I have been brought in contact with
+them in a way in which I trust no other poor chap ever will be. But,
+really, as regards odyllic force, you ought to know something of it,
+for it has a great future before it in your profession. You should read
+Reichenbach's 'Researches on Magnetism and Vital Force,' and Gregory's
+'Letters on Animal Magnetism.' These, supplemented by the twenty-seven
+Aphorisms of Mesmer, and the works of Dr. Justinus Kerner, of Weinsberg,
+would enlarge your ideas."
+
+I did not particularly relish having a course of reading prescribed for
+me on a subject connected with my own profession, so I made no comment,
+but rose to take my departure. Before doing so I felt his pulse once
+more, and found that the fever had entirely left him in the sudden,
+unaccountable fashion which is peculiar to these malarious types of
+disease.
+
+I turned my face towards him to congratulate him upon his improvement,
+and stretched out my hand at the same time to pick my gloves from the
+table, with the result that I raised not only my own property, but also
+the linen cloth which was arranged over some object in the centre.
+
+I might not have noticed what I had done had I not seen an angry look
+upon the invalid's face and heard him utter an impatient exclamation.
+I at once turned, and replaced the cloth so promptly that I should
+have been unable to say what was underneath it, beyond having a general
+impression that it looked like a bride-cake.
+
+"All right, doctor," the general said good-humouredly, perceiving how
+entirely accidental the incident was. "There is no reason why you should
+not see it," and stretching out his hand, he pulled away the linen
+covering for the second time.
+
+I then perceived that what I had taken for a bride-cake was really an
+admirably executed model of a lofty range of mountains, whose snow-clad
+peaks were not unlike the familiar sugar pinnacles and minarets.
+
+"These are the Himalayas, or at least the Surinam branch of them," he
+remarked, "showing the principal passes between India and Afghanistan.
+It is an excellent model. This ground has a special interest for me,
+because it is the scene of my first campaign. There is the pass opposite
+Kalabagh and the Thul valley, where I was engaged during the summer
+of 1841 in protecting the convoys and keeping the Afridis in order. It
+wasn't a sinecure, I promise you."
+
+"And this," said I, indicating a blood-red spot which had been marked
+on one side of the pass which he had pointed out--"this is the scene of
+some fight in which you were engaged."
+
+"Yes, we had a skirmish there," he answered, leaning forward and looking
+at the red mark. "We were attacked by--"
+
+At this moment he fell back upon his pillow as if he had been shot,
+while the same look of horror came over his face which I had observed
+when I first entered the room. At the same instant there came,
+apparently from the air immediately above his bed, a sharp, ringing,
+tinkling sound, which I can only compare with the noise made by a
+bicycle alarm, though it differed from this in having a distinctly
+throbbing character. I have never, before or since, heard any sound
+which could be confounded with it.
+
+I stared round in astonishment, wondering where it could have come from,
+but without perceiving anything to which it could be ascribed.
+
+"It's all right, doctor," the general said with a ghastly smile. "It's
+only my private gong. Perhaps you had better step downstairs and write
+my prescription in the dining-room."
+
+He was evidently anxious to get rid of me, so I was forced to take my
+departure, though I would gladly have stayed a little longer, in the
+hope of learning something as to the origin of the mysterious sound.
+
+I drove away from the house with the full determination of calling again
+upon my interesting patient, and endeavouring to elicit some further
+particulars as to his past life and his present circumstances. I was
+destined, however, to be disappointed, for I received that very evening
+a note from the general himself, enclosing a handsome fee for my single
+visit, and informing me that my treatment had done him so much good that
+he considered himself to be convalescent, and would not trouble me to
+see him again.
+
+This was the last and only communication which I ever received from the
+tenant of Cloomber.
+
+I have been asked frequently by neighbours and others who were
+interested in the matter whether he gave me the impression of insanity.
+To this I must unhesitatingly answer in the negative. On the contrary,
+his remarks gave me the idea of a man who had both read and thought
+deeply.
+
+I observed, however, during our single interview, that his reflexes
+were feeble, his arcus senilis well marked, and his arteries
+atheromatous--all signs that his constitution was in an unsatisfactory
+condition, and that a sudden crisis might be apprehended.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. OF THE LETTER WHICH CAME FROM THE HALL
+
+Having thrown this side-light upon my narrative, I can now resume the
+statement of my own personal experiences. These I had brought down, as
+the reader will doubtless remember, to the date of the arrival of the
+savage-looking wanderer who called himself Corporal Rufus Smith. This
+incident occurred about the beginning of the month of October, and I
+find upon a comparison of dates that Dr. Easterling's visit to Cloomber
+preceded it by three weeks or more.
+
+During all this time I was in sore distress of mind, for I had never
+seen anything either of Gabriel or of her brother since the interview
+in which the general had discovered the communication which was kept up
+between us. I had no doubt that some sort of restraint had been placed
+upon them; and the thought that we had brought trouble on their heads
+was a bitter one both to my sister and myself.
+
+Our anxiety, however, was considerably mitigated by the receipt, a
+couple of days after my last talk with the general, of a note from
+Mordaunt Heatherstone. This was brought us by a little, ragged urchin,
+the son of one of the fishermen, who informed us that it had been handed
+to him at the avenue gate by an old woman--who, I expect, must have been
+the Cloomber cook.
+
+"MY DEAREST FRIENDS," it ran, "Gabriel and I have grieved to think how
+concerned you must be at having neither heard from nor seen us. The fact
+is that we are compelled to remain in the house. And this compulsion is
+not physical but moral.
+
+"Our poor father, who gets more and more nervous every day, has
+entreated us to promise him that we will not go out until after the
+fifth of October, and to allay his fears we have given him the desired
+pledge. On the other hand, he has promised us that after the fifth--that
+is, in less than a week--we shall be as free as air to come or go as we
+please, so we have something to look forward to.
+
+"Gabriel says that she has explained to you that the governor is always
+a changed man after this particular date, on which his fears reach a
+crisis. He apparently has more reason than usual this year to anticipate
+that trouble is brewing for this unfortunate family, for I have never
+known him to take so many elaborate precautions or appear so thoroughly
+unnerved. Who would ever think, to see his bent form and his shaking
+hands, that he is the same man who used some few short years ago to
+shoot tigers on foot among the jungles of the Terai, and would laugh at
+the more timid sportsmen who sought the protection of their elephant's
+howdah?
+
+"You know that he has the Victoria Cross, which he won in the streets
+of Delhi, and yet here he is shivering with terror and starting at every
+noise, in the most peaceful corner of the world. Oh, the pity of it.
+West! Remember what I have already told you--that it is no fanciful or
+imaginary peril, but one which we have every reason to suppose to be
+most real. It is, however, of such a nature that it can neither be
+averted nor can it profitably be expressed in words. If all goes well,
+you will see us at Branksome on the sixth.
+
+"With our fondest love to both of you, I am ever, my dear friends, your
+attached
+
+"MORDAUNT."
+
+This letter was a great relief to us as letting us know that the brother
+and sister were under no physical restraint, but our powerlessness and
+inability even to comprehend what the danger was which threatened those
+whom we had come to love better than ourselves was little short of
+maddening.
+
+Fifty times a day we asked ourselves and asked each other from what
+possible quarter this peril was to be expected, but the more we thought
+of it the more hopeless did any solution appear.
+
+In vain we combined our experiences and pieced together every word
+which had fallen from the lips of any inmate of Cloomber which might be
+supposed to bear directly or indirectly upon the subject.
+
+At last, weary with fruitless speculation, we were fain to try to drive
+the matter from our thoughts, consoling ourselves with the reflection
+that in a few more days all restrictions would be removed, and we should
+be able to learn from our friends' own lips.
+
+Those few intervening days, however, would, we feared, be dreary, long
+ones. And so they would have been, had it not been for a new and most
+unexpected incident, which diverted our minds from our own troubles and
+gave them something fresh with which to occupy themselves.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. OF THE CASTING AWAY OF THE BARQUE "BELINDA"
+
+The third of October had broken auspiciously with a bright sun and a
+cloudless sky. There had in the morning been a slight breeze, and a few
+little white wreaths of vapour drifted here and there like the scattered
+feathers of some gigantic bird, but, as the day wore on, such wind as
+there was fell completely away, and the air became close and stagnant.
+
+The sun blazed down with a degree of heat which was remarkable so late
+in the season, and a shimmering haze lay upon the upland moors and
+concealed the Irish mountains on the other side of the Channel.
+
+The sea itself rose and fell in a long, heavy, oily roll, sweeping
+slowly landward, and breaking sullenly with a dull, monotonous booming
+upon the rock-girt shore. To the inexperienced all seemed calm and
+peaceful, but to those who are accustomed to read Nature's warnings
+there was a dark menace in air and sky and sea.
+
+My sister and I walked out in the afternoon, sauntering slowly along
+the margin of the great, sandy spit which shoots out into the Irish Sea,
+flanking upon one side the magnificent Bay of Luce, and on the other the
+more obscure inlet of Kirkmaiden, on the shores of which the Branksome
+property is situated.
+
+It was too sultry to go far, so we soon seated ourselves upon one of the
+sandy hillocks, overgrown with faded grass-tufts, which extend along the
+coast-line, and which form Nature's dykes against the encroachments of
+the ocean.
+
+Our rest was soon interrupted by the scrunching of heavy boots upon the
+shingle, and Jamieson, the old man-o'-war's man whom I have already had
+occasion to mention, made his appearance, with the flat, circular net
+upon his back which he used for shrimp-catching. He came towards us upon
+seeing us, and said in his rough, kindly way that he hoped we would
+not take it amiss if he sent us up a dish of shrimps for our tea at
+Branksome.
+
+"I aye make a good catch before a storm," he remarked.
+
+"You think there is going to be a storm, then?" I asked.
+
+"Why, even a marine could see that," he answered, sticking a great wedge
+of tobacco into his cheek. "The moors over near Cloomber are just white
+wi' gulls and kittiewakes. What d'ye think they come ashore for except
+to escape having all the feathers blown out o' them? I mind a day like
+this when I was wi' Charlie Napier off Cronstadt. It well-nigh blew us
+under the guns of the forts, for all our engines and propellers."
+
+"Have you ever known a wreck in these parts?" I asked.
+
+"Lord love ye, sir, it's a famous place for wrecks. Why, in that very
+bay down there two o' King Philip's first-rates foundered wi' all hands
+in the days o' the Spanish war. If that sheet o' water and the Bay o'
+Luce round the corner could tell their ain tale they'd have a gey lot
+to speak of. When the Jedgment Day comes round that water will be
+just bubbling wi' the number o' folks that will be coming up frae the
+bottom."
+
+"I trust that there will be no wrecks while we are here," said Esther
+earnestly.
+
+The old man shook his grizzled head and looked distrustfully at the hazy
+horizon.
+
+"If it blows from the west," he said, "some o' these sailing ships may
+find it no joke to be caught without sea-room in the North Channel.
+There's that barque out yonder--I daresay her maister would be glad
+enough to find himsel' safe in the Clyde."
+
+"She seems to be absolutely motionless," I remarked, looking at the
+vessel in question, whose black hull and gleaming sails rose and fell
+slowly with the throbbing of the giant pulse beneath her. "Perhaps,
+Jamieson, we are wrong, and there will be no storm after all."
+
+The old sailor chuckled to himself with an air of superior knowledge,
+and shuffled away with his shrimp-net, while my sister and I walked
+slowly homewards through the hot and stagnant air.
+
+I went up to my father's study to see if the old gentleman had any
+instructions as to the estate, for he had become engrossed in a new work
+upon Oriental literature, and the practical management of the property
+had in consequence devolved entirely upon me.
+
+I found him seated at his square library table, which was so heaped with
+books and papers that nothing of him was visible from the door except a
+tuft of white hair.
+
+"My dear son," he said to me as I entered, "it is a great grief to me
+that you are not more conversant with Sanscrit. When I was your age, I
+could converse not only in that noble language, but also in the Tamulic,
+Lohitic, Gangelic, Taic, and Malaic dialects, which are all offshoots
+from the Turanian branch."
+
+"I regret extremely, sir," I answered, "that I have not inherited your
+wonderful talents as a polyglot."
+
+"I have set myself a task," he explained, "which, if it could only be
+continued from generation to generation in our own family until it was
+completed, would make the name of West immortal. This is nothing less
+than to publish an English translation of the Buddhist Djarmas, with a
+preface giving an idea of the position of Brahminism before the coming
+of Sakyamuni. With diligence it is possible that I might be able myself
+to complete part of the preface before I die."
+
+"And pray, sir," I asked, "how long would the whole work be when it was
+finished?"
+
+"The abridged edition in the Imperial Library of Pekin," said my father,
+rubbing his hands together, "consists of 325 volumes of an average
+weight of five pounds. Then the preface, which must embrace some
+account of the Rig-veda, the Sama-veda, the Yagur-veda, and the
+Atharva-veda, with the Brahmanas, could hardly be completed in less
+than ten volumes. Now, if we apportion one volume to each year, there is
+every prospect of the family coming to an end of its task about the date
+2250, the twelfth generation completing the work, while the thirteenth
+might occupy itself upon the index."
+
+"And how are our descendants to live, sir," I asked, with a smile,
+"during the progress of this great undertaking:"
+
+"That's the worst of you, Jack," my father cried petulantly. "There is
+nothing practical about you. Instead of confining your attention to the
+working out of my noble scheme, you begin raising all sorts of absurd
+objections. It is a mere matter of detail how our descendants live, so
+long as they stick to the Djarmas. Now, I want you to go up to the bothy
+of Fergus McDonald and see about the thatch, and Willie Fullerton has
+written to say that his milk-cow is bad. You might took in upon your way
+and ask after it."
+
+I started off upon my errands, but before doing so I took a look at the
+barometer upon the wall. The mercury had sunk to the phenomenal point
+of twenty-eight inches. Clearly the old sailor had not been wrong in his
+interpretation of Nature's signs.
+
+As I returned over the moors in the evening, the wind was blowing in
+short, angry puffs, and the western horizon was heaped with sombre
+clouds which stretched their long, ragged tentacles right up to the
+zenith.
+
+Against their dark background one or two livid, sulphur-coloured
+splotches showed up malignant and menacing, while the surface of the
+sea had changed from the appearance of burnished quicksilver to that of
+ground glass. A low, moaning sound rose up from the ocean as if it knew
+that trouble was in store for it.
+
+Far out in the Channel I saw a single panting, eager steam vessel making
+its way to Belfast Lough, and the large barque which I had observed in
+the morning still beating about in the offing, endeavouring to pass to
+the northward.
+
+At nine o'clock a sharp breeze was blowing, at ten it had freshened into
+a gale, and before midnight the most furious storm was raging which I
+can remember upon that weather-beaten coast.
+
+I sat for some time in our small, oak-panelled sitting-room listening to
+the screeching and howling of the blast and to the rattle of the gravel
+and pebbles as they pattered against the window. Nature's grim orchestra
+was playing its world-old piece with a compass which ranged from
+the deep diapason of the thundering surge to the thin shriek of the
+scattered shingle and the keen piping of frightened sea birds.
+
+Once for an instant I opened the lattice window, but a gust of wind and
+rain came blustering through, bearing with it a great sheet of seaweed,
+which flapped down upon the table. It was all I could do to close it
+again with a thrust of my shoulder in the face of the blast.
+
+My sister and father had retired to their rooms, but my thoughts
+were too active for sleep, so I continued to sit and to smoke by the
+smouldering fire.
+
+What was going on in the Hall now, I wondered? What did Gabriel think of
+the storm, and how did it affect the old man who wandered about in the
+night? Did he welcome these dread forces of Nature as being of the same
+order of things as his own tumultuous thoughts?
+
+It was only two days now from the date which I had been assured was to
+mark a crisis in his fortunes. Would he regard this sudden tempest as
+being in any way connected with the mysterious fate which threatened
+him?
+
+Over all these things and many more I pondered as I sat by the glowing
+embers until they died gradually out, and the chill night air warned me
+that it was time to retire.
+
+I may have slept a couple of hours when I was awakened by someone
+tugging furiously at my shoulder. Sitting up in bed, I saw by the dim
+light that my father was standing half-clad by my bedside, and that it
+was his grasp which I felt on my night-shirt.
+
+"Get up, Jack, get up!" he was crying excitedly. "There's a great ship
+ashore in the bay, and the poor folk will all be drowned. Come down, my
+boy, and let us see what we can do."
+
+The good old man seemed to be nearly beside himself with excitement and
+impatience. I sprang from my bed, and was huddling on a few clothes,
+when a dull, booming sound made itself heard above the howling of the
+wind and the thunder of the breakers.
+
+"There it is again!" cried my father. "It is their signal gun, poor
+creatures! Jamieson and the fishermen are below. Put your oil-skin coat
+on and the Glengarry hat. Come, come, every second may mean a human
+life!"
+
+We hurried down together and made our way to the beach, accompanied by a
+dozen or so of the inhabitants of Branksome.
+
+The gale had increased rather than moderated, and the wind screamed all
+round us with an infernal clamour. So great was its force that we had
+to put our shoulders against it, and bore our way through it, while the
+sand and gravel tingled up against our faces.
+
+There was just light enough to make out the scudding clouds and the
+white gleam of the breakers, but beyond that all was absolute darkness.
+
+We stood ankle deep in the shingle and seaweed, shading our eyes with
+our hands and peering out into the inky obscurity.
+
+It seemed to me as I listened that I could hear human voices loud
+in intreaty and terror, but amid the wild turmoil of Nature it was
+difficult to distinguish one sound from another.
+
+Suddenly, however, a light glimmered in the heart of the tempest, and
+next instant the beach and sea and wide, tossing bay were brilliantly
+illuminated by the wild glare of a signal light.
+
+The ship lay on her beam-ends right in the centre of the terrible Hansel
+reef, hurled over to such an angle that I could see all the planking of
+her deck. I recognised her at once as being the same three-masted barque
+which I had observed in the Channel in the morning, and the Union
+Jack which was nailed upside down to the jagged slump of her mizzen
+proclaimed her nationality.
+
+Every spar and rope and writhing piece of cordage showed up hard and
+clear under the vivid light which spluttered and flickered from the
+highest portion of the forecastle. Beyond the doomed ship, out of the
+great darkness came the long, rolling lines of big waves, never ending,
+never tiring, with a petulant tuft of foam here and there upon their
+crests. Each as it reached the broad circle of unnatural light appeared
+to gather strength and volume and to hurry on more impetuously until
+with a roar and a jarring crash it sprang upon its victim.
+
+Clinging to the weather shrouds we could distinctly see ten or a dozen
+frightened seamen who, when the light revealed our presence, turned
+their white faces towards us and waved their hands imploringly. The poor
+wretches had evidently taken fresh hope from our presence, though it was
+clear that their own boats had either been washed away or so damaged as
+to render them useless.
+
+The sailors who clung to the rigging were not, however, the only
+unfortunates on board. On the breaking poop there stood three men who
+appeared to be both of a different race and nature from the cowering
+wretches who implored our assistance.
+
+Leaning upon the shattered taff-rail they seemed to be conversing
+together as quietly and unconcernedly as though they were unconscious of
+the deadly peril which surrounded them.
+
+As the signal light flickered over them, we could see from the shore
+that these immutable strangers wore red fezes, and that their faces were
+of a swarthy, large-featured type, which proclaimed an Eastern origin.
+
+There was little time, however, for us to take note of such details.
+The ship was breaking rapidly, and some effort must be made to save the
+poor, sodden group of humanity who implored our assistance.
+
+The nearest lifeboat was in the Bay of Luce, ten long miles away, but
+here was our own broad, roomy craft upon the shingle, and plenty of
+brave fisher lads to form a crew. Six of us sprang to the oars, the
+others pushed us off, and we fought our way through the swirling, raging
+waters, staggering and recoiling before the great, sweeping billows, but
+still steadily decreasing the distance between the barque and ourselves.
+
+It seemed, however, that our efforts were fated to be in vain.
+
+As we mounted upon a surge I saw a giant wave, topping all the others,
+and coming after them like a driver following a flock, sweep down upon
+the vessel, curling its great, green arch over the breaking deck.
+
+With a rending, riving sound the ship split in two where the terrible,
+serrated back of the Hansel reef was sawing into her keel. The
+after-part, with the broken mizzen and the three Orientals, sank
+backwards into deep water and vanished, while the fore-half oscillated
+helplessly about, retaining its precarious balance upon the rocks.
+
+A wail of fear went up from the wreck and was echoed from the beach,
+but by the blessing of Providence she kept afloat until we made our way
+under her bowsprit and rescued every man of the crew.
+
+We had not got half-way upon our return, however, when another great
+wave swept the shattered forecastle off the reef, and, extinguishing the
+signal light, hid the wild denouement from our view.
+
+Our friends upon the shore were loud in congratulation and praise, nor
+were they backward in welcoming and comforting the castaways. They were
+thirteen in all, as cold and cowed a set of mortals as ever slipped
+through Death's fingers, save, indeed, their captain, who was a hardy,
+robust man, and who made light of the affair.
+
+Some were taken off to this cottage and some to that, but the greater
+part came back to Branksome with us, where we gave them such dry clothes
+as we could lay our hands on, and served them with beef and beer by the
+kitchen fire. The captain, whose name was Meadows, compressed his bulky
+form into a suit of my own, and came down to the parlour, where he
+mixed himself some grog and gave my father and myself an account of the
+disaster.
+
+"If it hadn't been for you, sir, and your brave fellows," he said,
+smiling across at me, "we should be ten fathoms deep by this time. As to
+the _Belinda_, she was a leaky old tub and well insured, so neither the
+owners nor I are likely to break our hearts over her."
+
+"I am afraid," said my father sadly, "that we shall never see your three
+passengers again. I have left men upon the beach in case they should be
+washed up, but I fear it is hopeless. I saw them go down when the vessel
+split, and no man could have lived for a moment among that terrible
+surge."
+
+"Who were they?" I asked. "I could not have believed that it was
+possible for men to appear so unconcerned in the face of such imminent
+peril."
+
+"As to who they are or were," the captain answered, puffing thoughtfully
+at his pipe, "that is by no means easy to say. Our last port was
+Kurrachee, in the north of India, and there we took them aboard as
+passengers for Glasgow. Ram Singh was the name of the younger, and it is
+only with him that I have come in contact, but they all appeared to be
+quiet, inoffensive gentlemen. I never inquired their business, but I
+should judge that they were Parsee merchants from Hyderabad whose trade
+took them to Europe. I could never see why the crew should fear them,
+and the mate, too, he should have had more sense."
+
+"Fear them!" I ejaculated in surprise.
+
+"Yes, they had some preposterous idea that they were dangerous
+shipmates. I have no doubt if you were to go down into the kitchen now
+you would find that they are all agreed that our passengers were the
+cause of the whole disaster."
+
+As the captain was speaking the parlour door opened and the mate of
+the barque, a tall, red-bearded sailor, stepped in. He had obtained a
+complete rig-out from some kind-hearted fisherman, and looked in his
+comfortable jersey and well-greased seaboots a very favourable specimen
+of a shipwrecked mariner.
+
+With a few words of grateful acknowledgment of our hospitality, he drew
+a chair up to the fire and warmed his great, brown hands before the
+blaze.
+
+"What d'ye think now, Captain Meadows?" he asked presently, glancing up
+at his superior officer. "Didn't I warn you what would be the upshot of
+having those niggers on board the _Belinda_?"
+
+The captain leant back in his chair and laughed heartily.
+
+"Didn't I tell you?" he cried, appealing to us. "Didn't I tell you?"
+
+"It might have been no laughing matter for us," the other remarked
+petulantly. "I have lost a good sea-kit and nearly my life into the
+bargain."
+
+"Do I understand you to say," said I, "that you attribute your
+misfortunes to your ill-fated passengers?"
+
+The mate opened his eyes at the adjective.
+
+"Why ill-fated, sir?" he asked.
+
+"Because they are most certainly drowned," I answered.
+
+He sniffed incredulously and went on warming his hands.
+
+"Men of that kind are never drowned," he said, after a pause. "Their
+father, the devil, looks after them. Did you see them standing on the
+poop and rolling cigarettes at the time when the mizzen was carried away
+and the quarter-boats stove? That was enough for me. I'm not surprised
+at you landsmen not being able to take it in, but the captain here,
+who's been sailing since he was the height of the binnacle, ought to
+know by this time that a cat and a priest are the worst cargo you can
+carry. If a Christian priest is bad, I guess an idolatrous pagan one is
+fifty times worse. I stand by the old religion, and be d--d to it!"
+
+My father and I could not help laughing at the rough sailor's very
+unorthodox way of proclaiming his orthodoxy. The mate, however, was
+evidently in deadly earnest, and proceeded to state his case, marking
+off the different points upon the rough, red fingers of his left hand.
+
+"It was at Kurrachee, directly after they come that I warned ye," he
+said reproachfully to the captain. "There was three Buddhist Lascars in
+my watch, and what did they do when them chaps come aboard? Why, they
+down on their stomachs and rubbed their noses on the deck--that's what
+they did. They wouldn't ha' done as much for an admiral of the R'yal
+Navy. They know who's who--these niggers do; and I smelt mischief
+the moment I saw them on their faces. I asked them afterwards in your
+presence, Captain, why they had done it, and they answered that the
+passengers were holy men. You heard 'em yourself."
+
+"Well, there's no harm in that, Hawkins," said Captain Meadows.
+
+"I don't know that," the mate said doubtfully. "The holiest Christian
+is the one that's nearest God, but the holiest nigger is, in my opinion,
+the one that's nearest the devil. Then you saw yourself, Captain
+Meadows, how they went on during the voyage, reading books that was
+writ on wood instead o' paper, and sitting up right through the night to
+jabber together on the quarter-deck. What did they want to have a chart
+of their own for and to mark the course of the vessel every day?"
+
+"They didn't," said the captain.
+
+"Indeed they did, and if I did not tell you sooner it was because
+you were always ready to laugh at what I said about them. They had
+instruments o' their own--when they used them I can't say--but every day
+at noon they worked out the latitude and longitude, and marked out the
+vessel's position on a chart that was pinned on their cabin table. I saw
+them at it, and so did the steward from his pantry."
+
+"Well, I don't see what you prove from that," the captain remarked,
+"though I confess it is a strange thing."
+
+"I'll tell you another strange thing," said the mate impressively. "Do
+you know the name of this bay in which we are cast away?"
+
+"I have learnt from our kind friends here that we are upon the
+Wigtownshire coast," the captain answered, "but I have not heard the
+name of the bay."
+
+The mate leant forward with a grave face.
+
+"It is the Bay of Kirkmaiden," he said.
+
+If he expected to astonish Captain Meadows he certainly succeeded, for
+that gentleman was fairly bereft of speech for a minute or more.
+
+"This is really marvellous," he said, after a time, turning to us.
+"These passengers of ours cross-questioned us early in the voyage as
+to the existence of a bay of that name. Hawkins here and I denied all
+knowledge of one, for on the chart it is included in the Bay of
+Luce. That we should eventually be blown into it and destroyed is an
+extraordinary coincidence."
+
+"Too extraordinary to be a coincidence," growled the mate. "I saw
+them during the calm yesterday morning, pointing to the land over our
+starboard quarter. They knew well enough that that was the port they
+were making for."
+
+"What do you make of it all, then, Hawkins?" asked the captain, with a
+troubled face. "What is your own theory on the matter?"
+
+"Why, in my opinion," the mate answered, "them three swabs have no more
+difficulty in raising a gale o' wind than I should have in swallowing
+this here grog. They had reasons o' their own for coming to this
+God-forsaken--saving your presence, sirs--this God-forsaken bay, and
+they took a short cut to it by arranging to be blown ashore there.
+That's my idea o' the matter, though what three Buddhist priests could
+find to do in the Bay of Kirkmaiden is clean past my comprehension."
+
+My father raised his eyebrows to indicate the doubt which his
+hospitality forbade him from putting into words.
+
+"I think, gentlemen," he said, "that you are both sorely in need of rest
+after your perilous adventures. If you will follow me I shall lead you
+to your rooms."
+
+He conducted them with old-fashioned ceremony to the laird's best spare
+bedroom, and then, returning to me in the parlour, proposed that we
+should go down together to the beach and learn whether anything fresh
+had occurred.
+
+The first pale light of dawn was just appearing in the east when we made
+our way for the second time to the scene of the shipwreck. The gale had
+blown itself out, but the sea was still very high, and all inside the
+breakers was a seething, gleaming line of foam, as though the fierce old
+ocean were gnashing its white fangs at the victims who had escaped from
+its clutches.
+
+All along the beach fishermen and crofters were hard at work hauling up
+spars and barrels as fast as they were tossed ashore. None of them had
+seen any bodies, however, and they explained to us that only such things
+as could float had any chance of coming ashore, for the undercurrent was
+so strong that whatever was beneath the surface must infallibly be swept
+out to sea.
+
+As to the possibility of the unfortunate passengers having been able to
+reach the shore, these practical men would not hear of it for a moment,
+and showed us conclusively that if they had not been drowned they must
+have been dashed to pieces upon the rocks.
+
+"We did all that could be done," my father said sadly, as we returned
+home. "I am afraid that the poor mate has had his reason affected by
+the suddenness of the disaster. Did you hear what he said about Buddhist
+priests raising a gale?"
+
+"Yes, I heard him," said I. "It was very painful to listen to him," said
+my father. "I wonder if he would object to my putting a small mustard
+plaster under each of his ears. It would relieve any congestion of
+the brain. Or perhaps it would be best to wake him up and give him two
+antibilious pills. What do you think, Jack?"
+
+"I think," said I, with a yawn, "that you had best let him sleep, and go
+to sleep yourself. You can physic him in the morning if he needs it."
+
+So saying I stumbled off to my bedroom, and throwing myself upon the
+couch was soon in a dreamless slumber.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. OF THE THREE FOREIGN MEN UPON THE COAST
+
+It must have been eleven or twelve o'clock before I awoke, and it seemed
+to me in the flood of golden light which streamed into my chamber that
+the wild, tumultuous episodes of the night before must have formed part
+of some fantastic dream.
+
+It was hard to believe that the gentle breeze which whispered so softly
+among the ivy-leaves around my window was caused by the same element
+which had shaken the very house a few short hours before. It was as if
+Nature had repented of her momentary passion and was endeavouring to
+make amends to an injured world by its warmth and its sunshine. A chorus
+of birds in the garden below filled the whole air with their wonder and
+congratulations.
+
+Down in the hall I found a number of the shipwrecked sailors, looking
+all the better for their night's repose, who set up a buzz of pleasure
+and gratitude upon seeing me.
+
+Arrangements had been made to drive them to Wigtown, whence they were to
+proceed to Glasgow by the evening train, and my father had given orders
+that each should be served with a packet of sandwiches and hard-boiled
+eggs to sustain him on the way.
+
+Captain Meadows thanked us warmly in the name of his employers for the
+manner in which we had treated them, and he called for three cheers from
+his crew, which were very heartily given. He and the mate walked down
+with us after we had broken our fast to have a last look at the scene of
+the disaster.
+
+The great bosom of the bay was still heaving convulsively, and its waves
+were breaking into sobs against the rocks, but there was none of that
+wild turmoil which we had seen in the early morning. The long, emerald
+ridges, with their little, white crests of foam, rolled slowly and
+majestically in, to break with a regular rhythm--the panting of a tired
+monster.
+
+A cable length from the shore we could see the mainmast of the barque
+floating upon the waves, disappearing at times in the trough of the sea,
+and then shooting up towards Heaven like a giant javelin, shining
+and dripping as the rollers tossed it about. Other smaller pieces of
+wreckage dotted the waters, while innumerable spars and packages were
+littered over the sands. These were being drawn up and collected in
+a place of safety by gangs of peasants. I noticed that a couple of
+broad-winged gulls were hovering and skimming over the scene of the
+shipwreck, as though many strange things were visible to them beneath
+the waves. At times we could hear their raucous voices as they cried to
+one another of what they saw.
+
+"She was a leaky old craft," said the captain, looking sadly out to sea,
+"but there's always a feeling of sorrow when we see the last of a ship
+we have sailed in. Well, well, she would have been broken up in any
+case, and sold for firewood."
+
+"It looks a peaceful scene," I remarked. "Who would imagine that three
+men lost their lives last night in those very waters?"
+
+"Poor fellows," said the captain, with feeling. "Should they be cast
+up after our departure, I am sure, Mr. West, that you will have them
+decently interred."
+
+I was about to make some reply when the mate burst into a loud guffaw,
+slapping his thigh and choking with merriment.
+
+"If you want to bury them," he said, "you had best look sharp, or they
+may clear out of the country. You remember what I said last night? Just
+look at the top of that 'ere hillock, and tell me whether I was in the
+right or not?"
+
+There was a high sand dune some little distance along the coast, and
+upon the summit of this the figure was standing which had attracted the
+mate's attention. The captain threw up his hands in astonishment as his
+eyes rested upon it.
+
+"By the eternal," he shouted, "it's Ram Singh himself! Let us overhaul
+him!"
+
+Taking to his heels in his excitement he raced along the beach, followed
+by the mate and myself, as well as by one or two of the fishermen who
+had observed the presence of the stranger.
+
+The latter, perceiving our approach, came down from his post of
+observation and walked quietly in our direction, with his head sunk upon
+his breast, like one who is absorbed in thought.
+
+I could not help contrasting our hurried and tumultuous advance with the
+gravity and dignity of this lonely Oriental, nor was the matter mended
+when he raised a pair of steady, thoughtful dark eyes and inclined his
+head in a graceful, sweeping salutation. It seemed to me that we were
+like a pack of schoolboys in the presence of a master.
+
+The stranger's broad, unruffled brow, his clear, searching gaze,
+firm-set yet sensitive mouth, and clean-cut, resolute expression, all
+combined to form the most imposing and noble presence which I had ever
+known. I could not have imagined that such imperturbable calm and at
+the same time such a consciousness of latent strength could have been
+expressed by any human face.
+
+He was dressed in a brown velveteen coat, loose, dark trousers, with a
+shirt that was cut low in the collar, so as to show the muscular,
+brown neck, and he still wore the red fez which I had noticed the night
+before.
+
+I observed with a feeling of surprise, as we approached him, that none
+of these garments showed the slightest indication of the rough treatment
+and wetting which they must have received during their wearer's
+submersion and struggle to the shore.
+
+"So you are none the worse for your ducking," he said in a pleasant,
+musical voice, looking from the captain to the mate. "I hope that your
+poor sailors have found pleasant quarters."
+
+"We are all safe," the captain answered. "But we had given you up for
+lost--you and your two friends. Indeed, I was just making arrangements
+for your burial with Mr. West here."
+
+The stranger looked at me and smiled.
+
+"We won't give Mr. West that trouble for a little time yet," he
+remarked; "my friends and I came ashore all safe, and we have found
+shelter in a hut a mile or so along the coast. It is lonely down there,
+but we have everything which we can desire."
+
+"We start for Glasgow this afternoon," said the captain; "I shall be
+very glad if you will come with us. If you have not been in England
+before you may find it awkward travelling alone."
+
+"We are very much indebted to you for your thoughtfulness," Ram Singh
+answered; "but we will not take advantage of your kind offer. Since
+Nature has driven us here we intend to have a look about us before we
+leave."
+
+"As you like," the captain said, shrugging his shoulders. "I don't
+think you are likely to find very much to interest you in this hole of a
+place."
+
+"Very possibly not," Ram Singh answered with an amused smile. "You
+remember Milton's lines:
+
+ 'The mind is its own place, and in itself
+ Can make a hell of Heaven, a heaven of Hell.'
+
+I dare say we can spend a few days here comfortably enough. Indeed, I
+think you must be wrong in considering this to be a barbarous locality.
+I am much mistaken if this young gentleman's father is not Mr. James
+Hunter West, whose name is known and honoured by the pundits of India."
+
+"My father is, indeed, a well-known Sanscrit scholar," I answered in
+astonishment.
+
+"The presence of such a man," observed the stranger slowly, "changes a
+wilderness into a city. One great mind is surely a higher indication of
+civilisation than are incalculable leagues of bricks and mortar.
+
+"Your father is hardly so profound as Sir William Jones, or so universal
+as the Baron Von Hammer-Purgstall, but he combines many of the virtues
+of each. You may tell him, however, from me that he is mistaken in
+the analogy which he has traced between the Samoyede and Tamulic word
+roots."
+
+"If you have determined to honour our neighbourhood by a short stay,"
+said I, "you will offend my father very much if you do not put up with
+him. He represents the laird here, and it is the laird's privilege,
+according to our Scottish custom, to entertain all strangers of repute
+who visit this parish."
+
+My sense of hospitality prompted me to deliver this invitation, though
+I could feel the mate twitching at my sleeves as if to warn me that
+the offer was, for some reason, an objectionable one. His fears were,
+however, unnecessary, for the stranger signified by a shake of the head
+that it was impossible for him to accept it.
+
+"My friends and I are very much obliged to you," he said, "but we have
+our own reasons for remaining where we are. The hut which we occupy is
+deserted and partly ruined, but we Easterns have trained ourselves to
+do without most of those things which are looked upon as necessaries in
+Europe, believing firmly in that wise axiom that a man is rich, not in
+proportion to what he has, but in proportion to what he can dispense
+with. A good fisherman supplies us with bread and with herbs, we have
+clean, dry straw for our couches; what could man wish for more?"
+
+"But you must feel the cold at night, coming straight from the tropics,"
+remarked the captain. "Perhaps our bodies are cold sometimes. We
+have not noticed it. We have all three spent many years in the Upper
+Himalayas on the border of the region of eternal snow, so we are not
+very sensitive to inconveniences of the sort."
+
+"At least," said I, "you must allow me to send you over some fish and
+some meat from our larder."
+
+"We are not Christians," he answered, "but Buddhists of the higher
+school. We do not recognise that man has a moral right to slay an ox or
+a fish for the gross use of his body. He has not put life into them, and
+has assuredly no mandate from the Almighty to take life from them save
+under most pressing need. We could not, therefore, use your gift if you
+were to send it."
+
+"But, sir," I remonstrated, "if in this changeable and inhospitable
+climate you refuse all nourishing food your vitality will fail you--you
+will die."
+
+"We shall die then," he answered, with an amused smile. "And now,
+Captain Meadows, I must bid you adieu, thanking you for your kindness
+during the voyage, and you, too, good-bye--you will command a ship of
+your own before the year is out. I trust, Mr. West, that I may see you
+again before I leave this part of the country. Farewell!"
+
+He raised his red fez, inclined his noble head with the stately grace
+which characterised all his actions, and strode away in the direction
+from which he had come.
+
+"Let me congratulate you, Mr. Hawkins," said the captain to the mate as
+we walked homewards. "You are to command your own ship within the year."
+
+"No such luck!" the mate answered, with a pleased smile upon his
+mahogany face, "still, there's no saying how things may come out. What
+d'ye think of him, Mr. West?"
+
+"Why," said I, "I am very much interested in him. What a magnificent
+head and bearing he has for a young man. I suppose he cannot be more
+than thirty."
+
+"Forty," said the mate.
+
+"Sixty, if he is a day," remarked Captain Meadows. "Why, I have heard
+him talk quite familiarly of the first Afghan war. He was a man then,
+and that is close on forty years ago."
+
+"Wonderful!" I ejaculated. "His skin is as smooth and his eyes are as
+clear as mine are. He is the superior priest of the three, no doubt."
+
+"The inferior," said the captain confidently. "That is why he does all
+the talking for them. Their minds are too elevated to descend to mere
+worldly chatter."
+
+"They are the strangest pieces of flotsam and jetsam that were ever
+thrown upon this coast," I remarked. "My father will be mightily
+interested in them."
+
+"Indeed, I think the less you have to do with them the better for you,"
+said the mate. "If I do command my own ship I'll promise you that I
+never carry live stock of that sort on board of her. But here we are all
+aboard and the anchor tripped, so we must bid you good-bye."
+
+The wagonette had just finished loading up when we arrived, and the
+chief places, on either side of the driver, had been reserved for my two
+companions, who speedily sprang into them. With a chorus of cheers the
+good fellows whirled away down the road, while my father, Esther, and I
+stood upon the lawn and waved our hands to them until they disappeared
+behind the Cloomber woods, _en route_ for the Wigtown railway station.
+Barque and crew had both vanished now from our little world, the only
+relic of either being the heaps of _debris_ upon the beach, which were
+to lie there until the arrival of an agent from Lloyd's.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. IN WHICH I SEE THAT WHICH HAS BEEN SEEN BY FEW
+
+At dinner that evening I mentioned to my father the episode of the three
+Buddhist priests, and found, as I had expected, that he was very much
+interested by my account of them.
+
+When, however, he heard of the high manner in which Ram Singh had spoken
+of him, and the distinguished position which he had assigned him among
+philologists, he became so excited that it was all we could do to
+prevent him from setting off then and there to make his acquaintance.
+
+Esther and I were relieved and glad when we at last succeeded in
+abstracting his boots and manoeuvring him to his bedroom, for the
+exciting events of the last twenty-four hours had been too much for his
+weak frame and delicate nerves.
+
+I was sitting at the open porch in the gloaming, turning over in my
+mind the unexpected events which had occurred so rapidly--the gale, the
+wreck, the rescue, and the strange character of the castaways--when my
+sister came quietly over to me and put her hand in mine.
+
+"Don't you think, Jack," she said, in her low, sweet voice, "that we
+are forgetting our friends over at Cloomber? Hasn't all this excitement
+driven their fears and their danger out of our heads?"
+
+"Out of our heads, but never out of our hearts," said I, laughing.
+"However, you are right, little one, for our attention has certainly
+been distracted from them. I shall walk up in the morning and see if I
+can see anything of them. By the way, to-morrow is the fateful 5th of
+October--one more day, and all will be well with us."
+
+"Or ill," said my sister gloomily.
+
+"Why, what a little croaker you are, to be sure!" I cried. "What in the
+world is coming over you?"
+
+"I feel nervous and low-spirited," she answered, drawing closer to my
+side and shivering. "I feel as if some great peril were hanging over the
+heads of those we love. Why should these strange men wish to stay upon
+the coast?"
+
+"What, the Buddhists?" I said lightly. "Oh, these fellows have continual
+feast-days and religious rites of all sorts. They have some very good
+reason for staying, you may be sure."
+
+"Don't you think," said Esther, in an awe-struck whisper, "that it is
+very strange that these priests should arrive here all the way from
+India just at the present moment? Have you not gathered from all you
+have heard that the general's fears are in some way connected with India
+and the Indians?"
+
+The remark made me thoughtful.
+
+"Why, now that you mention it," I answered, "I have some vague
+impression that the mystery is connected with some incident which
+occurred in that country. I am sure, however, that your fears would
+vanish if you saw Ram Singh. He is the very personification of wisdom
+and benevolence. He was shocked at the idea of our killing a sheep, or
+even a fish for his benefit--said he would rather die than have a hand
+in taking the life of an animal."
+
+"It is very foolish of me to be so nervous," said my sister bravely.
+"But you must promise me one thing, Jack. You will go up to Cloomber in
+the morning, and if you can see any of them you must tell them of these
+strange neighbours of ours. They are better able to judge than we are
+whether their presence has any significance or not."
+
+"All right, little one," I answered, as we went indoors. "You have been
+over-excited by all these wild doings, and you need a sound night's rest
+to compose you. I'll do what you suggest, however, and our friends shall
+judge for themselves whether these poor fellows should be sent about
+their business or not."
+
+I made the promise to allay my sister's apprehensions, but in the bright
+sunlight of morning it appeared less than absurd to imagine that our
+poor vegetarian castaways could have any sinister intentions, or that
+their advent could have any effect upon the tenant of Cloomber.
+
+I was anxious, myself, however, to see whether I could see anything of
+the Heatherstones, so after breakfast I walked up to the Hall. In their
+seclusion it was impossible for them to have learnt anything of the
+recent events. I felt, therefore, that even if I should meet the general
+he could hardly regard me as an intruder while I had so much news to
+communicate.
+
+The place had the same dreary and melancholy appearance which always
+characterised it. Looking through between the thick iron bars of the
+main gateway there was nothing to be seen of any of the occupants. One
+of the great Scotch firs had been blown down in the gale, and its long,
+ruddy trunk lay right across the grass-grown avenue; but no attempt had
+been made to remove it.
+
+Everything about the property had the same air of desolation and
+neglect, with the solitary exception of the massive and impenetrable
+fencing, which presented as unbroken and formidable an obstacle as ever
+to the would-be trespasser.
+
+I walked round this barrier as far as our old trysting-place without
+finding any flaw through which I could get a glimpse of the house, for
+the fence had been repaired with each rail overlapping the last, so
+as to secure absolute privacy for those inside, and to block those
+peep-holes which I had formerly used.
+
+At the old spot, however, where I had had the memorable interview with
+the general on the occasion when he surprised me with his daughter, I
+found that the two loose rails had been refixed in such a manner that
+there was a gap of two inches or more between them.
+
+Through this I had a view of the house and of part of the lawn in front
+of it, and, though I could see no signs of life outside or at any of the
+windows, I settled down with the intention of sticking to my post until
+I had a chance of speaking to one or other of the inmates. Indeed, the
+cold, dead aspect of the house had struck such a chill into my heart
+that I determined to scale the fence at whatever risk of incurring
+the general's displeasure rather than return without news of the
+Heatherstones.
+
+Happily there was no need of this extreme expedient, for I had not been
+there half-an-hour before I heard the harsh sound of an opening lock,
+and the general himself emerged from the main door.
+
+To my surprise he was dressed in a military uniform, and that not the
+uniform in ordinary use in the British Army. The red coat was strangely
+cut and stained with the weather. The trousers had originally been
+white, but had now faded to a dirty yellow. With a red sash across his
+chest and a straight sword hanging from his side, he stood the living
+example of a bygone type--the John Company's officer of forty years ago.
+
+He was followed by the ex-tramp, Corporal Rufus Smith, now well-clad and
+prosperous, who limped along beside his master, the two pacing up and
+down the lawn absorbed in conversation. I observed that from time to
+time one or other of them would pause and glance furtively all about
+them, as though guarding keenly against a surprise. I should have
+preferred communicating with the general alone, but since there was no
+dissociating him from his companion, I beat loudly on the fencing with
+my stick to attract their attention. They both faced round in a moment,
+and I could see from their gestures that they were disturbed and
+alarmed.
+
+I then elevated my stick above the barrier to show them where the sound
+proceeded from. At this the general began to walk in my direction with
+the air of a man who is bracing himself up for an effort, but the other
+caught him by the wrist and endeavoured to dissuade him.
+
+It was only when I shouted out my name and assured them that I was alone
+that I could prevail upon them to approach. Once assured of my identity
+the general ran eagerly towards me and greeted me with the utmost
+cordiality.
+
+"This is truly kind of you, West," he said. "It is only at such times
+as these that one can judge who is a friend and who not. It would not be
+fair to you to ask you to come inside or to stay any time, but I am none
+the less very glad to see you."
+
+"I have been anxious about you all," I said, "for it is some little
+time since I have seen or heard from any of you. How have you all been
+keeping?"
+
+"Why, as well as could be expected. But we will be better tomorrow--we
+will be different men to-morrow, eh, Corporal?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said the corporal, raising his hand to his forehead in a
+military salute. "We'll be right as the bank to-morrow."
+
+"The corporal and I are a little disturbed in our minds just now," the
+general explained, "but I have no doubt that all will come right. After
+all, there is nothing higher than Providence, and we are all in His
+hands. And how have you been, eh?"
+
+"We have been very busy for one thing," said I. "I suppose you have
+heard nothing of the great shipwreck?"
+
+"Not a word," the general answered listlessly.
+
+"I thought the noise of the wind would prevent you hearing the signal
+guns. She came ashore in the bay the night before last--a great barque
+from India."
+
+"From India!" ejaculated the general.
+
+"Yes. Her crew were saved, fortunately, and have all been sent on to
+Glasgow."
+
+"All sent on!" cried the general, with a face as bloodless as a corpse.
+
+"All except three rather strange characters who claim to be Buddhist
+priests. They have decided to remain for a few days upon the coast."
+
+The words were hardly out of my mouth when the general dropped upon his
+knees with his long, thin arms extended to Heaven.
+
+"Thy will be done!" he cried in a cracking voice. "Thy blessed will be
+done!"
+
+I could see through the crack that Corporal Rufus Smith's face had
+turned to a sickly yellow shade, and that he was wiping the perspiration
+from his brow.
+
+"It's like my luck!" he said. "After all these years, to come when I
+have got a snug billet."
+
+"Never mind, my lad," the general said, rising, and squaring his
+shoulders like a man who braces himself up for an effort. "Be it what
+it may we'll face it as British soldiers should. D'ye remember at
+Chillianwallah, when you had to run from your guns to our square, and
+the Sikh horse came thundering down on our bayonets? We didn't flinch
+then, and we won't flinch now. It seems to me that I feel better than I
+have done for years. It was the uncertainty that was killing me."
+
+"And the infernal jingle-jangle," said the corporal. "Well, we all go
+together--that's some consolation."
+
+"Good-bye, West," said the general. "Be a good husband to Gabriel,
+and give my poor wife a home. I don't think she will trouble you long.
+Good-bye! God bless you!"
+
+"Look here, General," I said, peremptorily breaking off a piece of wood
+to make communication more easy, "this sort of thing has been going on
+too long. What are these hints and allusions and innuendoes? It is time
+we had a little plain speaking. What is it you fear? Out with it! Are
+you in dread of these Hindoos? If you are, I am able, on my father's
+authority, to have them arrested as rogues and vagabonds."
+
+"No, no, that would never do," he answered, shaking his head. "You will
+learn about the wretched business soon enough. Mordaunt knows where to
+lay his hand upon the papers bearing on the matter. You can consult him
+about it to-morrow."
+
+"But surely," I cried, "if the peril is so imminent something may be
+done to avert it. If you would but tell me what you fear I should know
+how to act."
+
+"My dear friend," he said, "there is nothing to be done, so calm
+yourself, and let things take their course. It has been folly on my part
+to shelter myself behind mere barriers of wood and stone. The fact
+is, that inaction was terrible to me, and I felt that to do anything,
+however futile, in the nature of a precaution, was better than passive
+resignation. My humble friend here and I have placed ourselves in a
+position in which, I trust, no poor fellow will ever find himself
+again. We can only recommend ourselves to the unfailing goodness of the
+Almighty, and trust that what we have endured in this world may lessen
+our atonement in the world to come. I must leave you now, for I have
+many papers to destroy and much to arrange. Good-bye!"
+
+He pushed his hand through the hole which I had made, and grasped mine
+in a solemn farewell, after which he walked back to the Hall with a firm
+and decided step, still followed by the crippled and sinister corporal.
+
+I walked back to Branksome much disturbed by this interview, and
+extremely puzzled as to what course I should pursue.
+
+It was evident now that my sister's suspicions were correct, and that
+there was some very intimate connection between the presence of the
+three Orientals and the mysterious peril which hung over the towers of
+Cloomber.
+
+It was difficult for me to associate the noble-faced Ram Singh's gentle,
+refined manner and words of wisdom with any deed of violence, yet now
+that I thought of it I could see that a terrible capacity for wrath lay
+behind his shaggy brows and dark, piercing eyes.
+
+I felt that of all men whom I had ever met he was the one whose
+displeasure I should least care to face. But how could two men so
+widely dissociated as the foul-mouthed old corporal of artillery and
+the distinguished Anglo-Indian general have each earned the ill-will of
+these strange castaways? And if the danger were a positive physical one,
+why should he not consent to my proposal to have the three men placed
+under custody--though I confess it would have gone much against my grain
+to act in so inhospitable a manner upon such vague and shadowy grounds.
+
+These questions were absolutely unanswerable, and yet the solemn words
+and the terrible gravity which I had seen in the faces of both the
+old soldiers forbade me from thinking that their fears were entirely
+unfounded.
+
+It was all a puzzle--an absolutely insoluble puzzle.
+
+One thing at least was clear to me--and that was that in the present
+state of my knowledge, and after the general's distinct prohibition,
+it was impossible for me to interfere in any way. I could only wait and
+pray that, whatever the danger might be, it might pass over, or at least
+that my dear Gabriel and her brother might be protected against it.
+
+I was walking down the lane lost in thought, and had got as far as the
+wicket gate which opens upon the Branksome lawn, when I was surprised to
+hear my father's voice raised in most animated and excited converse.
+
+The old man had been of late so abstracted from the daily affairs of the
+world, and so absorbed in his own special studies, that it was difficult
+to engage his attention upon any ordinary, mundane topic. Curious to
+know what it was that had drawn him so far out of himself, I opened
+the gate softly, and walking quietly round the laurel bushes, found him
+sitting, to my astonishment, with none other than the very man who was
+occupying my thoughts, Ram Singh, the Buddhist.
+
+The two were sitting upon a garden bench, and the Oriental appeared to
+be laying down some weighty proposition, checking every point upon his
+long, quivering, brown fingers, while my father, with his hands thrown
+abroad and his face awry, was loud in protestation and in argument.
+
+So absorbed were they in their controversy, that I stood within a
+hand-touch of them for a minute or more before they became conscious of
+my presence.
+
+On observing me the priest sprang to his feet and greeted me with the
+same lofty courtesy and dignified grace which had so impressed me the
+day before.
+
+"I promised myself yesterday," he said, "the pleasure of calling upon
+your father. You see I have kept my word. I have even been daring enough
+to question his views upon some points in connection with the Sanscrit
+and Hindoo tongues, with the result that we have been arguing for
+an hour or more without either of us convincing the other. Without
+pretending to as deep a theoretical knowledge as that which has made the
+name of James Hunter West a household word among Oriental scholars,
+I happen to have given considerable attention to this one point, and
+indeed I am in a position to say that I know his views to be unsound.
+I assure you, sir, that up to the year 700, or even later, Sanscrit was
+the ordinary language of the great bulk of the inhabitants of India."
+
+"And I assure you, sir," said my father warmly, "that it was dead and
+forgotten at that date, save by the learned, who used it as a vehicle
+for scientific and religious works--just as Latin was used in the Middle
+Ages long after it had ceased to be spoken by any European nation."
+
+"If you consult the puranas you will find," said Ram Singh, "that this
+theory, though commonly received, is entirely untenable."
+
+"And if you will consult the Ramayana, and more particularly the
+canonical books on Buddhist discipline," cried my father, "you will find
+that the theory is unassailable."
+
+"But look at the Kullavagga," said our visitor earnestly.
+
+"And look at King Asoka," shouted my father triumphantly. "When, in the
+year 300 before the Christian era--before, mind you--he ordered the laws
+of Buddha to be engraved upon the rocks, what language did he employ,
+eh? Was it Sanscrit?--no! And why was it not Sanscrit? Because the lower
+orders of his subjects would not have been able to understand a word
+of it. Ha, ha! That was the reason. How are you going to get round King
+Asoka's edicts, eh?"
+
+"He carved them in the various dialects," Ram Singh answered. "But
+energy is too precious a thing to be wasted in mere wind in this style.
+The sun has passed its meridian, and I must return to my companions."
+
+"I am sorry that you have not brought them to see us," said my father
+courteously. He was, I could see, uneasy lest in the eagerness of debate
+he had overstepped the bounds of hospitality.
+
+"They do not mix with the world," Ram Singh answered, rising to
+his feet. "They are of a higher grade than I, and more sensitive to
+contaminating influences. They are immersed in a six months' meditation
+upon the mystery of the third incarnation, which has lasted with few
+intermissions from the time that we left the Himalayas. I shall not see
+you again, Mr. Hunter West, and I therefore bid you farewell. Your old
+age will be a happy one, as it deserves to be, and your Eastern studies
+will have a lasting effect upon the knowledge and literature of your own
+country. Farewell!"
+
+"And am I also to see no more of you?" I asked.
+
+"Unless you will walk with me along the sea-shore," he answered. "But
+you have already been out this morning, and may be tired. I ask too much
+of you."
+
+"Nay, I should be delighted to come," I responded from my heart, and we
+set off together, accompanied for some little distance by my father, who
+would gladly, I could see, have reopened the Sanscrit controversy, had
+not his stock of breath been too limited to allow of his talking and
+walking at the same time.
+
+"He is a learned man," Ram Singh remarked, after we had left him behind,
+"but, like many another, he is intolerant towards opinions which differ
+from his own. He will know better some day."
+
+I made no answer to this observation, and we trudged along for a time in
+silence, keeping well down to the water's edge, where the sands afforded
+a good foothold.
+
+The sand dunes which lined the coast formed a continuous ridge upon our
+left, cutting us off entirely from all human observation, while on the
+right the broad Channel stretched away with hardly a sail to break its
+silvery uniformity. The Buddhist priest and I were absolutely alone with
+Nature.
+
+I could not help reflecting that if he were really the dangerous man
+that the mate affected to consider him, or that might be inferred from
+the words of General Heatherstone, I had placed myself completely in his
+power.
+
+Yet such was the majestic benignity of the man's aspect, and the
+unruffled serenity of his deep, dark eyes, that I could afford in his
+presence to let fear and suspicion blow past me as lightly as the breeze
+which whistled round us. His face might be stern, and even terrible, but
+I felt that he could never be unjust.
+
+As I glanced from time to time at his noble profile and the sweep of his
+jet-black beard, his rough-spun tweed travelling suit struck me with
+an almost painful sense of incongruity, and I re-clothed him in my
+imagination with the grand, sweeping Oriental costume which is the
+fitting and proper frame for such a picture--the only garb which does
+not detract from the dignity and grace of the wearer.
+
+The place to which he led me was a small fisher cottage which had been
+deserted some years before by its tenant, but still stood gaunt and
+bare, with the thatch partly blown away and the windows and doors in
+sad disrepair. This dwelling, which the poorest Scotch beggar would have
+shrunk from, was the one which these singular men had preferred to the
+proffered hospitality of the laird's house. A small garden, now a mass
+of tangled brambles, stood round it, and through this my acquaintance
+picked his way to the ruined door. He glanced into the house and then
+waved his hand for me to follow him.
+
+"You have now an opportunity," he said, in a subdued, reverential voice,
+"of seeing a spectacle which few Europeans have had the privilege of
+beholding. Inside that cottage you will find two Yogis--men who are only
+one remove from the highest plane of adeptship. They are both wrapped
+in an ecstatic trance, otherwise I should not venture to obtrude your
+presence upon them. Their astral bodies have departed from them, to be
+present at the feast of lamps in the holy Lamasery of Rudok in Tibet.
+Tread lightly lest by stimulating their corporeal functions you recall
+them before their devotions are completed."
+
+Walking slowly and on tiptoe, I picked my way through the weed-grown
+garden, and peered through the open doorway.
+
+There was no furniture in the dreary interior, nor anything to cover the
+uneven floor save a litter of fresh straw in a corner.
+
+Among this straw two men were crouching, the one small and wizened, the
+other large-boned and gaunt, with their legs crossed in Oriental fashion
+and their heads sunk upon their breasts. Neither of them looked up, or
+took the smallest notice of our presence.
+
+They were so still and silent that they might have been two bronze
+statues but for the slow and measured rhythm of their breathing. Their
+faces, however, had a peculiar, ashen-grey colour, very different from
+the healthy brown of my companion's, and I observed, on stooping my
+head, that only the whites of their eyes were visible, the balls being
+turned upwards beneath the lids.
+
+In front of them upon a small mat lay an earthenware pitcher of water
+and half-a-loaf of bread, together with a sheet of paper inscribed with
+certain cabalistic characters. Ram Singh glanced at these, and then,
+motioning to me to withdraw, followed me out into the garden.
+
+"I am not to disturb them until ten o'clock," he said. "You have now
+seen in operation one of the grandest results of our occult philosophy,
+the dissociation of spirit from body. Not only are the spirits of these
+holy men standing at the present moment by the banks of the Ganges, but
+those spirits are clothed in a material covering so identical with their
+real bodies that none of the faithful will ever doubt that Lal Hoomi and
+Mowdar Khan are actually among them. This is accomplished by our power
+of resolving an object into its chemical atoms, of conveying these
+atoms with a speed which exceeds that of lightning to any given spot,
+and of there re-precipitating them and compelling them to retake their
+original form. Of old, in the days of our ignorance, it was necessary to
+convey the whole body in this way, but we have since found that it was
+as easy and more convenient to transmit material enough merely to build
+up an outside shell or semblance. This we have termed the astral body."
+
+"But if you can transmit your spirits so readily," I observed, "why
+should they be accompanied by any body at all?"
+
+"In communicating with brother initiates we are able to employ our
+spirits only, but when we wish to come in contact with ordinary mankind
+it is essential that we should appear in some form which they can see
+and comprehend."
+
+"You have interested me deeply in all that you have told me," I said,
+grasping the hand which Ram Singh had held out to me as a sign that
+our interview was at an end. "I shall often think of our short
+acquaintance."
+
+"You will derive much benefit from it," he said slowly, still holding my
+hand and looking gravely and sadly into my eyes. "You must remember that
+what will happen in the future is not necessarily bad because it does
+not fall in with your preconceived ideas of right. Be not hasty in your
+judgments. There are certain great rules which must be carried out, at
+whatever cost to individuals. Their operation may appear to you to be
+harsh and cruel, but that is as nothing compared with the dangerous
+precedent which would be established by not enforcing them. The ox and
+the sheep are safe from us, but the man with the blood of the highest
+upon his hands should not and shall not live."
+
+He threw up his arms at the last words with a fierce, threatening
+gesture, and, turning away from me, strode back to the ruined hut.
+
+I stood gazing after him until he disappeared through the doorway, and
+then started off for home, revolving in my mind all that I had heard,
+and more particularly this last outburst of the occult philosopher.
+
+Far on the right I could see the tall, white tower of Cloomber standing
+out clear-cut and sharp against a dark cloud-bank which rose behind it.
+I thought how any traveller who chanced to pass that way would envy in
+his heart the tenant of that magnificent building, and how little
+they would guess the strange terrors, the nameless dangers, which were
+gathering about his head. The black cloud-wrack was but the image, I
+reflected, of the darker, more sombre storm which was about to burst.
+
+"Whatever it all means, and however it happens," I ejaculated, "God
+grant that the innocent be not confounded with the guilty."
+
+My father, when I reached home, was still in a ferment over his learned
+disputation with the stranger.
+
+"I trust, Jack," he said, "that I did not handle him too roughly. I
+should remember that I am _in loco magistri_, and be less prone to argue
+with my guests. Yet, when he took up this most untenable position, I
+could not refrain from attacking him and hurling him out of it, which
+indeed I did, though you, who are ignorant of the niceties of the
+question, may have failed to perceive it. You observed, however, that my
+reference to King Asoka's edicts was so conclusive that he at once rose
+and took his leave."
+
+"You held your own bravely," I answered, "but what is your impression of
+the man now that you have seen him?"
+
+"Why," said my father, "he is one of those holy men who, under the
+various names of Sannasis, Yogis, Sevras, Qualanders, Hakims, and Cufis
+have devoted their lives to the study of the mysteries of the Buddhist
+faith. He is, I take it, a theosophist, or worshipper of the God of
+knowledge, the highest grade of which is the adept. This man and his
+companions have not attained this high position or they could not have
+crossed the sea without contamination. It is probable that they are all
+advanced chelas who hope in time to attain to the supreme honour of
+adeptship."
+
+"But, father," interrupted my sister, "this does not explain why men of
+such sanctity and attainments should choose to take up their quarters on
+the shores of a desolate Scotch bay."
+
+"Ah, there you get beyond me," my father answered. "I may suggest,
+however, that it is nobody's business but their own, so long as they
+keep the peace and are amenable to the law of the land."
+
+"Have you ever heard," I asked, "that these higher priests of whom you
+speak have powers which are unknown to us?"
+
+"Why, Eastern literature is full of it. The Bible is an Eastern book,
+and is it not full of the record of such powers from cover to cover?
+It is unquestionable that they have in the past known many of Nature's
+secrets which are lost to us. I cannot say, however, from my own
+knowledge that the modern theosophists really possess the powers that
+they claim."
+
+"Are they a vindictive class of people?" I asked. "Is there any offence
+among them which can only be expiated by death?"
+
+"Not that I know of," my father answered, raising his white eyebrows
+in surprise. "You appear to be in an inquisitive humour this
+afternoon--what is the object of all these questions? Have our Eastern
+neighbours aroused your curiosity or suspicion in any way?"
+
+I parried the question as best I might, for I was unwilling to let the
+old man know what was in my mind. No good purpose could come from his
+enlightenment; his age and his health demanded rest rather than anxiety;
+and indeed, with the best will in the world I should have found it
+difficult to explain to another what was so very obscure to myself. For
+every reason I felt that it was best that he should be kept in the dark.
+
+Never in all my experience had I known a day pass so slowly as did that
+eventful 5th of October. In every possible manner I endeavoured to while
+away the tedious hours, and yet it seemed as if darkness would never
+arrive.
+
+I tried to read, I tried to write, I paced about the lawn, I walked to
+the end of the lane, I put new flies upon my fishing-hooks, I began to
+index my father's library--in a dozen ways I endeavoured to relieve the
+suspense which was becoming intolerable. My sister, I could see, was
+suffering from the same feverish restlessness.
+
+Again and again our good father remonstrated with us in his mild way for
+our erratic behaviour and the continual interruption of his work which
+arose from it.
+
+At last, however, the tea was brought, and the tea was taken, the
+curtains were drawn, the lamps lit, and after another interminable
+interval the prayers were read and the servants dismissed to their
+rooms. My father compounded and swallowed his nightly jorum of toddy,
+and then shuffled off to his room, leaving the two of us in the parlour
+with our nerves in a tingle and our minds full of the most vague and yet
+terrible apprehensions.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. OF THE VISITOR WHO RAN DOWN THE ROAD IN THE NIGHT-TIME
+
+
+It was a quarter past ten o'clock by the parlour timepiece when my
+father went off to his room, and left Esther and myself together. We
+heard his slow steps dying away up the creaking staircase, until the
+distant slamming of a door announced that he had reached his sanctum.
+
+The simple oil lamp upon the table threw a weird, uncertain light over
+the old room, flickering upon the carved oak panelling, and casting
+strange, fantastic shadows from the high-elbowed, straight-backed
+furniture. My sister's white, anxious face stood out in the obscurity
+with a startling exactness of profile like one of Rembrandt's portraits.
+
+We sat opposite to each other on either side of the table with no sound
+breaking the silence save the measured ticking of the clock and the
+intermittent chirping of a cricket beneath the grate.
+
+There was something awe-inspiring in the absolute stillness. The
+whistling of a belated peasant upon the high road was a relief to us,
+and we strained our ears to catch the last of his notes as he plodded
+steadily homewards.
+
+At first we had made some pretence--she of knitting and I of
+reading--but we soon abandoned the useless deception, and sat uneasily
+waiting, starting and glancing at each other with questioning eyes
+whenever the faggot crackled in the fire or a rat scampered behind the
+wainscot. There was a heavy electrical feeling in the air, which weighed
+us down with a foreboding of disaster.
+
+I rose and flung the hall door open to admit the fresh breeze of the
+night. Ragged clouds swept across the sky, and the moon peeped out at
+times between their hurrying fringes, bathing the whole countryside in
+its cold, white radiance. From where I stood in the doorway I could see
+the edge of the Cloomber wood, though the house itself was only
+visible from the rising ground some little distance off. At my sister's
+suggestion we walked together, she with her shawl over her head, as far
+as the summit of this elevation, and looked out in the direction of the
+Hall.
+
+There was no illumination of the windows tonight. From roof to basement
+not a light twinkled in any part of the great building. Its huge mass
+loomed up dark and sullen amid the trees which surrounded it, looking
+more like some giant sarcophagus than a human habitation.
+
+To our overwrought nerves there was something of terror in its mere bulk
+and its silence. We stood for some little time peering at it through the
+darkness, and then we made our way back to the parlour again, where
+we sat waiting--waiting, we knew not for what, and yet with absolute
+conviction that some terrible experience was in store for us.
+
+It was twelve o'clock or thereabout when my sister suddenly sprang to
+her feet and held up her fingers to bespeak attention.
+
+"Do you hear nothing?" she asked.
+
+I strained my ears, but without success.
+
+"Come to the door," she cried, with a trembling voice. "Now can you hear
+anything?"
+
+In the deep silence of the night I distinctly heard a dull, murmuring,
+clattering sound, continuous apparently, but very faint and low.
+
+"What is it?" I asked, in a subdued voice.
+
+"It's the sound of a man running towards us," she answered, and then,
+suddenly dropping the last semblance of self-command, she fell upon
+her knees beside the table and began praying aloud with that frenzied
+earnestness which intense, overpowering fear can produce, breaking off
+now and again into half-hysterical whimperings.
+
+I could distinguish the sound clearly enough now to know that her quick,
+feminine perception had not deceived her, and that it was indeed caused
+by a running man.
+
+On he came, and on down the high road, his footfalls ringing out clearer
+and sharper every moment. An urgent messenger he must be, for he neither
+paused nor slackened his pace.
+
+The quick, crisp rattle was changed suddenly to a dull, muffled murmur.
+He had reached the point where sand had been recently laid down for
+a hundred yards or so. In a few moments, however, he was back on hard
+ground again and his flying feet came nearer and ever nearer.
+
+He must, I reflected, be abreast of the head of the lane now. Would he
+hold on? Or would he turn down to Branksome?
+
+The thought had hardly crossed my mind when I heard by the difference of
+the sound that the runner had turned the corner, and that his goal was
+beyond all question the laird's house.
+
+Rushing down to the gate of the lawn, I reached it just as our visitor
+dashed it open and fell into my arms. I could see in the moonlight that
+it was none other than Mordaunt Heatherstone.
+
+"What has happened?" I cried. "What is amiss, Mordaunt?"
+
+"My father!" he gasped--"my father!"
+
+His hat was gone, his eyes dilated with terror, and his face as
+bloodless as that of a corpse. I could feel that the hands which clasped
+my arms were quivering and shaking with emotion.
+
+"You are exhausted," I said, leading him into the parlour. "Give
+yourself a moment's rest before you speak to us. Be calm, man, you are
+with your best friends."
+
+I laid him on the old horsehair sofa, while Esther, whose fears had all
+flown to the winds now that something practical was to be done, dashed
+some brandy into a tumbler and brought it to him. The stimulant had a
+marvellous effect upon him, for the colour began to come back into his
+pale cheeks and the light of recognition in his eyes.
+
+He sat up and took Esther's hand in both of his, like a man who is
+waking out of some bad dream and wishes to assure himself that he is
+really in safety.
+
+"Your father?" I asked. "What of him?"
+
+"He is gone."
+
+"Gone!"
+
+"Yes; he is gone; and so is Corporal Rufus Smith. We shall never set
+eyes upon them again."
+
+"But where have they gone?" I cried. "This is unworthy of you, Mordaunt.
+What right have we to sit here, allowing our private feelings to
+overcome us, while there is a possibility of succouring your father? Up,
+man! Let us follow him. Tell me only what direction he took."
+
+"It's no use," young Heatherstone answered, burying his face in
+his hands. "Don't reproach me, West, for you don't know all the
+circumstances. What can we do to reverse the tremendous and unknown laws
+which are acting against us? The blow has long been hanging over us, and
+now it has fallen. God help us!"
+
+"In Heaven's name tell me what has happened?" said I excitedly. "We must
+not yield to despair."
+
+"We can do nothing until daybreak," he answered. "We shall then
+endeavour to obtain some trace of them. It is hopeless at present."
+
+"And how about Gabriel and Mrs. Heatherstone?" I asked. "Can we
+not bring them down from the Hall at once? Your poor sister must be
+distracted with terror."
+
+"She knows nothing of it," Mordaunt answered. "She sleeps at the other
+side of the house, and has not heard or seen anything. As to my poor
+mother, she has expected some such event for so long a time that it has
+not come upon her as a surprise. She is, of course, overwhelmed with
+grief, but would, I think, prefer to be left to herself for the
+present. Her firmness and composure should be a lesson to me, but I am
+constitutionally excitable, and this catastrophe coming after our long
+period of suspense deprived me of my very reason for a time."
+
+"If we can do nothing until the morning," I said, "you have time to tell
+us all that has occurred."
+
+"I will do so," he answered, rising and holding his shaking hands to the
+fire. "You know already that we have had reason for some time--for many
+years in fact--to fear that a terrible retribution was hanging over my
+father's head for a certain action of his early life. In this action he
+was associated with the man known as Corporal Rufus Smith, so that the
+fact of the latter finding his way to my father was a warning to us that
+the time had come, and that this 5th of October--the anniversary of the
+misdeed--would be the day of its atonement. I told you of our fears
+in my letter, and, if I am not mistaken, my father also had some
+conversation with you, John, upon the subject. When I saw yesterday
+morning that he had hunted out the old uniform which he had always
+retained since he wore it in the Afghan war, I was sure that the end was
+at hand, and that our forebodings would be realised.
+
+"He appeared to be more composed in the afternoon than I have seen him
+for years, and spoke freely of his life in India and of the incidents of
+his youth. About nine o'clock he requested us to go up to our own rooms,
+and locked us in there--a precaution which he frequently took when the
+dark fit was upon him. It was always his endeavour, poor soul, to keep
+us clear of the curse which had fallen upon his own unfortunate head.
+Before parting from us he tenderly embraced my mother and Gabriel,
+and he afterwards followed me to my room, where he clasped my hand
+affectionately and gave into my charge a small packet addressed to
+yourself."
+
+"To me?" I interrupted.
+
+"To you. I shall fulfill my commission when I have told you my story. I
+conjured him to allow me to sit up with him and share any danger which
+might arise, but he implored me with irresistible earnestness not to add
+to his troubles by thwarting his arrangements. Seeing that I was really
+distressing him by my pertinacity, I at last allowed him to close the
+door and to turn the key upon the outside. I shall always reproach
+myself for my want of firmness. But what can you do when your own father
+refuses your assistance or co-operation? You cannot force yourself upon
+him."
+
+"I am sure that you did all you could do," my sister said.
+
+"I meant to, dear Esther, but, God help me, it was hard to tell what
+was right. He left me, and I heard his footsteps die away down the long
+corridor. It was then about ten o'clock, or a little after. For a time
+I paced up and down the room, and then, carrying the lamp to the head of
+my bed, I lay down without undressing, reading St. Thomas a Kempis, and
+praying from my heart that the night might pass safely over us.
+
+"I had at last fallen into a troubled sleep when I was suddenly aroused
+by a loud, sonorous sound ringing in my ears. I sat up bewildered, but
+all was silent again. The lamp was burning low, and my watch showed
+me that it was going on to midnight. I blundered to my feet, and was
+striking a match with the intention of lighting the candles, when the
+sharp, vehement cry broke out again so loud and so clear that it might
+have been in the very room with me. My chamber is in the front of the
+house, while those of my mother and sister are at the back, so that I am
+the only one who commands a view of the avenue.
+
+"Rushing to the window I drew the blind aside and looked out. You know
+that the gravel-drive opens up so as to form a broad stretch immediately
+in front of the house. Just in the centre of this clear space there
+stood three men looking up at the house.
+
+"The moon shone full upon them, glistening on their upturned eyeballs,
+and by its light I could see that they were swarthy-faced and
+black-haired, of a type that I was familiar with among the Sikhs and
+Afridis. Two of them were thin, with eager, aesthetic countenances,
+while the third was kinglike and majestic, with a noble figure and
+flowing beard."
+
+"Ram Singh!" I ejaculated.
+
+"What, you know of them?" exclaimed Mordaunt in great surprise. "You
+have met them?"
+
+"I know of them. They are Buddhist priests," I answered, "but go on."
+
+"They stood in a line," he continued, "sweeping their arms upwards
+and downwards, while their lips moved as if repeating some prayer or
+incantation. Suddenly they ceased to gesticulate, and broke out for the
+third time into the wild, weird, piercing cry which had roused me from
+my slumber. Never shall I forget that shrill, dreadful summons swelling
+and reverberating through the silent night with an intensity of sound
+which is still ringing in my ears.
+
+"As it died slowly away, there was a rasping and creaking as of keys
+and bolts, followed by the clang of an opening door and the clatter of
+hurrying feet. From my window I saw my father and Corporal Rufus Smith
+rush frantically out of the house hatless and unkempt, like men who are
+obeying a sudden and overpowering impulse. The three strangers laid
+no hands on them, but all five swept swiftly away down the avenue and
+vanished among the trees. I am positive that no force was used, or
+constraint of any visible kind, and yet I am as sure that my poor father
+and his companion were helpless prisoners as if I had seen them dragged
+away in manacles.
+
+"All this took little time in the acting. From the first summons which
+disturbed my sleep to the last shadowy glimpse which I had of them
+between the tree trunks could hardly have occupied more than five
+minutes of actual time. So sudden was it, and so strange, that when the
+drama was over and they were gone I could have believed that it was
+all some terrible nightmare, some delusion, had I not felt that the
+impression was too real, too vivid, to be imputed to fancy.
+
+"I threw my whole weight against my bedroom door in the hope of forcing
+the lock. It stood firm for a while, but I flung myself upon it again
+and again, until something snapped and I found myself in the passage.
+
+"My first thought was for my mother. I rushed to her room and turned
+the key in her door. The moment that I did so she stepped out into the
+corridor in her dressing-gown, and held up a warning finger.
+
+"'No noise, she said, Gabriel is asleep. They have been called away?'
+
+"'They have,' I answered.
+
+"'God's will be done!' she cried. 'Your poor father will be happier in
+the next world than he has ever been in this. Thank Heaven that Gabriel
+is asleep. I gave her chloral in her cocoa.'
+
+"'What am I to do?' I said distractedly.
+
+"'Where have they gone? How can I help him? We cannot let him go from
+us like this, or leave these men to do what they will with him. Shall I
+ride into Wigtown and arouse the police?'
+
+"'Anything rather than that,' my mother said earnestly. 'He has begged
+me again and again to avoid it. My son, we shall never set eyes upon
+your father again. You may marvel at my dry eyes, but if you knew as
+I know the peace which death would bring him, you could not find it in
+your heart to mourn for him. All pursuit is, I feel, vain, and yet some
+pursuit there must be. Let it be as private as possible. We cannot serve
+him better than by consulting his wishes.'
+
+"'But every minute is precious,' I cried. 'Even now he may be calling
+upon us to rescue him from the clutches of those dark-skinned fiends.'
+
+"The thought so maddened me that I rushed out of the house and down to
+the high road, but once there I had no indication in which direction to
+turn. The whole wide moor lay before me, without a sign of movement
+upon its broad expanse. I listened, but not a sound broke the perfect
+stillness of the night.
+
+"It was then, my dear friends, as I stood, not knowing in which
+direction to turn, that the horror and responsibility broke full upon
+me. I felt that I was combating against forces of which I knew nothing.
+All was strange and dark and terrible.
+
+"The thought of you, and of the help which I might look for from your
+advice and assistance, was a beacon of hope to me. At Branksome, at
+least, I should receive sympathy, and, above all, directions as to what
+I should do, for my mind is in such a whirl that I cannot trust my own
+judgment. My mother was content to be alone, my sister asleep, and
+no prospect of being able to do anything until daybreak. Under those
+circumstances what more natural than that I should fly to you as fast as
+my feet would carry me? You have a clear head, Jack; speak out, man, and
+tell me what I should do. Esther, what should I do?"
+
+He turned from one to the other of us with outstretched hands and eager,
+questioning eyes.
+
+"You can do nothing while the darkness lasts," I answered. "We must
+report the matter to the Wigtown police, but we need not send our
+message to them until we are actually starting upon the search, so as to
+comply with the law and yet have a private investigation, as your mother
+wishes. John Fullarton, over the hill, has a lurcher dog which is as
+good as a bloodhound. If we set him on the general's trail he will run
+him down if he had to follow him to John o' Groat's."
+
+"It is terrible to wait calmly here while he may need our assistance."
+
+"I fear our assistance could under any circumstances do him little
+good. There are forces at work here which are beyond human intervention.
+Besides, there is no alternative. We have, apparently, no possible
+clue as to the direction which they have taken, and for us to wander
+aimlessly over the moor in the darkness would be to waste the strength
+which may be more profitably used in the morning. It will be daylight
+by five o'clock. In an hour or so we can walk over the hill together and
+get Fullarton's dog."
+
+"Another hour!" Mordaunt groaned, "every minute seems an age."
+
+"Lie down on the sofa and rest yourself," said I. "You cannot serve your
+father better than by laying up all the strength you can, for we may
+have a weary trudge before us. But you mentioned a packet which the
+general had intended for me."
+
+"It is here," he answered, drawing a small, flat parcel from his pocket
+and handing it over to me, "you will find, no doubt, that it will
+explain all which has been so mysterious."
+
+The packet was sealed at each end with black wax, bearing the impress
+of the flying griffin, which I knew to be the general's crest. It
+was further secured by a band of broad tape, which I cut with my
+pocket-knife. Across the outside was written in bold handwriting: "J.
+Fothergill West, Esq.," and underneath: "To be handed to that gentleman
+in the event of the disappearance or decease of Major-General J. B.
+Heatherstone, V.C., C.B., late of the Indian Army."
+
+So at last I was to know the dark secret which had cast a shadow over
+our lives. Here in my hands I held the solution of it.
+
+With eager fingers I broke the seals and undid the wrapper. A note and a
+small bundle of discoloured paper lay within. I drew the lamp over to me
+and opened the former. It was dated the preceding afternoon, and ran in
+this way:
+
+MY DEAR WEST,--
+
+I should have satisfied your very natural curiosity on the subject which
+we have had occasion to talk of more than once, but I refrained for your
+own sake. I knew by sad experience how unsettling and unnerving it is
+to be for ever waiting for a catastrophe which you are convinced must
+befall, and which you can neither avert nor accelerate.
+
+Though it affects me specially, as being the person most concerned, I am
+still conscious that the natural sympathy which I have observed in you,
+and your regard for Gabriel's father, would both combine to render you
+unhappy if you knew the hopelessness and yet the vagueness of the fate
+which threatens me. I feared to disturb your mind, and I was therefore
+silent, though at some cost to myself, for my isolation has not been the
+least of the troubles which have weighed me down.
+
+Many signs, however, and chief among them the presence of the Buddhists
+upon the coast as described by you this morning, have convinced me that
+the weary waiting is at last over and that the hour of retribution is at
+hand. Why I should have been allowed to live nearly forty years after my
+offence is more than I can understand, but it is possible that those who
+had command over my fate know that such a life is the greatest of all
+penalties to me.
+
+Never for an hour, night or day, have they suffered me to forget that
+they have marked me down as their victim. Their accursed astral bell has
+been ringing my knell for two-score years, reminding me ever that there
+is no spot upon earth where I can hope to be in safety. Oh, the peace,
+the blessed peace of dissolution! Come what may on the other side of the
+tomb, I shall at least be quit of that thrice terrible sound.
+
+There is no need for me to enter into the wretched business again, or
+to detail at any length the events of October 5th, 1841, and the various
+circumstances which led up to the death of Ghoolab Shah, the arch adept.
+
+I have torn a sheaf of leaves from my old journal, in which you will
+find a bald account of the matter, and an independent narrative was
+furnished by Sir Edward Elliott, of the Artillery, to the Star of India
+some years ago--in which, however, the names were suppressed.
+
+I have reason to believe that many people, even among those who knew
+India well, thought that Sir Edward was romancing, and that he had
+evolved his incidents from his imagination. The few faded sheets which
+I send you will show you that this is not the case, and that our men of
+science must recognise powers and laws which can and have been used by
+man, but which are unknown to European civilisation.
+
+I do not wish to whine or to whimper, but I cannot help feeling that I
+have had hard measure dealt me in this world. I would not, God knows,
+take the life of any man, far less an aged one, in cold blood. My temper
+and nature, however, were always fiery and headstrong, and in action
+when my blood is up, I have no knowledge of what I am about. Neither
+the corporal nor I would have laid a finger upon Ghoolab Shah had we not
+seen that the tribesmen were rallying behind him. Well, well, it is an
+old story now, and there is no profit in discussing it. May no other
+poor fellow ever have the same evil fortune!
+
+I have written a short supplement to the statements contained in my
+journal for your information and that of any one else who may chance to
+be interested in the matter.
+
+And now, adieu! Be a good husband to Gabriel, and, if your sister be
+brave enough to marry into such a devil-ridden family as ours, by all
+means let her do so. I have left enough to keep my poor wife in comfort.
+
+When she rejoins me I should wish it to be equally divided between the
+children. If you hear that I am gone, do not pity, but congratulate
+
+Your unfortunate friend,
+
+JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE.
+
+I threw aside the letter and picked up the roll of blue foolscap which
+contained the solution of the mystery. It was all ragged and frayed at
+the inner edge, with traces of gum and thread still adhering to it, to
+show that it had been torn out of a strongly bound volume. The ink with
+which it had been written was faded somewhat, but across the head of the
+first page was inscribed in bold, clear characters, evidently of later
+date than the rest: "Journal of Lieutenant J. B. Heatherstone in the
+Thull Valley during the autumn of 1841," and then underneath:
+
+This extract contains some account of the events of the first week of
+October of that year, including the skirmish of the Terada ravine and
+the death of the man Ghoolab Shah.
+
+I have the narrative lying before me now, and I copy it verbatim. If it
+contains some matter which has no direct bearing upon the question
+at issue, I can only say that I thought it better to publish what is
+irrelevant than by cutting and clipping to lay the whole statement open
+to the charge of having been tampered with.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE DAY-BOOK OF JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE
+
+Thull Valley, Oct. 1, 1841.--The Fifth Bengal and Thirty-third Queen's
+passed through this morning on their way to the Front. Had tiffin with
+the Bengalese. Latest news from home that two attempts had been made on
+the Queen's life by semi-maniacs named Francis and Bean.
+
+It promises to be a hard winter. The snow-line has descended a thousand
+feet upon the peaks, but the passes will be open for weeks to come, and,
+even if they were blocked, we have established so many depots in the
+country that Pollock and Nott will have no difficulty in holding their
+own. They shall not meet with the fate of Elphinstone's army. One such
+tragedy is enough for a century.
+
+Elliott of the Artillery, and I, are answerable for the safety of the
+communications for a distance of twenty miles or more, from the mouth of
+the valley to this side of the wooden bridge over the Lotar. Goodenough,
+of the Rifles, is responsible on the other side, and Lieutenant-Colonel
+Sidney Herbert of the Engineers, has a general supervision over both
+sections.
+
+Our force is not strong enough for the work which has to be done. I have
+a company and a half of our own regiment, and a squadron of Sowars,
+who are of no use at all among the rocks. Elliott has three guns, but
+several of his men are down with cholera, and I doubt if he has enough
+to serve more than two.
+
+(Note: capsicum for cholera--tried it)
+
+On the other hand, each convoy is usually provided with some guard of
+its own, though it is often absurdly inefficient. These valleys and
+ravines which branch out of the main pass are alive with Afridis and
+Pathans, who are keen robbers as well as religious fanatics. I wonder
+they don't swoop down on some of our caravans. They could plunder them
+and get back to their mountain fastnesses before we could interfere or
+overtake them. Nothing but fear will restrain them.
+
+If I had my way I would hang one at the mouth of every ravine as a
+warning to the gang. They are personifications of the devil to look at,
+hawk-nosed, full-lipped, with a mane of tangled hair, and most Satanic
+sneer. No news today from the Front.
+
+October 2.--I must really ask Herbert for another company at the very
+least. I am convinced that the communications would be cut off if any
+serious attack were made upon us.
+
+Now, this morning two urgent messages were sent me from two different
+points more than sixteen miles apart, to say that there were signs of a
+descent of the tribes.
+
+Elliott, with one gun and the Sowars, went to the farther ravine, while
+I, with the infantry, hurried to the other, but we found it was a false
+alarm. I saw no signs of the Hillmen, and though we were greeted by a
+splutter of jezail bullets we were unable to capture any of the rascals.
+
+Woe betide them if they fall into my hands. I would give them as short
+a shrift as ever a Highland cateran got from a Glasgow judge. These
+continued alarms may mean nothing or they may be an indication that the
+Hillmen are assembling and have some plan in view.
+
+We have had no news from the Front for some time, but to-day a convoy of
+wounded came through with the intelligence that Nott had taken Ghuznee.
+I hope he warmed up any of the black rascals that fell into his hands.
+
+No word of Pollock.
+
+An elephant battery came up from the Punjab, looking in very good
+condition. There were several convalescents with it going up to rejoin
+their regiments. Knew none of them except Mostyn of the Hussars and
+young Blakesley, who was my fag at Charterhouse, and whom I have never
+seen since.
+
+Punch and cigars _al fresco_ up to eleven o'clock.
+
+Letters to-day from Wills & Co. about their little bill forwarded on
+from Delhi. Thought a campaign freed a man from these annoyances. Wills
+says in his note that, since his written applications have been in
+vain, he must call upon me in person. If he calls upon me now he will
+assuredly be the boldest and most persevering of tailors.
+
+A line from Calcutta Daisy and another from Hobhouse to say that Matilda
+comes in for all the money under the will. I am glad of it.
+
+October 3.--Glorious news from the Front today. Barclay, of the Madras
+Cavalry, galloped through with dispatches. Pollock entered Cabul
+triumphantly on the 16th of last month, and, better still, Lady Sale
+has been rescued by Shakespear, and brought safe into the British camp,
+together with the other hostages. _Te Deum laudamus!_
+
+This should end the whole wretched business--this and the sack of the
+city. I hope Pollock won't be squeamish, or truckle to the hysterical
+party at home. The towns should be laid in ashes and the fields sown
+with salt. Above all, the Residency and the Palace must come down. So
+shall Burnes, McNaghten, and many another gallant fellow know that his
+countrymen could avenge if they could not save him!
+
+It is hard when others are gaining glory and experience to be stuck in
+this miserable valley. I have been out of it completely, bar a few petty
+skirmishes. However, we may see some service yet.
+
+A jemidar of ours brought in a Hillman today, who says that the tribes
+are massing in the Terada ravine, ten miles to the north of us, and
+intend attacking the next convoy. We can't rely on information of this
+sort, but there may prove to be some truth in it. Proposed to shoot our
+informant, so as to prevent his playing the double traitor and reporting
+our proceedings. Elliott demurred.
+
+If you are making war you should throw no chance away. I hate
+half-and-half measures. The Children of Israel seem to have been the
+only people who ever carried war to its logical conclusion--except
+Cromwell in Ireland. Made a compromise at last by which the man is to
+be detained as a prisoner and executed if his information prove to be
+false. I only hope we get a fair chance of showing what we can do.
+
+No doubt these fellows at the Front will have C.B.'s and knighthoods
+showering upon them thick and fast, while we poor devils, who have had
+most of the responsibility and anxiety, will be passed over completely.
+Elliott has a whitlow.
+
+The last convoy left us a large packet of sauces, but as they forgot to
+leave anything to eat with them, we have handed them over to the Sowars,
+who drink them out of their pannikins as if they were liqueurs. We hear
+that another large convoy may be expected from the plains in the course
+of a day or two. Took nine to four on Cleopatra for the Calcutta Cup.
+
+October 4.--The Hillmen really mean business this time, I think. We have
+had two of our spies come in this morning with the same account about
+the gathering in the Terada quarter. That old rascal Zemaun is at the
+head of it, and I had recommended the Government to present him with
+a telescope in return for his neutrality! There will be no Zemaun to
+present it to if I can but lay hands upon him.
+
+We expect the convoy tomorrow morning, and need anticipate no attack
+until it comes up, for these fellows fight for plunder, not for glory,
+though, to do them justice, they have plenty of pluck when they get
+started. I have devised an excellent plan, and it has Elliott's hearty
+support. By Jove! if we can only manage it, it will be as pretty a ruse
+as ever I heard of.
+
+Our intention is to give out that we are going down the valley to meet
+the convoy and to block the mouth of a pass from which we profess to
+expect an attack. Very good. We shall make a night-march to-night and
+reach their camp. Once there I shall conceal my two hundred men in the
+waggons and travel up with the convoy again.
+
+Our friends the enemy, having heard that we intended to go south, and
+seeing the caravan going north without us, will naturally swoop down
+upon it under the impression that we are twenty miles away. We shall
+teach them such a lesson that they would as soon think of stopping a
+thunderbolt as of interfering again with one of Her Britannic Majesty's
+provision trains. I am all on thorns to be off.
+
+Elliott has rigged up two of his guns so ingeniously that they look more
+like costermongers' barrows than anything else. To see artillery ready
+for action in the convoy might arouse suspicion. The artillerymen will
+be in the waggons next the guns, all ready to unlimber and open fire.
+Infantry in front and rear. Have told our confidential and discreet
+Sepoy servants the plan which we do not intend to adopt. N.B.--If you
+wish a thing to be noised over a whole province always whisper it under
+a vow of secrecy to your confidential native servant.
+
+8.45 P.M.--Just starting for the convoy. May luck go with us!
+
+October 5.--Seven o'clock in the evening. _Io triumphe!_ Crown us with
+laurel--Elliott and myself! Who can compare with us as vermin killers?
+
+I have only just got back, tired and weary, stained with blood and
+dust, but I have sat down before either washing or changing to have the
+satisfaction of seeing our deeds set forth in black and white--if only
+in my private log for no eye but my own. I shall describe it all fully
+as a preparation for an official account, which must be drawn up when
+Elliott gets back. Billy Dawson used to say that there were three
+degrees of comparison--a prevarication, a lie, and an official account.
+We at least cannot exaggerate our success, for it would be impossible to
+add anything to it.
+
+We set out, then, as per programme, and came upon the camp near the head
+of the valley. They had two weak companies of the 54th with them who
+might no doubt have held their own with warning, but an unexpected rush
+of wild Hillmen is a very difficult thing to stand against. With our
+reinforcements, however, and on our guard, we might defy the rascals.
+
+Chamberlain was in command--a fine young fellow. We soon made him
+understand the situation, and were all ready for a start by daybreak
+though his waggons were so full that we were compelled to leave several
+tons of fodder behind in order to make room for my Sepoys and for the
+artillery.
+
+About five o'clock we inspanned, to use an Africanism, and by six we
+were well on our way, with our escort as straggling and unconcerned as
+possible--as helpless-looking a caravan as ever invited attack.
+
+I could soon see that it was to be no false alarm this time, and that
+the tribes really meant business.
+
+From my post of observation, under the canvas screens of one of the
+waggons, I could make out turbaned heads popping up to have a look at
+us from among the rocks, and an occasional scout hurrying northward with
+the news of our approach.
+
+It was not, however, until we came abreast of the Terada Pass, a gloomy
+defile bounded by gigantic cliffs, that the Afridis began to show in
+force, though they had ambushed themselves so cleverly that, had we not
+been keenly on the look-out for them, we might have walked right into
+the trap. As it was, the convoy halted, upon which the Hillmen, seeing
+that they were observed, opened a heavy but ill-directed fire upon us.
+
+I had asked Chamberlain to throw out his men in skirmishing order, and
+to give them directions to retreat slowly upon the waggons so as to draw
+the Afridis on. The ruse succeeded to perfection.
+
+As the redcoats steadily retired, keeping behind cover as much as
+possible, the enemy followed them up with yells of exultation, springing
+from rock to rock, waving their jezails in the air, and howling like a
+pack of demons.
+
+With their black, contorted, mocking faces, their fierce gestures, and
+their fluttering garments, they would have made a study for any painter
+who wished to portray Milton's conception of the army of the damned.
+
+From every side they pressed in until, seeing, as they thought, nothing
+between them and victory, they left the shelter of the rocks and came
+rushing down, a furious, howling throng, with the green banner of the
+Prophet in their van.
+
+Now was our chance, and gloriously we utilised it.
+
+From every cranny and slit of the waggons came a blaze of fire, every
+shot of which told among the close-packed mob. Two or three score rolled
+over like rabbits and the rest reeled for a moment, and then, with their
+chiefs at their head, came on again in a magnificent rush.
+
+It was useless, however, for undisciplined men to attempt to face such a
+well-directed fire. The leaders were bowled over, and the others, after
+hesitating for a few moments, turned and made for the rocks.
+
+It was our turn now to assume the offensive. The guns were unlimbered
+and grape poured into them, while our little infantry force advanced at
+the double, shooting and stabbing all whom they overtook.
+
+Never had I known the tide of battle turn so rapidly and so decisively.
+The sullen retreat became a flight, and the flight a panic-stricken
+rout, until there was nothing left of the tribesmen except a scattered,
+demoralised rabble flying wildly to their native fastnesses for shelter
+and protection.
+
+I was by no means inclined to let them off cheaply now that I had them
+in my power. On the contrary, I determined to teach them such a lesson
+that the sight of a single scarlet uniform would in future be a passport
+in itself.
+
+We followed hard upon the track of the fugitives and entered the Terada
+defile at their very heels. Having detached Chamberlain and Elliott with
+a company on either side to protect my wings, I pushed on with my Sepoys
+and a handful of artillerymen, giving the enemy no time to rally or
+to recover themselves. We were so handicapped, however, by our stiff
+European uniforms and by our want of practice in climbing, that we
+should have been unable to overtake any of the mountaineers had it not
+been for a fortunate accident.
+
+There is a smaller ravine which opens into the main pass, and in their
+hurry and confusion some of the fugitives rushed down this. I saw sixty
+or seventy of them turn down, but I should have passed them by and
+continued in pursuit of the main body had not one of my scouts come
+rustling up to inform me that the smaller ravine was a _cul-de-sac_, and
+that the Afridis who had gone up it had no possible means of getting out
+again except by cutting their way through our ranks.
+
+Here was an opportunity of striking terror into the tribes. Leaving
+Chamberlain and Elliott to continue the pursuit of the main body, I
+wheeled my Sepoys into the narrow path and proceeded slowly down it in
+extended order, covering the whole ground from cliff to cliff. Not a
+jackal could have passed us unseen. The rebels were caught like rats in
+a trap.
+
+The defile in which we found ourselves was the most gloomy and majestic
+that I have ever seen. On either side naked precipices rose sheer up
+for a thousand feet or more, converging upon each other so as to leave a
+very narrow slit of daylight above us, which was further reduced by the
+feathery fringe of palm trees and aloes which hung over each lip of the
+chasm.
+
+The cliffs were not more than a couple of hundred yards apart at the
+entrance, but as we advanced they grew nearer and nearer, until a half
+company in close order could hardly march abreast.
+
+A sort of twilight reigned in this strange valley, and the dim,
+uncertain light made the great, basalt rocks loom up vague and
+fantastic. There was no path, and the ground was most uneven, but I
+pushed on briskly, cautioning my fellows to have their fingers on their
+triggers, for I could see that we were nearing the point where the two
+cliffs would form an acute angle with each other.
+
+At last we came in sight of the place. A great pile of boulders was
+heaped up at the very end of the pass, and among these our fugitives
+were skulking, entirely demoralised apparently, and incapable of
+resistance. They were useless as prisoners, and it was out of the
+question to let them go, so there was no choice but to polish them off.
+
+Waving my sword, I was leading my men on, when we had a most dramatic
+interruption of a sort which I have seen once or twice on the boards of
+Drury Lane, but never in real life.
+
+In the side of the cliff, close to the pile of stones where the Hillmen
+were making their last stand, there was a cave which looked more like
+the lair of some wild beast than a human habitation.
+
+Out of this dark archway there suddenly emerged an old man--such a
+very, very old man that all the other veterans whom I have seen were
+as chickens compared with him. His hair and beard were both as white
+as snow, and each reached more than half-way to his waist. His face was
+wrinkled and brown and ebony, a cross between a monkey and a mummy, and
+so thin and emaciated were his shrivelled limbs that you would hardly
+have given him credit for having any vitality left, were it not for his
+eyes, which glittered and sparkled with excitement, like two diamonds in
+a setting of mahogany.
+
+This apparition came rushing out of the cave, and, throwing himself
+between the fugitives and our fellows, motioned us back with as
+imperious a sweep of the hand as ever an emperor used to his slaves.
+
+"Men of blood," he cried, in a voice of thunder, speaking excellent
+English, too--"this is a place for prayer and meditation, not for
+murder. Desist, lest the wrath of the gods fall upon you."
+
+"Stand aside, old man," I shouted. "You will meet with a hurt if you
+don't get out of the way."
+
+I could see that the Hillmen were taking heart, and that some of
+my Sepoys were flinching, as if they did not relish this new enemy.
+Clearly, I must act promptly if I wished to complete our success.
+
+I dashed forward at the head of the white artillerymen who had stuck to
+me. The old fellow rushed at us with his arms out as if to stop us, but
+it was not time to stick at trifles, so I passed my sword through his
+body at the same moment that one of the gunners brought his carbine down
+upon his head. He dropped instantly, and the Hillmen, at the sight of
+his fall, set up the most unearthly howl of horror and consternation.
+
+The Sepoys, who had been inclined to hang back, came on again the
+moment he was disposed of, and it did not take us long to consummate our
+victory. Hardly a man of the enemy got out of the defile alive.
+
+What could Hannibal or Caesar have done more? Our own loss in the whole
+affair has been insignificant--three killed and about fifteen wounded.
+Got their banner, a green wisp of a thing with a sentence of the Koran
+engraved upon it.
+
+I looked, after the action, for the old chap, but his body had
+disappeared, though how or whither I have no conception. His blood be
+upon his own head! He would be alive now if he had not interfered, as
+the constables say at home, "with an officer in the execution of his
+duty."
+
+The scouts tell me that his name was Ghoolab Shah, and that he was one
+of the highest and holiest of the Buddhists. He had great fame in the
+district as a prophet and worker of miracles--hence the hubbub when he
+was cut down. They tell me that he was living in this very cave when
+Tamerlane passed this way in 1399, with a lot more bosh of that sort.
+
+I went into the cave, and how any man could live in it a week is a
+mystery to me, for it was little more than four feet high, and as damp
+and dismal a grotto as ever was seen. A wooden settle and a rough
+table were the sole furniture, with a lot of parchment scrolls with
+hieroglyphics.
+
+Well, he has gone where he will learn that the gospel of peace and good
+will is superior to all his Pagan lore. Peace go with him.
+
+Elliott and Chamberlain never caught the main body--I knew they
+wouldn't--so the honours of the day rest with me. I ought to get a step
+for it, anyhow, and perhaps, who knows? some mention in the _Gazette_.
+What a lucky chance! I think Zemaun deserves his telescope after all for
+giving it to me. Shall have something to eat now, for I am half starved.
+Glory is an excellent thing, but you cannot live upon it.
+
+October 6, 11 A.M.--Let me try to set down as calmly and as accurately
+as I can all that occurred last night. I have never been a dreamer or
+a visionary, so I can rely upon my own senses, though I am bound to
+say that if any other fellow had told me the same thing I should have
+doubted him. I might even have suspected that I was deceived at the time
+had I not heard the bell since. However, I must narrate what happened.
+
+Elliott was in my tent with me having a quiet cheroot until about ten
+o'clock. I then walked the rounds with my jemidar, and having seen that
+all was right I turned in a little before eleven.
+
+I was just dropping off to sleep, for I was dog-tired after the day's
+work, when I was aroused by some slight noise, and, looking round, I saw
+a man dressed in Asiatic costume standing at the entrance of my tent. He
+was motionless when I saw him, and he had his eyes fixed upon me with a
+solemn and stern expression.
+
+My first thought was that the fellow was some Ghazi or Afghan fanatic
+who had stolen in with the intention of stabbing me, and with this idea
+in my mind I had all the will to spring from my couch and defend myself,
+but the power was unaccountably lacking.
+
+An overpowering languor and want of energy possessed me. Had I seen
+the dagger descending upon my breast I could not have made an effort
+to avert it. I suppose a bird when it is under the influence of a snake
+feels very much as I did in the presence of this gloomy-faced stranger.
+My mind was clear enough, but my body was as torpid as though I were
+still asleep.
+
+I shut my eyes once or twice and tried to persuade myself that the whole
+thing was a delusion, but every time that I opened them there was the
+man still regarding me with the same stony, menacing stare.
+
+The silence became unendurable. I felt that I must overcome my languor
+so far as to address him. I am not a nervous man, and I never knew
+before what Virgil meant when he wrote "adhoesit faucibus ora." At last
+I managed to stammer out a few words, asking the intruder who he was and
+what he wanted.
+
+"Lieutenant Heatherstone," he answered, speaking slowly and gravely,
+"you have committed this day the foulest sacrilege and the greatest
+crime which it is possible for man to do. You have slain one of the
+thrice blessed and reverend ones, an arch adept of the first degree, an
+elder brother who has trod the higher path for more years than you
+have numbered months. You have cut him off at a time when his labours
+promised to reach a climax and when he was about to attain a height of
+occult knowledge which would have brought man one step nearer to his
+Creator. All this you have done without excuse, without provocation, at
+a time when he was pleading the cause of the helpless and distressed.
+Listen now to me, John Heatherstone.
+
+"When first the occult sciences were pursued many thousands of years
+ago, it was found by the learned that the short tenure of human
+existence was too limited to allow a man to attain the loftiest heights
+of inner life. The inquirers of those days directed their energies in
+the first place, therefore, to the lengthening of their own days in
+order that they might have more scope for improvement.
+
+"By their knowledge of the secret laws of Nature they were enabled to
+fortify their bodies against disease and old age. It only remained to
+protect themselves against the assaults of wicked and violent men who
+are ever ready to destroy what is wiser and nobler than themselves.
+There was no direct means by which this protection could be effected,
+but it was in some measure attained by arranging the occult forces in
+such a way that a terrible and unavoidable retribution should await the
+offender.
+
+"It was irrevocably ordained by laws which cannot be reversed that any
+one who should shed the blood of a brother who had attained a certain
+degree of sanctity should be a doomed man. Those laws are extant to this
+day, John Heatherstone, and you have placed yourself in their power.
+King or emperor would be helpless before the forces which you have
+called into play. What hope, then, is there for you?
+
+"In former days these laws acted so instantaneously that the slayer
+perished with his victim. It was judged afterwards that this prompt
+retribution prevented the offender from having time to realise the
+enormity of his offence.
+
+"It was therefore ordained that in all such cases the retribution should
+be left in the hands of the _chelas_, or immediate disciples of the
+holy man, with power to extend or shorten it at their will, exacting
+it either at the time or at any future anniversary of the day when the
+crime was committed.
+
+"Why punishment should come on those days only it does not concern
+you to know. Suffice it that you are the murderer of Ghoolab Shah,
+the thrice blessed, and that I am the senior of his three _chelas_
+commissioned to avenge his death.
+
+"It is no personal matter between us. Amid our studies we have no
+leisure or inclination for personal matters. It is an immutable law, and
+it is as impossible for us to relax it as it is for you to escape from
+it. Sooner or later we shall come to you and claim your life in atonement
+for the one which you have taken.
+
+"The same fate shall be meted out to the wretched soldier, Smith, who,
+though less guilty than yourself, has incurred the same penalty by
+raising his sacrilegious hand against the chosen of Buddha. If your
+life is prolonged, it is merely that you may have time to repent of your
+misdeed and to feel the full force of your punishment.
+
+"And lest you should be tempted to cast it out of your mind and to
+forget it, our bell--our astral bell, the use of which is one of our
+occult secrets--shall ever remind you of what have been and what is to
+be. You shall hear it by day and you shall hear it by night, and it will
+be a sign to you that do what you may and go where you will, you can
+never shake yourself clear of the _chelas_ of Ghoolab Shah.
+
+"You will never see me more, accursed one, until the day when we come
+for you. Live in fear, and in that anticipation which is worse than
+death."
+
+With a menacing wave of the hand the figure turned and swept out of my
+tent into the darkness. The instant that the fellow disappeared from my
+sight I recovered from my lethargy which had fallen upon me. Springing
+to my feet, I rushed to the opening and looked out. A Sepoy sentry was
+standing leaning upon his musket, a few paces off.
+
+"You dog," I said in Hindustani. "What do you mean by letting people
+disturb me in this way?"
+
+The man stared at me in amazement. "Has any one disturbed the sahib?" he
+asked.
+
+"This instant--this moment. You must have seen him pass out of my tent."
+
+"Surely the Burra Sahib is mistaken," the man answered, respectfully but
+firmly. "I have been here for an hour, and no one has passed from the
+tent."
+
+Puzzled and disconcerted, I was sitting by the side of my couch
+wondering whether the whole thing were a delusion, brought on by the
+nervous excitement of our skirmish, when a new marvel overtook me. From
+over my head there suddenly sounded a sharp, tinkling sound, like that
+produced by an empty glass when flipped by the nail, only louder and
+more intense.
+
+I looked up, but nothing was to be seen. I examined the whole interior
+of the tent carefully, but without discovering any cause for the strange
+sound. At last, worn out with fatigue, I gave the mystery up, and
+throwing myself on the couch was soon fast asleep.
+
+When I awoke this morning I was inclined to put the whole of my
+yesternight's experiences down to imagination, but I was soon disabused
+of the idea, for I had hardly risen before the same strange sound was
+repeated in my very ear as loudly, and to all appearance as causelesly,
+as before. What it is or where it comes from I cannot conceive. I have
+not heard it since.
+
+Can the fellow's threats have something in them and this be the warning
+bell of which he spoke? Surely it is impossible. Yet his manner was
+indescribably impressive.
+
+I have tried to set down what he said as accurately as I can, but I
+fear I have omitted a good deal. What is to be the end of this strange
+affair? I must go in for a course of religion and holy water. Not a word
+to Chamberlain or Elliott. They tell me I am looking like a ghost this
+morning.
+
+_Evening_.--Have managed to compare notes with Gunner Rufus Smith of the
+Artillery, who knocked the old fellow over with the butt of his gun. His
+experience has been the same as mine. He has heard the sound, too. What
+is the meaning of it all? My brain is in a whirl.
+
+Oct. 10 (four days later).--God help us!
+
+This last laconic entry terminated the journal. It seemed to me that,
+coming as it did after four days' complete silence, it told a clearer
+tale of shaken nerve and a broken spirit than could any more elaborate
+narrative. Pinned on to the journal was a supplementary statement which
+had evidently been recently added by the general.
+
+"From that day to this," it said, "I have had no night or day free from
+the intrusion of that dreadful sound with its accompanying train of
+thought. Time and custom have brought me no relief, but on the contrary,
+as the years pass over my head my physical strength decreases and my
+nerves become less able to bear up against the continual strain.
+
+"I am a broken man in mind and body. I live in a state of tension,
+always straining my ears for the hated sound, afraid to converse with
+my fellows for fear of exposing my dreadful condition to them, with
+no comfort or hope of comfort on this side of the grave. I should be
+willing, Heaven knows, to die, and yet as each 5th of October comes
+round, I am prostrated with fear because I do not know what strange and
+terrible experience may be in store for me.
+
+"Forty years have passed since I slew Ghoolab Shah, and forty times
+I have gone through all the horrors of death, without attaining the
+blessed peace which lies beyond.
+
+"I have no means of knowing in what shape my fate will come upon me. I
+have immured myself in this lonely country, and surrounded myself with
+barriers, because in my weaker moments my instincts urge me to take some
+steps for self-protection, but I know well in my heart how futile it
+all is. They must come quickly now, for I grow old, and Nature will
+forestall them unless they make haste.
+
+"I take credit to myself that I have kept my hands off the prussic-acid
+or opium bottle. It has always been in my power to checkmate my occult
+persecutors in that way, but I have ever held that a man in this world
+cannot desert his post until he has been relieved in due course by the
+authorities. I have had no scruples, however, about exposing myself to
+danger, and, during the Sikh and Sepoy wars, I did all that a man could
+do to court Death. He passed me by, however, and picked out many a young
+fellow to whom life was only opening and who had everything to live for,
+while I survived to win crosses and honours which had lost all relish
+for me.
+
+"Well, well, these things cannot depend upon chance, and there is no
+doubt some deep reason for it all.
+
+"One compensation Providence has made me in the shape of a true and
+faithful wife, to whom I told my dreadful secret before the wedding, and
+who nobly consented to share my lot. She has lifted half the burden from
+my shoulders, but with the effect, poor soul, of crushing her own life
+beneath its weight!
+
+"My children, too, have been a comfort to me. Mordaunt knows all, or
+nearly all. Gabriel we have endeavoured to keep in the dark, though we
+cannot prevent her from knowing that there is something amiss.
+
+"I should like this statement to be shown to Dr. John Easterling
+of Stranraer. He heard on one occasion this haunting sound. My sad
+experience may show him that I spoke truth when I said that there was
+much knowledge in the world which has never found its way to England.
+
+"J. B. HEATHERSTONE."
+
+It was going on for dawn by the time that I had finished this
+extraordinary narrative, to which my sister and Mordaunt Heatherstone
+listened with the most absorbed attention. Already we could see through
+the window that the stars had begun to fade and a grey light to appear
+in the east. The crofter who owned the lurcher dog lived a couple of
+miles off, so it was time for us to be on foot. Leaving Esther to tell
+my father the story in such fashion as she might, we thrust some food in
+our pockets and set off upon our solemn and eventful errand.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. AT THE HOLE OF CREE
+
+It was dark enough when we started to make it no easy matter to find our
+way across the moors, but as we advanced it grew lighter and lighter,
+until by the time we reached Fullarton's cabin it was broad daylight.
+
+Early as it was, he was up and about, for the Wigtown peasants are an
+early rising race. We explained our mission to him in as few words as
+possible, and having made his bargain--what Scot ever neglected that
+preliminary?--he agreed not only to let us have the use of his dog but
+to come with us himself.
+
+Mordaunt, in his desire for privacy, would have demurred at this
+arrangement, but I pointed out to him that we had no idea what was in
+store for us, and the addition of a strong, able-bodied man to our party
+might prove to be of the utmost consequence.
+
+Again, the dog was less likely to give us trouble if we had its master
+to control it. My arguments carried the day, and the biped accompanied
+us as well as his four-footed companion.
+
+There was some little similarity between the two, for the man was a
+towsy-headed fellow with a great mop of yellow hair and a straggling
+beard, while the dog was of the long-haired, unkempt breed looking like
+an animated bundle of oakum.
+
+All our way to the Hall its owner kept retailing instances of the
+creature's sagacity and powers of scent, which, according to his
+account, were little less than miraculous. His anecdotes had a poor
+audience, I fear, for my mind was filled with the strange story which I
+had been reading, while Mordaunt strode on with wild eyes and feverish
+cheeks, without a thought for anything but the problem which we had to
+solve.
+
+Again and again as we topped an eminence I saw him look eagerly round
+him in the faint hope of seeing some trace of the absentee, but over the
+whole expanse of moorland there was no sign of movement or of life. All
+was dead and silent and deserted.
+
+Our visit to the Hall was a very brief one, for every minute now was
+of importance. Mordaunt rushed in and emerged with an old coat of his
+father's, which he handed to Fullarton, who held it out to the dog.
+
+The intelligent brute sniffed at it all over, then ran whining a little
+way down the avenue, came back to sniff the coat again, and finally
+elevating its stump of a tail in triumph, uttered a succession of sharp
+yelps to show that it was satisfied that it had struck the trail. Its
+owner tied a long cord to its collar to prevent it from going too fast
+for us, and we all set off upon our search, the dog tugging and
+straining at its leash in its excitement as it followed in the general's
+footsteps.
+
+Our way lay for a couple of hundred yards along the high road, and then
+passed through a gap in the hedge and on to the moor, across which we
+were led in a bee-line to the northward.
+
+The sun had by this time risen above the horizon, and the whole
+countryside looked so fresh and sweet, from the blue, sparkling sea to
+the purple mountains, that it was difficult to realise how weird and
+uncanny was the enterprise upon which we were engaged.
+
+The scent must have lain strongly upon the ground, for the dog never
+hesitated nor stopped, dragging its master along at a pace which
+rendered conversation impossible.
+
+At one place, in crossing a small stream, we seemed to get off the trail
+for a few minutes, but our keen-nosed ally soon picked it up on the
+other side and followed it over the trackless moor, whining and yelping
+all the time in its eagerness. Had we not all three been fleet of foot
+and long of wind, we could not have persisted in the continuous, rapid
+journey over the roughest of ground, with the heather often well-nigh up
+to our waists.
+
+For my own part, I have no idea now, looking back, what goal it was
+which I expected to reach at the end of our pursuit. I can remember that
+my mind was full of the vaguest and most varying speculations.
+
+Could it be that the three Buddhists had had a craft in readiness off
+the coast, and had embarked with their prisoners for the East? The
+direction of their track seemed at first to favour this supposition,
+for it lay in the line of the upper end of the bay, but it ended by
+branching off and striking directly inland. Clearly the ocean was not to
+be our terminus.
+
+By ten o'clock we had walked close upon twelve miles, and were compelled
+to call a halt for a few minutes to recover our breath, for the last
+mile or two we had been breasting the long, wearying slope of the
+Wigtown hills.
+
+From the summit of this range, which is nowhere more than a thousand
+feet in height, we could see, looking northward, such a scene of
+bleakness and desolation as can hardly be matched in any country.
+
+Right away to the horizon stretched the broad expanse of mud and of
+water, mingled and mixed together in the wildest chaos, like a portion
+of some world in the process of formation. Here and there on the
+dun-coloured surface of this great marsh there had burst out patches of
+sickly yellow reeds and of livid, greenish scum, which only served
+to heighten and intensify the gloomy effect of the dull, melancholy
+expanse.
+
+On the side nearest to us some abandoned peat-cuttings showed that
+ubiquitous man had been at work there, but beyond these few petty scars
+there was no sign anywhere of human life. Not even a crow nor a seagull
+flapped its way over that hideous desert.
+
+This is the great Bog of Cree. It is a salt-water marsh formed by an
+inroad of the sea, and so intersected is it with dangerous swamps and
+treacherous pitfalls of liquid mud, that no man would venture through
+it unless he had the guidance of one of the few peasants who retain the
+secret of its paths.
+
+As we approached the fringe of rushes which marked its border, a foul,
+dank smell rose up from the stagnant wilderness, as from impure water
+and decaying vegetation--an earthy, noisome smell which poisoned the
+fresh upland air.
+
+So forbidding and gloomy was the aspect of the place that our stout
+crofter hesitated, and it was all that we could do to persuade him
+to proceed. Our lurcher, however, not being subject to the delicate
+impressions of our higher organisation, still ran yelping along with its
+nose on the ground and every fibre of its body quivering with excitement
+and eagerness.
+
+There was no difficulty about picking our way through the morass, for
+wherever the five could go we three could follow.
+
+If we could have had any doubts as to our dog's guidance they would
+all have been removed now, for in the soft, black, oozing soil we could
+distinctly trace the tracks of the whole party. From these we could
+see that they had walked abreast, and, furthermore, that each was about
+equidistant from the other. Clearly, then, no physical force had been
+used in taking the general and his companion along. The compulsion had
+been psychical and not material.
+
+Once within the swamp, we had to be careful not to deviate from the
+narrow track, which offered a firm foothold.
+
+On each side lay shallow sheets of stagnant water overlying a
+treacherous bottom of semi-fluid mud, which rose above the surface
+here and there in moist, sweltering banks, mottled over with occasional
+patches of unhealthy vegetation. Great purple and yellow fungi had
+broken out in a dense eruption, as though Nature were afflicted with a
+foul disease, which manifested itself by this crop of plague spots.
+
+Here and there dark, crab-like creatures scuttled across our path,
+and hideous, flesh-coloured worms wriggled and writhed amid the sickly
+reeds. Swarms of buzzing, piping insects rose up at every step and
+formed a dense cloud around our heads, settling on our hands and faces
+and inoculating us with their filthy venom. Never had I ventured into so
+pestilent and forbidding a place.
+
+Mordaunt Heatherstone strode on, however, with a set purpose upon his
+swarthy brow, and we could but follow him, determined to stand by him
+to the end of the adventure. As we advanced, the path grew narrower
+and narrower until, as we saw by the tracks, our predecessors had been
+compelled to walk in single file. Fullarton was leading us with the dog,
+Mordaunt behind him, while I brought up the rear. The peasant had been
+sulky and surly for a little time back, hardly answering when spoken to,
+but he now stopped short and positively refused to go a step farther.
+
+"It's no' canny," he said, "besides I ken where it will lead us tae."
+
+"Where, then?" I asked.
+
+"Tae the Hole o' Cree," he answered. "It's no far frae here, I'm
+thinking."
+
+"The Hole of Cree! What is that, then?"
+
+"It's a great, muckle hole in the ground that gangs awa' doon so deep
+that naebody could ever reach the bottom. Indeed there are folk wha says
+that it's just a door leadin' intae the bottomless pit itsel'."
+
+"You have been there, then?" I asked.
+
+"Been there!" he cried. "What would I be doin' at the Hole o' Cree? No,
+I've never been there, nor any other man in his senses."
+
+"How do you know about it, then?"
+
+"My great-grandfeyther had been there, and that's how I ken," Fullarton
+answered. "He was fou' one Saturday nicht and he went for a bet. He
+didna like tae talk aboot it afterwards, and he wouldna tell a' what
+befell him, but he was aye feared o' the very name. He's the first
+Fullarton that's been at the Hole o' Cree, and he'll be the last for
+me. If ye'll tak' my advice ye'll just gie the matter up and gang hame
+again, for there's na guid tae be got oot o' this place."
+
+"We shall go on with you or without you," Mordaunt answered. "Let us
+have your dog and we can pick you up on our way back."
+
+"Na, na," he cried, "I'll no' hae my dog scaret wi' bogles, and running
+down Auld Nick as if he were a hare. The dog shall bide wi' me."
+
+"The dog shall go with us," said my companion, with his eyes blazing.
+"We have no time to argue with you. Here's a five-pound note. Let us
+have the dog, or, by Heaven, I shall take it by force and throw you in
+the bog if you hinder us."
+
+I could realise the Heatherstone of forty years ago when I saw the
+fierce and sudden wrath which lit up the features of his son.
+
+Either the bribe or the threat had the desired effect, for the fellow
+grabbed at the money with one hand while with the other he surrendered
+the leash which held the lurcher. Leaving him to retrace his steps, we
+continued to make our way into the utmost recesses of the great swamp.
+
+The tortuous path grew less and less defined as we proceeded, and was
+even covered in places with water, but the increasing excitement of the
+hound and the sight of the deep footmarks in the mud stimulated us to
+push on. At last, after struggling through a grove of high bulrushes,
+we came on a spot the gloomy horror of which might have furnished Dante
+with a fresh terror for his "Inferno."
+
+The whole bog in this part appeared to have sunk in, forming a great,
+funnel-shaped depression, which terminated in the centre in a circular
+rift or opening about forty feet in diameter. It was a whirlpool--a
+perfect maelstrom of mud, sloping down on every side to this silent and
+awful chasm.
+
+Clearly this was the spot which, under the name of the Hole of Cree,
+bore such a sinister reputation among the rustics. I could not wonder at
+its impressing their imagination, for a more weird or gloomy scene, or
+one more worthy of the avenue which led to it, could not be conceived.
+
+The steps passed down the declivity which surrounded the abyss, and we
+followed them with a sinking feeling in our hearts, as we realised that
+this was the end of our search.
+
+A little way from the downward path was the return trail made by the
+feet of those who had come back from the chasm's edge. Our eyes fell
+upon these tracks at the same moment, and we each gave a cry of horror,
+and stood gazing speechlessly at them. For there, in those blurred
+footmarks, the whole drama was revealed.
+
+_Five had gone down, but only three had returned_.
+
+None shall ever know the details of that strange tragedy. There was no
+mark of struggle nor sign of attempt at escape. We knelt at the edge of
+the Hole and endeavoured to pierce the unfathomable gloom which shrouded
+it. A faint, sickly exhalation seemed to rise from its depths, and there
+was a distant hurrying, clattering sound as of waters in the bowels of
+the earth.
+
+A great stone lay embedded in the mud, and this I hurled over, but we
+never heard thud or splash to show that it had reached the bottom.
+
+As we hung over the noisome chasm a sound did at last rise to our ears
+out of its murky depths. High, clear, and throbbing, it tinkled for an
+instant out of the abyss, to be succeeded by the same deadly stillness
+which had preceded it.
+
+I did not wish to appear superstitious, or to put down to extraordinary
+causes that which may have a natural explanation. That one keen note may
+have been some strange water sound produced far down in the bowels of
+the earth. It may have been that or it may have been that sinister bell
+of which I had heard so much. Be this as it may, it was the only sign
+that rose to us from the last terrible resting-place of the two who had
+paid the debt which had so long been owing.
+
+We joined our voices in a call with the unreasoning obstinacy with which
+men will cling to hope, but no answer came back to us save a hollow
+moaning from the depths beneath. Footsore and heart-sick, we retraced
+our steps and climbed the slimy slope once more.
+
+"What shall we do, Mordaunt?" I asked, in a subdued voice. "We can but
+pray that their souls may rest in peace."
+
+Young Heatherstone looked at me with flashing eyes.
+
+"This may be all according to occult laws," he cried, "but we shall see
+what the laws of England have to say upon it. I suppose a _chela_ may be
+hanged as well as any other man. It may not be too late yet to run them
+down. Here, good dog, good dog--here!"
+
+He pulled the hound over and set it on the track of the three men.
+The creature sniffed at it once or twice, and then, falling upon its
+stomach, with bristling hair and protruding tongue, it lay shivering and
+trembling, a very embodiment of canine terror.
+
+"You see," I said, "it is no use contending against those who have
+powers at their command to which we cannot even give a name. There is
+nothing for it but to accept the inevitable, and to hope that these poor
+men may meet with some compensation in another world for all that they
+have suffered in this."
+
+"And be free from all devilish religions and their murderous
+worshippers!" Mordaunt cried furiously.
+
+Justice compelled me to acknowledge in my own heart that the murderous
+spirit had been set on foot by the Christian before it was taken up by
+the Buddhists, but I forbore to remark upon it, for fear of irritating
+my companion.
+
+For a long time I could not draw him away from the scene of his father's
+death, but at last, by repeated arguments and reasonings, I succeeded in
+making him realise how useless and unprofitable any further efforts on
+our part must necessarily prove, and in inducing him to return with me
+to Cloomber.
+
+Oh, the wearisome, tedious journey! It had seemed long enough when we
+had some slight flicker of hope, or at least of expectation, before us,
+but now that our worst fears were fulfilled it appeared interminable.
+
+We picked up our peasant guide at the outskirts of the marsh, and having
+restored his dog we let him find his own way home, without telling him
+anything of the results of our expedition. We ourselves plodded all
+day over the moors with heavy feet and heavier hearts until we saw the
+ill-omened tower of Cloomber, and at last, as the sun was setting, found
+ourselves once more beneath its roof.
+
+There is no need for me to enter into further details, nor to describe
+the grief which our tidings conveyed to mother and to daughter. Their
+long expectation of some calamity was not sufficient to prepare them for
+the terrible reality.
+
+For weeks my poor Gabriel hovered between life and death, and though
+she came round at last, thanks to the nursing of my sister and the
+professional skill of Dr. John Easterling, she has never to this day
+entirely recovered her former vigour. Mordaunt, too, suffered much
+for some time, and it was only after our removal to Edinburgh that he
+rallied from the shock which he had undergone.
+
+As to poor Mrs. Heatherstone, neither medical attention nor change of
+air can ever have a permanent effect upon her. Slowly and surely, but
+very placidly, she has declined in health and strength, until it is
+evident that in a very few weeks at the most she will have rejoined her
+husband and restored to him the one thing which he must have grudged to
+leave behind.
+
+The Laird of Branksome came home from Italy restored in health, with the
+result that we were compelled to return once more to Edinburgh.
+
+The change was agreeable to us, for recent events had cast a cloud over
+our country life and had surrounded us with unpleasant associations.
+Besides, a highly honourable and remunerative appointment in connection
+with the University library had become vacant, and had, through the
+kindness of the late Sir Alexander Grant, been offered to my father,
+who, as may be imagined, lost no time in accepting so congenial a post.
+
+In this way we came back to Edinburgh very much more important people
+than we left it, and with no further reason to be uneasy about the
+details of housekeeping. But, in truth, the whole household has been
+dissolved, for I have been married for some months to my dear Gabriel,
+and Esther is to become Mrs. Heatherstone upon the 23rd of the month. If
+she makes him as good a wife as his sister has made me, we may both set
+ourselves down as fortunate men.
+
+These mere domestic episodes are, as I have already explained,
+introduced only because I cannot avoid alluding to them.
+
+My object in drawing up this statement and publishing the evidence which
+corroborates it, was certainly not to parade my private affairs before
+the public, but to leave on record an authentic narrative of a most
+remarkable series of events. This I have endeavoured to do in as
+methodical a manner as possible, exaggerating nothing and suppressing
+nothing.
+
+The reader has now the evidence before him, and can form his own
+opinions unaided by me as to the causes of the disappearance and death
+of Rufus Smith and of John Berthier Heatherstone, V.C., C.B.
+
+There is only one point which is still dark to me. Why the _chelas_ of
+Ghoolab Shah should have removed their victims to the desolate Hole of
+Cree instead of taking their lives at Cloomber, is, I confess, a mystery
+to me.
+
+In dealing with occult laws, however, we must allow for our own complete
+ignorance of the subject. Did we know more we might see that there was
+some analogy between that foul bog and the sacrilege which had been
+committed, and that their ritual and customs demanded that just such a
+death was the one appropriate to the crime.
+
+On this point I should be sorry to be dogmatic, but at least we must
+allow that the Buddhist priests must have had some very good cause for
+the course of action which they so deliberately carried out.
+
+Months afterwards I saw a short paragraph in the _Star of India_
+announcing that three eminent Buddhists--Lal Hoomi, Mowdar Khan, and Ram
+Singh--had just returned in the steamship _Deccan_ from a short trip
+to Europe. The very next item was devoted to an account of the life and
+services of Major-General Heatherstone, "who has lately disappeared from
+his country house in Wigtownshire, and who, there is too much reason to
+fear, has been drowned."
+
+I wonder if by chance there was any other human eye but mine which
+traced a connection between these paragraphs. I never showed them to
+my wife or to Mordaunt, and they will only know of their existence when
+they read these pages.
+
+I don't know that there is any other point which needs clearing up. The
+intelligent reader will have already seen the reasons for the general's
+fear of dark faces, of wandering men (not knowing how his pursuers might
+come after him), and of visitors (from the same cause and because his
+hateful bell was liable to sound at all times).
+
+His broken sleep led him to wander about the house at night, and
+the lamps which he burnt in every room were no doubt to prevent his
+imagination from peopling the darkness with terrors. Lastly, his
+elaborate precautions were, as he has himself explained, rather the
+result of a feverish desire to do something than in the expectation that
+he could really ward off his fate.
+
+Science will tell you that there are no such powers as those claimed
+by the Eastern mystics. I, John Fothergill West, can confidently answer
+that science is wrong.
+
+For what is science? Science is the consensus of opinion of scientific
+men, and history has shown that it is slow to accept a truth. Science
+sneered at Newton for twenty years. Science proved mathematically that
+an iron ship could not swim, and science declared that a steamship could
+not cross the Atlantic.
+
+Like Goethe's Mephistopheles, our wise professor's forte is "stets
+verneinen." Thomas Didymus is, to use his own jargon, his prototype. Let
+him learn that if he will but cease to believe in the infallibility
+of his own methods, and will look to the East, from which all great
+movements come, he will find there a school of philosophers and of
+savants who, working on different lines from his own, are many thousand
+years ahead of him in all the essentials of knowledge.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Mystery of Cloomber, by Arthur Conan Doyle
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery of Cloomber, by Arthur Conan Doyle
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+Title: The Mystery of Cloomber
+
+Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7964]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on June 6, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Lionel G. Sear
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF CLOOMBER
+
+
+Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+I THE HEGIRA OF THE WESTS FROM EDINBURGH
+
+II OF THE STARNGE MANNER IN WHICH A TENANT CAME TO CLOOMBER
+
+III OF OUR FURTHER ACQUAINTANCE WITH MAJOR-GENERAL J. B. HEATHERSTONE
+
+IV OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A GREY HEAD
+
+V HOW FOUR OF US CAME TO BE UNDER THE SHADOW OF CLOOMBER
+
+VI HOW I CAME TO BE ENLISTED AS ONE OF THE GARRISON OF CLOOMBER
+
+VII OF CORPORAL RUFUS SMITH AND HIS COMING TO CLOOMBER
+
+VIII STATEMENT OF ISRAEL STAKES
+
+IX NARRATIVE OF JOHN EASTERLING, F.R.C.P. EDIN.
+
+X OF THE LETTER WHICH CAME FROM THE HALL
+
+XI OF THE CASTING AWAY OF THE BARQUE "BELINDA"
+
+XII OF THE THREE FOREIGN MEN UPON THE COAST
+
+XIII IN WHICH I SEE THAT WHICH HAS BEEN SEEN BY FEW
+
+XIV OF THE VISITOR WHO RAN DOWN THE ROAD IN THE NIGHT-TIME
+
+XV THE DAY-BOOK OF JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE
+
+XVI AT THE HOLE OF CREE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+
+THE HEGIRA OF THE WESTS FROM EDINBURGH
+
+I John Fothergill West, student of law in the University of St. Andrews,
+have endeavoured in the ensuing pages to lay my statement before the
+public in a concise and business-like fashion.
+
+It is not my wish to achieve literary success, nor have I any desire by
+the graces of my style, or by the artistic ordering of my incidents, to
+throw a deeper shadow over the strange passages of which I shall have to
+speak. My highest ambition is that those who know something of the
+matter should, after reading my account, be able to conscientiously
+indorse it without finding a single paragraph in which I have either
+added to or detracted from the truth.
+
+Should I attain this result, I shall rest amply satisfied with the
+outcome of my first, and probably my last, venture in literature.
+
+It was my intention to write out the sequence of events in due order,
+depending on trustworthy hearsay when I was describing that which was
+beyond my own personal knowledge. I have now, however, through the kind
+cooperation of friends, hit upon a plan which promises to be less
+onerous to me and more satisfactory to the reader. This is nothing less
+than to make use of the various manuscripts which I have by me bearing
+upon the subject, and to add to them the first-hand evidence contributed
+by those who had the best opportunities of knowing Major-General
+J. B. Heatherstone.
+
+In pursuance of this design I shall lay before the public the testimony
+of Israel Stakes, formerly coachman at Cloomber Hall, and of John
+Easterling, F.R.C.P. Edin., now practising at Stranraer, in
+Wigtownshire. To these I shall add a verbatim account extracted from
+the journal of the late John Berthier Heatherstone, of the events which
+occurred in the Thul Valley in the autumn of '41 towards the end of the
+first Afghan War, with a description of the skirmish in the Terada
+defile, and of the death of the man Ghoolab Shah.
+
+To myself I reserve the duty of filling up all the gaps and chinks which
+may be left in the narrative. By this arrangement I have sunk from the
+position of an author to that of a compiler, but on the other hand my
+work has ceased to be a story and has expanded into a series of
+affidavits.
+
+My Father, John Hunter West, was a well known Oriental and Sanskrit
+scholar, and his name is still of weight with those who are interested
+in such matters. He it was who first after Sir William Jones called
+attention to the great value of early Persian literature, and his
+translations from the Hafiz and from Ferideddin Atar have earned the
+warmest commendations from the Baron von Hammer-Purgstall, of Vienna,
+and other distinguished Continental critics.
+
+In the issue of the _Orientalisches_Scienzblatt_ for January, 1861, he
+is described as _"Der_beruhmte_und_sehr_gelhernte_Hunter_West_von
+Edinburgh"_--a passage which I well remember that he cut out and
+stowed away, with a pardonable vanity, among the most revered family
+archives.
+
+He had been brought up to be a solicitor, or Writer to the Signet, as it
+is termed in Scotland, but his learned hobby absorbed so much of his
+time that he had little to devote to the pursuit of his profession.
+
+When his clients were seeking him at his chambers in George Street, he
+was buried in the recesses of the Advocates' Library, or poring over
+some mouldy manuscript at the Philosophical Institution, with his brain
+more exercised over the code which Menu propounded six hundred years
+before the birth of Christ than over the knotty problems of Scottish law
+in the nineteenth century. Hence it can hardly be wondered at that as
+his learning accumulated his practice dissolved, until at the very
+moment when he had attained the zenith of his celebrity he had also
+reached the nadir of his fortunes.
+
+There being no chair of Sanscrit in any of his native universities, and
+no demand anywhere for the only mental wares which he had to dispose of,
+we should have been forced to retire into genteel poverty, consoling
+ourselves with the aphorisms and precepts of Firdousi, Omar Khayyam, and
+others of his Eastern favourites, had it not been for the kindness and
+liberality of his half-brother William Farintosh, the Laird of
+Branksome, in Wigtownshire.
+
+This William Farintosh was the proprietor of a landed estate, the
+acreage which bore, unfortunately, a most disproportional relation to
+its value, for it formed the bleakest and most barren tract of land in
+the whole of a bleak and barren shire. As a bachelor, however, his
+expenses had been small, and he had contrived from the rents of his
+scattered cottages, and the sale of the Galloway nags, which he bred
+upon the moors, not only to live as a laird should, but to put by a
+considerable sum in the bank.
+
+We had heard little from our kinsman during the days of our comparative
+prosperity, but just as we were at our wit's end, there came a letter
+like a ministering angel, giving us assurance of sympathy and succour.
+In it the Laird of Branksome told us that one of his lungs had been
+growing weaker for some time, and that Dr. Easterling, of Stranraer, had
+strongly advised him to spend the few years which were left to him in
+some more genial climate. He had determined, therefore to set out for
+the South of Italy, and he begged that we should take up our residence
+at Branksome in his absence, and that my father should act as his land
+steward and agent at a salary which placed us above all fear of want.
+
+Our mother had been dead for some years, so that there were only myself,
+my father, and my sister Esther to consult, and it may be readily
+imagined that it did not take us long to decide upon the acceptance of
+the laird's generous offer. My father started for Wigtown that very
+night, while Esther and I followed a few days afterwards, bearing with
+us two potato-sacksful of learned books, and such other of our household
+effects that were worth the trouble and expense of transport.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+
+OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH A TENANT CAME TO CLOOMBER
+
+Branksome might have appeared a poor dwelling-place when compared with
+the house of an English squire, but to us, after our long residence in
+stuffy apartments, it was of regal magnificence.
+
+The building was broad-spread and low, with red-tiled roof,
+diamond-paned windows, and a profusion of dwelling rooms with
+smoke-blackened ceilings and oaken wainscots. In front was a small
+lawn, girt round with a thin fringe of haggard and ill grown beeches,
+all gnarled and withered from the effects of the sea-spray. Behind lay
+the scattered hamlet of Branksome-Bere--a dozen cottages at most--
+inhabited by rude fisher-folk who looked upon the laird as their natural
+protector.
+
+To the west was the broad, yellow beach and the Irish Sea, while in all
+other directions the desolate moors, greyish-green in the foreground and
+purple in the distance, stretched away in long, low curves to the
+horizon.
+
+Very bleak and lonely it was upon this Wigtown coast. A man might walk
+many a weary mile and never see a living thing except the white, heavy-
+flapping kittiwakes, which screamed and cried to each other with their
+shrill, sad voices.
+
+Very lonely and very bleak! Once out of sight of Branksome and there
+was no sign of the works of man save only where the high, white tower of
+Cloomber Hall shot up, like a headstone of some giant grave, from amid
+the firs and larches which girt it round.
+
+This great house, a mile or more from our dwelling, had been built by a
+wealthy Glasgow merchant of strange tastes and lonely habits, but at the
+time of our arrival it had been untenanted for many years, and stood
+with weather-blotched walls and vacant, staring windows looking blankly
+out over the hill side.
+
+Empty and mildewed, it served only as a landmark to the fishermen, for
+they had found by experience that by keeping the laird's chimney and the
+white tower of Cloomber in a line they could steer their way through the
+ugly reef which raises its jagged back, like that of some sleeping
+monster, above the troubled waters of the wind-swept bay.
+
+To this wild spot it was that Fate had brought my father, my sister, and
+myself. For us its loneliness had no terrors. After the hubbub and
+bustle of a great city, and the weary task of upholding appearances upon
+a slender income, there was a grand, soul-soothing serenity in the long
+sky-line and the eager air. Here at least there was no neighbour to pry
+and chatter.
+
+The laird had left his phaeton and two ponies behind him, with the aid
+of which my father and I would go the round of the estate doing such
+light duties as fall to an agent, or "factor" as it was there called,
+while our gentle Esther looked to our household needs, and brightened
+the dark old building.
+
+Such was our simple, uneventful existence, until the summer night when
+an unlooked-for incident occurred which proved to be the herald of those
+strange doings which I have taken up my pen to describe.
+
+It had been my habit to pull out of an evening in the laird's skiff and
+to catch a few whiting which might serve for our supper. On this
+well-remembered occasion my sister came with me, sitting with her book
+in the stern-sheets of the boat, while I hung my lines over the bows.
+
+The sun had sunk down behind the rugged Irish coast, but a long bank of
+flushed cloud still marked the spot, and cast a glory upon the waters.
+The whole broad ocean was seamed and scarred with crimson streaks. I
+had risen in the boat, and was gazing round in delight at the broad
+panorama of shore and sea and sky, when my sister plucked at my sleeve
+with a little, sharp cry of surprise.
+
+"See, John," she cried, "there is a light in Cloomber Tower!".
+
+I turned my head and stared back at the tall, white turret which peeped
+out above the belt of trees. As I gazed I distinctly saw at one of the
+windows the glint of a light, which suddenly vanished, and then shone
+out once more from another higher up. There it flickered for some time,
+and finally flashed past two successive windows underneath before the
+trees obscured our view of it. It was clear that some one bearing a
+lamp or a candle had climbed up the tower stairs and had then returned
+into the body of the house.
+
+"Who in the world can it be?" I exclaimed, speaking rather to myself
+than to Esther, for I could see by the surprise upon her face that she
+had no solution to offer. "Maybe some of the folk from Branksome-Bere
+have wanted to look over the place."
+
+My sister shook her head.
+
+"There is not one of them would dare to set foot within the avenue
+gates," she said. "Besides, John, the keys are kept by the house-agent
+at Wigtown. Were they ever so curious, none of our people could find
+their way in"
+
+When I reflected upon the massive door and ponderous shutters which
+guarded the lower storey of Cloomber, I could not but admit the force of
+my sister's objection. The untimely visitor must either have used
+considerable violence in order to force his way in, or he must have
+obtained possession of the keys.
+
+Piqued by the little mystery, I pulled for the beach, with the
+determination to see for myself who the intruder might be, and what were
+his intentions. Leaving my sister at Branksome, and summoning Seth
+Jamieson, an old man-o'-war's-man and one of the stoutest of the
+fishermen, I set off across the moor with him through the gathering
+darkness.
+
+"It hasna a guid name after dark, yon hoose," remarked my companion,
+slackening his pace perceptibly as I explained to him the nature of our
+errand. "It's no for naething that him wha owns it wunna gang within a
+Scotch mile o't."
+
+"Well, Seth, there is some one who has no fears about going into it,"
+said I, pointing to the great, white building which flickered up in
+front of us through the gloom.
+
+The light which I had observed from the sea was moving backwards and
+forward past the lower floor windows, the shutters of which had been
+removed. I could now see that a second fainter light followed a few
+paces behind the other. Evidently two individuals, the one with a lamp
+and the other with a candle or rushlight, were making a careful
+examination of tile building.
+
+"Let ilka man blaw his ain parritch," said Seth Jamieson doggedly,
+coming to a dead stop. "What is it tae us if a wraith or a bogle minds
+tae tak' a fancy tae Cloomber? It's no canny tae meddle wi' such
+things."
+
+"Why, man," I cried, "you don't suppose a wraith came here in a gig?
+What are those lights away yonder by the avenue gates?"
+
+"The lamps o' a gig, sure enough!" exclaimed my companion in a less
+lugubrious voice. "Let's steer for it, Master West, and speer where she
+hails frae."
+
+By this time night had closed in save for a single long, narrow slit in
+the westward. Stumbling across the moor together, we made our way into
+the Wigtown Road, at the point where the high stone pillars mark the
+entrance to the Cloomber avenue. A tall dog-cart stood in front of the
+gateway, the horse browsing upon the thin border of grass which skirted
+the road.
+
+"It's a' richt!" said Jamieson, taking a close look at the deserted
+vehicle. "I ken it weel. It belongs tae Maister McNeil, the factor
+body frae Wigtown--him wha keeps the keys."
+
+"Then we may as well have speech with him now that we are here," I
+answered. "They are coming down, if I am not mistaken."
+
+As I spoke we heard the slam of the heavy door and within a few minutes
+two figures, the one tall and angular, the other short and thick came
+towards us through the darkness. They were talking so earnestly that
+they did not observe us until they had passed through the avenue gate.
+
+"Good evening, Mr. McNeil," said I, stepping forward and addressing the
+Wigtown factor, with whom I had some slight acquaintance.
+
+The smaller of the two turned his face towards me as I spoke, and showed
+me that I was not mistaken in his identity, but his taller companion
+sprang back and showed every sign of violent agitation.
+
+"What is this, McNeil?" I heard him say, in a gasping, choking voice.
+"Is this your promise? What is the meaning of it?"
+
+"Don't be alarmed, General! Don't be alarmed!" said the little fat
+factor in a soothing fashion, as one might speak to a frightened child.
+"This is young Mr. Fothergill West, of Branksome, though what brings him
+up here tonight is more than I can understand. However, as you are to
+be neighbours, I can't do better than take the opportunity to introduce
+you to each other. Mr. West, this is General Heatherstone, who is about
+to take a lease of Cloomber Hall."
+
+I held out my hand to the tall man, who look it in a hesitating,
+half-reluctant fashion.
+
+"I came up," I explained, "because I saw your lights in the windows, and
+I bought that something might be wrong. I am very glad I did so, since
+it has given me the chance of making the general's acquaintance."
+
+Whilst I was talking, I was conscious that the new tenant of Cloomber
+Hall was peering at me very closely through the darkness. As I
+concluded, he stretched out a long, tremulous arm, and turned the
+gig-lamp in such a way as to throw a flood of light upon my face.
+
+"Good Heavens, McNeil!" he cried, in the same quivering voice as before,
+"the fellow's as brown as chocolate. He's not an Englishman. You're
+not an Englishman--you, sir?"
+
+"I'm a Scotchman, born and bred," said I, with an inclination to laugh,
+which was only checked by my new acquaintance's obvious terror.
+
+"A Scotchman, eh?" said he, with a sigh of relief. "It's all one
+nowadays. You must excuse me, Mr.--Mr. West. I'm nervous, infernally
+nervous. Come along, McNeil, we must be back in Wigtown in less than an
+hour. Good-night, gentlemen, good-night!"
+
+The two clambered into their places; the factor cracked his whip, and
+the high dog-cart clattered away through the darkness, casting a
+brilliant tunnel of yellow light on either side of it, until the rumble
+of its wheels died away in the distance.
+
+"What do you think of our new neighbour, Jamieson?" I asked, after a
+long silence.
+
+"'Deed, Mr. West, he seems, as he says himsel', to be vera nervous.
+Maybe his conscience is oot o' order."
+
+"His liver, more likely," said I. "He looks as if he had tried his
+constitution a bit. But it's blowing chill, Seth, my lad, and it's time
+both of us were indoors."
+
+I bade my companion good-night, and struck off across the moors for the
+cheery, ruddy light which marked the parlour windows of Branksome.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+OF OUR FURTHER ACQUAINTANCE WITH MAJOR-GENERAL J. B. HEATHERSTONE
+
+There was, as may well be imagined, much stir amongst our small
+community at the news that the Hall was to be inhabited once more, and
+considerable speculation as to the new tenants, and their object in
+choosing this particular part of the country for their residence.
+
+It speedily became apparent that, whatever their motives might be, they
+had definitely determined upon a lengthy stay, for relays of plumbers
+and of joiners came down from Wigtown, and there was hammering and
+repairing going on from morning till night.
+
+It was surprising how quickly the signs of the wind and weather were
+effaced, until the great, square-set house was all as spick-and-span as
+though it had been erected yesterday. There were abundant signs that
+money was no consideration to General Heatherstone, and that it was not
+on the score of retrenchment that he had taken up his abode among us.
+
+"It may be that he is devoted to study," suggested my father, as we
+discussed the question round the breakfast table. "Perhaps he has chosen
+this secluded spot to finish some magnum opus upon which he is engaged.
+If that is the case I should be happy to let him have the run of my
+library."
+
+Esther and I laughed at the grandiloquent manner in which he spoke of
+the two potato-sacksful of books.
+
+"It may be as you say," said I, "but the general did not strike me
+during our short interview as being a man who was likely to have any
+very pronounced literary tastes. If I might hazard a guess, I should
+say that he is here upon medical advice, in the hope that the complete
+quiet and fresh air may restore his shattered nervous system. If you
+had seen how he glared at me, and the twitching of his fingers, you
+would have thought it needed some restoring."
+
+"I do wonder whether he has a wife and a family," said my sister. "Poor
+souls, how lonely they will be! Why, excepting ourselves, there is not
+a family that they could speak to for seven miles and more."
+
+"General Heatherstone is a very distinguished soldier," remarked my
+father.
+
+"Why, papa, however came you to know anything about him?"
+
+"Ah, my dears," said my father, smiling at us over his coffee-cup, "you
+were laughing at my library just now, but you see it may be very useful
+at times." As he spoke he took a red-covered volume from a shelf and
+turned over the pages. "This is an Indian Army List of three years
+back," he explained, "and here is the very gentleman we want-
+'Heatherstone, J. B., Commander of the Bath,' my dears, and 'V.C.',
+think of that, 'V.C.'--'formerly colonel in the Indian Infantry, 41st
+Bengal Foot, but now retired with the rank of major-general.' In this
+other column is a record of his services--'capture of Ghuznee and
+defence of Jellalabad, Sobraon 1848, Indian Mutiny and reduction of
+Oudh. Five times mentioned in dispatches.' I think, my dears, that we
+have cause to be proud of our new neighbour."
+
+"It doesn't mention there whether he is married or not, I suppose?"
+asked Esther.
+
+"No," said my father, wagging his white head with a keen appreciation of
+his own humour. "It doesn't include that under the heading of 'daring
+actions'--though it very well might, my dear, it very well might."
+
+All our doubts, however, upon this head were very soon set at rest, for
+on the very day that the repairing and the furnishing had been completed
+I had occasion to ride into Wigtown, and I met upon the way a carriage
+which was bearing General Heatherstone and his family to their new home.
+An elderly lady, worn and sickly-looking, was by his side, and opposite
+him sat a young fellow about my own age and a girl who appeared to be a
+couple of years younger.
+
+I raised my hat, and was about to pass them, when the general shouted to
+his coachman to pull up, and held out his hand to me. I could see now
+in the daylight that his face, although harsh and stern, was capable of
+assuming a not unkindly expression.
+
+"How are you, Mr. Fothergill West?" he cried. "I must apologise to you
+if I was a little brusque the other night--you will excuse an old
+soldier who has spent the best part of his life in harness--All the
+same, you must confess that you are rather dark-skinned for a
+Scotchman."
+
+"We have a Spanish strain in our blood," said I, wondering at his
+recurrence to the topic.
+
+"That would, of course, account for it," he remarked. "My dear," to his
+wife, "allow me to introduce Mr. Fothergill West to you. This is my son
+and my daughter. We have come here in search of rest, Mr. West
+--complete rest."
+
+"And you could not possibly have come to a better place," said I.
+
+"Oh, you think so?" he answered. "I suppose it is very quiet indeed,
+and very lonely. You might walk through these country lanes at night, I
+dare say, and never meet a soul, eh?"
+
+"Well, there are not many about after dark," I said.
+
+"And you are not much troubled with vagrants or wandering beggars, eh?
+Not many tinkers or tramps or rascally gipsies--no vermin of that sort
+about?"
+
+"I find it rather cold," said Mrs. Heatherstone, drawing her thick
+sealskin mantle tighter round her figure. "We are detaining Mr. West,
+too."
+
+"So we are, my dear, so we are. Drive on, coachman. Good-day, Mr.
+West."
+
+The carriage rattled away towards the Hall, and I trotted thoughtfully
+onwards to the little country metropolis.
+
+As I passed up the High Street, Mr. McNeil ran out from his office and
+beckoned to me to stop.
+
+"Our new tenants have gone out," he said. "They drove over this morning."
+
+"I met them on the way," I answered.
+
+As I looked down at the little factor, I could see that his face was
+flushed and that he bore every appearance of having had an extra glass.
+
+"Give me a real gentleman to do business with," he said, with a burst of
+laughter. "They understand me and I understand them. 'What shall I
+fill it up for?' says the general, taking a blank cheque out o' his
+pouch and laying it on the table. 'Two hundred,' says I, leaving a bit
+o' a margin for my own time and trouble."
+
+"I thought that the landlord had paid you for that," I remarked.
+
+"Aye, aye, but it's well to have a bit margin. He filled it up and
+threw it over to me as if it had been an auld postage stamp. That's the
+way business should be done between honest men--though it wouldna do if
+one was inclined to take an advantage. Will ye not come in, Mr. West,
+and have a taste of my whisky?"
+
+"No, thank you" said I, "I have business to do."
+
+"Well, well, business is the chief thing. It's well not to drink in
+the morning, too. For my own part, except a drop before breakfast to
+give me an appetite, and maybe a glass, or even twa, afterwards to
+promote digestion, I never touch spirits before noon. What d'ye think
+o' the general, Mr. West?"
+
+"Why, I have hardly had an opportunity of judging," I answered.
+
+Mr. McNeil tapped his forehead with his forefinger.
+
+"That's what I think of him," he said in a confidential whisper, shaking
+his head at me. "He's gone, sir, gone, in my estimation. Now what
+would you take to be a proof of madness, Mr. West?"
+
+"Why, offering a blank cheque to a Wigtown house-agent," said I.
+
+"Ah, you're aye at your jokes. But between oorsel's now, if a man asked
+ye how many miles it was frae a seaport, and whether ships come there
+from the East, and whether there were tramps on the road, and whether it
+was against the lease for him to build a high wall round the grounds,
+what would ye make of it, eh?"
+
+"I should certainly think him eccentric," said I.
+
+"If every man had his due, our friend would find himsel' in a house with
+a high wall round the grounds, and that without costing him a farthing,"
+said the agent.
+
+"Where then?" I asked, humouring his joke.
+
+"Why, in the Wigtown County Lunatic Asylum," cried the little man, with
+a bubble of laughter, in the midst of which I rode on my way, leaving
+him still chuckling over his own facetiousness.
+
+The arrival of the new family at Cloomber Hall had no perceptible effect
+in relieving the monotony of our secluded district, for instead of
+entering into such simple pleasures as the country had to offer, or
+interesting themselves, as we had hoped, in our attempts to improve the
+lot of our poor crofters and fisherfolk, they seemed to shun all
+observation, and hardly ever to venture beyond the avenue gates.
+
+We soon found, too, that the factor's words as to the inclosing of the
+grounds were founded upon fact, for gangs of workmen were kept hard at
+work from early in the morning until late at night in erecting a high,
+wooden fence round the whole estate.
+
+When this was finished and topped with spikes, Cloomber Park became
+impregnable to any one but an exceptionally daring climber. It was as
+if the old soldier had been so imbued with military ideas that, like my
+Uncle Toby, he could not refrain even in times of peace from standing
+upon the defensive.
+
+Stranger still, he had victualled the house as if for a siege, for
+Begbie, the chief grocer of Wigtown, told me himself in a rapture of
+delight and amazement that the general had sent him an order for
+hundreds of dozens of every imaginable potted meat and vegetable.
+
+It may be imagined that all these unusual incidents were not allowed to
+pass without malicious comment. Over the whole countryside and as far
+away as the English border there was nothing but gossip about the new
+tenants of Cloomber Hall and the reasons which had led them to come
+among us.
+
+The only hypothesis, however, which the bucolic mind could evolve, was
+that which had already occurred to Mr. McNeil, the factor--namely, that
+the old general and his family were one and all afflicted with madness,
+or, as an alternative conclusion, that he had committed some heinous
+offence and was endeavouring to escape the consequences of his misdeeds.
+
+These were both natural suppositions under the circumstances, but
+neither of them appeared to me to commend itself as a true explanation
+of the facts.
+
+It is true that General Heatherstone's behaviour on the occasion of our
+first interview was such as to suggest some suspicion of mental disease,
+but no man could have been more reasonable or more courteous than he had
+afterwards shown himself to be.
+
+Then, again, his wife and children led the same secluded life that he
+did himself, so that the reason could not be one peculiar to his own
+health.
+
+As to the possibility of his being a fugitive from justice, that theory
+was even more untenable. Wigtownshire was bleak and lonely, but it was
+not such an obscure corner of the world that a well-known soldier could
+hope to conceal himself there, nor would a man who feared publicity set
+every one's tongue wagging as the general had done.
+
+On the whole, I was inclined to believe that the true solution of the
+enigma lay in his own allusion to the love of quiet, and that they had
+taken shelter here with an almost morbid craving for solitude and
+repose. We very soon had an instance of the great lengths to which this
+desire for isolation would carry them.
+
+My father had come down one morning with the weight of a great
+determination upon his brow.
+
+"You must put on your pink frock to-day, Esther," said he, "and you,
+John, you must make yourself smart, for I have determined that the three
+of us shall drive round this afternoon and pay our respects to Mrs.
+Heatherstone and the general."
+
+"A visit to Cloomber," cried Esther, clapping her hands.
+
+"I am here," said my father, with dignity, "not only as the laird's
+factor, but also as his kinsman. In that capacity I am convinced that
+he would wish me to call upon these newcomers and offer them any
+politeness which is in our power. At present they must feel lonely and
+friendless. What says the great Firdousi? 'The choicest ornaments to a
+man's house are his friends.'"
+
+My sister and I knew by experience that when the old man began to
+justify his resolution by quotations from the Persian poets there was no
+chance of shaking it. Sure enough that afternoon saw the phaeton at the
+door, with my father perched upon the seat, with his second-best coat on
+and a pair of new driving-gloves.
+
+"Jump in, my dears," he cried, cracking his whip briskly, "we shall show
+the general that he has no cause to be ashamed of his neighbours."
+
+Alas! pride always goes before a fall. Our well-fed ponies and shining
+harness were not destined that day to impress the tenants of Cloomber
+with a sense of our importance.
+
+We had reached the avenue gate, and I was about to get out and open it,
+when our attention was arrested by a very large wooden placard, which
+was attached to one of the trees in such a manner that no one could
+possibly pass without seeing it. On the white surface of this board was
+printed in big, black letters the following hospitable inscription:
+
+ GENERAL AND MRS. HEATHERSTONE
+ HAVE NO WISH
+ TO INCREASE
+ THE CIRCLE OF THEIR ACQUAINTANCE.
+
+We all sat gazing at this announcement for some moments in silent
+astonishment. Then Esther and I, tickled by the absurdity of the thing,
+burst out laughing, but my father pulled the ponies' heads round, and
+drove home with compressed lips and the cloud of much wrath upon his
+brow. I have never seen the good man so thoroughly moved, and I am
+convinced that his anger did not arise from any petty feeling of injured
+vanity upon his own part, but from the thought that a slight had been
+offered to the Laird of Branksome, whose dignity he represented.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+
+
+OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A GREY HEAD
+
+If I had any personal soreness on account of this family snub, it was a
+very passing emotion, and one which was soon effaced from my mind.
+
+It chanced that on the very next day after the episode I had occasion to
+pass that way, and stopped to have another look at the obnoxious
+placard. I was standing staring at it and wondering what could have
+induced our neighbours to take such an outrageous step, when I became
+suddenly aware of a sweet, girlish face which peeped out at me from
+between the bars of the gate, and of a white hand which eagerly beckoned
+me to approach. As I advanced to her I saw that it was the same young
+lady whom I had seen in the carriage.
+
+"Mr. West," she said, in a quick whisper, glancing from side to side as
+she spoke in a nervous, hasty manner, "I wish to apologise to you for
+the indignity to which you and your family were subjected yesterday. My
+brother was in the avenue and saw it all, but he is powerless to
+interfere. I assure you, Mr. West, that if that hateful thing,"
+pointing up at the placard, "has given you any annoyance, it has given
+my brother and myself far more."
+
+"Why, Miss Heatherstone," said I, putting the matter off with a laugh,
+"Britain is a free country, and if a man chooses to warn off visitors
+from his premises there is no reason why he should not."
+
+"It is nothing less than brutal," she broke out, with a petulant stamp
+of the foot. "To think that your sister, too, should have such a
+unprovoked insult offered to her! I am ready to sink with shame at the
+very thought."
+
+"Pray do not give yourself one moment's uneasiness upon the subject,"
+said I earnestly, for I was grieved at her evident distress. "I am sure
+that your father has some reason unknown to us for taking this step."
+
+"Heaven knows he has!" she answered, with ineffable sadness in her
+voice, "and yet I think it would be more manly to face a danger than to
+fly from it. However, he knows best, and it is impossible for us to
+judge. But who is this?" she exclaimed, anxiously, peering up the dark
+avenue. "Oh, it is my brother Mordaunt. Mordaunt," she said, as the
+young man approached us. "I have been apologising to Mr. West for what
+happened yesterday, in your name as well as my own."
+
+"I am very, very glad to have the opportunity of doing it in person,"
+said he courteously. "I only wish that I could see your sister and your
+father as well as yourself, to tell them how sorry I am. I think you
+had better run up to the house, little one, for it's getting near
+tiffin-time. No--don't you go Mr. West. I want to have a word with
+you."
+
+Miss Heatherstone waved her hand to me with a bright smile, and tripped
+up the avenue, while her brother unbolted the gate, and, passing
+through, closed it again, locking it upon the outside.
+
+"I'll have a stroll down the road with you, if you have no objection.
+Have a manilla." He drew a couple of cheroots from his pocket and
+handed one to me. "You'll find they are not bad," he said. "I became
+a connoisseur in tobacco when I was in India. I hope I am not
+interfering with your business in coming along with you?"
+
+"Not at all," I answered "I am very glad to have your company."
+
+"I'll tell you a secret," said my companion. "This is the first time
+that I have been outside the grounds since we have been down here."
+
+"And your sister?"
+
+"She has never been out, either," he answered. "I have given the
+governor the slip to-day, but he wouldn't half like it if he knew. It's
+a whim of his that we should keep ourselves entirely to ourselves. At
+least, some people would call it a whim, for my own part I have reason
+to believe that he has solid grounds for all that he does--though
+perhaps in this matter he may be a little too exacting."
+
+"You must surely find it very lonely," said I. "Couldn't you manage to
+slip down at times and have a smoke with me? That house over yonder is
+Branksome."
+
+"Indeed, you are very kind," he answered, with sparkling eyes. "I
+should dearly like to run over now and again. With the exception of
+Israel Stakes, our old coachman and gardener, I have not a soul that I
+can speak to."
+
+"And your sister--she must feel it even more," said I, thinking in my
+heart that my new acquaintance made rather too much of his own troubles
+and too little of those of his companion.
+
+"Yes; poor Gabriel feels it, no doubt," he answered carelessly, "but
+it's a more unnatural thing for a young man of my age to be cooped up in
+this way than for a woman. Look at me, now. I am three-and-twenty next
+March, and yet I have never been to a university, nor to a school for
+that matter. I am as complete an ignoramus as any of these clodhoppers.
+It seems strange to you, no doubt, and yet it is so. Now, don't you
+think I deserve a better fate?"
+
+He stopped as he spoke, and faced round to me, throwing his palms
+forward in appeal.
+
+As I looked at him, with the sun shining upon his face, he certainly
+did seem a strange bird to be cooped up in such a cage. Tall and
+muscular, with a keen, dark face, and sharp, finely cut features, he
+might have stepped out of a canvas of Murillo or Velasquez. There were
+latent energy and power in his firm-set mouth, his square eyebrows, and
+the whole pose of his elastic, well-knit figure.
+
+"There is the learning to be got from books and the learning to be got
+from experience," said I sententiously. "If you have less of your share
+of the one, perhaps you have more of the other. I cannot believe you
+have spent all your life in mere idleness and pleasure."
+
+"Pleasure!" he cried. "Pleasure! Look at this!" He pulled off his hat,
+and I saw that his black hair was all decked and dashed with streaks of
+grey. "Do you imagine that this came from pleasure?" he asked, with a
+bitter laugh.
+
+"You must have had some great shock," I said, astonished at the sight,
+"some terrible illness in your youth. Or perhaps it arises from a more
+chronic cause--a constant gnawing anxiety. I have known men as young as
+you whose hair was as grey."
+
+"Poor brutes!" he muttered. "I pity them."
+
+"If you can manage to slip down to Branksome at times," I said, "perhaps
+you could bring Miss Heatherstone with you. I know that my father and
+my sister would be delighted to see her, and a change, if only for an
+hour or two, might do her good."
+
+"It would be rather hard for us both to get away together," he answered,
+"However, if I see a chance I shall bring her down. It might be managed
+some afternoon perhaps, for the old man indulges in a siesta
+occasionally."
+
+We had reached the head of the winding lane which branches off from the
+high road and leads to the laird's house, so my companion pulled up.
+
+"I must go back," he said abruptly, "or they will miss me. It's very
+kind of you, West, to take this interest in us. I am very grateful to
+you, and so will Gabriel be when she hears of your kind invitation.
+It's a real heaping of coals of fire after that infernal placard of my
+father's."
+
+He shook my hand and set off down the road, but he came running after me
+presently, calling me to stop.
+
+"I was just thinking," he said, "that you must consider us a great
+mystery up there at Cloomber. I dare say you have come to look upon it
+as a private lunatic asylum, and I can't blame you. If you are
+interested in the matter, I feel it is unfriendly upon my part not to
+satisfy your curiosity, but I have promised my father to be silent about
+it. And indeed if I were to tell you all that I know you might not be
+very much the wiser after all. I would have you understand this,
+however--that my father is as sane as you or I, and that he has very
+good reasons for living the life which he does. I may add that his wish
+to remain secluded does not arise from any unworthy or dishonourable
+motives, but merely from the instinct of self-preservation."
+
+"He is in danger, then?" I ejaculated.
+
+"Yes; he is in constant danger."
+
+"But why does he not apply to the magistrates for protection?" I asked.
+"If he is afraid of any one, he has only to name him and they will bind
+him over to keep the peace."
+
+"My dear West," said young Heatherstone, "the danger with which my
+father is threatened is one that cannot be averted by any human
+intervention. It is none the less very real, and possibly very
+imminent."
+
+"You don't mean to assert that it is supernatural," I said
+incredulously.
+
+"Well, hardly that, either," he answered with hesitation. "There." he
+continued, "I have said rather more than I should, "but I know that you
+will not abuse my confidence. Good-bye!"
+
+He look to his heels and was soon out of sight round a curve in the
+country road.
+
+A danger which was real and imminent, not to be averted by human means,
+and yet hardly supernatural--here was a conundrum indeed!
+
+I had come to look upon the inhabitants of the Hall as mere eccentrics,
+but after what young Mordaunt Heatherstone had just told me, I could no
+longer doubt that some dark and sinister meaning underlay all their
+actions. The more I pondered over the problem, the more unanswerable
+did it appear, and yet I could not get the matter out of my thoughts.
+
+The lonely, isolated Hall, and the strange, impending catastrophe which
+hung over its inmates, appealed forcibly to my imagination. All that
+evening, and late into the night, I sat moodily by the fire, pondering
+over what I had heard, and revolving in my mind the various incidents
+which might furnish me with some clue to the mystery.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+
+HOW FOUR OF US CAME TO BE UNDER THE SHADOW OF CLOOMBER
+
+I trust that my readers will not set me down as an inquisitive busybody
+when I say that as the days and weeks went by I found my attention and
+my thoughts more and more attracted to General Heatherstone and the
+mystery which surrounded him.
+
+It was in vain that I endeavoured by hard work and a strict attention to
+the laird's affairs to direct my mind into some more healthy channel.
+Do what I would, on land or on the water, I would still find myself
+puzzling over this one question, until it obtained such a hold upon me
+that I felt it was useless for me to attempt to apply myself to anything
+until I had come to some satisfactory solution of it.
+
+I could never pass the dark line of five-foot fencing, and the great
+iron gate, with its massive lock, without pausing and racking my brain
+as to what the secret might be which was shut in by that inscrutable
+barrier. Yet, with all my conjectures and all my observations, I could
+never come to any conclusion which could for a moment be accepted as an
+explanation of the facts.
+
+My sister had been out for a stroll one night, visiting a sick peasant
+or performing some other of the numerous acts of charity by which she
+had made herself beloved by the whole countryside.
+
+"John," she said when she returned, "have you seen Cloomber Hall at
+night?"
+
+"No," I answered, laying down the book which I was reading. "Not since
+that memorable evening when the general and Mr. McNeil came over to make
+an inspection."
+
+"Well, John, will you put your hat on and come a little walk with me?"
+
+I could see by her manner that something had agitated or frightened her.
+
+"Why, bless the girl!" cried I boisterously, "what is the matter? The
+old Hall is not on fire, surely? You look as grave as if all Wigtown
+were in a blaze."
+
+"Not quite so bad as that," she said, smiling. "But do come out, Jack.
+I should very much like you to see it."
+
+I had always refrained from saying anything which might alarm my sister,
+so that she knew nothing of the interest which our neighbours' doings
+had for me. At her request I took my hat and followed her out
+into the darkness. She led the way along a little footpath over the
+moor, which brought us to some rising ground, from which we could look
+down upon the Hall without our view being obstructed by any of the
+fir-trees which had been planted round it.
+
+"Look at that!" said my sister, pausing at the summit of this little
+eminence.
+
+Cloomber lay beneath us in a blaze of light. In the lower floors the
+shutters obscured the illumination, but above, from the broad windows of
+the second storey to the thin slits at the summit of the tower, there
+was not a chink or an aperture which did not send forth a stream of
+radiance. So dazzling was the effect that for a moment I was persuaded
+that the house was on fire, but the steadiness and clearness of the
+light soon freed me from that apprehension. It was clearly the result
+of many lamps placed systematically all over the building.
+
+It added to the strange effect that all these brilliantly illuminated
+rooms were apparently untenanted, and some of them, so far as we could
+judge, were not even furnished. Through the whole great house there was
+no sign of movement or of life--nothing but the clear, unwinking flood
+of yellow light.
+
+I was still lost in wonder at the sight when I heard a short, quick
+sob at my side.
+
+"What is it, Esther, dear?" I asked, looking down at my companion.
+
+"I feel so frightened. Oh, John, John, take me home, I feel so
+frightened!"
+
+She clung to my arm, and pulled at my coat in a perfect frenzy of fear.
+
+"It's all safe, darling," I said soothingly. "There is nothing to fear.
+What has upset you so?"
+
+"I am afraid of them, John; I am afraid of the Heatherstones. Why is
+their house lit up like this every night? I have heard from others that
+it is always so. And why does the old man run like a frightened hare if
+any one comes upon him. There is something wrong about it, John, and it
+frightens me."
+
+I pacified her as well as I could, and led her home with me, where I
+took care that she should have some hot port negus before going to bed.
+I avoided the subject of the Heatherstones for fear of exciting her, and
+she did not recur to it of her own accord. I was convinced, however,
+from what I had heard from her, that she had for some time back been
+making her own observations upon our neighbours, and that in doing so
+she had put a considerable strain upon her nerves.
+
+I could see that the mere fact of the Hall being illuminated at night
+was not enough to account for her extreme agitation, and that it must
+have derived its importance in her eyes from being one in a chain of
+incidents, all of which had left a weird or unpleasant impression upon
+her mind.
+
+That was the conclusion which I came to at the time, and I have reason
+to know now that I was right, and that my sister had even more cause
+than I had myself for believing that there was something uncanny about
+the tenants of Cloomber.
+
+Our interest in the matter may have arisen at first from nothing
+higher than curiosity, but events soon look a turn which associated us
+more closely with the fortunes of the Heatherstone family.
+
+Mordaunt had taken advantage of my invitation to come down to the
+laird's house, and on several occasions he brought with him his
+beautiful sister. The four of us would wander over the moors together,
+or perhaps if the day were fine set sail upon our little skiff and stand
+off into the Irish Sea.
+
+On such excursions the brother and sister would be as merry and as
+happy as two children. It was a keen pleasure to them to escape from
+their dull fortress, and to see, if only for a few hours, friendly and
+sympathetic faces round them.
+
+There could be but one result when four young people were brought
+together in sweet, forbidden intercourse. Acquaintance-ship warmed into
+friendship, and friendship flamed suddenly into love.
+
+Gabriel sits beside me now as I write, and she agrees with me that,
+dear as is the subject to ourselves, the whole story of our mutual
+affection is of too personal a nature to be more than touched upon in
+this statement. Suffice it to say that, within a few weeks of our first
+meeting Mordaunt Heatherstone had won the heart of my clear sister, and
+Gabriel had given me that pledge which death itself will not be able to
+break.
+
+I have alluded in this brief way to the double tie which sprang up
+between the two families, because I have no wish that this narrative
+should degenerate into anything approaching to romance, or that I should
+lose the thread of the facts which I have set myself to chronicle.
+These are connected with General Heatherstone, and only indirectly with
+my own personal history.
+
+It is enough if I say that after our engagement the visits to
+Branksome became more frequent, and that our friends were able sometimes
+to spend a whole day with us when business had called the general to
+Wigtown, or when his gout confined him to his room.
+
+As to our good father, he was ever ready to greet us with many small
+jests and tags of Oriental poems appropriate to the occasion, for we had
+no secrets from him, and he already looked upon us all as his children.
+
+There were times when on account of some peculiarly dark or restless
+fit of the general's it was impossible for weeks on end for either
+Gabriel or Mordaunt to get away from the grounds. The old man would
+even stand on guard, a gloomy and silent sentinel, at the avenue gate,
+or pace up and down the drive as though he suspected that attempts had
+been made to penetrate his seclusion.
+
+Passing of an evening I have seen his dark, grim figure flitting about
+in the shadow of the trees, or caught a glimpse of his hard, angular,
+swarthy face peering out suspiciously at me from behind the bars.
+
+My heart would often sadden for him as I noticed his uncouth, nervous
+movements, his furtive glances and twitching features. Who would have
+believed that this slinking, cowering creature had once been a dashing
+officer, who had fought the battles of his country and had won the palm
+of bravery among the host of brave men around him?
+
+In spite of the old soldier's vigilance, we managed to hold
+communication with our friends.
+
+Immediately behind the Hall there was a spot where the fencing had
+been so carelessly erected that two of the rails could be removed
+without difficulty, leaving a broad gap, which gave us the opportunity
+for many a stolen interview, though they were necessarily short, for the
+general's movements were erratic, and no part of the grounds was secure
+from his visitations.
+
+How vividly one of these hurried meetings rises before me! It stands
+out clear, peaceful, and distinct amid the wild, mysterious incidents
+which were destined to lead up to the terrible catastrophe which has
+cast a shade over our lives.
+
+I can remember that as I walked through the fields the grass was damp
+with the rain of the morning, and the air was heavy with the smell of
+the fresh-turned earth. Gabriel was waiting for me under the hawthorn
+tree outside the gap, and we stood hand-in-hand looking down at the long
+sweep of moorland and at the broad blue channel which encircled it with
+its fringe of foam.
+
+Far away in the north-west the sun glinted upon the high peak of Mount
+Throston. From where we stood we could see the smoke of the steamers as
+they ploughed along the busy water-way which leads to Belfast.
+
+"Is it not magnificent?" Gabriel cried, clasping her hands round my arm.
+"Ah, John, why are we not free to sail away over these waves together,
+and leave all our troubles behind us on the shore?"
+
+"And what are the troubles which you would leave behind you, dear one?"
+I asked. "May I not know them, and help you to bear them?"
+
+"I have no secrets from you, John," she answered, "Our chief trouble is,
+as you may guess, our poor father's strange behaviour. Is it not a
+sad thing for all of us that a man who has played such a distinguished
+part in the world should skulk from one obscure corner of the country to
+another, and should defend himself with locks and barriers as though he
+were a common thief flying from justice? This is a trouble, John, which
+it is out of your power to alleviate."
+
+"But why does he do it, Gabriel?" I asked.
+
+"I cannot tell," she answered frankly. "I only know that he imagines
+some deadly danger to be hanging over his head, and that this danger was
+incurred by him during his stay in India. What its nature may be I have
+no more idea than you have."
+
+"Then your brother has," I remarked. "I am sure from the way in which
+he spoke to me about it one day that he knows what it is, and that he
+looks upon it as real."
+
+"Yes, he knows, and so does my mother," she answered, "but they have
+always kept it secret from me. My poor father is very excited at
+present. Day and night he is in an agony of apprehension, but it will
+soon be the fifth of October, and after that he will be at peace."
+
+"How do you know that?" I asked in surprise.
+
+"By experience," she answered gravely. "On the fifth of October these
+fears of his come to a crisis. For years back he has been in the habit
+of locking Mordaunt and myself up in our rooms on that date, so that we
+have no idea what occurs, but we have always found that he has been much
+relieved afterwards, and has continued to be comparatively in peace
+until that day begins to draw round again."
+
+"Then you have only ten days or so to wait," I remarked, for September
+was drawing to a close. "By the way, dearest, why is it that you light
+up all your rooms at night?"
+
+"You have noticed it, then?" she said. "It comes also from my father's
+fears. He does not like to have one dark corner in the whole house. He
+walks about a good deal at night, and inspects everything, from the
+attics right down to the cellars. He has large lamps in every room and
+corridor, even the empty ones, and he orders the servants to light them
+all at dusk."
+
+"I am rather surprised that you manage to keep your servants," I said,
+laughing. "The maids in these parts are a superstitious class, and
+their imaginations are easily excited by anything which they don't
+understand."
+
+"The cook and both housemaids are from London, and are used to our
+ways. We pay them on a very high scale to make up for any inconvenience
+to which they may be put. Israel Stakes, the coachman, is the only one
+who comes from this part of the country, and he seems to be a stolid,
+honest fellow, who is not easily scared."
+
+ "Poor little girl," I exclaimed, looking down at the slim, graceful
+figure by my side. "This is no atmosphere for you to live in. Why
+will you not let me rescue you from it? Why won't you allow me to go
+straight and ask the general for your hand? At the worst he could only
+refuse."
+
+She turned quite haggard and pale at the very thought.
+
+"For Heaven's sake, John," she cried earnestly, "do nothing of the
+kind. He would whip us all away in the dead of the night, and within a
+week we should be settling down again in some wilderness where we might
+never have a chance of seeing or hearing from you again. Besides, he
+never would forgive us for venturing out of the grounds."
+
+"I don't think that he is a hard-hearted man," I remarked. "I have
+seen a kindly look in his eyes, for all his stern face."
+
+"He can be the kindest of fathers," she answered. "But he is terrible
+when opposed or thwarted. You have never seen him so, and I trust you
+never will. It was that strength of will and impatience of opposition
+which made him such a splendid officer. I assure you that in India
+every one thought a great deal of him. The soldiers were afraid of him,
+but they would have followed him anywhere."
+
+"And had he these nervous attacks then?"
+
+"Occasionally, but not nearly so acutely. He seems to think that the
+danger--whatever it may be--becomes more imminent every year. Oh, John,
+it is terrible to be waiting like this with a sword over our heads--and
+all the more terrible to me since I have no idea where the blow is to
+come from."
+
+"Dear Gabriel," I said, taking her hand and drawing her to my side,
+"look over all this pleasant countryside and the broad blue sea. Is it
+not all peaceful and beautiful? In these cottages, with their red-tiled
+roofs peeping out from the grey moor, there live none but simple,
+God-fearing men, who toil hard at their crafts and bear enmity to no
+man. Within seven miles of us is a large town, with every civilised
+appliance for the preservation of order. Ten miles farther there is a
+garrison quartered, and a telegram would at any time bring down a
+company of soldiers. Now, I ask you, dear, in the name of common-sense,
+what conceivable danger could threaten you in this secluded
+neighbourhood, with the means of help so near? You assure me that the
+peril is not connected with your father's health?"
+
+"No, I am sure of that. It is true that Dr. Easterling, of Stranraer.
+has been over to see him once or twice, but that was merely for some
+small indisposition. I can assure you that the danger is not to be
+looked for in that direction."
+
+"Then I can assure you," said I, laughing, "that there is no danger at
+all. It must be some strange monomania or hallucination. No other
+hypothesis will cover the facts."
+
+"Would my father's monomania account for the fact of my brother's hair
+turning grey and my mother wasting away to a mere shadow?"
+
+"Undoubtedly," I answered, "The long continued worry of the general's
+restlessness and irritability would produce those effects on sensitive
+natures."
+
+"No, no!" said she, shaking her head sadly, "I have been exposed to
+his restlessness and irritability, but they have had no such effect upon
+me. The difference between us lies in the fact that they know this
+awful secret and I do not."
+
+"My dear girl," said I, "the days of family apparitions and that kind
+of thing are gone. Nobody is haunted nowadays, so we can put that
+supposition out of the question. Having done so, what remains? There
+is absolutely no other theory which could even be suggested. Believe
+me, the whole mystery is that the heat of India has been too much for
+your poor father's brain."
+
+What she would have answered I cannot tell, for at that moment she gave
+a start as if some sound had fallen upon her ear. As she looked round
+apprehensively, I suddenly saw her features become rigid and her eyes
+fixed and dilated.
+
+Following the direction of her gaze, I felt a sudden thrill of fear pass
+through me as I perceived a human face surveying us from behind one of
+the trees--a man's face, every feature of which was distorted by the
+most malignant hatred and anger. Finding himself observed, he stepped
+out and advanced towards us, when I saw that it was none other than the
+general himself. His beard was all a-bristle with fury, and his deepset
+eyes glowed from under their heavily veined lids with a most sinister
+and demoniacal brightness.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+
+HOW I CAME TO BE ENLISTED AS ONE OF THE
+GARRISON OF CLOOMBER
+
+"To your room, girl!" he cried in a hoarse, harsh voice, stepping in
+between us and pointing authoritatively towards the house.
+
+He waited until Gabriel, with a last frightened glance at me, had
+passed through the gap, and then he turned upon me with an expression so
+murderous that I stepped back a pace or two, and tightened my grasp upon
+my oak stick.
+
+"You-you--" he spluttered, with his hand twitching at his throat, as
+though his fury were choking him. "You have dared to intrude upon my
+privacy! Do you think I built this fence that all the vermin in the
+country might congregate round it? Oh, you have been very near your
+death, my fine fellow! You will never be nearer until your time comes.
+Look at this!" he pulled a squat, thick pistol out of his bosom. "If
+you had passed through that gap and set foot on my land I'd have let
+daylight into you. I'll have no vagabonds here. I know how to treat
+gentry of that sort, whether their faces are black or white."
+
+"Sir," said I, "I meant no harm by coming here, and I do not know how
+I have deserved this extraordinary outburst. Allow me to observe,
+however, that you are still covering me with your pistol, and that, as
+your hand is rather tremulous, it is more than possible that it may go
+off. If you don't turn the muzzle down I shall be compelled in
+self-defence to strike you over the wrist with my stick."
+
+"What the deuce brought you here, then?" he asked, in a more composed
+voice, putting his weapon back into his bosom. "Can't a gentleman live
+quietly without your coming to peep and pry? Have you no business of
+your own to look after, eh? And my daughter? how came you to know
+anything of her? and what have you been trying to squeeze out of her?
+It wasn't chance that brought you here."
+
+"No," said I boldly, "it was not chance which brought me here. I have
+had several opportunities of seeing your daughter and of appreciating
+her many noble qualities. We are engaged to be married to each other,
+and I came up with the express intention of seeing her."
+
+Instead of blazing into a fury, as I had expected, the general gave a
+long whistle of astonishment, and then leant up against the railings,
+laughing softly to himself.
+
+"English terriers are fond of nosing worms," he remarked at last.
+"When we brought them out to India they used to trot off into the jungle
+and begin sniffing at what, they imagined to be worms there. But the
+worm turned out to be a venomous snake, and so poor doggy played no
+more. I think you'll find yourself in a somewhat analogous position if
+you don't look out."
+
+"You surely don't mean to cast an aspersion upon your own daughter?" I
+said, flushing with indignation.
+
+"Oh, Gabriel is all right," he answered carelessly. "Our family is not
+exactly one, however, which I should recommend a young fellow to marry
+into. And pray how is it that I was not informed of this snug little
+arrangement of yours?"
+
+"We were afraid, sir, that you might separate us," I replied, feeling
+that perfect candour was the best policy under the circumstances. "It
+is possible that we were mistaken. Before coming to any final decision,
+I implore you to remember that the happiness of both of us is at stake.
+It is in your power to divide our bodies, but our souls shall be for
+ever united."
+
+"My good fellow," said the general, in a not unkindly tone, "you don't
+know what you are asking for. There is a gulf between you and any one
+of the blood of Heatherstone which can never be bridged over."
+
+All trace of anger had vanished now from his manner, and given place to
+an air of somewhat contemptuous amusement.
+
+My family pride took fire at his words. "The gulf may be less than you
+imagine," I said coldly. "We are not clodhoppers because we live in
+this out-of-the-way place. I am of noble descent on one side, and my
+mother was a Buchan of Buchan, I assure you that there is no such
+disparity between us as you seem to imagine."
+
+"You misunderstand me," the general answered. "It is on our side that
+the disparity lies. There are reasons why my daughter Gabriel should
+live and die single. It would not be to your advantage to marry her."
+
+"But surely, sir," I persisted, "I am the best judge of my own
+interests and advantages. Since you take this ground all becomes easy,
+for I do assure you that the one interest which overrides all others is
+that I should have the woman I love for my wife. If this is your only
+objection to our match you may surely give us your consent, for any
+danger or trial which I may incur in marrying Gabriel will not weigh
+with me one featherweight."
+
+"Here's a young bantam!" exclaimed the old soldier, smiling at my
+warmth. "It's easy to defy danger when you don't know what the danger
+is."
+
+"What is it, then?" I asked, hotly. "There is no earthly peril which
+will drive me from Gabriel's side. Let me know what it is and test me."
+
+"No, no. That would never do," he answered with a sigh, and then,
+thoughtfully, as if speaking his mind aloud: "He has plenty of pluck and
+is a well-grown lad, too. We might do worse than make use of him."
+
+He went on mumbling to himself with a vacant stare in his eyes as if
+he had forgotten my presence.
+
+"Look here, West," he said presently. "You'll excuse me if I spoke
+hastily a little time ago. It is the second time that I have had
+occasion to apologise to you for the same offence. It shan't occur
+again. I am rather over-particular, no doubt, in my desire for complete
+isolation, but I have good reasons for insisting on the point. Rightly
+or wrongly, I have got it into my head that some day there might be an
+organised raid upon my grounds. If anything of the sort should occur I
+suppose I might reckon upon your assistance?"
+
+"With all my heart."
+
+"So that if ever you got a message such as 'Come up,' or even
+'Cloomber,' you would know that it was an appeal for help, and
+would hurry up immediately, even if it were in the dead of the night?"
+
+"Most certainly I should," I answered. "But might I ask you what the
+nature of the danger is which you apprehend?"
+
+"There would be nothing gained by your knowing. Indeed, you would
+hardly understand it if I told you. I must bid you good day now, for I
+have stayed with you too long. Remember, I count upon you as one of the
+Cloomber garrison now."
+
+"One other thing, sir," I said hurriedly, for he was turning away,"
+I hope that you will not be angry with your daughter for anything which
+I have told you. It was for my sake that she kept it all secret from
+you."
+
+"All right," he said, with his cold, inscrutable smile. "I am not such
+an ogre in the bosom of my family as you seem to think. As to this
+marriage question, I should advise you as a friend to let it drop
+altogether, but if that is impossible I must insist that it stand
+over completely for the present. It is impossible to say what
+unexpected turn events may take. Good-bye."
+
+He plunged into the wood and was quickly out of sight among the dense
+plantation.
+
+Thus ended this extraordinary interview, in which this strange man had
+begun by pointing a loaded pistol at my breast and had ended, by
+partially acknowledging the possibility of my becoming his future son-
+in-law. I hardly knew whether to be cast down or elated over it.
+
+On the one hand he was likely, by keeping a closer watch over his
+daughter, to prevent us from communicating as freely as we had done
+hitherto. Against this there was the advantage of having obtained
+an implied consent to the renewal of my suit at some future date. On
+the whole, I came to the conclusion as I walked thoughtfully home that I
+had improved my position by the incident.
+
+But this danger--this shadowy, unspeakable danger--which appeared to
+rise up at every turn, and to hang day and night over the towers of
+Cloomber! Rack my brain as I would, I could not conjure up any solution
+to the problem which was not puerile and inadequate.
+
+One fact struck me as being significant. Both the father and the son
+had assured me, independently of each other, that if I were told what
+the peril was, I would hardly realise its significance. How strange and
+bizarre must the fear be which can scarcely be expressed in intelligible
+language!
+
+I held up my hand in the darkness before I turned to sleep that night,
+and I swore that no power of man or devil should ever weaken my love for
+the woman whose pure heart I had had the good fortune to win.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+
+OF CORPORAL RUFUS SMITH AND HIS COMING TO CLOOMBER
+
+In making this statement I have purposely couched it in bald and
+simple language, for fear I should be accused of colouring my narrative
+for the sake of effect. If, however, I have told my story with any
+approach to realism, the reader will understand me when I say that by
+this time the succession of dramatic incidents which had occurred had
+arrested my attention and excited my imagination to the exclusion of all
+minor topics.
+
+How could I plod through the dull routine of an agent's work, or
+interest myself in the thatch of this tenant's bothy or the sails of
+that one's boat, when my mind was taken up by the chain of events which
+I have described, and was still busy seeking an explanation for them.
+
+Go where I would over the countryside, I could see the square, white
+tower shooting out from among the trees, and beneath that tower this
+ill-fated family were watching and waiting, waiting and watching--and
+for what? That was still the question which stood like an impassable
+barrier at the end of every train of thought.
+
+Regarded merely as an abstract problem, this mystery of the Heatherstone
+family had a lurid fascination about it, but when the woman whom I loved
+a thousandfold better than I did myself proved to be so deeply
+interested in the solution, I felt that it was impossible to turn my
+thoughts to anything else until it had been finally cleared up.
+
+My good father had received a letter from the laird, dated from Naples,
+which told us that he had derived much benefit from the change, and that
+he had no intention of returning to Scotland for some time. This was
+satisfactory to all of us, for my father had found Branksome such an
+excellent place for study that it would have been a sore trial to
+him to return to the noise and tumult of a city. As to my dear sister
+and myself, there were, as I have shown, stronger reasons still to make
+us love the Wigtownshire moors.
+
+In spite of my interview with the general--or perhaps I might say on
+account of it--I took occasion at least twice a day to walk towards
+Cloomber and satisfy myself that all was well there. He had begun by
+resenting my intrusion, but he had ended by taking me into a sort of
+half-confidence, and even by asking my assistance, so I felt that I
+stood upon a different footing with him than I had done formerly, and
+that he was less likely to be annoyed by my presence. Indeed, I met
+him pacing round the inclosure a few days afterwards, and his manner
+towards me was civil, though he made no allusion to our former
+conversation.
+
+He appeared to be still in an extreme state of nervousness, starting
+from time to time, and gazing furtively about him, with little
+frightened, darting glances to the right and the left. I hoped that his
+daughter was right in naming the fifth of October as the turning
+point of his complaint, for it was evident to me as I looked at his
+gleaming eyes and quivering hands, that a man could not live
+long in such a state of nervous tension.
+
+I found on examination that he had had the loose rails securely
+fastened so as to block up our former trysting-place, and though I
+prowled round the whole long line of fencing, I was unable to find any
+other place where an entrance could be effected.
+
+Here and there between the few chinks left in the barrier I could
+catch glimpses of the Hall, and once I saw a rough-looking, middle-aged
+man standing at a window on the lower floor, whom I supposed to be
+Israel Stakes, the coachman. There was no sign, however, of Gabriel or
+of Mordaunt, and their absence alarmed me. I was convinced that, unless
+they were under some restraint, they would have managed to communicate
+with my sister or myself. My fears became more and more acute as day
+followed day without our seeing or hearing anything of them.
+
+One morning--it was the second day of October--I was walking towards
+the Hall, hoping that I might be fortunate enough to learn some news of
+my darling, when I observed a man perched upon a stone at the side of
+the road.
+
+As I came nearer to him I could see that he was a stranger, and from
+his dusty clothes and dilapidated appearance he seemed to have come from
+a distance. He had a great hunch of bread on his knee and a clasp-knife
+in his hand, but he had apparently just finished his breakfast, for he
+brushed the crumbs off his lap and rose to his feet when he perceived
+me.
+
+Noticing the great height of the fellow and that he still held his
+weapon, I kept well to the other side of the road, for I knew that
+destitution makes men desperate and that the chain that glittered on my
+waistcoat might be too great a temptation to him upon this lonely
+highway. I was confirmed in my fears when I saw him step out into the
+centre of the road and bar my progress.
+
+"Well, my lad," I said, affecting an ease which I by no means felt,
+"what can I do for you this morning?"
+
+The fellow's face was the colour of mahogany with exposure to the
+weather, and he had a deep scar from the corner of his mouth to his ear,
+which by no means improved his appearance. His hair was grizzled, but
+his figure was stalwart, and his fur cap was cocked on one side so as to
+give him a rakish, semi-military appearance. Altogether he gave
+me the impression of being one of the most dangerous types of tramp that
+I had ever fallen in with.
+
+Instead of replying to my question, he eyed me for some time in
+silence with sullen, yellow-shot eyes, and then closed his knife with a
+loud snick.
+
+"You're not a beak," he said, "too young for that, I guess. They had
+me in chokey at Paisley and they had me in chokey at Wigtown, but by the
+living thunder if another of them lays a hand on me I'll make him
+remember Corporal Rufus Smith! It's a darned fine country this, where
+they won't give a man work, and then lay him by the heels for having no
+visible means of subsistence."
+
+"I am sorry to see an old soldier so reduced," said I. "What corps
+did you serve in?"
+
+"H Battery, Royal Horse Artillery. Bad cess to the Service and every
+one in it! Here I am nigh sixty years of age, with a beggarly pension
+of thirty-eight pound ten--not enough to keep me in beer and baccy."
+
+"I should have thought thirty-eight pound ten a year would have been a
+nice help to you in your old age," I remarked.
+
+"Would you, though?" he answered with a sneer, pushing his weather-
+beaten face forward until it was within a foot of my own.
+
+"How much d'ye think that slash with a tulwar is worth? And my foot
+with all the bones rattling about like a bagful of dice where the trail
+of the gun went across it. What's that worth, eh? And a liver like a
+sponge, and ague whenever the wind comes round to the east--what's the
+market value of that? Would you take the lot for a dirty forty pound a
+year--would you now?"
+
+"We are poor folk in this part of the country," I answered. "You would
+pass for a rich man down here."
+
+"They are fool folk and they have fool tastes," said he, drawing a
+black pipe from his pocket and stuffing it with tobacco. "I know what
+good living is, and, by cripes! while I have a shilling in my pocket I
+like to spend it as a shilling should be spent. I've fought for my
+country and my country has done darned little for me. I'll go to the
+Rooshians, so help me! I could show them how to cross the Himalayas so
+that it would puzzle either Afghans or British to stop 'em. What's that
+secret worth in St. Petersburg, eh, mister?"
+
+"I am ashamed to hear an old soldier speak so, even in jest," said I
+sternly.
+
+"Jest, indeed!" He cried, with a great, roaring oath. "I'd have done
+it years ago if the Rooshians had been game to take it up. Skobeloff
+was the best of the bunch, but he's been snuffed out. However, that's
+neither here nor there. What I want to ask you is whether you've ever
+heard anything in this quarter of a man called Heatherstone, the same
+who used to be colonel of the 41st Bengalis? They told me at Wigtown
+that he lived somewhere down this way."
+
+"He lives in that large house over yonder," said I, pointing to
+Cloomber Tower. "You'll find the avenue gate a little way down the
+road, but the general isn't over fond of visitors."
+
+The last part of my speech was lost upon Corporal Rufus Smith; for the
+instant that I pointed out the gate he set off hopping down the road.
+
+His mode of progression was the most singular I have ever seen, for He
+would only put his right foot to the ground once in every half-dozen
+strides, while he worked so hard and attained such a momentum with the
+other limb that he got over the ground at an astonishing speed.
+
+I was so surprised that I stood in the roadway gazing after this
+hulking figure until the thought suddenly struck me that some serious
+result might come from a meeting between a man of such blunt speech and
+the choleric, hot-headed general. I therefore followed him as he hopped
+along like some great, clumsy bird, and overtook him at the avenue gate,
+where he stood grasping the ironwork and peering through at the dark
+carriage-drive beyond.
+
+"He's a sly old jackal," he said, looking round at me and nodding his
+head in the direction of the Hall. "He's a deep old dog. And that's
+his bungalow, is it, among the trees?"
+
+"That is his house," I answered; "but I should advise you to keep a
+more civil tongue in your head if you intend to speak with the general.
+He is not a man to stand any nonsense."
+
+"Right you are. He was always a hard nut to crack. But isn't this him
+coming down the avenue?"
+
+I looked through the gate and saw that it was indeed the general, who,
+having either seen us or been attracted by our voices, was hurrying down
+towards us. As he advanced he would stop from time to time and peer at
+us through the dark shadow thrown by the trees, as if he were irresolute
+whether to come on or no.
+
+"He's reconnoitering!" whispered my companion with a hoarse chuckle.
+"He's afraid--and I know what he's afraid of. He won't be caught in a
+trap if he can help it, the old 'un. He's about as fly as they make
+'em, you bet!"
+
+Then suddenly standing on his tip-toes and waving his hand through the
+bars of the gate, he shouted at the top of his voice:
+
+"Come on, my gallant commandant! Come on! The coast's clear, and no
+enemy in sight."
+
+This familiar address had the effect of reassuring the general, for he
+came right for us, though I could tell by his heightened colour that his
+temper was at boiling point.
+
+"What, you here, Mr. West?" he said, as his eye fell upon me. "What is
+it you want, and why have you brought this fellow with you?"
+
+"I have not brought him with me, sir," I answered, feeling rather
+disgusted at being made responsible for the presence of the
+disreputable-looking vagabond beside me. "I found him on the road here,
+and he desired to be directed to you, so I showed him the way. I know
+nothing of him myself."
+
+"What do you want with me, then?" the general asked sternly, turning
+to my companion.
+
+"If you please, sir," said the ex-corporal, speaking in a whining
+voice, and touching his moleskin cap with a humility which contrasted
+strangely with the previous rough independence of his bearing, "I'm an
+old gunner in the Queen's service, sir, and knowing your name by hearing
+it in India I thought that maybe you would take me as your groom or
+gardener, or give me any other place as happened to be vacant."
+
+"I am sorry that I cannot do anything for you, my man," the old
+soldier answered impressively.
+
+"Then you'll give me a little just to help me on my way, sir," said he
+cringing mendicant. "You won't see an old comrade go to the bad for the
+sake of a few rupees? I was with Sale's brigade in the Passes, sir, and
+I was at the second taking of Cabul."
+
+ General Heatherstone looked keenly at the supplicant, but was silent
+to his appeal.
+
+"I was in Ghuznee with you when the walls were all shook down by an
+earthquake, and when we found forty thousand Afghans within gunshot of
+us. You ask me about it, and you'll see whether I'm lying or not. We
+went through all this when we were young, and now that we are old you
+are to live in a fine bungalow, and I am to starve by the roadside. It
+don't seem to me to be fair."
+
+"You are an impertinent scoundrel," said the general. "If you had been
+a good soldier you would never need to ask for help. I shall not give
+you a farthing."
+
+"One word more, sir," cried the tramp, for the other was turning away,
+"I've been in the Tarada Pass."
+
+The old soldier sprang round as if the words had been a pistol-shot.
+
+"What--what d'ye mean?" he stammered. "I've been in the Tarada Pass,
+sir, and I knew a man there called Ghoolab Shah."
+
+These last were hissed out in an undertone, and a malicious grin
+overspread the face of the speaker.
+
+Their effect upon the general was extraordinary. He fairly staggered
+back from the gateway, and his yellow countenance blanched to a livid,
+mottled grey. For a moment he was too overcome to speak. At last he
+gasped out:
+
+"Ghoolab Shah' Who are you who know Ghoolab Shah?"
+
+"Take another look," said the tramp, "your sight is not as keen as it
+was forty years ago."
+
+The general took a long, earnest look at the unkempt wanderer in front
+of him, and as he gazed I saw the light of recognition spring up in his
+eyes.
+
+"God bless my soul!" he cried. "Why, it's Corporal Rufus Smith."
+
+"You've come on it at last," said the other, chuckling to himself.
+"I was wondering how long it would be before you knew me. And, first of
+all, just unlock this gate, will you? It's hard to talk through a
+grating. It's too much like ten minutes with a visitor in the cells."
+
+The general, whose face still bore evidences of his agitation, undid
+the bolts with nervous, trembling fingers. The recognition of Corporal
+Rufus Smith had, I fancied, been a relief to him, and yet he plainly
+showed by his manner that he regarded his presence as by no means an
+unmixed blessing.
+
+"Why, Corporal," he said, as the gate swung open, "I have often
+wondered whether you were dead or alive, but I never expected to see you
+again. How have you been all these long years?"
+
+"How have I been?" the corporal answered gruffly. "Why, I have been
+drunk for the most part. When I draw my money I lay it out in liquor,
+and as long as that lasts I get some peace in life. When I'm cleaned
+out I go upon tramp, partly in the hope of picking up the price of a
+dram, and partly in order to look for you."
+
+"You'll excuse us talking about these private matters, West," the
+general said, looking round at me, for I was beginning to move away.
+"Don't leave us. You know something of this matter already, and may
+find yourself entirely in the swim with us some of these days."
+
+Corporal Rufus Smith looked round at me in blank astonishment.
+
+"In the swim with us?" he said. "However did he get there?"
+
+"Voluntarily, voluntarily," the general explained, hurriedly sinking
+his voice. "He is a neighbour of mine, and he has volunteered his help
+in case I should ever need it."
+
+This explanation seemed, if anything, to increase the big stranger's
+surprise.
+
+"Well, if that don't lick cock-fighting!" he exclaimed, contemplating
+me with admiration. "I never heard tell of such a thing."
+
+"And now you have found me, Corporal Smith," said the tenant of
+Cloomber, "what is it that you want of me?"
+
+"Why, everything. I want a roof to cover me, and clothes to wear, and
+food to eat, and, above all, brandy to drink."
+
+"Well, I'll take you in and do what I can for you," said the general
+slowly. "But look here, Smith, we must have discipline. I'm the general
+and you are the corporal; I am the master and you are the man. Now,
+don't let me have to remind you of that again."
+
+The tramp drew himself up to his full height and raised his right hand
+with the palm forward in a military salute.
+
+"I can take you on as gardener and get rid of the fellow I have got.
+As to brandy, you shall have an allowance and no more. We are not deep
+drinkers at the Hall."
+
+"Don't you take opium, or brandy, or nothing yourself, sir?" asked
+Corporal Rufus Smith.
+
+"Nothing," the general said firmly.
+
+"Well, all I can say is, that you've got more nerve and pluck than I
+shall ever have. I don't wonder now at your winning that Cross in the
+Mutiny. If I was to go on listening night after night to them things
+without ever taking a drop of something to cheer my heart--why, it would
+drive me silly."
+
+General Heatherstone put his hand up, as though afraid that his
+companion might say too much.
+
+"I must thank you, Mr. West," he said, "for having shown this man my
+door. I would not willingly allow an old comrade, however humble, to go
+to the bad, and if I did not acknowledge his claim more readily
+it was simply because I had my doubts as to whether he was really what
+he represented himself to be. Just walk up to the Hall, Corporal, and I
+shall follow you in a minute."
+
+"Poor fellow!" he continued, as he watched the newcomer hobbling up
+the avenue in the ungainly manner which I have described. "He got a gun
+over his foot, and it crushed the bones, but the obstinate fool would
+not let the doctors take it off. I remember him now as a smart young
+soldier in Afghanistan. He and I were associated in some queer
+adventures, which I may tell you of some day, and I naturally feel
+sympathy towards him, and would befriend him. Did he tell you
+anything about me before I came?"
+
+"Not a word," I replied.
+
+"Oh," said the general carelessly, but with an evident expression of
+relief, "I thought perhaps he might have said something of old times.
+Well, I must go and look after him, or the servants will be frightened,
+for he isn't a beauty to look at. Good-bye!"
+
+With a wave of the hand the old man turned away from me and hurried up
+the drive after this unexpected addition to his household, while I
+strolled on round the high, black paling, peering through every chink
+between the planks, but without seeing a trace either of Mordaunt or of
+his sister.
+
+I have now brought this statement down to the coming of Corporal Rufus
+Smith, which will prove to be the beginning of the end.
+
+I have set down soberly and in order the events which brought us to
+Wigtownshire, the arrival of the Heatherstones at Cloomber, the many
+strange incidents which excited first our curiosity and finally our
+intense interest in that family, and I have briefly touched upon
+the circumstances which brought my sister and myself into a closer and
+more personal relationship with them. I think that there cannot be a
+better moment than this to hand the narrative over to those who had
+means of knowing something of what was going on inside Cloomber during
+the months that I was observing it from without.
+
+Israel Stakes, the coachman, proved to be unable to read or write, but
+Mr. Mathew Clark, the Presbyterian Minister of Stoneykirk, has copied
+down his deposition, duly attested by the cross set opposite to his
+name. The good clergyman has, I fancy, put some slight polish upon the
+narrator's story, which I rather regret, as it might have been more
+interesting, if less intelligible, when reported verbatim. It still
+preserves, however, considerable traces of Israel's individuality, and
+may be regarded as an exact record of what he saw and did while in
+General Heatherstone's service.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+
+STATEMENT OF ISRAEL STAKES
+
+
+
+[Copied and authenticated by the Reverend Mathew Clark, Presbyterian
+Minister of Stoneykirk, in Wigtownshire]
+
+Maister Fothergill West and the meenister say that I maun tell all I can
+aboot General Heatherstone and his hoose, but that I maunna say muckle
+aboot mysel' because the readers wouldna care to hear aboot me or my
+affairs. I am na sae sure o' that, for the Stakes is a family weel
+kenned and respecked on baith sides o' the Border, and there's mony
+in Nithsdale and Annandale as would be gey pleased to hear news o' the
+son o' Archie Stakes, o' Ecclefechan.
+
+I maun e'en do as I'm tauld, however, for Mr. West's sake, hoping he'll
+no forget me when I chance to hae a favour tae ask.[1] I'm no able tae
+write mysel' because my feyther sent me oot to scare craws instead o'
+sendin' me tae school, but on the ither hond he brought me up in the
+preenciples and practice o' the real kirk o' the Covenant, for which
+may the Lord be praised!
+
+It way last May twel'month that the factor body, Maister McNeil, cam
+ower tae me in the street and speered whether I was in want o' a place
+as a coachman and gairdner. As it fell oot I chanced tae be on the look
+oot for something o' the sort mysel' at the time, but I wasna ower quick
+to let him see that I wanted it.
+
+"Ye can tak it or leave it," says he sharp like. "It's a guid place,
+and there's mony would be glad o't. If ye want it ye can come up tae my
+office at twa the morn and put your ain questions tae the gentleman."
+
+That was a' I could get frae him, for he's a close man and a hard one at
+a bargain--which shall profit him leetle in the next life, though he lay
+by a store o' siller in this. When the day comes there'll be a hantle
+o' factors on the left hand o' the throne, and I shouldna be surprised
+if Maister McNeil found himsel' amang them.
+
+Weel, on the morn I gaed up to the office and there I foond the factor
+and a lang, thin, dour man wi' grey hair and a face as brown and
+crinkled as a walnut. He looked hard at me wi' a pair o' een that
+glowed like twa spunks, and then he says, says he:
+
+"You've been born in these pairts, I understan'?"
+
+"Aye," says I, "and never left them neither."
+
+"Never been oot o' Scotland?" he speers.
+
+"Twice to Carlisle fair," says I, for I am a man wha loves the truth;
+and besides I kenned that the factor would mind my gaeing there, for I
+bargained fur twa steers and a stirk that he wanted for the stockin' o'
+the Drumleugh Fairm.
+
+"I learn frae Maister McNeil," says General Heatherstone--for him it was
+and nane ither--"that ye canna write."
+
+"Na," says I.
+
+"Nor read?"
+
+"Na," says I.
+
+"It seems tae me," says he, turnin' tae the factor, "that this is the
+vera man I want. Servants is spoilt noo-a-days," says he, "by ower
+muckle eddication. I hae nae doobt, Stakes, that ye will suit me well
+enough. Ye'll hae three pund a month and a' foond, but I shall resairve
+the right o' givin' ye twenty-four hoors' notice at any time. How will
+that suit ye?"
+
+"It's vera different frae my last place," says I, discontented-like.
+
+And the words were true enough, for auld Fairmer Scott only gave me a
+pund a month and parritch twice a day.
+
+"Weel, weel," says he, "maybe we'll gie ye a rise if ye suit. Meanwhile
+here's the han'sel shillin' that Maister McNeil tells me it's the custom
+tae give, and I shall expec' tae see ye at Cloomber on Monday."
+
+When the Monday cam roond I walked oot tae Cloomber, and a great muckle
+hoose it is, wi' a hunderd windows or mair, and space enough tae hide
+awa' half the parish.
+
+As tae gairdening, there was no gairden for me tae work at, and the
+horse was never taken oot o' the stables frae week's end tae week's
+end. I was busy enough for a' that, for there was a deal o' fencing tae
+be put up, and one thing or anither, forbye cleanin' the knives and
+brushin' the boots and such-like jobs as is mair fit for an auld wife
+than for a grown man.
+
+There was twa besides mysel' in the kitchen, the cook Eliza, and Mary
+the hoosemaid, puir, benighted beings baith o' them, wha had wasted a'
+their lives in London, and kenned leetle aboot the warld or the ways o'
+the flesh.
+
+I hadna muckle tae say to them, for they were simple folk who could
+scarce understand English, and had hardly mair regard for their ain
+souls than the tods on the moor. When the cook said she didna think
+muckle o' John Knox, and the ither that she wouldna give saxpence tae
+hear the discourse o' Maister Donald McSnaw o' the true kirk, I kenned
+it was time for me tae leave them tae a higher Judge.
+
+There was four in family, the general, my leddy, Maister Mordaunt, and
+Miss Gabriel, and it wasna long before I found that a' wasna just
+exactly as it should be. My leddy was as thin and as white as a ghaist,
+and many's the time as I've come on her and found her yammerin' and
+greetin' all by hersel'. I've watched her walkin' up and doon in the
+wood where she thought nane could see her and wringin' her honds like
+one demented.
+
+There was the young gentleman, tae, and his sister--they baith seemed to
+hae some trouble on their minds, and the general maist of a', for the
+ithers were up ane day and down anither; but he was aye the same, wi' a
+face as dour and sad as a felon when he feels the tow roond his neck.
+
+I speered o' the hussies in the kitchen whether they kenned what was
+amiss wi' the family, but the cook she answered me back that it wasna
+for her tae inquire into the affairs o' her superiors, and that it was
+naething to her as long as she did her work and had her wages.
+They were puir, feckless bodies, the twa o' them, and would scarce gie
+an answer tae a ceevil question, though they could clack lood eneugh
+when they had a mind.
+
+Weel, weeks passed into months and a' things grew waur instead o' better
+in the Hall. The general he got mair nairvous, and his leddy mair
+melancholy every day, and yet there wasna any quarrel or bickering
+between them, for when they've been togither in the breakfast room I
+used often tae gang round and prune the rose-tree alongside o' the
+window, so that I couldna help hearin' a great pairt o' their
+conversation, though sair against the grain.
+
+When the young folk were wi' them they would speak little, but when they
+had gone they would aye talk as if some waefu' trial ere aboot to fa'
+upon them, though I could never gather from their words what it was
+that they were afeared o'.
+
+I've heard the general say mair than ance that he wasna frighted o'
+death, or any danger that he could face and have done wi', but that
+it was the lang, weary waitin' and the uncertainty that had taken a' the
+strength and the mettle oot o' him. Then my leddy would console him and
+tell him that maybe it wasna as bad as he thocht, and that a' would come
+richt in the end--but a' her cheery words were clean throwed away upon
+him.
+
+As tae the young folks, I kenned weel that they didna bide in the
+groonds, and that they were awa' whenever they got a chance wi'
+Maister Fothergill West tae Branksome, but the general was too fu' o'
+his ain troubles tae ken aboot it, and it didna seem tae me that
+it was pairt o' my duties either as coachman or as gairdner tae mind the
+bairns. He should have lairnt that if ye forbid a lassie and a laddie
+to dae anything it's just the surest way o' bringin' it aboot. The Lord
+foond that oot in the gairden o' Paradise, and there's no muckle change
+between the folk in Eden and the folk in Wigtown.
+
+There's ane thing that I havena spoke aboot yet, but that should be set
+doon.
+
+The general didna share his room wi' his wife, but slept a' alane in a
+chamber at the far end o' the hoose, as distant as possible frae every
+one else. This room was aye lockit when he wasna in it, and naebody was
+ever allowed tae gang into it. He would mak' his ain bed, and red it up
+and dust it a' by himsel', but he wouldna so much as allow one o' us to
+set fut on the passage that led tae it.
+
+At nicht he would walk a' ower the hoose, and he had lamps hung in every
+room and corner, so that no pairt should be dark.
+
+Many's the time frae my room in the garret I've heard his futsteps
+comin' and gangin', comin' and gangin' doon one passage and up anither
+frae midnight till cockcraw. It was weary wark to lie listenin' tae his
+clatter and wonderin' whether he was clean daft, or whether maybe he'd
+lairnt pagan and idolatrous tricks oot in India, and that his conscience
+noo was like the worm which gnaweth and dieth not. I'd ha' speered frae
+him whether it wouldna ease him to speak wi' the holy Donald McSnaw, but
+it might ha' been a mistake, and the general wasna a man that you'd care
+tae mak' a mistake wi'.
+
+Ane day I was workin' at the grass border when he comes up and he says,
+says he:
+
+"Did ye ever have occasion tae fire a pistol, Israel?"
+
+"Godsakes!" says I, "I never had siccan a thing in my honds in my life."
+
+"Then you'd best not begin noo," says he. "Every man tae his ain
+weepon," he says. "Now I warrant ye could do something wi' a guid
+crab-tree cudgel!"
+
+"Aye, could I," I answered blithely, "as well as ony lad on the Border."
+
+"This is a lonely hoose," says he, "and we might be molested by some
+rascals. It's weel tae be ready for whatever may come. Me and you and
+my son Mordaunt and Mr. Fothergill West of Branksome, who would come if
+he was required, ought tae be able tae show a bauld face--what think
+ye?"
+
+"'Deed, sir," I says, "feastin' is aye better than fechtin'--but if
+ye'll raise me a pund a month, I'll no' shirk my share o' either."
+
+"We won't quarrel ower that," says he, and agreed tae the extra twal'
+pund a year as easy as though it were as many bawbees. Far be
+it frae me tae think evil, but I couldna help surmisin' at the time that
+money that was so lightly pairted wi' was maybe no' so very honestly cam
+by.
+
+I'm no' a curious or a pryin' mun by nature, but I was sair puzzled in
+my ain mind tae tell why it was that the general walked aboot at
+nicht and what kept him frae his sleep.
+
+Weel, ane day I was cleanin' doon the passages when my e'e fell on a
+great muckle heap o' curtains and auld cairpets and sic' like things
+that were piled away in a corner, no vera far frae the door o' the
+general's room. A' o' a sudden a thocht came intae my heid and I says
+tae mysel':
+
+"Israel, laddie," says I, "what's tae stop ye frae hidin' behind that
+this vera nicht and seein' the auld mun when he doesna ken human e'e is
+on him?"
+
+The mair I thocht o't the mair seemple it appeared, and I made up my
+mind tae put the idea intae instant execution.
+
+When the nicht cam roond I tauld the women-folk that I was bad wi' the
+jawache, and would gang airly tae my room. I kenned fine when ance I
+got there that there was na chance o' ony ane disturbin' me, so I waited
+a wee while, and then when a' was quiet, I slippit aff my boots and ran
+doon the ither stair until I cam tae the heap o' auld clothes, and there
+I lay doon wi' ane e'e peepin' through a kink and a' the rest covered up
+wi' a great, ragged cairpet.
+
+There I bided as quiet as a mouse until the general passed me on his
+road tae bed, and a' was still in the hoose.
+
+My certie! I wouldna gang through wi' it again for a' the siller at the
+Union Bank of Dumfries, I canna think o't noo withoot feelin' cauld a'
+the way doon my back.
+
+It was just awfu' lyin' there in the deid silence, waitin' and waitin'
+wi' never a soond tae break the monotony, except the heavy tickin' o' an
+auld clock somewhere doon the passage.
+
+First I would look doon the corridor in the one way, and syne I'd look
+doon in t'ither, but it aye seemed to me as though there was something
+coming up frae the side that I wasna lookin' at. I had a cauld sweat on
+my broo, and my hairt was beatin' twice tae ilka tick o' the clock, and
+what feared me most of a' was that the dust frae the curtains and things
+was aye gettin' doon intae my lungs, and it was a' I could dae tae keep
+mysel' frae coughin'.
+
+Godsakes! I wonder my hair wasna grey wi' a' that I went through. I
+wouldna dae it again to be made Lord Provost o' Glasgie.
+
+Weel, it may have been twa o'clock in the mornin' or maybe a little
+mair, and I was just thinkin' that I wasna tae see onything after
+a'--and I wasna very sorry neither--when all o' a sudden a soond cam tae
+my ears clear and distinct through the stillness o' the nicht.
+
+I've been asked afore noo tae describe that soond, but I've aye foond
+that it's no' vera easy tae gie a clear idea o't, though it was unlike
+any other soond that ever I hearkened tae. It was a shairp, ringin'
+clang, like what could be caused by flippin' the rim o' a
+wineglass, but it was far higher and thinner than that, and had in it,
+tae, a kind o' splash, like the tinkle o' a rain-drop intae a
+water-butt.
+
+In my fear I sat up amang my cairpets, like a puddock among
+gowan-leaves, and I listened wi' a' my ears. A' was still again
+noo, except for the dull tickin' o' the distant clock.
+
+Suddenly the soond cam again, as clear, as shrill, as shairp as ever,
+and this time the general heard it, for I heard him gie a kind
+o' groan, as a tired man might wha has been roosed oot o' his sleep.
+
+He got up frae his bed, and I could make oot a rustling noise, as though
+he were dressin' himsel', and presently his footfa' as he began tae walk
+up and doon in his room.
+
+Mysakes! it didna tak lang for me tae drap doon amang the cairpets again
+and cover mysel' ower. There I lay tremblin' in every limb, and sayin'
+as mony prayers as I could mind, wi' my e'e still peepin' through the
+keek-hole, and' fixed upon the door o' the general's room.
+
+I heard the rattle o' the handle presently, and the door swung slowly
+open. There was a licht burnin' in the room beyond, an' I could just
+catch a glimpse o' what seemed tae me like a row o' swords stuck alang
+the side o' the wa', when the general stepped oot and shut the door
+behind him. He was dressed in a dressin' goon, wi' a red smokin'-cap on
+his heid, and a pair o' slippers wi' the heels cut off and the taes
+turned up.
+
+For a moment it cam into my held that maybe he was walkin' in his sleep,
+but as he cam towards me I could see the glint o' the licht in his e'en,
+and his face was a' twistin', like a man that's in sair distress o'
+mind. On my conscience, it gies me the shakes noo when I think o' his
+tall figure and his yelley face comin' sae solemn and silent doon the
+lang, lone passage.
+
+I haud my breath and lay close watchin' him, but just as he cam tae
+where I was my vera hairt stood still in my breast, for "ting!"--loud
+and clear, within a yaird o' me cam the ringin', clangin' soond that I
+had a'ready hairkened tae.
+
+Where it cam frae is mair than I can tell or what was the cause o't.
+It might ha' been that the general made it, but I was sair puzzled tae
+tell hoo, for his honds were baith doon by his side as he passed me.
+It cam frae his direction, certainly, but it appeared tae me tae come
+frae ower his heid, but it was siccan a thin, eerie, high-pitched,
+uncanny kind o' soond that it wasna easy tae say just exactly where it
+did come frae.
+
+The general tuk nae heed o't, but walked on and was soon oot o' sicht,
+and I didna lose a minute in creepin' oot frae my hidin' place and
+scamperin' awa' back tae my room, and if a' the bogies in the Red Sea
+were trapesin' up and doon the hale nicht through, I wud never put my
+heid oot again tae hae a glimpse o' them.
+
+I didna say a word tae anybody aboot what I'd seen, but I made up my
+mind that I wudna stay muckle langer at Cloomber Ha'. Four pund a month
+is a good wage, but it isna enough tae pay a man for the loss o' his
+peace o' mind, and maybe the loss o' his soul as weel, for when the deil
+is aboot ye canna tell what sort o' a trap he may lay for ye, and though
+they say that Providence is stronger than him, it's maybe as weel no' to
+risk it.
+
+It was clear tae me that the general and his hoose were baith under some
+curse, and it was fit that that curse should fa' on them that had earned
+it, and no' on a righteous Presbyterian, wha had ever trod the narrow
+path.
+
+My hairt was sair for young Miss Gabriel--for she was a bonnie and
+winsome lassie--but for a' that, I felt that my duty was tae mysel' and
+that I should gang forth, even as Lot ganged oot o' the wicked cities o'
+the plain.
+
+That awfu' cling-clang was aye dingin' in my lugs, and I couldna bear to
+be alane in the passages for fear o' hearin' it ance again. I only
+wanted a chance or an excuse tae gie the general notice, and tae gang
+back to some place where I could see Christian folk, and have the kirk
+within a stone-cast tae fa' back upon.
+
+But it proved tae be ordained that, instead o' my saying the word, it
+should come frae the general himsel'.
+
+It was ane day aboot the beginning of October, I was comin' oot o' the
+stable, after giein' its oats tae the horse, when I seed a great muckle
+loon come hoppin' on ane leg up the drive, mair like a big, ill-faured
+craw than a man.
+
+When I clapped my een on him I thocht that maybe this was ane of the
+rascals that the maister had been speakin' aboot, so withoot mair ado I
+fetched oot my bit stick with the intention o' tryin' it upon the
+limmer's heid. He seed me comin' towards him, and readin' my intention
+frae my look maybe, or frae the stick in my hand, he pu'ed oot a lang
+knife frae his pocket and swore wi' the most awfu' oaths that if I didna
+stan' back he'd be the death o' me.
+
+Ma conscience! the words the chiel used was eneugh tae mak' the hair
+stand straight on your heid. I wonder he wasna struck deid where he
+stood.
+
+We were still standin' opposite each ither--he wi' his knife and me wi'
+the stick--when the general he cam up the drive and foond us. Tae my
+surprise he began tae talk tae the stranger as if he'd kenned him a' his
+days.
+
+"Put your knife in your pocket, Corporal," says he. "Your fears have
+turned your brain."
+
+"Blood an' wounds!" says the other. "He'd ha' turned my brain tae some
+purpose wi' that muckle stick o' his if I hadna drawn my snickersnee.
+You shouldna keep siccan an auld savage on your premises."
+
+The maister he frooned and looked black at him, as though he didna
+relish advice comin' frae such a source. Then turnin' tae me--"You
+won't be wanted after to-day, Israel," he says; "you have been a guid
+servant, and I ha' naething tae complain of wi' ye, but circumstances
+have arisen which will cause me tae change my arrangements."
+
+"Vera guid, sir," says I.
+
+"You can go this evening," says he, "and you shall have an extra month's
+pay tae mak up t'ye for this short notice."
+
+Wi' that he went intae the hoose, followed by the man that he ca'ed the
+corporal, and frae that day tae this I have never clapped een either on
+the ane or the ither. My money was sent oot tae me in an envelope, and
+havin' said a few pairtin' words tae the cook and the wench wi'
+reference tae the wrath tae come and the treasure that is richer than
+rubies, I shook the dust o' Cloomber frae my feet for ever.
+
+Maister Fothergill West says I maunna express an opeenion as tae what
+cam aboot afterwards, but maun confine mysel' tae what I saw mysel'.
+Nae doubt he has his reasons for this--and far be it frae me tae hint
+that they are no' guid anes--but I maun say this, that what happened
+didna surprise me. It was just as I expeckit, and so I said tae Maister
+Donald McSnaw.
+
+I've tauld ye a' aboot it noo, and I havena a word tae add or tae
+withdraw. I'm muckle obleeged tae Maister Mathew Clairk for puttin' it
+a' doon in writin' for me, and if there's ony would wish tae speer
+onything mair o' me I'm well kenned and respeckit in Ecclefechan,
+and Maister McNeil, the factor o' Wigtown, can aye tell where I am tae
+be foond.
+
+
+[1] The old rascal was well paid for his trouble, so he need not have
+made such a favour of it.--J.F.W.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+
+NARRATIVE OF JOHN EASTERLING, F.R.C.P.EDIN.
+
+Having given the statement of Israel Stakes _in extenso_, I shall append
+a short memorandum from Dr. Easterling, now practising at Stranraer.
+It is true that the doctor was only once within the walls of Cloomber
+during its tenancy by General Heatherstone, but there were some
+circumstances connected with this visit which made it valuable,
+especially when considered as a supplement to the experiences which I
+have just submitted to the reader.
+
+The doctor has found time amid the calls of a busy country practice to
+jot down his recollections, and I feel that I cannot do better than
+subjoin them exactly as they stand.
+
+I have very much pleasure in furnishing Mr. Fothergill West with an
+account of my solitary visit to Cloomber Hall, not only on account of
+the esteem which I have formed for that gentleman ever since his
+residence at Branksome, but also because it is my conviction that the
+facts in the case of General Heatherstone are of such a singular nature
+that it is of the highest importance that they should be placed before
+the public in a trustworthy manner.
+
+It was about the beginning of September of last year that I received a
+note from Mrs. Heatherstone, of Cloomber Hall, desiring me to make a
+professional call upon her husband, whose health, she said, had been for
+some time in a very unsatisfactory state.
+
+I had heard something of the Heatherstones and of the strange seclusion
+in which they lived, so that I was very much pleased at this opportunity
+of making their closer acquaintance, and lost no time in complying with
+her request.
+
+I had known the Hall in the old days of Mr. McVittie, the original
+proprietor, and I was astonished on arriving at the avenue gate
+to observe the changes which had taken place.
+
+The gate itself, which used to yawn so hospitably upon the road, was now
+barred and locked, and a high wooden fence, with nails upon the top,
+encircled the whole grounds. The drive itself was leaf-strewn and
+uncared-for, and the whole place had a depressing air of neglect and
+decay.
+
+I had to knock twice before a servant-maid opened the door and showed me
+through a dingy hall into a small room, where sat an elderly, careworn
+lady, who introduced herself as Mrs. Heatherstone. With her pale face,
+her grey hair, her sad, colourless eyes, and her faded silk dress, she
+was in perfect keeping with her melancholy surroundings.
+
+"You find us in much trouble, doctor," she said, in a quiet, refined
+voice. "My poor husband has had a great deal to worry him, and his
+nervous system for a long time has been in a very weak state. We came
+to this part of the country in the hope that the bracing air and the
+quiet would have a good effect upon him. Instead of improving, however,
+he has seemed to grow weaker, and this morning he is in a high fever and
+a little inclined to be delirious. The children and I were so
+frightened that we sent for you at once. If you will follow me I will
+take you to the general's bedroom."
+
+She led the way down a series of corridors to the chamber of the sick
+man, which was situated in the extreme wing of the building.
+
+It was a carpetless, bleak-looking room, scantily furnished with a small
+truckle bed, a campaigning chair, and a plain deal table, on which were
+scattered numerous papers and books. In the centre of this table there
+stood a large object of irregular outline, which was covered over with a
+sheet of linen.
+
+All round the walls and in the corners were arranged a very choice and
+varied collection of arms, principally swords, some of which were of the
+straight pattern in common use in the British Army, while among the
+others were scimitars, tulwars, cuchurries, and a score of other
+specimens of Oriental workmanship. Many of these were richly mounted,
+with inlaid sheaths and hilts sparkling with precious stones, so that
+there was a piquant contrast between the simplicity of the apartment and
+the wealth which glittered on the walls.
+
+I had little time, however, to observe the general's collection, since
+the general himself lay upon the couch and was evidently in sore need of
+my services.
+
+He was lying with his head turned half away from us. Breathing heavily,
+and apparently unconscious of our presence. His bright, staring eyes
+and the deep, hectic flush upon his cheek showed that his fever was at
+its height.
+
+I advanced to the bedside, and, stooping over him, I placed my fingers
+upon his pulse, when immediately he sprang up into the sitting position
+and struck at me frenziedly with his clenched hands. I have never seen
+such intensity of fear and horror stamped upon a human face as appeared
+upon that that which was now glaring up at me.
+
+"Bloodhound!" he yelled; "let me go--let me go, I say! Keep your hands
+off me! Is it not enough that my life has been ruined? When is it all
+to end? How long am I to endure it?"
+
+"Hush, dear, hush!" said his wife in a soothing voice, passing her cool
+hand over his heated forehead. "This is Doctor Easterling, from
+Stranraer. He has not come to harm you, but to do you good."
+
+The general dropped wearily back upon his pillow, and I could see by the
+changed expression of his face that his delirium had left him, and that
+he understood what had been said.
+
+I slipped my clinical thermometer into his armpit and counted his pulse
+rate. It amounted to 120 per minute, and his temperature proved to be
+104 degrees. Clearly it was a case of remittent fever, such as occurs
+in men who have spent a great part of their lives in the tropics.
+
+"There is no danger," I remarked. "With a little quinine and arsenic we
+shall very soon overcome the attack and restore his health."
+
+"No danger, eh?" he said. "There never is any danger for me. I am as
+hard to kill as the Wandering Jew. I am quite clear in the head now,
+Mary; so you may leave me with the doctor."
+
+Mrs. Heatherstone left the room-rather unwillingly, as I thought--and I
+sat down by the bedside to listen to anything which my patient might
+have to communicate.
+
+"I want you to examine my liver," he said when the door was closed.
+"I used to have an abscess there, and Brodie, the staff-surgeon, said
+that it was ten to one that it would carry me off. I have not felt much
+of it since I left the East. This is where it used to be, just under
+the angle of the ribs."
+
+"I can find the place," said I, after making a careful examination;
+"but I am happy to tell you that the abscess has either been entirely
+absorbed, or has turned calcareous, as these solitary abscesses will.
+There is no fear of its doing you any harm now."
+
+He seemed to be by no means overjoyed at the intelligence.
+
+"Things always happen so with me," he said moodily. "Now, if another
+fellow was feverish and delirious he would surely be in some danger, and
+yet you will tell me that I am in none. Look at this, now." He bared
+his chest and showed me a puckered wound over the region of the heart.
+"That's where the jezail bullet of a Hillman went in. You would think
+that was in the right spot to settle a man, and yet what does it do but
+glance upon a rib, and go clean round and out at the back, without so
+much as penetrating what you medicos call the pleura. Did ever you hear
+of such a thing?"
+
+"You were certainly born under a lucky star," I observed, with a smile.
+
+"That's a matter of opinion," he answered, shaking his head. "Death has
+no terrors for me, if it will but come in some familiar form, but I
+confess that the anticipation of some strange, some preternatural form
+of death is very terrible and unnerving"
+
+"You mean," said I, rather puzzled at his remark, "that you would prefer
+a natural death to a death by violence?"
+
+"No, I don't mean that exactly," he answered. "I am too familiar with
+cold steel and lead to be afraid of either. Do you know anything about
+odyllic force, doctor?"
+
+"No, I do not," I replied, glancing sharply at him to see if there were
+any signs of his delirium returning. His expression was intelligent,
+however, and the feverish flush had faded from his cheeks.
+
+"Ah, you Western scientific men are very much behind the day in some
+things," he remarked. "In all that is material and conducive to the
+comfort of the body you are pre-eminent, but in what concerns the subtle
+forces of Nature and the latent powers of the human spirit your best men
+are centuries behind the humblest coolies of India. Countless
+generations of beef-eating, comfort loving ancestors have given our
+animal instincts the command over our spiritual ones. The body, which
+should have been a mere tool for the use of the soul, has now become a
+degrading prison in which it is confined. The Oriental soul and body
+are not so welded together as ours are, and there is far less wrench
+when they part in death"
+
+"They do not appear to derive much benefit from this peculiarity in
+their organisation," I remarked incredulously.
+
+"Merely the benefit of superior knowledge," the general answered. "If
+you were to go to India, probably the very first thing you would see in
+the way of amusement would be a native doing what is called the mango
+trick. Of course you have heard or read of it. The fellow plants a
+mango seed, and makes passes over it until it sprouts and bears leaves
+and fruit--all in the space of half-an-hour. It is not really a trick--
+it is a power. These men know more than your Tyndalls or Huxleys do
+about Nature's processes, and they can accelerate or retard her workings
+by subtle means of which we have no conception. These low-caste
+conjurers--as they are called--are mere vulgar dabblers, but the men who
+have trod the higher path are as far superior to us in knowledge as we
+are to the Hottentots or Patagonians."
+
+"You speak as if you were well acquainted with them," I remarked.
+
+"To my cost, I am," he answered. "I have been brought in contact with
+them in a way in which I trust no other poor chap ever will be. But,
+really, as regards odyllic force, you ought to know something of it, for
+it has a great future before it in your profession. You should read
+Reichcnbach's 'Researches on Magnetism and Vital Force,' and Gregory's
+'Letters on Animal Magnetism.' These, supplemented by the twenty-seven
+Aphorisms of Mesmer, and the works of Dr. Justinus Kerner, of Weinsberg,
+would enlarge your ideas."
+
+I did not particularly relish having a course of reading prescribed for
+me on a subject connected with my own profession, so I made no comment,
+but rose to take my departure. Before doing so I felt his pulse once
+more, and found that the fever had entirely left him in the sudden,
+unaccountable fashion which is peculiar to these malarious types of
+disease.
+
+I turned my face towards him to congratulate him upon his improvement,
+and stretched out my hand at the same time to pick my gloves from the
+table, with the result that I raised not only my own property, but also
+the linen cloth which was arranged over some object in the centre.
+
+I might not have noticed what I had done had I not seen an angry look
+upon the invalid's face and heard him utter an impatient exclamation. I
+at once turned, and replaced the cloth so promptly that I should have
+been unable to say what was underneath it, beyond having a general
+impression that it looked like a bride-cake.
+
+"All right, doctor," the general said good-humouredly, perceiving how
+entirely accidental the incident was. "There is no reason why you
+should not see it," and stretching out his hand, he pulled away the
+linen covering for the second time.
+
+I then perceived that what I had taken for a bride-cake was really an
+admirably executed model of a lofty range of mountains, whose snow-clad
+peaks were not unlike the familiar sugar pinnacles and minarets.
+
+"These are the Himalayas, or at least the Surinam branch of them," he
+remarked, "showing the principal passes between India and Afghanistan.
+It is an excellent model. This ground has a special interest for me,
+because it is the scene of my first campaign. There is the pass
+opposite Kalabagh and the Thul valley, where I was engaged during the
+summer of 1841 in protecting the convoys and keeping the Afridis in
+order. It wasn't a sinecure, I promise you."
+
+"And this," said I, indicating a blood-red spot which had been marked on
+one side of the pass which he had pointed out--"this is the scene of
+some fight in which you were engaged."
+
+"Yes, we had a skirmish there," he answered, leaning forward and looking
+at the red mark. "We were attacked by--"
+
+At this moment he fell back upon his pillow as if he had been shot,
+while the same look of horror came over his face which I had observed
+when I first entered the room. At the same instant there came,
+apparently from the air immediately above his bed, a sharp, ringing,
+tinkling sound, which I can only compare with the noise made by a
+bicycle alarm, though it differed from this in having a distinctly
+throbbing character. I have never, before or since, heard any sound
+which could be confounded with it.
+
+I stared round in astonishment, wondering where it could have come from,
+but without perceiving anything to which it could be ascribed.
+
+"It's all right, doctor," the general said with a ghastly smile. "It's
+only my private gong. Perhaps you had better step downstairs and write
+my prescription in the dining-room."
+
+He was evidently anxious to get rid of me, so I was forced to take my
+departure, though I would gladly have stayed a little longer, in the
+hope of learning something as to the origin of the mysterious sound.
+
+I drove away from the house with the full determination of calling again
+upon my interesting patient, and endeavouring to elicit some further
+particulars as to his past life and his present circumstances. I was
+destined, however, to be disappointed, for I received that very evening
+a note from the general himself, enclosing a handsome fee for my single
+visit, and informing me that my treatment had done him so much good that
+he considered himself to be convalescent, and would not trouble me to
+see him again.
+
+This was the last and only communication which I ever received from the
+tenant of Cloomber.
+
+I have been asked frequently by neighbours and others who were
+interested in the matter whether he gave me the impression of insanity.
+To this I must unhesitatingly answer in the negative. On the contrary,
+his remarks gave me the idea of a man who had both read and thought
+deeply.
+
+I observed, however, during our single interview, that his reflexes were
+feeble, his arcus senilis well marked, and his arteries atheromatous--
+all signs that his constitution was in an unsatisfactory condition, and
+that a sudden crisis might be apprehended.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+
+OF THE LETTER WHICH CAME FROM THE HALL
+
+Having thrown this side-light upon my narrative, I can now resume the
+statement of my own personal experiences. These I had brought down, as
+the reader will doubtless remember, to the date of the arrival of the
+savage-looking wanderer who called himself Corporal Rufus Smith. This
+incident occurred about the beginning of the month of October, and I
+find upon a comparison of dates that Dr. Easterling's visit to Cloomber
+preceded it by three weeks or more.
+
+During all this time I was in sore distress of mind, for I had never
+seen anything either of Gabriel or of her brother since the interview in
+which the general had discovered the communication which was kept up
+between us. I had no doubt that some sort of restraint had been placed
+upon them; and the thought that we had brought trouble on their heads
+was a bitter one both to my sister and myself.
+
+Our anxiety, however, was considerably mitigated by the receipt, a
+couple of days after my last talk with the general, of a note from
+Mordaunt Heatherstone. This was brought us by a little, ragged urchin,
+the son of one of the fishermen, who informed us that it had been handed
+to him at the avenue gate by an old woman--who, I expect, must have
+been the Cloomber cook.
+
+"MY DEAREST FRIENDS," it ran, "Gabriel and I have grieved to think how
+concerned you must be at having neither heard from nor seen us. The
+fact is that we are compelled to remain in the house. And this
+compulsion is not physical but moral.
+
+"Our poor father, who gets more and more nervous every day, has
+entreated us to promise him that we will not go out until after
+the fifth of October, and to allay his fears we have given him the
+desired pledge. On the other hand, he has promised us that after the
+fifth--that is, in less than a week--we shall be as free as air to come
+or go as we please, so we have something to look forward to.
+
+"Gabriel says that she has explained to you that the governor is always
+a changed man after this particular date, on which his fears reach a
+crisis. He apparently has more reason than usual this year to
+anticipate that trouble is brewing for this unfortunate family,
+for I have never known him to take so many elaborate precautions or
+appear so thoroughly unnerved. Who would ever think, to see his
+bent form and his shaking hands, that he is the same man who used some
+few short years ago to shoot tigers on foot among the jungles
+of the Terai, and would laugh at the more timid sportsmen who sought the
+protection of their elephant's howdah?
+
+"You know that he has the Victoria Cross, which he won in the streets of
+Delhi, and yet here he is shivering with terror and starting at every
+noise, in the most peaceful corner of the world. Oh, the pity of it.
+West! Remember what I have already told you--that it is no fanciful or
+imaginary peril, but one which we have every reason to suppose to be
+most real. It is, however, of such a nature that it can neither be
+averted nor can it profitably be expressed in words. If all goes well,
+you will see us at Branksome on the sixth.
+
+"With our fondest love to both of you, I am ever, my dear friends, your
+attached
+
+"MORDAUNT."
+
+This letter was a great relief to us as letting us know that the brother
+and sister were under no physical restraint, but our powerlessness
+and inability even to comprehend what the danger was which threatened
+those whom we had come to love better than ourselves was little short of
+maddening.
+
+Fifty times a day we asked ourselves and asked each other from what
+possible quarter this peril was to be expected, but the more we thought
+of it the more hopeless did any solution appear.
+
+In vain we combined our experiences and pieced together every word which
+had fallen from the lips of any inmate of Cloomber which might be
+supposed to bear directly or indirectly upon the subject.
+
+At last, weary with fruitless speculation, we were fain to try to drive
+the matter from our thoughts, consoling ourselves with the reflection
+that in a few more days all restrictions would be removed, and we should
+be able to learn from our friends' own lips.
+
+Those few intervening days, however, would, we feared, be dreary, long
+ones. And so they would have been, had it not been for a new and most
+unexpected incident, which diverted our minds from our own troubles
+and gave them something fresh with which to occupy themselves.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+
+OF THE CASTING AWAY OF THE BARQUE "BELINDA"
+
+The third of October had broken auspiciously with a bright sun and a
+cloudless sky. There had in the morning been a slight breeze, and a few
+little white wreaths of vapour drifted here and there like the scattered
+feathers of some gigantic bird, but, as the day wore on, such wind as
+there was fell completely away, and the air became close and stagnant.
+
+The sun blazed down with a degree of heat which was remarkable so late
+in the season, and a shimmering haze lay upon the upland moors and
+concealed the Irish mountains on the other side of the Channel.
+
+The sea itself rose and fell in a long, heavy, oily roll, sweeping
+slowly landward, and breaking sullenly with a dull, monotonous
+booming upon the rock-girt shore. To the inexperienced all seemed calm
+and peaceful, but to those who are accustomed to read Nature's warnings
+there was a dark menace in air and sky and sea.
+
+My sister and I walked out in the afternoon, sauntering slowly along the
+margin of the great, sandy spit which shoots out into the Irish Sea,
+flanking upon one side the magnificent Bay of Luce, and on the other the
+more obscure inlet of Kirkmaiden, on the shores of which the Branksome
+property is situated.
+
+It was too sultry to go far, so we soon seated ourselves upon one of the
+sandy hillocks, overgrown with faded grass-tufts, which extend along the
+coast-line, and which form Nature's dykes against the encroachments of
+the ocean.
+
+Our rest was soon interrupted by the scrunching of heavy boots upon the
+shingle, and Jamieson, the old man-o'-war's man whom I have already had
+occasion to mention, made his appearance, with the flat, circular
+net upon his back which he used for shrimp-catching. He came towards us
+upon seeing us, and said in his rough, kindly way that he hoped we would
+not take it amiss if he sent us up a dish of shrimps for our tea at
+Branksome.
+
+"I aye make a good catch before a storm," he remarked.
+
+"You think there is going to be a storm, then?" I asked.
+
+"Why, even a marine could see that," he answered, sticking a great wedge
+of tobacco into his cheek. "The moors over near Cloomber are just white
+wi' gulls and kittiewakes. What d'ye think they come ashore for except
+to escape having all the feathers blown out o' them? I mind a day like
+this when I was wi' Charlie Napier off Cronstadt. It well-nigh blew us
+under the guns of the forts, for all our engines and propellers."
+
+"Have you ever known a wreck in these parts?" I asked.
+
+"Lord love ye, sir, it's a famous place for wrecks. Why, in that very
+bay down there two o' King Philip's first-rates foundered wi' all hands
+in the days o' the Spanish war. If that sheet o' water and the Bay o'
+Luce round the corner could tell their ain tale they'd have a gey lot to
+speak of. When the Jedgment Day comes round that water will be just
+bubbling wi' the number o' folks that will be coming up frae the
+bottom."
+
+"I trust that there will be no wrecks while we are here," said Esther
+earnestly.
+
+The old man shook his grizzled head and looked distrustfully at the hazy
+horizon.
+
+"If it blows from the west," he said, "some o' these sailing ships may
+find it no joke to be caught without sea-room in the North Channel.
+There's that barque out yonder--I daresay her maister would be glad
+enough to find himsel' safe in the Clyde."
+
+"She seems to be absolutely motionless," I remarked, looking at the
+vessel in question, whose black hull and gleaming sails rose and
+fell slowly with the throbbing of the giant pulse beneath her.
+"Perhaps, Jamieson, we are wrong, and there will be no storm after all."
+
+The old sailor chuckled to himself with an air of superior knowledge,
+and shuffled away with his shrimp-net, while my sister and I walked
+slowly homewards through the hot and stagnant air.
+
+I went up to my father's study to see if the old gentleman had any
+instructions as to the estate, for he had become engrossed in a new work
+upon Oriental literature, and the practical management of the property
+had in consequence devolved entirely upon me.
+
+I found him seated at his square library table, which was so heaped with
+books and papers that nothing of him was visible from the door except a
+tuft of white hair.
+
+"My dear son," he said to me as I entered, "it is a great grief to me
+that you are not more conversant with Sanscrit. When I was your age, I
+could converse not only in that noble language, but also in the Tamulic,
+Lohitic, Gangelic, Taic, and Malaic dialects, which are all offshoots
+from the Turanian branch."
+
+"I regret extremely, sir," I answered, "that I have not inherited your
+wonderful talents as a polyglot."
+
+"I have set myself a task," he explained, "which, if it could only be
+continued from generation to generation in our own family until it was
+completed, would make the name of West immortal. This is nothing less
+than to publish an English translation of the Buddhist Djarmas, with a
+preface giving an idea of the position of Brahminism before the coming
+of Sakyamuni. With diligence it is possible that I might be able myself
+to complete part of the preface before I die."
+
+"And pray, sir," I asked, "how long would the whole work be when it was
+finished?"
+
+"The abridged edition in the Imperial Library of Pekin," said my father,
+rubbing his hands together, "consists of 325 volumes of an average
+weight of five pounds. Then tile preface, which must embrace some
+account of the Rig-veda, the Sama-veda, the Yagur-veda, and the Atharva-
+veda, with the Brahmanas, could hardly be completed in less than
+ten volumes. Now, if we apportion one volume to each year, there is
+every prospect of the family coming to an end of its task about the
+date 2250, the twelfth generation completing the work, while the
+thirteenth might occupy itself upon the index."
+
+"And how are our descendants to live, sir," I asked, with a smile,
+"during the progress of this great undertaking:'"
+
+"That's the worst of you, Jack," my father cried petulantly. "There is
+nothing practical about you. Instead of confining your attention to the
+working out of my noble scheme, you begin raising all sorts of absurd
+objections. It is a mere matter of detail how our descendants live, so
+long as they stick to the Djarmas. Now, I want you to go up to the
+bothy of Fergus McDonald and see about the thatch, and Willie Fullerton
+has written to say that his milk-cow is bad. You might took in upon
+your way and ask after it."
+
+I started off upon my errands, but before doing so I took a look at the
+barometer upon the wall. The mercury had sunk to the phenomenal point
+of twenty-eight inches. Clearly the old sailor had not been wrong in
+his interpretation of Nature's signs.
+
+As I returned over the moors in the evening, the wind was blowing in
+short, angry puffs, and the western horizon was heaped with sombre
+clouds which stretched their long, ragged tentacles right up to the
+zenith.
+
+Against their dark background one or two livid, sulphur-coloured
+splotches showed up malignant and menacing, while the surface of
+the sea had changed from the appearance of burnished quicksilver to that
+of ground glass. A low, moaning sound rose up from the ocean as if it
+knew that trouble was in store for it.
+
+Far out in the Channel I saw a single panting, eager steam vessel making
+ifs way to Belfast Lough, and the large barque which I had observed in
+the morning still beating about in the offing, endeavouring to pass to
+the northward.
+
+At nine o'clock a sharp breeze was blowing, at ten it had freshened into
+a gale, and before midnight the most furious storm was raging which I
+can remember upon that weather-beaten coast.
+
+I sat for some time in our small, oak-panelled sitting-room listening to
+the screeching and howling of the blast and to the rattle of the gravel
+and pebbles as they pattered against the window. Nature's grim
+orchestra was playing its world-old piece with a compass which ranged
+from the deep diapason of the thundering surge to the thin shriek of the
+scattered shingle and the keen piping of frightened sea birds.
+
+Once for an instant I opened the lattice window, but a gust of wind and
+rain came blustering through, bearing with it a great sheet of seaweed,
+which flapped down upon the table. It was all I could do to close it
+again with a thrust of my shoulder in the face of the blast.
+
+My sister and father had retired to their rooms, but my thoughts were
+too active for sleep, so I continued to sit and to smoke by the
+smouldering fire.
+
+What was going on in the Hall now, I wondered? What did Gabriel think
+of the storm, and how did it affect the old man who wandered about in
+the night? Did he welcome these dread forces of Nature as being of the
+same order of things as his own tumultuous thoughts?
+
+It was only two days now from the date which I had been assured was to
+mark a crisis in his fortunes. Would he regard this sudden tempest as
+being in any way connected with the mysterious fate which threatened
+him?
+
+Over all these things and many more I pondered as I sat by the glowing
+embers until they died gradually out, and the chill night air warned me
+that it was time to retire.
+
+I may have slept a couple of hours when I was awakened by some one
+tugging furiously at my shoulder. Sitting up in bed, I saw by the dim
+light that my father was standing half-clad by my bedside, and that it
+was his grasp which I felt on my night-shirt.
+
+"Get up, Jack, get up!" he was crying excitedly. "There's a great ship
+ashore in the bay, and the poor folk will all be drowned. Come down, my
+boy, and let us see what we can do."
+
+The good old man seemed to be nearly beside himself with excitement and
+impatience. I sprang from my bed, and was huddling on a few clothes,
+when a dull, booming sound made itself heard above the howling of the
+wind and the thunder of the breakers.
+
+"There it is again!" cried my father. "It is their signal gun, poor
+creatures! Jamieson and the fishermen are below. Put your oil-skin
+coat on and the Glengarry hat. Come, come, every second may mean a
+human life!"
+
+We hurried down together and made our way to the beach, accompanied by a
+dozen or so of the inhabitants of Branksome.
+
+The gale had increased rather than moderated, and the wind screamed all
+round us with an infernal clamour. So great was its force that we had
+to put our shoulders against it, and bore our way through it, while the
+sand and gravel tingled up against our faces.
+
+There was just light enough to make out the scudding clouds and the
+white gleam of the breakers, but beyond that all was absolute darkness.
+
+We stood ankle deep in the shingle and seaweed, shading our eyes with
+our hands and peering out into the inky obscurity.
+
+It seemed to me as I listened that I could hear human voices loud in
+intreaty and terror, but amid the wild turmoil of Nature it was
+difficult to distinguish one sound from another.
+
+Suddenly, however, a light glimmered in the heart of the tempest, and
+next instant the beach and sea and wide, tossing bay were brilliantly
+illuminated by the wild glare of a signal light.
+
+The ship lay on her beam-ends right in the centre of the terrible Hansel
+reef, hurled over to such an angle that I could see all the planking of
+her deck. I recognised her at once as being the same three-masted
+barque which I had observed in the Channel in the morning, and the Union
+Jack which was nailed upside down to the jagged slump of her mizzen
+proclaimed her nationality.
+
+Every spar and rope and writhing piece of cordage showed up hard and
+clear under the vivid light which spluttered and flickered from
+the highest portion of the forecastle. Beyond the doomed ship, out of
+the great darkness came the long, rolling lines of big waves, never
+ending, never tiring, with a petulant tuft of foam here and there upon
+their crests. Each as it reached the broad circle of unnatural light
+appeared to gather strength and volume and to hurry on more impetuously
+until with a roar and a jarring crash it sprang upon its victim.
+
+Clinging to the weather shrouds we could distinctly see ten or a dozen
+frightened seamen who, when the light revealed our presence, turned
+their white faces towards us and waved their hands imploringly. The
+poor wretches had evidently taken fresh hope from our presence, though
+it was clear that their own boats had either been washed away or so
+damaged as to render them useless.
+
+The sailors who clung to the rigging were not, however, the only
+unfortunates on board. On the breaking poop there stood three men
+who appeared to be both of a different race and nature from the cowering
+wretches who implored our assistance.
+
+Leaning upon the shattered taff-rail they seemed to be conversing
+together as quietly and unconcernedly as though they were unconscious of
+the deadly peril which surrounded them.
+
+As the signal light flickered over them, we could see from the shore
+that these immutable strangers wore red fezes, and that their faces
+were of a swarthy, large-featured type, which proclaimed an Eastern
+origin.
+
+There was little time, however, for us to take note of such details.
+The ship was breaking rapidly, and some effort must be made to save the
+poor, sodden group of humanity who implored our assistance.
+
+The nearest lifeboat was in the Bay of Luce, ten long miles away, but
+here was our own broad, roomy craft upon the shingle, and plenty of
+brave fisher lads to form a crew. Six of us sprang to the oars, the
+others pushed us off, and we fought our way through the swirling, raging
+waters, staggering and recoiling before the great, sweeping billows,
+but still steadily decreasing the distance between the barque and
+ourselves.
+
+It seemed, however, that our efforts were fated to be in vain.
+
+As we mounted upon a surge I saw a giant wave, topping all the others,
+and coming after them like a driver following a flock, sweep down upon
+the vessel, curling its great, green arch over the breaking deck.
+
+With a rending, riving sound the ship split in two where the terrible,
+serrated back of the Hansel reef was sawing into her keel. The
+after-part, with the broken mizzen and the three Orientals, sank
+backwards into deep water and vanished, while the fore-half oscillated
+helplessly about, retaining its precarious balance upon the rocks.
+
+A wail of fear went up from the wreck and was echoed from the beach, but
+by the blessing of Providence she kept afloat until we made our way
+under her bowsprit and rescued every man of the crew.
+
+We had not got half-way upon our return, however, when another great
+wave swept the shattered forecastle off the reef, and, extinguishing the
+signal light, hid the wild denouement from our view.
+
+Our friends upon the shore were loud in congratulation and praise, nor
+were they backward in welcoming and comforting the castaways. They were
+thirteen in all, as cold and cowed a set of mortals as ever slipped
+through Death's fingers, save, indeed, their captain, who was a hardy,
+robust man, and who made light of the affair.
+
+Some were taken off to this cottage and some to that, but the greater
+part came back to Branksome with us, where we gave them such dry clothes
+as we could lay our hands on, and served them with beef and beer by
+the kitchen fire. The captain, whose name was Meadows, compressed his
+bulky form into a suit of my own, and came down to the parlour, where he
+mixed himself some grog and gave my father and myself an account of the
+disaster.
+
+"If it hadn't been for you, sir, and your brave fellows," he said,
+smiling across at me, "we should be ten fathoms deep by this time.
+As to the _Belinda_, she was a leaky old tub and well insured, so
+neither the owners nor I are likely to break our hearts over her."
+
+"I am afraid," said my father sadly, "that we shall never see your three
+passengers again. I have left men upon the beach in case they should be
+washed up, but I fear it is hopeless. I saw them go down when the
+vessel split, and no man could have lived for a moment among that
+terrible surge."
+
+"Who were they?" I asked. "I could not have believed that it was
+possible for men to appear so unconcerned in the face of such imminent
+peril."
+
+"As to who they are or were," the captain answered, puffing thoughtfully
+at his pipe, "that is by no means easy to say. Our last port was
+Kurrachee, in the north of India, and there we took them aboard as
+passengers for Glasgow. Ram Singh was the name of the younger, and it
+is only with him that I have come in contact, but they all appeared to
+be quiet, inoffensive gentlemen. I never inquired their business, but I
+should judge that they were Parsee merchants from Hyderabad whose trade
+took them to Europe. I could never see why the crew should fear them,
+and the mate, too, he should have had more sense."
+
+"Fear them I!" I ejaculated in surprise.
+
+"Yes, they had some preposterous idea that they were dangerous
+shipmates. I have no doubt if you were to go down into the kitchen
+now you would find that they are all agreed that our passengers were the
+cause of the whole disaster."
+
+As the captain was speaking the parlour door opened and the mate of the
+barque, a tall, red-bearded sailor, stepped in. He had obtained a
+complete rig-out from some kind-hearted fisherman, and looked in his
+comfortable jersey and well-greased seaboots a very favourable specimen
+of a shipwrecked mariner.
+
+With a few words of grateful acknowledgment of our hospitality, he drew
+a chair up to the fire and warmed his great, brown hands before the
+blaze.
+
+"What d'ye think now, Captain Meadows?" he asked presently, glancing up
+at his superior officer. "Didn't I warn you what would be the upshot of
+having those niggers on board the _Belinda_?"
+
+The captain leant back in his chair and laughed heartily.
+
+"Didn't I tell you?" he cried, appealing to us. "Didn't I tell you?"
+
+"It might have been no laughing matter for us," the other remarked
+petulantly. "I have lost a good sea-kit and nearly my life into the
+bargain."
+
+"Do I understand you to say," said I, "that you attribute your
+misfortunes to your ill-fated passengers?"
+
+The mate opened his eyes at the adjective.
+
+"Why ill-fated, sir?" he asked.
+
+"Because they are most certainly drowned," I answered.
+
+He sniffed incredulously and went on warming his hands.
+
+"Men of that kind are never drowned," he said, after a pause. "Their
+father, the devil, looks after them. Did you see them standing on the
+poop and rolling cigarettes at the time when the mizzen was carried away
+and the quarter-boats stove? That was enough for me. I'm not surprised
+at you landsmen not being able to take it in, but the captain here,
+who's been sailing since he was the height of the binnacle, ought to
+know by this time that a cat and a priest are the worst cargo you
+can carry. If a Christian priest is bad, I guess an idolatrous pagan
+one is fifty times worse. I stand by the old religion, and be d--d
+to it!"
+
+My father and I could not help laughing at the rough sailor's very
+unorthodox way of proclaiming his orthodoxy. The mate, however, was
+evidently in deadly earnest, and proceeded to state his case, marking
+off the different points upon the rough, red fingers of his left hand.
+
+"It was at Kurrachee, directly after they come that I warned ye," he
+said reproachfully to the captain. "There was three Buddhist Lascars in
+my watch, and what did they do when them chaps come aboard? Why, they
+down on their stomachs and rubbed their noses on the deck--that's what
+they did. They wouldn't ha' done as much for an admiral of the R'yal
+Navy. They know who's who--these niggers do; and I smelt mischief
+the moment I saw them on their faces. I asked them afterwards in your
+presence, Captain, why they had done it, and they answered that the
+passengers were holy men. You heard 'em yourself."
+
+"Well, there's no harm in that, Hawkins," said Captain Meadows.
+
+"I don't know that," the mate said doubtfully. "The holiest Christian is
+the one that's nearest God, but the holiest nigger is, in my opinion,
+the one that's nearest the devil. Then you saw yourself, Captain
+Meadows, how they went on during the voyage, reading books that was writ
+on wood instead o' paper, and sitting up right through the night to
+jabber together on the quarter-deck. What did they want to have a
+chart of their own for and to mark the course of the vessel every
+day?"
+
+"They didn't," said the captain.
+
+"Indeed they did, and if I did not tell you sooner it was because you
+were always ready to laugh at what I said about them. They had
+instruments o' their own--when they used them I can't say--but every day
+at noon they worked out the latitude and longitude, and marked out the
+vessel's position on a chart that was pinned on their cabin table.
+I saw them at it, and so did the steward from his pantry."
+
+"Well, I don't see what you prove from that," the captain remarked,"
+though I confess it is a strange thing."
+
+"I'll tell you another strange thing," said the mate impressively.
+"Do you know the name of this bay in which we are cast away?"
+
+"I have learnt from our kind friends here that we are upon the
+Wigtownshire coast," the captain answered, "but I have not heard
+the name of the bay."
+
+The mate leant forward with a grave face.
+
+"It is the Bay of Kirkmaiden," he said.
+
+If he expected to astonish Captain Meadows he certainly succeeded, for
+that gentleman was fairly bereft of speech for a minute or more.
+
+"This is really marvellous," he said, after a time, turning to us.
+"These passengers of ours cross-questioned us early in tile voyage
+as to the existence of a bay of that name. Hawkins here and I denied
+all knowledge of one, for on the chart it is included in the Bay
+of Luce. That we should eventually be blown into it and destroyed is an
+extraordinary coincidence."
+
+"Too extraordinary to be a coincidence," growled the mate. "I saw them
+during the calm yesterday morning, pointing to the land over our
+starboard quarter. They knew well enough that that was the port they
+were making for."
+
+"What do you make of it all, then, Hawkins?" asked the captain, with a
+troubled face. "What is your own theory on the matter?"
+
+"Why, in my opinion," the mate answered, "them three swabs have no more
+difficulty in raising a gale o' wind than I should have in swallowing
+this here grog. They had reasons o' their own for coming to this
+God-forsaken--saving your presence, sirs--this God-forsaken bay, and
+they took a short cut to it by arranging to be blown ashore there.
+That's my idea o' the matter, though what three Buddhist priests could
+find to do in the Bay of Kirkmaiden is clean past my comprehension."
+
+My father raised his eyebrows to indicate the doubt which his
+hospitality forbade him from putting into words.
+
+"I think, gentlemen," he said, "that you are both sorely in need of rest
+after your perilous adventures. If you will follow me I shall lead you
+to your rooms."
+
+He conducted them with old-fashioned ceremony to the laird's best spare
+bedroom, and then, returning to me in the parlour, proposed that we
+should go down together to the beach and learn whether anything fresh
+had occurred.
+
+The first pale light of dawn was just appearing in the east when we made
+our way for the second time to the scene of the shipwreck. The gale had
+blown itself out, but the sea was still very high, and all inside the
+breakers was a seething, gleaming line of foam, as though the fierce old
+ocean were gnashing its white fangs at the victims who had escaped from
+its clutches.
+
+All along the beach fishermen and crofters were hard at work hauling up
+spars and barrels as fast as they were tossed ashore. None of them had
+seen any bodies, however, and they explained to us that only such things
+as could float had any chance of coming ashore, for the undercurrent was
+so strong that whatever was beneath the surface must infallibly be swept
+out to sea.
+
+As to the possibility of the unfortunate passengers having been able to
+reach the shore, these practical men would not hear of it for a moment,
+and showed us conclusively that if they had not been drowned they
+must have been dashed to pieces upon the rocks.
+
+"We did all that could be done," my father said sadly, as we returned
+home. "I am afraid that the poor mate has had his reason affected by the
+suddenness of the disaster. Did you hear what he said about Buddhist
+priests raising a gale?"
+
+"Yes, I heard him," said I. "It was very painful to listen to him,"
+said my father. "I wonder if he would object to my putting a small
+mustard plaster under each of his ears. It would relieve any congestion
+of the brain. Or perhaps it would be best to wake him up and give him
+two antibilious pills. What do you think, Jack?"
+
+"I think," said I, with a yawn, "that you had best let him sleep, and go
+to sleep yourself. You can physic him in the morning if he needs it."
+
+So saying I stumbled off to my bedroom, and throwing myself upon the
+couch was soon in a dreamless slumber.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+
+OF THE THREE FOREIGN MEN UPON THE COAST
+
+It must have been eleven or twelve o'clock before I awoke, and it seemed
+to me in the flood of golden light which streamed into my chamber that
+the wild, tumultuous episodes of the night before must have formed part
+of some fantastic dream.
+
+It was hard to believe that the gentle breeze which whispered so softly
+among the ivy-leaves around my window was caused by the same element
+which had shaken the very house a few short hours before. It was as
+if Nature had repented of her momentary passion and was endeavouring to
+make amends to an injured world by its warmth and its sunshine. A
+chorus of birds in the garden below filled the whole air with their
+wonder and congratulations.
+
+Down in the hall I found a number of the shipwrecked sailors, looking
+all the better for their night's repose, who set up a buzz of
+pleasure and gratitude upon seeing me.
+
+Arrangements had been made to drive them to Wigtown, whence they were to
+proceed to Glasgow by the evening train, and my father had given orders
+that each should be served with a packet of sandwiches and hard-boiled
+eggs to sustain him on the way.
+
+Captain Meadows thanked us warmly in the name of his employers for the
+manner in which we had treated them, and he called for three cheers from
+his crew, which were very heartily given. He and the mate walked down
+with us after we had broken our fast to have a last look at the scene of
+the disaster.
+
+The great bosom of the bay was still heaving convulsively, and its waves
+were breaking into sobs against the rocks, but there was none of that
+wild turmoil which we had seen in the early morning. The long, emerald
+ridges, with their little, white crests of foam, rolled slowly and
+majestically in, to break with a regular rhythm--the panting of a tired
+monster.
+
+A cable length from the shore we could see the mainmast of the barque
+floating upon the waves, disappearing at times in the trough of the sea,
+and then shooting up towards Heaven like a giant javelin, shining and
+dripping as the rollers tossed it about. Other smaller pieces of
+wreckage dotted the waters, while innumerable spars and packages were
+littered over the sands. These were being drawn up and collected in a
+place of safety by gangs of peasants. I noticed that a couple of
+broad-winged gulls were hovering and skimming over the scene of the
+shipwreck, as though many strange things were visible to them beneath
+the waves. At times we could hear their raucous voices as they cried to
+one another of what they saw.
+
+"She was a leaky old craft," said the captain, looking sadly out to sea,
+"but there's always a feeling of sorrow when we see the last of a ship
+we have sailed in. Well, well, she would have been broken up in any
+case, and sold for firewood."
+
+"It looks a peaceful scene," I remarked. "Who would imagine that three
+men lost their lives last night in those very waters?"
+
+"Poor fellows," said the captain, with feeling, "Should they be cast up
+after our departure, I am sure, Mr. West, that you will have them
+decently interred."
+
+I was about to make some reply when the mate burst into a loud guffaw,
+slapping his thigh and choking with merriment.
+
+"If you want to bury them," he said, "you had best look sharp, or they
+may clear out of the country. You remember what I said last night?
+Just look at the top of that 'ere hillock, and tell me whether I was in
+the right or not?"
+
+There was a high sand dune some little distance along the coast, and
+upon the summit of this the figure was standing which had attracted the
+mate's attention. The captain threw up his hands in astonishment as his
+eyes rested upon it.
+
+"By the eternal," he shouted, "it's Ram Singh himself! Let us overhaul
+him!"
+
+Taking to his heels in his excitement he raced along the beach, followed
+by the mate and myself, as well as by one or two of the fishermen who
+had observed the presence of the stranger.
+
+The latter, perceiving our approach, came down from his post of
+observation and walked quietly in our direction, with his head sunk
+upon his breast, like one who is absorbed in thought.
+
+I could not help contrasting our hurried and tumultuous advance with the
+gravity and dignity of this lonely Oriental, nor was the matter mended
+when he raised a pair of steady, thoughtful dark eyes and inclined his
+head in a graceful, sweeping salutation. It seemed to me that we were
+like a pack of schoolboys in the presence of a master.
+
+The stranger's broad, unruffled brow, his clear, searching gaze,
+firm-set yet sensitive mouth, and clean-cut, resolute expression, all
+combined to form the most imposing and noble presence which I had ever
+known. I could not have imagined that such imperturbable calm and at
+the same time such a consciousness of latent strength could have
+been expressed by any human face.
+
+He was dressed in a brown velveteen coat, loose, dark trousers, with a
+shirt that was cut low in the collar, so as to show the muscular, brown
+neck, and he still wore the red fez which I had noticed the night
+before.
+
+I observed with a feeling of surprise, as we approached him, that none
+of these garments showed the slightest indication of the rough treatment
+and wetting which they must have received during their wearer's
+submersion and struggle to the shore.
+
+"So you are none the worse for your ducking," he said in a pleasant,
+musical voice, looking from the captain to the mate. "I hope that your
+poor sailors have found pleasant quarters."
+
+"We are all safe," the captain answered. "But we had given you up for
+lost--you and your two friends. Indeed, I was just making arrangements
+for your burial with Mr. West here."
+
+The stranger looked at me and smiled.
+
+"We won't give Mr. West that trouble for a little time yet," he
+remarked; "my friends and I came ashore all safe, and we have found
+shelter in a hut a mile or so along the coast. It is lonely down there,
+but we have everything which we can desire."
+
+"We start for Glasgow this afternoon," said the captain; "I shall be
+very glad if you will come with us. If you have not been in England
+before you may find it awkward travelling alone."
+
+"We are very much indebted to you for your thoughtfulness," Ram Singh
+answered; "but we will not take advantage of your kind offer. Since
+Nature has driven us here we intend to have a look about us before we
+leave."
+
+"As you like," the captain said, shrugging his shoulders. "I don't
+think you are likely to find very much to interest you in this hole of a
+place."
+
+"Very possibly not," Ram Singh answered with an amused smile. "You
+remember Milton's lines:
+
+'The mind is its own place, and in itself
+Can make a hell of Heaven, a heaven of Hell.'
+
+I dare say we can spend a few days here comfortably enough. Indeed, I
+think you must be wrong in considering this to be a barbarous locality.
+I am much mistaken if this young gentleman's father is not Mr.
+James Hunter West, whose name is known and honoured by the pundits of
+India."
+
+"My father is, indeed, a well-known Sanscrit scholar," I answered in
+astonishment.
+
+"The presence of such a man," observed the stranger slowly, "changes a
+wilderness into a city. One great mind is surely a higher indication of
+civilisation than are incalculable leagues of bricks and mortar.
+
+"Your father is hardly so profound as Sir William Jones, or so universal
+as the Baron Von Hammer-Purgstall, but he combines many of the virtues
+of each. You may tell him, however, from me that he is mistaken in
+the analogy which he has traced between the Samoyede and Tamulic word
+roots."
+
+"If you have determined to honour our neighbourhood by a short stay,"
+said I, "you will offend my father very much if you do not put up with
+him. He represents the laird here, and it is the laird's privilege,
+according to our Scottish custom, to entertain all strangers of repute
+who visit this parish."
+
+My sense of hospitality prompted me to deliver this invitation, though I
+could feel the mate twitching at my sleeves as if to warn me that the
+offer was, for some reason, an objectionable one. His fears were,
+however, unnecessary, for the stranger signified by a shake of the head
+that it was impossible for him to accept it.
+
+"My friends and I are very much obliged to you," he said, "but we have
+our own reasons for remaining where we are. The hut which we occupy is
+deserted and partly ruined, but we Easterns have trained ourselves
+to do without most of those things which are looked upon as necessaries
+in Europe, believing firmly in that wise axiom that a man is rich, not
+in proportion to what he has, but in proportion to what he can dispense
+with. A good fisherman supplies us with bread and with herbs, we have
+clean, dry straw for our couches; what could man wish for more?"
+
+"But you must feel the cold at night, coming straight from the tropics,"
+remarked the captain. "Perhaps our bodies are cold sometimes. We have
+not noticed it. We have all three spent many years in the
+Upper Himalayas on the border of the region of eternal snow, so we are
+not very sensitive to inconveniences of the sort."
+
+"At least," said I, "you must allow me to send you over some fish and
+some meat from our larder."
+
+"We are not Christians," he answered, "but Buddhists of the higher
+school. We do not recognise that man has a moral right to slay
+an ox or a fish for the gross use of his body. He has not put life into
+them, and has assuredly no mandate from the Almighty to take life from
+them save under most pressing need. We could not, therefore, use your
+gift if you were to send it."
+
+"But, sir," I remonstrated, "if in this changeable and inhospitable
+climate you refuse all nourishing food your vitality will fail you--you
+will die."
+
+"We shall die then," he answered, with an amused smile. "And now,
+Captain Meadows, I must bid you adieu, thanking you for your kindness
+during the voyage, and you, too, good-bye--you will command a ship of
+your own before the year is out. I trust, Mr. West, that I may see you
+again before I leave this part of the country. Farewell!"
+
+He raised his red fez, inclined his noble head with the stately grace
+which characterised all his actions, and strode away in the direction
+from which he had come.
+
+"Let me congratulate you, Mr. Hawkins," said the captain to the mate as
+we walked homewards. "You are to command your own ship within the
+year."
+
+"No such luck!" the mate answered, with a pleased smile upon his
+mahogany face, "still, there's no saying how things may come
+out. What d'ye think of him, Mr. West?"
+
+"Why," said I, "I am very much interested in him. What a magnificent
+head and bearing he has for a young man. I suppose he cannot be more
+than thirty."
+
+"Forty," said the mate.
+
+"Sixty, if he is a day," remarked Captain Meadows. "Why, I have heard
+him talk quite familiarly of the first Afghan war. He was a man then,
+and that is close on forty years ago."
+
+"Wonderful!" I ejaculated. "His skin is as smooth and his eyes are as
+clear as mine are. He is the superior priest of the three, no doubt."
+
+"The inferior," said the captain confidently. "That is why he does all
+the talking for them. Their minds are too elevated to descend to mere
+worldly chatter."
+
+"They are the strangest pieces of flotsam and jetsam that were ever
+thrown upon this coast," I remarked. "My father will be mightily
+interested in them."
+
+"Indeed, I think the less you have to do with them the better for you,"
+said the mate. "If I do command my own ship I'll promise you that I
+never carry live stock of that sort on board of her. But here we are
+all aboard and the anchor tripped, so we must bid you good-bye."
+
+The wagonette had just finished loading up when we arrived, and the
+chief places, on either side of the driver, had been reserved for my two
+companions, who speedily sprang into them. With a chorus of cheers the
+good fellows whirled away down the road, while my father, Esther, and I
+stood upon the lawn and waved our hands to them until they disappeared
+behind the Cloomber woods, _en_route_ for the Wigtown railway station.
+Barque and crew had both vanished now from our little world, the only
+relic of either being the heaps of _debris_ upon the beach, which were
+to lie there until the arrival of an agent from Lloyd's.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+
+IN WHICH I SEE THAT WHICH HAS BEEN SEEN BY FEW
+
+At dinner that evening I mentioned to my father the episode of the three
+Buddhist priests, and found, as I had expected, that he was very much
+interested by my account of them.
+
+When, however, he heard of the high manner in which Ram Singh had spoken
+of him, and the distinguished position which he had assigned him among
+philologists, he became so excited that it was all we could do to
+prevent him from setting off then and there to make his acquaintance.
+
+Esther and I were relieved and glad when we at last succeeded in
+abstracting his boots and manoeuvring him to his bedroom, for the
+exciting events of the last twenty-four hours had been too much for his
+weak frame and delicate nerves.
+
+I was silting at the open porch in the gloaming, turning over in my mind
+the unexpected events which had occurred so rapidly--the gale, the
+wreck, the rescue, and the strange character of the castaways--when my
+sister came quietly over to me and put her hand in mine.
+
+"Don't you think, Jack." she said, in her low, sweet voice, "that we are
+forgetting our friends over at Cloomber? Hasn't all this excitement
+driven their fears and their danger out of our heads?"
+
+"Out of our heads, but never out of our hearts," said I, laughing.
+"However, you are right, little one, for our attention has certainly
+been distracted from them. I shall walk up in the morning and see if I
+can see anything of them. By the way, to-morrow is the fateful 5th of
+October--one more day, and all will be well with us."
+
+"Or ill," said my sister gloomily.
+
+"Why, what a little croaker you are, to be sure!" I cried. "What in the
+world is coming over you?"
+
+"I feel nervous and low-spirited," she answered, drawing closer to my
+side and shivering. "I feel as if some great peril were hanging over
+the heads of those we love. Why should these strange men wish to stay
+upon the coast?"
+
+"What, the Buddhists?" I said lightly. "Oh, these fellows have
+continual feast-days and religious rites of all sorts. They have
+some very good reason for staying, you may be sure."
+
+"Don't you think," said Esther, in an awe-struck whisper, "that it is
+very strange that these priests should arrive here all the way from
+India just at the present moment? Have you not gathered from all you
+have heard that the general's fears are in some way connected with India
+and the Indians?"
+
+The remark made me thoughtful.
+
+"Why, now that you mention it," I answered, "I have some vague
+impression that the mystery is connected with some incident which
+occurred in that country. I am sure, however, that your fears would
+vanish if you saw Ram Singh. He is the very personification of wisdom
+and benevolence. He was shocked at the idea of our killing a sheep, or
+even a fish for his benefit--said he would rather die than have a hand
+in taking the life of an animal."
+
+"It is very foolish of me to be so nervous," said my sister bravely.
+"But you must promise me one thing, Jack. You will go up to Cloomber in
+the morning, and if you can see any of them you must tell them of these
+strange neighbours of ours. They are better able to judge than we are
+whether their presence has any significance or not."
+
+"All right, little one," I answered, as we went indoors. "You have been
+over-excited by all these wild doings, and you need a sound night's rest
+to compose you. I'll do what you suggest, however, and our friends
+shall judge for themselves whether these poor fellows should be sent
+about their business or not."
+
+I made the promise to allay my sister's apprehensions, but in the bright
+sunlight of morning it appeared less than absurd to imagine that our
+poor vegetarian castaways could have any sinister intentions, or that
+their advent could have any effect upon the tenant of Cloomber.
+
+I was anxious, myself, however, to see whether I could see anything of
+the Heatherstones, so after breakfast I walked up to the Hall. In their
+seclusion it was impossible for them to have learnt anything of the
+recent events. I felt, therefore, that even if I should meet the
+general he could hardly regard me as an intruder while I had so much
+news to communicate.
+
+The place had the same dreary and melancholy appearance which always
+characterised it. Looking through between the thick iron bars of the
+main gateway there was nothing to be seen of any of the occupants.
+One of the great Scotch firs had been blown down in the gale, and its
+long, ruddy trunk lay right across the grass-grown avenue; but no
+attempt had been made to remove it.
+
+Everything about the property had the same air of desolation and
+neglect, with the solitary exception of the massive and impenetrable
+fencing, which presented as unbroken and formidable an obstacle as ever
+to the would-be trespasser.
+
+I walked round this barrier as far as our old trysting-place without
+finding any flaw through which I could get a glimpse of the house, for
+the fence had been repaired with each rail overlapping the last, so as
+to secure absolute privacy for those inside, and to block those
+peep-holes which I had formerly used.
+
+At the old spot, however, where I had had the memorable interview with
+the general on the occasion when he surprised me with his daughter,
+I found that the two loose rails had been refixed in such a manner that
+there was a gap of two inches or more between them.
+
+Through this I had a view of the house and of part of the lawn in front
+of it, and, though I could see no signs of life outside or at any
+of the windows, I settled down with the intention of sticking to my post
+until I had a chance of speaking to one or other of the inmates.
+Indeed, the cold, dead aspect of the house had struck such a chill into
+my heart that I determined to scale the fence at whatever risk of
+incurring the general's displeasure rather than return without news of
+the Heatherstones.
+
+Happily there was no need of this extreme expedient, for I had not been
+there half-an-hour before I heard the harsh sound of an opening lock,
+and the general himself emerged from the main door.
+
+To my surprise he was dressed in a military uniform, and that not the
+uniform in ordinary use in the British Army. The red coat was strangely
+cut and stained with the weather. The trousers had originally been
+white, but had now faded to a dirty yellow. With a red sash across his
+chest and a straight sword hanging from his side, he stood the living
+example of a bygone type--the John Company's officer of forty years ago.
+
+He was followed by the ex-tramp, Corporal Rufus Smith, now well-clad and
+prosperous, who limped along beside his master, the two pacing up and
+down the lawn absorbed in conversation. I observed that from time to
+time one or other of them would pause and glance furtively all about
+them, as though guarding keenly against a surprise. I should have
+preferred communicating with the general alone, but since there was no
+dissociating him from his companion, I beat loudly on the fencing with
+my stick to attract their attention. They both faced round in a moment,
+and I could see from their gestures that they were disturbed and
+alarmed.
+
+I then elevated my stick above the barrier to show them where the sound
+proceeded from. At this the general began to walk in my direction with
+the air of a man who is bracing himself up for an effort, but the other
+caught him by the wrist and endeavoured to dissuade him.
+
+It was only when I shouted out my name and assured them that I was alone
+that I could prevail upon them to approach. Once assured of my identity
+the general ran eagerly towards me and greeted me with the utmost
+cordiality.
+
+"This is truly kind of you, West," he said. "It is only at such times
+as these that one can judge who is a friend and who not. It would not
+be fair to you to ask you to come inside or to stay any time, but I am
+none the less very glad to see you."
+
+"I have been anxious about you all," I said, "for it is some little time
+since I have seen or heard from any of you. How have you all been
+keeping?"
+
+"Why, as well as could be expected. But we will be better tomorrow--we
+will be different men to-morrow, eh, Corporal?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said the corporal, raising his hand to his forehead in a
+military salute. "We'll be right as the bank to-morrow."
+
+"The corporal and I are a little disturbed in our minds just now," the
+general explained, "but I have no doubt that all will come right.
+After all, there is nothing higher than Providence, and we are all in
+His hands. And how have you been, eh?"
+
+"We have been very busy for one thing," said I. "I suppose you have
+heard nothing of the great shipwreck?"
+
+"Not a word," the general answered listlessly.
+
+"I thought the noise of the wind would prevent you hearing the signal
+guns. She came ashore in the bay the night before last--a great barque
+from India."
+
+"From India!" ejaculated the general.
+
+"Yes. Her crew were saved, fortunately, and have all been sent on to
+Glasgow."
+
+"All sent on!" cried the general, with a face as bloodless as a corpse.
+
+"All except three rather strange characters who claim to be Buddhist
+priests. They have decided to remain for a few days upon the coast."
+
+The words were hardly out of my mouth when the general dropped upon his
+knees with his long, thin arms extended to Heaven.
+
+"Thy will be done!" he cried in a cracking voice. "Thy blessed will be
+done!"
+
+I could see through the crack that Corporal Rufus Smith's face had
+turned to a sickly yellow shade, and that he was wiping the perspiration
+from his brow.
+
+"It's like my luck!" he said. "After all these years, to come when I
+have got a snug billet."
+
+"Never mind, my lad," the general said, rising, and squaring his
+shoulders like a man who braces himself up for an effort. "Be it
+what it may we'll face it as British soldiers should. D'ye remember at
+Chillianwallah, when you had to run from your guns to our square, and
+the Sikh horse came thundering down on our bayonets? We didn't flinch
+then, and we won't flinch now. It seems to me that I feel better than I
+have done for years. It was the uncertainty that was killing me."
+
+"And the infernal jingle-jangle," said the corporal. "Well, we all go
+together--that's some consolation."
+
+"Good-bye, West," said the general. "Be a good husband to Gabriel, and
+give my poor wife a home. I don't think she will trouble you long.
+Good-bye! God bless you!"
+
+"Look here, General," I said, peremptorily breaking off a piece of wood
+to make communication more easy, "this sort of thing has been going on
+too long. What are these hints and allusions and innuendoes? It is
+time we had a little plain speaking. What is it you fear? Out with it!
+Are you in dread of these Hindoos? If you are, I am able, on my
+father's authority, to have them arrested as rogues and vagabonds."
+
+"No, no, that would never do," he answered, shaking his head. "You will
+learn about the wretched business soon enough. Mordaunt knows where to
+lay his hand upon the papers bearing on the matter. You can consult him
+about it to-morrow."
+
+"But surely," I cried, "if the peril is so imminent something may be
+done to avert it. If you would but tell me what you fear I should know
+how to act."
+
+"My dear friend," he said, "there is nothing to be done, so calm
+yourself, and let things take their course. It has been folly on my
+part to shelter myself behind mere barriers of wood and stone. The fact
+is, that inaction was terrible to me, and I felt that to do anything,
+however futile, in the nature of a precaution, was better than passive
+resignation. My humble friend here and I have placed ourselves in a
+position in which, I trust, no poor fellow will ever find himself again.
+We can only recommend ourselves to the unfailing goodness of the
+Almighty, and trust that what we have endured in this world may
+lessen our atonement in the world to come. I must leave you now, for I
+have many papers to destroy and much to arrange. Good-bye!"
+
+He pushed his hand through the hole which I had made, and grasped mine
+in a solemn farewell, after which he walked back to the Hall with a firm
+and decided step, still followed by the crippled and sinister corporal.
+
+I walked back to Branksome much disturbed by this interview, and
+extremely puzzled as to what course I should pursue.
+
+It was evident now that my sister's suspicions were correct, and that
+there was some very intimate connection between the presence of the
+three Orientals and the mysterious peril which hung over the towers of
+Cloomber.
+
+It was difficult for me to associate the noble-faced Ram Singh's gentle,
+refined manner and words of wisdom with any deed of violence, yet now
+that I thought of it I could see that a terrible capacity for wrath lay
+behind his shaggy brows and dark, piercing eyes.
+
+I felt that of all men whom I had ever met he was the one whose
+displeasure I should least care to face. But how could two men
+so widely dissociated as the foul-mouthed old corporal of artillery and
+the distinguished Anglo-Indian general have each earned the ill-will of
+these strange castaways? And if the danger were a positive physical
+one, why should he not consent to my proposal to have the three men
+placed under custody--though I confess it would have gone much against
+my grain to act in so inhospitable a manner upon such vague and shadowy
+grounds.
+
+These questions were absolutely unanswerable, and yet the solemn words
+and the terrible gravity which I had seen in the faces of both the old
+soldiers forbade me from thinking that their fears were entirely
+unfounded.
+
+It was all a puzzle--an absolutely insoluble puzzle.
+
+One thing at least was clear to me--and that was that in the present
+state of my knowledge, and after the general's distinct prohibition, it
+was impossible for me to interfere in any way. I could only wait and
+pray that, whatever the danger might be, it might pass over, or at least
+that my dear Gabriel and her brother might be protected against it.
+
+I was walking down the lane lost in thought, and had got as far as the
+wicket gate which opens upon the Branksome lawn, when I was surprised to
+hear my father's voice raised in most animated and excited converse.
+
+The old man had been of late so abstracted from the daily affairs of the
+world, and so absorbed in his own special studies, that it was difficult
+to engage his attention upon any ordinary, mundane topic. Curious to
+know what it was that had drawn him so far out of himself, I opened the
+gate softly, and walking quietly round the laurel bushes, found him
+sitting, to my astonishment, with none other than the very man who was
+occupying my thoughts, Ram Singh, the Buddhist.
+
+The two were sitting upon a garden bench, and the Oriental appeared to
+be laying down some weighty proposition, checking every point upon his
+long, quivering, brown fingers, while my father, with his hands thrown
+abroad and his face awry, was loud in protestation and in argument.
+
+So absorbed were they in their controversy, that I stood within a
+hand-touch of them for a minute or more before they became conscious of
+my presence.
+
+On observing me the priest sprang to his feet and greeted me with the
+same lofty courtesy and dignified grace which had so impressed me the
+day before.
+
+"I promised myself yesterday," he said, "the pleasure of calling upon
+your father. You see I have kept my word. I have even been daring
+enough to question his views upon some points in connection with the
+Sanscrit and Hindoo tongues, with the result that we have been arguing
+for an hour or more without either of us convincing the other. Without
+pretending to as deep a theoretical knowledge as that which has made
+the name of James Hunter West a household word among Oriental scholars,
+I happen to have given considerable attention to this one point, and
+indeed I am in a position to say that I know his views to be unsound.
+I assure you, sir, that up to the year 700, or even later, Sanscrit was
+the ordinary language of the great bulk of the inhabitants of India."
+
+"And I assure you, sir," said my father warmly, "that it was dead and
+forgotten at that date, save by the learned, who used it as a vehicle
+for scientific and religious works--just as Latin was used in the Middle
+Ages long after it had ceased to be spoken by any European nation."
+
+"If you consult the puranas you will find," said Ram Singh, "that this
+theory, though commonly received, is entirely untenable."
+
+"And if you will consult the Ramayana, and more particularly the
+canonical books on Buddhist discipline," cried my father, "you
+will find that the theory is unassailable."
+
+"But look at the Kullavagga," said our visitor earnestly.
+
+"And look at King Asoka," shouted my father triumphantly. "When, in the
+year 300 before the Christian era--before, mind you--he ordered the laws
+of Buddha to be engraved upon the rocks, what language did he employ,
+eh? Was it Sanscrit?--no! And why was it not Sanscrit? Because the
+lower orders of his subjects would not have been able to understand a
+word of it. Ha, ha! That was the reason. How are you going to get
+round King Asoka's edicts, eh?"
+
+"He carved them in the various dialects," Ram Singh answered. "But
+energy is too precious a thing to be wasted in mere wind in this style.
+The sun has passed its meridian, and I must return to my companions."
+
+"I am sorry that you have not brought them to see us," said my father
+courteously. He was, I could see, uneasy lest in the eagerness of
+debate he had overstepped the bounds of hospitality.
+
+"They do not mix with the world," Ram Singh answered, rising to his
+feet. "They are of a higher grade than I, and more sensitive to
+contaminating influences. They are immersed in a six months' meditation
+upon the mystery of the third incarnation, which has lasted with few
+intermissions from the time that we left the Himalayas. I shall not
+see you again, Mr. Hunter West, and I therefore bid you farewell. Your
+old age will be a happy one, as it deserves to be, and your Eastern
+studies will have a lasting effect upon the knowledge and literature of
+your own country. Farewell!"
+
+"And am I also to see no more of you?" I asked.
+
+"Unless you will walk with me along the sea-shore," he answered. "But
+you have already been out this morning, and may be tired. I ask too
+much of you."
+
+"Nay, I should be delighted to come," I responded from my heart, and we
+set off together, accompanied for some little distance by my father, who
+would gladly, I could see, have reopened the Sanscrit controversy, had
+not his stock of breath been too limited to allow of his talking and
+walking at the same time.
+
+"He is a learned man," Ram Singh remarked, after we had left him behind,
+"but, like many another, he is intolerant towards opinions which differ
+from his own. He will know better some day."
+
+I made no answer to this observation, and we trudged along for a time in
+silence, keeping well down to the water's edge, where the sands afforded
+a good foothold.
+
+The sand dunes which lined the coast formed a continuous ridge upon our
+left, cutting us off entirely from all human observation, while on the
+right the broad Channel stretched away with hardly a sail to break its
+silvery uniformity. The Buddhist priest and I were absolutely alone
+with Nature.
+
+I could not help reflecting that if he were really the dangerous man
+that the mate affected to consider him, or that might be inferred from
+the words of General Heatherstone, I had placed myself completely in his
+power.
+
+Yet such was the majestic benignity of the man's aspect, and the
+unruffled serenity of his deep, dark eyes, that I could afford in his
+presence to let fear and suspicion blow past me as lightly as the breeze
+which whistled round us. His face might be stern, and even terrible,
+but I felt that he could never be unjust.
+
+As I glanced from time to time at his noble profile and the sweep of his
+jet-black beard, his rough-spun tweed travelling suit struck me with an
+almost painful sense of incongruity, and I re-clothed him in my
+imagination with the grand, sweeping Oriental costume which is the
+fitting and proper frame for such a picture--the only garb which does
+not detract from the dignity and grace of the wearer.
+
+The place to which he led me was a small fisher cottage which had been
+deserted some years before by its tenant, but still stood gaunt and
+bare, with the thatch partly blown away and the windows and doors in sad
+disrepair. This dwelling, which the poorest Scotch beggar would have
+shrunk from, was the one which these singular men had preferred to the
+proffered hospitality of the laird's house. A small garden, now a mass
+of tangled brambles, stood round it, and through this my acquaintance
+picked his way to the ruined door. He glanced into the house and then
+waved his hand for me to follow him.
+
+"You have now an opportunity," he said, in a subdued, reverential voice,
+"of seeing a spectacle which few Europeans have had the privilege of
+beholding. Inside that cottage you will find two Yogis--men who are
+only one remove from the highest plane of adeptship. They are both
+wrapped in an ecstatic trance, otherwise I should not venture to
+obtrude your presence upon them. Their astral bodies have departed from
+them, to be present at the feast of lamps in the holy Lamasery of Rudok
+in Tibet. Tread lightly lest by stimulating their corporeal functions
+you recall them before their devotions are completed."
+
+Walking slowly and on tiptoe, I picked my way through the weed-grown
+garden, and peered through the open doorway.
+
+There was no furniture in the dreary interior, nor anything to cover the
+uneven floor save a litter of fresh straw in a corner.
+
+Among this straw two men were crouching, the one small and wizened, the
+other large-boned and gaunt, with their legs crossed in Oriental fashion
+and their heads sunk upon their breasts. Neither of them looked up, or
+took the smallest notice of our presence.
+
+They were so still and silent that they might have been two bronze
+statues but for the slow and measured rhythm of their breathing. Their
+faces, however, had a peculiar, ashen-grey colour, very different from
+the healthy brown of my companion's, and I observed, on, stooping my
+head, that only the whites of their eyes were visible, the balls
+being turned upwards beneath the lids.
+
+In front of them upon a small mat lay an earthenware pitcher of water
+and half-a-loaf of bread, together with a sheet of paper inscribed with
+certain cabalistic characters. Ram Singh glanced at these, and then,
+motioning to me to withdraw, followed me out into the garden.
+
+"I am not to disturb them until ten o'clock," he said. "You have now
+seen in operation one of the grandest results of our occult philosophy,
+the dissociation of spirit from body. Not only are the spirits of these
+holy men standing at the present moment by the banks of the Ganges, but
+those spirits are clothed in a material covering so identical with their
+real bodies that none of the faithful will ever doubt that Lal Hoomi and
+Mowdar Khan are actually among them. This is accomplished by our power
+of resolving an object into its 'chemical atoms, of conveying these
+atoms with a speed which exceeds that of lightning to any given spot,
+and of there re-precipitating them and compelling them to retake their
+original form. Of old, in the days of our ignorance, it was necessary
+to convey the whole body in this way, but we have since found that it
+was as easy and more convenient to transmit material enough merely
+to build up an outside shell or semblance. This we have termed the
+astral body"
+
+"But if you can transmit your spirits so readily," I observed, "why
+should they be accompanied by any body at all?"
+
+"In communicating with brother initiates we are able to employ our
+spirits only, but when we wish to come in contact with ordinary
+mankind it is essential that we should appear in some form which they
+can see and comprehend."
+
+"You have interested me deeply in all that you have told me," I said,
+grasping the hand which Ram Singh had held out to me as a sign that our
+interview was at an end. "I shall often think of our short
+acquaintance."
+
+"You will derive much benefit from it," he said slowly, still holding my
+hand and looking gravely and sadly into my eyes. "You must remember
+that what will happen in the future is not necessarily bad because it
+does not fall in with your preconceived ideas of right. Be not hasty in
+your judgments. There are certain great rules which must be carried
+out, at whatever cost to individuals. Their operation may appear to you
+to be harsh and cruel, but that is as nothing compared with the
+dangerous precedent which would be established by not enforcing them.
+The ox and the sheep are safe from us, but the man with the blood of the
+highest upon his hands should not and shall not live."
+
+He threw up his arms at the last words with a fierce, threatening
+gesture, and, turning away from me, strode back to the ruined hut.
+
+I stood gazing after him until he disappeared through the doorway, and
+then started off for home, revolving in my mind all that I had heard,
+and more particularly this last outburst of the occult philosopher.
+
+Far on the right I could see the tall, white tower of Cloomber standing
+out clear-cut and sharp against a dark cloud-bank which rose behind it.
+I thought how any traveller who chanced to pass that way would envy in
+his heart the tenant of that magnificent building, and how little they
+would guess the strange terrors, the nameless dangers, which were
+gathering about his head. The black cloud-wrack was but the image, I
+reflected, of the darker, more sombre storm which was about to burst.
+
+"Whatever it all means, and however it happens," I ejaculated, "God
+grant that the innocent be not confounded with the guilty."
+
+My father, when I reached home, was still in a ferment over his learned
+disputation with the stranger.
+
+"I trust, Jack," he said, "that I did not handle him too roughly. I
+should remember that I am _in_loco_magistri_, and be less prone to argue
+with my guests. Yet, when he took up this most untenable position, I
+could not refrain from attacking him and hurling him out of it, which
+indeed I did, though you, who are ignorant of the niceties of the
+question, may have failed to perceive it. You observed, however, that
+my reference to King Asoka's edicts was so conclusive that he at once
+rose and took his leave."
+
+"You held your own bravely," I answered, "but what is your impression of
+the man now that you have seen him?" "Why," said my father, "he is one
+of those holy men who, under the various names of Sannasis, Yogis,
+Sevras, Qualanders, Hakims, and Cufis have devoted their lives to the
+study of the mysteries of the Buddhist faith. He is, I take it, a
+theosophist, or worshipper of the God of knowledge, the highest grade of
+which is the adept. This man and his companions have not attained this
+high position or they could not have crossed the sea without
+contamination. It is probable that they are all advanced chelas who
+hope in time to attain to the supreme honour of adeptship."
+
+"But, father," interrupted my sister, "this does not explain why men of
+such sanctity and attainments should choose to take up their quarters on
+the shores of a desolate Scotch bay."
+
+"Ah, there you get beyond me," my father answered. "I may suggest,
+however, that it is nobody's business but their own, so long as
+they keep the peace and are amenable to the law of the land."
+
+"Have you ever heard," I asked, "that these higher priests of whom you
+speak have powers which are unknown to us?"
+
+"Why, Eastern literature is full of it. The Bible is an Eastern book,
+and is it not full of the record of such powers from cover to cover?
+It is unquestionable that they have in the past known many of Nature's
+secrets which are lost to us. I cannot say, however, from my
+own knowledge that the modern theosophists really possess the powers
+that they claim."
+
+"Are they a vindictive class of people?" I asked. "Is there any offence
+among them which can only be expiated by death?"
+
+"Not that I know of," my father answered, raising his white eyebrows in
+surprise. "You appear to be in an inquisitive humour this afternoon--
+what is the object of all these questions? Have our Eastern
+neighbours aroused your curiosity or suspicion in any way?"
+
+I parried the question as best I might, for I was unwilling to let the
+old man know what was in my mind. No good purpose could come from his
+enlightenment; his age and his health demanded rest rather than anxiety;
+and indeed, with the best will in the world I should have found it
+difficult to explain to another what was so very obscure to myself.
+For every reason I felt that it was best that he should be kept in the
+dark.
+
+Never in all my experience had I known a day pass so slowly as did that
+eventful 5th of October. In every possible manner I endeavoured to
+while away the tedious hours, and yet it seemed as if darkness would
+never arrive.
+
+I tried to read, I tried to write, I paced about the lawn, I walked to
+the end of the lane, I put new flies upon my fishing-hooks, I began to
+index my father's library--in a dozen ways I endeavoured to relieve the
+suspense which was becoming intolerable. My sister, I could see, was
+suffering from the same feverish restlessness.
+
+Again and again our good father remonstrated with us in his mild way for
+our erratic behaviour and the continual interruption of his work which
+arose from it.
+
+At last, however, the tea was brought, and the tea was taken, the
+curtains were drawn, the lamps lit, and after another interminable
+interval the prayers were read and the servants dismissed to their
+rooms. My father compounded and swallowed his nightly jorum of
+toddy, and then shuffled off to his room, leaving the two of us in the
+parlour with our nerves in a tingle and our minds full of the most vague
+and yet terrible apprehensions.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+
+OF THE VISITOR WHO RAN DOWN THE ROADIN THE NIGHT-TIME
+
+
+It was a quarter past ten o'clock by the parlour timepiece when my
+father went off to his room, and left Esther and myself together.
+We heard his slow steps dying away up the creaking staircase, until the
+distant slamming of a door announced that he had reached his
+sanctum.
+
+The simple oil lamp upon the table threw a weird, uncertain light over
+the old room, flickering upon the carved oak panelling, and casting
+strange, fantastic shadows from the high-elbowed, straight-backed
+furniture. My sister's white, anxious face stood out in the obscurity
+with a startling exactness of profile like one of Rembrandt's portraits.
+
+We sat opposite to each other on either side of the table with no sound
+breaking the silence save the measured ticking of the clock and
+the intermittent chirping of a cricket beneath the grate.
+
+There was something awe-inspiring in the absolute stillness.
+The whistling of a belated peasant upon the high road was a relief
+to us, and we strained our ears to catch the last of his notes as he
+plodded steadily homewards.
+
+At first we had made some pretence--she of knitting and I of reading--
+but we soon abandoned the useless deception, and sat uneasily waiting,
+starting and glancing at each other with questioning eyes whenever the
+faggot crackled in the fire or a rat scampered behind the wainscot.
+There was a heavy electrical feeling in the air, which weighed us down
+with a foreboding of disaster.
+
+I rose and flung the hall door open to admit the fresh breeze of the
+night. Ragged clouds swept across the sky, and the moon peeped out at
+times between their hurrying fringes, bathing the whole countryside in
+its cold, white radiance. From where I stood in the doorway I could
+see the edge of the Cloomber wood, though the house itself was only
+visible from the rising ground some little distance off. At my sister's
+suggestion we walked together, she with her shawl over her head, as far
+as the summit of this elevation, and looked out in the direction of the
+Hall.
+
+There was no illumination of the windows tonight. From roof to basement
+not a light twinkled in any part of the great building. Its huge mass
+loomed up dark and sullen amid the trees which surrounded it, looking
+more like some giant sarcophagus than a human habitation.
+
+To our overwrought nerves there was something of terror in its mere bulk
+and its silence. We stood for some little time peering at it through
+the darkness, and then we made our way back to the parlour again, where
+we sat waiting--waiting, we knew not for what, and yet with absolute
+conviction that some terrible experience was in store for us.
+
+It was twelve o'clock or thereabout when my sister suddenly sprang to
+her feet and held up her fingers to bespeak attention.
+
+"Do you hear nothing?" she asked.
+
+I strained my ears, but without success.
+
+"Come to the door," she cried, with a trembling voice. "Now can you hear
+anything?"
+
+In the deep silence of the night I distinctly heard a dull, murmuring,
+clattering sound, continuous apparently, but very faint and low.
+
+"What is it?" I asked, in a subdued voice.
+
+"It's the sound of a man running towards us," she answered, and then,
+suddenly dropping the last semblance of self-command, she tell upon her
+knees beside the table and began praying aloud with that frenzied
+earnestness which intense, overpowering fear can produce, breaking off
+now and again into half-hysterical whimperings.
+
+I could distinguish the sound clearly enough now to know that her quick,
+feminine perception had not deceived her, and that it was indeed caused
+by a running man.
+
+On he came, and on down the high road, his footfalls ringing out clearer
+and sharper every moment. An urgent messenger he must be, for he
+neither paused nor slackened his pace.
+
+The quick, crisp rattle was changed suddenly to a dull, muffled murmur.
+He had reached the point where sand had been recently laid down for a
+hundred yards or so. In a few moments, however, he was back on hard
+ground again and his flying feet came nearer and ever nearer.
+
+He must, I reflected, be abreast of the head of the lane now. Would he
+hold on? Or would he turn down to Branksome?
+
+The thought had hardly crossed my mind when I heard by the difference of
+the sound that the runner had turned the corner, and that his goal was
+beyond all question the laird's house.
+
+Rushing down to the gate of the lawn, I reached it just as our visitor
+dashed it open and fell into my arms. I could see in the moonlight that
+it was none other than Mordaunt Heatherstone.
+
+"What has happened?" I cried. "What is amiss, Mordaunt?"
+
+"My father!" he gasped--"my father!"
+
+His hat was gone, his eyes dilated with terror, and his face as
+bloodless as that of a corpse. I could feel that the hands which
+clasped my arms were quivering and shaking with emotion.
+
+"You are exhausted," I said, leading him into the parlour. "Give
+yourself a moment's rest before you speak to us. Be calm, man,
+you are with your best friends."
+
+I laid him on the old horsehair sofa, while Esther, whose fears had all
+flown to the winds now that something practical was to be done, dashed
+some brandy into a tumbler and brought it to him. The stimulant had a
+marvellous effect upon him, for the colour began to come back into his
+pale cheeks and the light of recognition in his eyes,
+
+He sat up and took Esther's hand in both of his, like a man who is
+waking out of some bad dream and wishes to assure himself that he is
+really in safety.
+
+"Your father?" I asked. "What of him?"
+
+"He is gone."
+
+"Gone!"
+
+"Yes; he is gone; and so is Corporal Rufus Smith. We shall never set
+eyes upon them again."
+
+"But where have they gone?" I cried. "This is unworthy of you,
+Mordaunt. What right have we to sit here, allowing our private
+feelings to overcome us, while there is a possibility of succouring your
+father? Up, man! Let us follow him. Tell me only what direction he
+took."
+
+"It's no use," young Heatherstone answered, burying his face in his
+hands. "Don't reproach me, West, for you don't know all the
+circumstances. What can we do to reverse the tremendous and unknown
+laws which are acting against us? The blow has long been hanging over
+us, and now it has fallen. God help us!"
+
+"In Heaven's name tell me what has happened?" said I excitedly. "We
+must not yield to despair."
+
+"We can do nothing until daybreak," he answered. "We shall then
+endeavour to obtain some trace of them. It is hopeless at present."
+
+"And how about Gabriel and Mrs. Heatherstone?" I asked. "Can we not
+bring them down from the Hall at once? Your poor sister must be
+distracted with terror."
+
+"She knows nothing of it," Mordaunt answered. "She sleeps at the other
+side of the house, and has not heard or seen anything. As to my poor
+mother, she has expected some such event for so long a time that it has
+not come upon her as a surprise. She is, of course, overwhelmed with
+grief, but would, I think, prefer to be left to herself for the present.
+Her firmness and composure should be a lesson to me, but I am
+constitutionally excitable, and this catastrophe coming after our long
+period of suspense deprived me of my very reason for a time."
+
+"If we can do nothing until the morning," I said, "you have time to tell
+us all that has occurred."
+
+"I will do so," he answered, rising and holding his shaking hands to the
+fire. "You know already that we have had reason for some time--for many
+years in fact--to fear that a terrible retribution was hanging over
+my father's head for a certain action of his early life. In this action
+he was associated with the man known as Corporal Rufus Smith, so that
+the fact of the latter finding his way to my father was a warning to us
+that the time had come, and that this 5th of October--the anniversary of
+the misdeed--would be the day of its atonement. I told you of our fears
+in my letter, and, if I am not mistaken, my father also had some
+conversation with you, John, upon the subject. When I saw yesterday
+morning that he had hunted out the old uniform which he had always
+retained since he wore it in the Afghan war, I was sure that the end was
+at hand, and that our forebodings would be realised.
+
+"He appeared to be more composed in the afternoon than I have seen him
+for years, and spoke freely of his life in India and of the incidents of
+his youth. About nine o'clock he requested us to go up to our own
+rooms, and locked us in there--a precaution which he frequently took
+when the dark fit way upon him. It was always his endeavour, poor soul.
+to keep us clear of the curse which had fallen upon his own unfortunate
+head. Before parting from us he tenderly embraced my mother and
+Gabriel, and he afterwards followed me to my room, where he clasped my
+hand affectionately and gave into my charge a small packet addressed to
+yourself."
+
+"To me?" I interrupted.
+
+"To you. I shall fulfill my commission when I have told you my story.
+I conjured him to allow me to sit up with him and share any danger which
+might arise, but he implored me with irresistible earnestness not to
+add to his troubles by thwarting his arrangements. Seeing that I was
+really distressing him by my pertinacity, I at last allowed him to close
+the door and to turn the key upon the outside. I shall always reproach
+myself for my want of firmness. But what can you do when your own
+father refuses your assistance or co-operation? You cannot force
+yourself upon him."
+
+"I am sure that you did all you could do," my sister said.
+
+"I meant to, dear Esther, but, God help me, it was hard to tell what was
+right. He left me, and I heard his footsteps die away down the long
+corridor. It was then about ten o'clock, or a little after. For a time
+I paced up and down the room, and then, carrying the lamp to the head of
+my bed, I lay down without undressing, reading St. Thomas a Kempis, and
+praying from my heart that the night might pass safely over us.
+
+"I had at last fallen into a troubled sleep when I was suddenly aroused
+by a loud, sonorous sound ringing in my ears. I sat up bewildered, but
+all was silent again. The lamp was burning low, and my watch showed
+me that it was going on to midnight. I blundered to my feet, and was
+striking a match with the intention of lighting the candles, when the
+sharp, vehement cry broke out again so loud and so clear that it might
+have been in the very room with me. My chamber is in the front of the
+house, while those of my mother and sister are at the back, so that I am
+the only one who commands a view of the avenue.
+
+"Rushing to the window I drew the blind aside and looked out. You know
+that the gravel-drive opens up so as to form a broad stretch immediately
+in front of the house. Just in the centre of this clear space there
+stood three men looking up at the house.
+
+"The moon shone full upon them, glistening on their upturned eyeballs,
+and by its light I could see that they were swarthy-faced and
+black-haired, of a type that I was familiar with among the Sikhs and
+Afridis. Two of them were thin, with eager, aesthetic countenances,
+while the third was kinglike and majestic, with a noble figure and
+flowing beard."
+
+"Ram Singh!" I ejaculated.
+
+"What, you know of them?" exclaimed Mordaunt in great surprise.
+"You have met them?"
+
+"I know of them. They are Buddhist priests," I answered, "but go on."
+
+"They stood in a line," he continued, "sweeping their arms upwards and
+downwards, while their lips moved as if repeating some prayer or
+incantation. Suddenly they ceased to gesticulate, and broke out for the
+third time into the wild, weird, piercing cry which had roused me from
+my slumber. Never shall I forget that shrill, dreadful summons swelling
+and reverberating through the silent night with an intensity of sound
+which is still ringing in my ears.
+
+"As it died slowly away, there was a rasping and creaking as of keys and
+bolts, followed by the clang of an opening door and the clatter of
+hurrying feet. From my window I saw my father and Corporal Rufus Smith
+rush frantically out of the house hatless and unkempt, like men who are
+obeying a sudden and overpowering impulse. The three strangers laid no
+hands on them, but all five swept swiftly away down the avenue and
+vanished among the trees. I am positive that no force was used, or
+constraint of any visible kind, and yet I am as sure that my poor father
+and his companion were helpless prisoners as it I bad seen them dragged
+away in manacles.
+
+"All this took little time in the acting. From the first summons which
+disturbed my sleep to the last shadowy glimpse which I had of them
+between the tree trunks could hardly have occupied more than five
+minutes of actual time. So sudden was it, and so strange, that when the
+drama was over and they were gone I could have believed that it was all
+some terrible nightmare, some delusion, had I not felt that the
+impression was too real, too vivid, to be imputed to fancy.
+
+"I threw my whole weight against my bedroom door in the hope of forcing
+the lock. It stood firm for a while, but I flung myself upon it again
+and again, until something snapped and I found myself in the passage.
+
+"My first thought was for my mother, I rushed to her room and turned the
+key in her door. The moment that I did so she stepped out into the
+corridor in her dressing-gown, and held up a warning finger.
+
+"'No noise, she said,' Gabriel is asleep. They have been called away?'
+
+"'They have,' I answered.
+
+"'God's will be done!' she cried. 'Your poor father will be happier in
+the next world than he has ever been in this. Thank Heaven that Gabriel
+is asleep. I gave her chloral in her cocoa.'
+
+"'What am I to do?' I said distractedly.
+
+"'Where have they gone? How can I help him? We cannot let him go from us
+like this, or leave these men to do what they will with him. Shall I
+ride into Wigtown and arouse the police?'
+
+"'Anything rather than that', my mother said earnestly. 'He has begged
+me again and again to avoid it. My son, we shall never set eyes upon
+your father again. You may marvel at my dry eyes, but it you knew as I
+know the peace which death would bring him, you could not find it in
+your heart to mourn for him. All pursuit is, I feel, vain, and yet
+some pursuit there must be. Let it be as private as possible. We
+cannot serve him better than by consulting his wishes.'
+
+"'But every minute is precious,' I cried. 'Even now he may be calling
+upon us to rescue him from the clutches of those dark-skinned fiends.'
+
+"The thought so maddened me that I rushed out of the house and down to
+the high road, but once there I had no indication in which direction to
+turn. The whole wide moor lay before me, without a sign of movement
+upon its broad expanse. I listened, but not a sound broke the perfect
+stillness of the night.
+
+"It was then, my dear friends, as I stood, not knowing in which
+direction to turn, that the horror and responsibility broke full upon
+me. I felt that I was combating against forces of which I knew nothing.
+All was strange and dark and terrible.
+
+"The thought of you, and of the help which I might look for from your
+advice and assistance, was a beacon of hope to me. At Branksome, at
+least, I should receive sympathy, and, above all, directions as to what
+I should do, for my mind is in such a whirl that I cannot trust my own
+judgment. My mother was content to be alone, my sister asleep, and no
+prospect of being able to do anything until daybreak. Under those
+circumstances what more natural than that I should fly to you as fast as
+my feet would carry me? You have a clear head, Jack; speak out, man,
+and tell me what I should do. Esther, what should I do?"
+
+He turned from one to the other of us with outstretched hands and eager,
+questioning eyes.
+
+"You can do nothing while the darkness lasts," I answered. "We must
+report the matter to the Wigtown police, but we need not send our
+message to them until we are actually starting upon the search, so as to
+comply with the law and yet have a private investigation, as your mother
+wishes. John Fullarton, over the hill, has a lurcher dog which is as
+good as a bloodhound. If we set him on the general's trail he will run
+him down if he had to follow him to John o' Groat's."
+
+"It is terrible to wait calmly here while he may need our assistance."
+
+"I fear our assistance could under any circumstances do him little good.
+There are forces at work here which are beyond human intervention.
+Besides, there is no alternative. We have, apparently, no possible clue
+as to the direction which they have taken, and for us to wander
+aimlessly over the moor in the darkness would be to waste the strength
+which may be more profitably used in the morning. It will be daylight
+by five o'clock. In an hour or so we can walk over the hill together
+and get Fullarton's dog."
+
+"Another hour!" Mordaunt groaned, "every minute seems an age."
+
+"Lie down on the sofa and rest yourself," said I. "You cannot serve your
+father better than by laying up all the strength you can, for we may
+have a weary trudge before us. But you mentioned a packet which the
+general had intended for me."
+
+"It is here," he answered, drawing a small, flat parcel from his pocket
+and handing it over to me, "you will find, no doubt, that it will
+explain all which has been so mysterious."
+
+The packet was sealed at each end with black wax, bearing the impress of
+the flying griffin, which I knew to be the general's crest. It was
+further secured by a band of broad tape, which I cut with my
+pocket-knife. Across the outside was written in bold handwriting:
+"J. Fothergill West, Esq.," and underneath: "To be handed to that
+gentleman in the event of the disappearance or decease of Major-General
+J. B. Heatherstone, V.C., C.B., late of the Indian Army."
+
+So at last I was to know the dark secret which had cast a shadow over
+our lives. Here in my hands I held the solution of it.
+
+With eager fingers I broke the seals and undid the wrapper. A note and
+a small bundle of discoloured paper lay within. I drew the lamp over to
+me and opened the former. It was dated the preceding afternoon, and ran
+in this way:
+
+MY DEAR WEST,--
+
+I should have satisfied your very natural curiosity on the subject which
+we have had occasion to talk of more than once, but I refrained for your
+own sake. I knew by sad experience how unsettling and unnerving it is
+to be for ever waiting for a catastrophe which you are convinced must
+befall, and which you can neither avert nor accelerate.
+
+Though it affects me specially, as being the person most concerned, I am
+still conscious that the natural sympathy which I have observed in you,
+and your regard for Gabriel's father, would both combine to render you
+unhappy if you knew the hopelessness and yet the vagueness of the fate
+which threatens me. I feared to disturb your mind, and I was therefore
+silent, though at some cost to myself, for my isolation has not been the
+least of the troubles which have weighed me down.
+
+Many signs, however, and chief among them the presence of the Buddhists
+upon the coast as described by you this morning, have convinced me that
+the weary waiting is at last over and that the hour of retribution is at
+hand. Why I should have been allowed to live nearly forty years after
+my offence is more than I can understand, but it is possible that those
+who had command over my fate know that such a life is the greatest of
+all penalties to me.
+
+Never for an hour, night or day, have they suffered me to forget that
+they have marked me down as their victim. Their accursed astral bell
+has been ringing my knell for two-score years, reminding me ever that
+there is no spot upon earth where I can hope to be in safety. Oh, the
+peace, the blessed peace of dissolution! Come what may on the other
+side of the tomb, I shall at least be quit of that thrice terrible
+sound.
+
+There is no need for me to enter into the wretched business again, or to
+detail at any length the events of October 5th, 1841, and the various
+circumstances which led up to the death of Ghoolab Shah, the arch adept.
+
+I have torn a sheaf of leaves from my old journal, in which you will
+find a bald account of the matter, and an independent narrative was
+furnished by. Sir Edward Elliott, of the Artillery, to the Star of India
+some years ago--in which, however, the names were suppressed.
+
+I have reason to believe that many people, even among those who knew
+India well, thought that Sir Edward was romancing, and that he had
+evolved his incidents from his imagination. The few faded sheets which
+I send you will show you that this is not the case, and that our men of
+science must recognise powers and laws which can and have been used by
+man, but which are unknown to European civilisation.
+
+I do not wish to whine or to whimper, but I cannot help feeling that I
+have had hard measure dealt me in this world. I would not, God knows,
+take the life of any man, far less an aged one, in cold blood. My
+temper and nature, however, were always fiery and headstrong, and in
+action when my blood is up, I have no knowledge of what I am about.
+Neither the corporal nor I would have laid a finger upon Ghoolab Shah
+had we not seen that the tribesmen were rallying behind him. Well,
+well, it is an old story now, and there is no profit in discussing it.
+May no other poor fellow ever have the same evil fortune!
+
+I have written a short supplement to the statements contained in my
+journal for your information and that of any one else who may chance to
+be interested in the matter.
+
+And now, adieu! Be a good husband to Gabriel, and, if your sister be
+brave enough to marry into such a devil-ridden family as ours, by all
+means let her do so. I have left enough to keep my poor wife in
+comfort.
+
+When she rejoins me I should wish it to be equally divided between the
+children. If you hear that I am gone, do not pity, but congratulate
+
+Your unfortunate friend,
+
+JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE.
+
+I threw aside the letter and picked up the roll of blue foolscap which
+contained the solution of the mystery. It was all ragged and frayed at
+the inner edge, with traces of gum and thread still adhering to it, to
+show that it had been torn out of a strongly bound volume. The ink with
+which it had been written was faded somewhat, but across the head of the
+first page was inscribed in bold, clear characters, evidently of later
+date than the rest: "Journal of Lieutenant J. B. Heatherstone in the
+Thull Valley during the autumn of 1841," and then underneath:
+
+This extract contains some account of the events of the first week of
+October of that year, including the skirmish of the Terada ravine and
+the death of the man Ghoolab Shah.
+
+I have the narrative lying before me now, and I copy it verbatim. If it
+contains some matter which has no direct bearing upon the question at
+issue, I can only say that I thought it better to publish what is
+irrelevant than by cutting and clipping to lay the whole statement open
+to the charge of having been tampered with.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+
+THE DAY-BOOK OF JOHN BERTHIER HEATHERSTONE
+
+Thull Valley, Oct. 1, 1841.--The Fifth Bengal and Thirty-third Queen's
+passed through this morning on their way to the Front. Had tiffin with
+the Bengalese. Latest news from home that two attempts had been made on
+the Queen's life by semi-maniacs named Francis and Bean.
+
+It promises to be a hard winter. The snow-line has descended a thousand
+feet upon the peaks, but the passes will be open for weeks to come, and,
+even if they were blocked, we have established so many depots in the
+country that Pollock and Nott will have no difficulty in holding their
+own. They shall not meet with the fate of Elphinstone's army. One such
+tragedy is enough for a century.
+
+Elliott of the Artillery, and I, are answerable for the safety of the
+communications for a distance of twenty miles or more, from the mouth of
+the valley to this side of the wooden bridge over the Lotar.
+Goodenough, of the Rifles, is responsible on the other side, and
+Lieutenant-Colonel Sidney Herbert of the Engineers, has a general
+supervision over both sections.
+
+Our force is not strong enough for the work which has to be done.
+I have a company and a half of our own regiment, and a squadron
+of Sowars, who are of no use at all among the rocks. Elliott has three
+guns, but several of his men are down with cholera, and I doubt
+if he has enough to serve more than two.
+
+[Note: capsicum for cholera--tried it]
+
+On the other hand, each convoy is usually provided with some guard of
+its own, though it is often absurdly inefficient. These valleys and
+ravines which branch out of the main pass are alive with Afridis and
+Pathans, who are keen robbers as well as religious fanatics. I wonder
+they don't swoop down on some of our caravans. They could plunder them
+and get back to their mountain fastnesses before we could interfere or
+overtake them. Nothing but fear will restrain them.
+
+If I had my way I would hang one at the mouth of every ravine as a
+warning to the gang. They are personifications of the devil to look at,
+hawk-nosed, full-lipped, with a mane of tangled hair, and most Satanic
+sneer. No news today from the Front.
+
+October 2.--I must really ask Herbert for another company at the very
+least. I am convinced that the communications would be cut off if any
+serious attack were made upon us.
+
+Now, this morning two urgent messages were sent me from two different
+points more than sixteen miles apart, to say that there were signs of a
+descent of the tribes.
+
+Elliott, with one gun and the Sowars, went to the farther ravine, while
+I, with the infantry, hurried to the other, but we found it was a false
+alarm. I saw no signs of the Hillmen, and though we were greeted by a
+splutter of jezail bullets we were unable to capture any of the rascals.
+
+Woe betide them if they fall into my hands. I would give them as short
+a shrift as ever a Highland cateran got from a Glasgow judge. These
+continued alarms may mean nothing or they may be an indication that the
+Hillmen are assembling and have some plan in view.
+
+We have had no news from the Front for some time, but to-day a convoy of
+wounded came through with the intelligence that Nott had taken Ghuznee.
+I hope he warmed up any of the black rascals that fell into his hands.
+
+No word of Pollock.
+
+An elephant battery came up from the Punjab, looking in very good
+condition. There were several convalescents with it going up to rejoin
+their regiments. Knew none of them except Mostyn of the Hussars and
+young Blakesley, who was my fag at Charterhouse, and whom I have never
+seen since.
+
+Punch and cigars _al_fresco_ up to eleven o'clock.
+
+Letters to-day from Wills & Co. about their little bill forwarded on
+from Delhi. Thought a campaign freed a man from these annoyances.
+Wills says in his note that, since his written applications have been in
+vain, he must call upon me in person. If he calls upon me now he will
+assuredly be the boldest and most persevering of tailors.
+
+A line from Calcutta Daisy and another from Hobhouse to say that Matilda
+comes in for all the money under the will. I am glad of it.
+
+October 3.--Glorious news from the Front today. Barclay, of the Madras
+Cavalry, galloped through with dispatches. Pollock entered Cabul
+triumphantly on the 16th of last month, and, better still, Lady Sale has
+been rescued by Shakespear, and brought safe into the British camp,
+together with the other hostages. _Te_Deum_laudamus!_
+
+This should end the whole wretched business--this and the sack of the
+city. I hope Pollock won't be squeamish, or truckle to the hysterical
+party at home. The towns should be laid in ashes and the fields sown
+with salt. Above all, the Residency and the Palace must come down.
+So shall Burnes, McNaghten, and many another gallant fellow know that
+his countrymen could avenge if they could not save him!
+
+It is hard when others are gaining glory and experience to be stuck in
+this miserable valley. I have been out of it completely, bar a few
+petty skirmishes. However, we may see some service yet.
+
+A jemidar of ours brought in a Hillman today, who says that the tribes
+are massing in the Terada ravine, ten miles to the north of us, and
+intend attacking the next convoy. We can't rely on information of this
+sort, but there may prove to be some truth in it. Proposed to shoot our
+informant, so as to prevent his playing the double traitor and reporting
+our proceedings. Elliott demurred.
+
+If you are making war you should throw no chance away. I hate half-and-
+half measures. The Children of Israel seem to have been the only people
+who ever carried war to its logical conclusion--except Cromwell in
+Ireland. Made a compromise at last by which the man is to be detained
+as a prisoner and executed if his information prove to be false. I only
+hope we get a fair chance of showing what we can do.
+
+No doubt these fellows at the Front will have C.B.'s and knighthoods
+showering upon them thick and fast, while we poor devils, who have had
+most of the responsibility and anxiety, will be passed over completely.
+Elliott has a whitlow.
+
+The last convoy left us a large packet of sauces, but as they forgot to
+leave anything to eat with them, we have handed them over to the Sowars,
+who drink them out of their pannikins as if they were liqueurs. We hear
+that another large convoy may be expected from the plains in the course
+of a day or two. Took nine to four on Cleopatra for the Calcutta Cup.
+
+October 4.--The Hillmen really mean business this time, I think.
+We have had two of our spies come in this morning with the same
+account about the gathering in the Terada quarter. That old rascal
+Zemaun is at the head of it, and I had recommended the Government to
+present him with a telescope in return for his neutrality! There will
+be no Zemaun to present it to if I can but lay hands upon him.
+
+We expect the convoy tomorrow morning, and need anticipate no attack
+until it comes up, for these fellows fight for plunder, not for glory,
+though, to do them justice, they have plenty of pluck when they
+get started. I have devised an excellent plan, and it has Elliott's
+hearty support. By Jove! if we can only manage it, it will be as pretty
+a ruse as ever I heard of.
+
+Our intention is to give out that we are going down the valley to meet
+the convoy and to block the mouth of a pass from which we profess to
+expect an attack. Very good. We shall make a night-march to-night and
+reach their camp. Once there I shall conceal my two hundred men in the
+waggons and travel up with the convoy again.
+
+Our friends the enemy, having heard that we intended to go south, and
+seeing the caravan going north without us, will naturally swoop down
+upon it under the impression that we are twenty miles away. We shall
+teach them such a lesson that they would as soon think of stopping a
+thunderbolt as of interfering again with one of Her Britannic Majesty's
+provision trains. I am all on thorns to be off.
+
+Elliott has rigged up two of his guns so ingeniously that they look more
+like costermongers' barrows than anything else. To see artillery ready
+for action in the convoy might arouse suspicion. The artillerymen will
+be in the waggons next the guns, all ready to unlimber and open fire.
+Infantry in front and rear. Have told our confidential and discreet
+Sepoy servants the plan which we do not intend to adopt. N.B.--If you
+wish a thing to be noised over a whole province always whisper it under
+a vow of secrecy to your confidential native servant.
+
+8.45 P.M.--Just starting for the convoy. May luck go with us!
+
+October 5.--Seven o'clock in the evening. _Io_triumphe!_ Crown us with
+laurel--Elliott and myself! Who can compare with us as vermin killers?
+
+I have only just got back, tired and weary, stained with blood and dust,
+but I have sat down before either washing or changing to have the
+satisfaction of seeing our deeds set forth in black and white--if only
+in my private log for no eye but my own. I shall describe it all fully
+as a preparation for an official account, which must be drawn up when
+Elliott gets back. Billy Dawson used to say that there were three
+degrees of comparison--a prevarication, a lie, and an official account.
+We at least cannot exaggerate our success, for it would be impossible to
+add anything to it.
+
+We set out, then, as per programme, and came upon the camp near the head
+of the valley. They had two weak companies of the 54th with them who
+might no doubt have held their own with warning, but an unexpected
+rush of wild Hillmen is a very difficult thing to stand against.
+With our reinforcements, however, and on our guard, we might defy
+the rascals.
+
+Chamberlain was in command--a fine young fellow. We soon made him
+understand the situation, and were all ready for a start by daybreak
+though his waggons were so full that we were compelled to leave
+several tons of fodder behind in order to make room for my Sepoys and
+for the artillery.
+
+About five o'clock we inspanned, to use an Africanism, and by six we
+were well on our way, with our escort as straggling and unconcerned as
+possible--as helpless-looking a caravan as ever invited attack.
+
+I could soon see that it was to be no false alarm this time, and that
+the tribes really meant business.
+
+From my post of observation, under the canvas screens of one of the
+waggons, I could make out turbaned heads popping up to have a look at us
+from among the rocks, and an occasional scout hurrying northward with
+the news of our approach.
+
+It was not, however, until we came abreast of the Terada Pass, a gloomy
+defile bounded by gigantic cliffs, that the Afridis began to show in
+force, though they had ambushed themselves so cleverly that, had we not
+been keenly on the look-out for them, we might have walked right into
+the trap. As it was, the convoy halted, upon which the Hillmen, seeing
+that they were observed, opened a heavy but ill-directed fire upon us.
+
+I had asked Chamberlain to throw out his men in skirmishing order, and
+to give them directions to retreat slowly upon the waggons so as to draw
+the Afridis on. The ruse succeeded to perfection.
+
+As the redcoats steadily retired, keeping behind cover as much as
+possible, the enemy followed them up with yells of exultation, springing
+from rock to rock, waving their jezails in the air, and howling like a
+pack of demons.
+
+With their black, contorted, mocking faces, their fierce gestures, and
+their fluttering garments, they would have made a study for any painter
+who wished to portray Milton's conception of the army of the damned.
+
+From every side they pressed in until, seeing, as they thought, nothing
+between them and victory, they left the shelter of the rocks and came
+rushing down, a furious, howling throng, with the green banner of the
+Prophet in their van.
+
+Now was our chance, and gloriously we utilised it.
+
+From every cranny and slit of the waggons came a blaze of fire, every
+shot of which told among the close-packed mob. Two or three score
+rolled over like rabbits and the rest reeled for a moment, and then,
+with their chiefs at their head, came on again in a magnificent rush.
+
+It was useless, however, for undisciplined men to attempt to face such a
+well-directed fire. The leaders were bowled over, and the others, after
+hesitating for a few moments, turned and made for the rocks.
+
+It was our turn now to assume the offensive. The guns were unlimbered
+and grape poured into them, while our little infantry force advanced at
+the double, shooting and stabbing all whom they overtook.
+
+Never had I known the tide of battle turn so rapidly and so decisively.
+The sullen retreat became a flight, and the flight a panic-stricken
+rout, until there was nothing left of the tribesmen except a scattered,
+demoralised rabble flying wildly to their native fastnesses for shelter
+and protection.
+
+I was by no means inclined to let them off cheaply now that I had them
+in my power. On the contrary, I determined to teach them such a lesson
+that the sight of a single scarlet uniform would in future be a passport
+in itself.
+
+We followed hard upon the track of the fugitives and entered the Terada
+defile at their very heels. Having detached Chamberlain and Elliott
+with a company on either side to protect my wings, I pushed on with my
+Sepoys and a handful of artillerymen, giving the enemy no time to rally
+or to recover themselves. We were so handicapped, however, by our stiff
+European uniforms and by our want of practice in climbing, that we
+should have been unable to overtake any of the mountaineers had it
+not been for a fortunate accident.
+
+There is a smaller ravine which opens into the main pass, and in their
+hurry and confusion some of the fugitives rushed down this. I saw sixty
+or seventy of them turn down, but I should have passed them by and
+continued in pursuit of the main body had not one of my scouts come
+rustling up to inform me that the smaller ravine was a _cul-de-sac_,
+and that the Afridis who had gone up it had no possible means of getting
+out again except by cutting their way through our ranks.
+
+Here was an opportunity of striking terror into the tribes. Leaving
+Chamberlain and Elliott to continue the pursuit of the main body,
+I wheeled my Sepoys into the narrow path and proceeded slowly down it in
+extended order, covering the whole ground from cliff to cliff. Not a
+jackal could have passed us unseen. The rebels were caught like rats in
+a trap.
+
+The defile in which we found ourselves was the most gloomy and majestic
+that I have ever seen. On either side naked precipices rose sheer up
+for a thousand feet or more, converging upon each other so as to leave a
+very narrow slit of daylight above us, which was further reduced by the
+feathery fringe of palm trees and aloes which hung over each lip of
+the chasm.
+
+The cliffs were not more than a couple of hundred yards apart at the
+entrance, but as we advanced they grew nearer and nearer, until a half
+company in close order could hardly march abreast.
+
+A sort of twilight reigned in this strange valley, and the dim,
+uncertain light made the great, basalt rocks loom up vague and
+fantastic. There was no path, and the ground was most uneven, but I
+pushed on briskly, cautioning my fellows to have their fingers on
+their triggers, for I could see that we were nearing the point where the
+two cliffs would form an acute angle with each other.
+
+At last we came in sight of the place. A great pile of boulders was
+heaped up at the very end of the pass, and among these our fugitives
+were skulking, entirely demoralised apparently, and incapable of
+resistance. They were useless as prisoners, and it was out of the
+question to let them go, so there was no choice but to polish them off.
+
+Waving my sword, I was leading my men on, when we had a most dramatic
+interruption of a sort which I have seen once or twice on the boards of
+Drury Lane, but never in real life.
+
+In the side of the cliff, close to the pile of stones where the Hillmen
+were making their last stand, there was a cave which looked more like
+the lair of some wild beast than a human habitation.
+
+Out of this dark archway there suddenly emerged an old man--such a very,
+very old man that all the other veterans whom I have seen were as
+chickens compared with him. His hair and beard were both as white as
+snow, and each reached more than half-way to his waist. His face was
+wrinkled and brown and ebony, a cross between a monkey and a mummy, and
+so thin and emaciated were his shrivelled limbs that you would hardly
+have given him credit for having any vitality left, were it not for his
+eyes, which glittered and sparkled with excitement, like two diamonds in
+a setting of mahogany.
+
+This apparition came rushing out of the cave, and, throwing himself
+between the fugitives and our fellows, motioned us back with as
+imperious a sweep of the hand as ever an emperor used to his slaves.
+
+"Men of blood," he cried, in a voice of thunder, speaking excellent
+English, too--"this is a place for prayer and meditation, not for
+murder. Desist, lest the wrath of the gods fall upon you."
+
+"Stand aside, old man," I shouted. "You will meet with a hurt if you
+don't get out of the way."
+
+I could see that the Hillmen were taking heart, and that some of my
+Sepoys were flinching, as if they did not relish this new enemy.
+Clearly, I must act promptly if I wished to complete our success.
+
+I dashed forward at the head of the white artillerymen who had stuck to
+me. The old fellow rushed at us with his arms out as if to stop us, but
+it was not time to stick at trifles, so I passed my sword through his
+body at the same moment that one of the gunners brought his carbine down
+upon his head. He dropped instantly, and the Hillmen, at the sight of
+his fall, set up the most unearthly howl of horror and consternation.
+
+The Sepoys, who had been inclined to hang back, came on again the moment
+he was disposed of, and it did not take us long to consummate our
+victory. Hardly a man of the enemy got out of the defile alive.
+
+What could Hannibal or Caesar have done more? Our own loss in the whole
+affair has been insignificant--three killed and about fifteen wounded.
+Got their banner, a green wisp of a thing with a sentence of the Koran
+engraved upon it.
+
+I looked, after the action, for the old chap, but his body had
+disappeared, though how or whither I have no conception. His blood
+be upon his own head! He would be alive now if he had not interfered,
+as the constables say at home, "with an officer in the execution of his
+duty."
+
+The scouts tell me that his name was Ghoolab Shah, and that he was one
+of the highest and holiest of the Buddhists. He had great fame in the
+district as a prophet and worker of miracles--hence the hubbub when
+he was cut down. They tell me that he was living in this very cave when
+Tamerlane passed this way in 1399, with a lot more bosh of that sort.
+
+I went into the cave, and how any man could live in it a week is a
+mystery to me, for it was little more than four feet high, and as
+damp and dismal a grotto as ever was seen. A wooden settle and a rough
+table were the sole furniture, with a lot of parchment scrolls with
+hieroglyphics.
+
+Well, he has gone where he will learn that the gospel of peace and good
+will is superior to all his Pagan lore. Peace go with him.
+
+Elliott and Chamberlain never caught the main body--I knew they
+wouldn't--so the honours of the day rest with me. I ought to get a step
+for it, anyhow, and perhaps, who knows? some mention in the _Gazette_.
+What a lucky chance! I think Zemaun deserves his telescope after all
+for giving it to me. Shall have something to eat now, for I am half
+starved. Glory is an excellent thing, but you cannot live upon it.
+
+October 6, 11 A.M.--Let me try to set down as calmly and as accurately
+as I can all that occurred last night. I have never been a dreamer or a
+visionary, so I can rely upon my own senses, though I am bound to say
+that if any other fellow had told me the same thing I should have
+doubted him. I might even have suspected that I was deceived at the
+time had I not heard the bell since. However, I must narrate what
+happened.
+
+Elliott was in my tent with me having a quiet cheroot until about ten
+o'clock. I then walked the rounds with my jemidar, and having seen that
+all was right I turned in a little before eleven.
+
+I was just dropping off to sleep, for I was dog-tired after the day's
+work, when I was aroused by some slight noise, and, looking round, I saw
+a man dressed in Asiatic costume standing at the entrance of my tent.
+He was motionless when I saw him, and he had his eyes fixed upon me with
+a solemn and stern expression.
+
+My first thought was that the fellow was some Ghazi or Afghan fanatic
+who had stolen in with the intention of stabbing me, and with this idea
+in my mind I had all the will to spring from my couch and defend myself,
+but the power was unaccountably lacking.
+
+An overpowering languor and want of energy possessed me. Had I seen the
+dagger descending upon my breast I could not have made an effort to
+avert it. I suppose a bird when it is under the influence of a snake
+feels very much as I did in the presence of this gloomy-faced stranger.
+My mind was clear enough, but my body was as torpid as though I were
+still asleep.
+
+I shut my eves once or twice and tried to persuade myself that the whole
+thing was a delusion, but every time that I opened them there was the
+man still regarding me with the same stony, menacing stare.
+
+The silence became unendurable. I felt that I must overcome my languor
+so far as to address him. I am not a nervous man, and I never knew
+before what Virgil meant when he wrote "adhoesit faucibus ora."
+At last I managed to stammer out a few words, asking the intruder who he
+was and what he wanted.
+
+"Lieutenant Heatherstone," he answered, speaking slowly and gravely, "you
+have committed this day the foulest sacrilege and the greatest crime
+which it is possible for man to do. You have slain one of the thrice
+blessed and reverend ones, an arch adept of the first degree, an elder
+brother who has trod the higher path for more years than you have
+numbered months. You have cut him off at a time when his labours
+promised to reach a climax and when he was about to attain a height of
+occult knowledge which would have brought man one step nearer to his
+Creator. All this you have done without excuse, without provocation, at
+a time when he was pleading the cause of the helpless and distressed.
+Listen now to me, John Heatherstone.
+
+"When first the occult sciences were pursued many thousands of years
+ago, it was found by the learned that the short tenure of human
+existence was too limited to allow a man to attain the loftiest heights
+of inner life. The inquirers of those days directed their energies in
+the first place, therefore, to the lengthening of their own days in
+order that they might have more scope for improvement.
+
+"By their knowledge of the secret laws of Nature they were enabled to
+fortify their bodies against disease and old age. It only remained to
+protect themselves against the assaults of wicked and violent men who
+are ever ready to destroy what is wiser and nobler than themselves.
+There was no direct means by which this protection could be effected,
+but it was in some measure attained by arranging the occult forces in
+such a way that a terrible and unavoidable retribution should await the
+offender.
+
+"It was irrevocably ordained by laws which cannot be reversed that any
+one who should shed the blood of a brother who had attained a certain
+degree of sanctity should be a doomed man. Those laws are extant to
+this day, John Heatherstone, and you have placed yourself in their
+power. King or emperor would be helpless before the forces which you
+have called into play. What hope, then, is there for you?
+
+"In former days these laws acted so instantaneously that the slayer
+perished with his victim. It was judged afterwards that this prompt
+retribution prevented the offender from having time to realise the
+enormity of his offence.
+
+"It was therefore ordained that in all such cases the retribution should
+be left in the hands of the _chelas_, or immediate disciples of the holy
+man, with power to extend or shorten it at their will, exacting it
+either at the time or at any future anniversary of the day when the
+crime was committed.
+
+"Why punishment should come on those days only it does not concern you
+to know. Suffice it that you are the murderer of Ghoolab Shah, the
+thrice blessed, and that I am the senior of his three _chelas_
+commissioned to avenge his death.
+
+"It is no personal matter between us. Amid our studies we have no
+leisure or inclination for personal matters. It is an immutable law,
+and it is as impossible for us to relax it as it is for you to escape
+from it Sooner or later we shall come to you and claim your life in
+atonement for the one which you have taken.
+
+"The same fate shall be meted out to the wretched soldier, Smith, who,
+though less guilty than yourself, has incurred the same penalty by
+raising his sacrilegious hand against the chosen of Buddha. If your
+life is prolonged, it is merely that you may have time to repent of your
+misdeed and to feel the full force of your punishment.
+
+"And lest you should be tempted to cast it out of your mind and to
+forget it, our bell--our astral bell, the use of which is one of
+our occult secrets--shall ever remind you of what have been and what is
+to be. You shall hear it by day and you shall hear it by night, and it
+will be a sign to you that do what you may and go where you will, you
+can never shake yourself clear of the _chelas_ of Ghoolab Shah.
+
+"You will never see me more, accursed one, until the day when we come
+for you. Live in fear, and in that anticipation which is worse than
+death."
+
+With a menacing wave of the hand the figure turned and swept out of my
+tent into the darkness. The instant that the fellow disappeared from
+my sight I recovered from my lethargy which had fallen upon me.
+Springing to my feet, I rushed to the opening and looked out. A Sepoy
+sentry was standing leaning upon his musket, a few paces off.
+
+"You dog," I said in Hindustani. "What do you mean by letting people
+disturb me in this way?"
+
+The man stared at me in amazement. "Has any one disturbed the sahib?"
+he asked.
+
+"This instant--this moment. You must have seen him pass out of my
+tent."
+
+"Surely the Burra Sahib is mistaken," the man answered, respectfully but
+firmly. "I have been here for an hour, and no one has passed from the
+tent."
+
+Puzzled and disconcerted, I was sitting by the side of my couch
+wondering whether the whole thing were a delusion, brought on by
+the nervous excitement of our skirmish, when a new marvel overtook me.
+From over my head there suddenly sounded a sharp, tinkling sound, like
+that produced by an empty glass when flipped by the nail, only louder
+and more intense.
+
+I looked up, but nothing was to be seen. I examined the whole interior
+of the tent carefully, but without discovering any cause for the strange
+sound. At last, worn out with fatigue, I gave the mystery up, and
+throwing myself on the couch was soon fast asleep.
+
+When I awoke this morning I was inclined to put the whole of my
+yesternight's experiences down to imagination, but I was soon disabused
+of the idea, for I had hardly risen before the same strange sound was
+repeated in my very ear as loudly, and to all appearance as causelesly,
+as before. What it is or where it comes from I cannot conceive. I have
+not heard it since.
+
+Can the fellow's threats have something in them and this be the warning
+bell of which he spoke? Surely it is impossible. Yet his manner was
+indescribably impressive.
+
+I have tried to set down what he said as accurately as I can, but I fear
+I have omitted a good deal. What is to be the end of this strange
+affair? I must go in for a course of religion and holy water. Not a
+word to Chamberlain or Elliott. They tell me I am looking like a ghost
+this morning.
+
+_Evening_.--Have managed to compare notes with Gunner Rufus Smith of the
+Artillery, who knocked the old fellow over with the butt of his gun.
+His experience has been the same as mine. He has heard the sound, too.
+What is the meaning of it all? My brain is in a whirl.
+
+Oct. 10 (four days later).--God help us!
+
+This last laconic entry terminated the journal. It seemed to me that,
+coming as it did after four days' complete silence, it told a clearer
+tale of shaken nerve and a broken spirit than could any more elaborate
+narrative. Pinned on to the journal was a supplementary statement which
+had evidently been recently added by the general.
+
+"From that day to this," it said, "I have had no night or day free from
+the intrusion of that dreadful sound with its accompanying train of
+thought. Time and custom have brought me no relief, but on the
+contrary, as the years pass over my head my physical strength decreases
+and my nerves become less able to bear up against the continual strain.
+
+"I am a broken man in mind and body. I live in a state of tension,
+always straining my ears for the hated sound, afraid to converse
+with my fellows for fear of exposing my dreadful condition to them, with
+no comfort or hope of comfort on this side of the grave. I should
+be willing. Heaven knows, to die, and yet as each 5th of October comes
+round, I am prostrated with fear because I do not know what strange and
+terrible experience may be in store for me.
+
+"Forty years have passed since I slew Ghoolab Shah, and forty times I
+have gone through all the horrors of death, without attaining the
+blessed peace which lies beyond.
+
+"I have no means of knowing in what shape my fate will come upon me.
+I have immured myself in this lonely country, and surrounded myself with
+barriers, because in my weaker moments my instincts urge me to take some
+steps for self-protection, but I know well in my heart how futile it all
+is. They must come quickly now, for I grow old, and Nature will
+forestall them unless they make haste.
+
+"I take credit to myself that I have kept my hands off the prussic-acid
+or opium bottle. It has always been in my power to checkmate my occult
+persecutors in that way, but I have ever held that a man in this world
+cannot desert his post until he has been relieved in due course by the
+authorities. I have had no scruples, however, about exposing myself to
+danger, and, during the Sikh and Sepoy wars, I did all that a man could
+do to court Death. He passed me by, however, and picked out many a
+young fellow to whom life was only opening and who had everything to
+live for, while I survived to win crosses and honours which had lost all
+relish for me.
+
+"Well, well, these things cannot depend upon chance, and there is no
+doubt some deep reason for it all.
+
+"One compensation Providence has made me in the shape of a true and
+faithful wife, to whom I told my dreadful secret before the wedding, and
+who nobly consented to share my lot. She has lifted half the burden
+from my shoulders, but with the effect, poor soul, of crushing her own
+life beneath its weight!
+
+"My children, too, have been a comfort to me. Mordaunt knows all, or
+nearly all. Gabriel we have endeavoured to keep in the dark, though we
+cannot prevent her from knowing that there is something amiss.
+
+"I should like this statement to be shown to Dr. John Easterling", of
+Stranraer. He heard on one occasion this haunting sound. My sad
+experience may show him that I spoke truth when I said that there was
+much knowledge in the world which has never found its way to England.
+
+"J. B. HEATHERSTONE."
+
+It was going on for dawn by the time that I had finished this
+extraordinary narrative, to which my sister and Mordaunt Heatherstone
+listened with the most absorbed attention. Already we could see through
+the window that the stars had begun to fade and a grey light to appear
+in the east. The crofter who owned the lurcher dog lived a couple of
+miles off, so it was time for us to be on foot. Leaving Esther to tell
+my father the story in such fashion as she might, we thrust some food in
+our pockets and set off upon our solemn and eventful errand.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+
+AT THE HOLE OF CREE
+
+It was dark enough when we started to make it no easy matter to find our
+way across the moors, but as we advanced it grew lighter and lighter,
+until by the time we reached Fullarton's cabin it was broad daylight.
+
+Early as it was, he was up and about, for the Wigtown peasants are an
+early rising race. We explained our mission to him in as few words as
+possible, and having made his bargain--what Scot ever neglected that
+preliminary?--he agreed not only to let us have the use of his dog but
+to come with us himself.
+
+Mordaunt, in his desire for privacy, would have demurred at this
+arrangement, but I pointed out to him that we had no idea what
+was in store for us, and the addition of a strong, able-bodied man to
+our party might prove to be of the utmost consequence.
+
+Again, the dog was less likely to give us trouble if we had its master
+to control it. My arguments carried the day, and the biped accompanied
+us as well as his four-footed companion.
+
+There was some little similarity between the two, for the man was a
+towsy-headed fellow with a great mop of yellow hair and a straggling
+beard, while the dog was of the long-haired, unkempt breed looking like
+an animated bundle of oakum.
+
+All our way to the Hall its owner kept retailing instances of the
+creature's sagacity and powers of scent, which, according to his
+account, were little less than miraculous. His anecdotes had a poor
+audience, I fear, for my mind was filled with the strange story which
+I had been reading, while Mordaunt strode on with wild eyes and feverish
+cheeks, without a thought for anything but the problem which
+we had to solve.
+
+Again and again as we topped an eminence I saw him look eagerly round
+him in the faint hope of seeing some trace of the absentee, but over the
+whole expanse of moorland there was no sign of movement or of life.
+All was dead and silent and deserted.
+
+Our visit to the Hall was a very brief one, for every minute now was of
+importance. Mordaunt rushed in and emerged with an old coat of his
+father's, which he handed to Fullarton, who held it out to the dog.
+
+The intelligent brute sniffed at it all over, then ran whining a little
+way down the avenue, came back to sniff the coat again, and finally
+elevating its stump of a tail in triumph, uttered a succession of sharp
+yelps to show that it was satisfied that it had struck the trail. Its
+owner tied a long cord to its collar to prevent it from going too fast
+for us, and we all set off upon our search, the dog tugging and training
+at its leash in its excitement as it followed in the general's
+footsteps.
+
+Our way lay for a couple of hundred yards along the high road, and then
+passed through a gap In the hedge and on to the moor, across which we
+were led in a bee-line to the northward.
+
+The sun had by this time risen above the horizon, and the whole
+countryside looked so fresh and sweet, from the blue, sparkling sea
+to the purple mountains, that it was difficult to realise how weird and
+uncanny was the enterprise upon which we were engaged.
+
+The scent must have lain strongly upon the ground, for the dog never
+hesitated nor stopped, dragging its master along at a pace which
+rendered conversation impossible.
+
+At one place, in crossing a small stream, we seemed to get off the trail
+for a few minutes, but our keen-nosed ally soon picked it up on the
+other side and followed it over the trackless moor, whining and yelping
+all the time in its eagerness. Had we not all three been fleet of foot
+and long of wind, we could not have persisted in the continuous, rapid
+journey over the roughest of ground, with the heather often well-nigh up
+to our waists.
+
+For my own part, I have no idea now, looking back, what goal it was
+which I expected to reach at the end of our pursuit. I can remember
+that my mind was full of the vaguest and most varying speculations.
+
+Could it be that the three Buddhists had had a craft in readiness off
+the coast, and had embarked with their prisoners for the East?
+The direction of their track seemed at first to favour this supposition,
+for it lay in the line of the upper end of the bay, but it ended by
+branching off and striking directly inland. Clearly the ocean was not
+to be our terminus.
+
+By ten o'clock we had walked close upon twelve miles, and were compelled
+to call a halt for a few minutes to recover our breath, for the last
+mile or two we had been breasting the long, wearying slope of the
+Wigtown hills.
+
+From the summit of this range, which is nowhere more than a thousand
+feet in height, we could see, looking northward, such a scene of
+bleakness and desolation as can hardly be matched in any country.
+
+Right away to the horizon stretched the broad expanse of mud and of
+water, mingled and mixed together in the wildest chaos, like a portion
+of some world in the process of formation. Here and there on the
+dun-coloured surface of this great marsh there had burst out patches of
+sickly yellow reeds and of livid, greenish scum, which only served to
+heighten and intensify the gloomy effect of the dull, melancholy
+expanse.
+
+On the side nearest to us some abandoned peat-cuttings showed that
+ubiquitous man had been at work there, but beyond these few petty scars
+there was no sign anywhere of human life. Not even a crow nor a
+seagull flapped its way over that hideous desert.
+
+This is the great Bog of Cree. It is a salt-water marsh formed by an
+inroad of the sea, and so intersected is it with dangerous swamps and
+treacherous pitfalls of liquid mud, that no man would venture through it
+unless he had the guidance of one of the few peasants who retain the
+secret of its paths.
+
+As we approached the fringe of rushes which marked its border, a foul,
+dank smell rose up from the stagnant wilderness, as from impure water
+and decaying vegetation--an earthy, noisome smell which poisoned the
+fresh upland air.
+
+So forbidding and gloomy was the aspect of the place that our stout
+crofter hesitated, and it was all that we could do to persuade him to
+proceed. Our lurcher, however, not being subject to the delicate
+impressions of our higher organisation, still ran yelping along with its
+nose on the ground and every fibre of its body quivering with excitement
+and eagerness.
+
+There was no difficulty about picking our way through the morass, for
+wherever the five could go we three could follow.
+
+If we could have had any doubts as to our dog's guidance they would all
+have been removed now, for in the soft, black, oozing soil we could
+distinctly trace the tracks of the whole party. From these we could see
+that they had walked abreast, and, furthermore, that each was about
+equidistant from the other. Clearly, then, no physical force had
+been used in taking the general and his companion along. The compulsion
+had been psychical and not material.
+
+Once within the swamp, we had to be careful not to deviate from the
+narrow track, which offered a firm foothold.
+
+On each side lay shallow sheets of stagnant water overlying a
+treacherous bottom of semi-fluid mud, which rose above the surface here
+and there in moist, sweltering banks, mottled over with occasional
+patches of unhealthy vegetation. Great purple and yellow fungi
+had broken out in a dense eruption, as though Nature were afflicted with
+a foul disease, which manifested itself by this crop of plague spots.
+
+Here and there dark, crab-like creatures scuttled across our path, and
+hideous, flesh-coloured worms wriggled and writhed amid the sickly
+reeds. Swarms of buzzing, piping insects rose up at every step and
+formed a dense cloud around our heads, settling on our hands and faces
+and inoculating us with their filthy venom. Never had I ventured into
+so pestilent and forbidding a place.
+
+Mordaunt Heatherstone strode on, however, with a set purpose upon his
+swarthy brow, and we could but follow him, determined to stand by him to
+the end of the adventure. As we advanced, the path grew narrower and
+narrower until, as we saw by the tracks, our predecessors had been
+compelled to walk in single file. Fullarton was leading us with the
+dog, Mordaunt behind him, while I brought up the rear. The peasant had
+been sulky and surly for a little time back, hardly answering when
+spoken to, but he now stopped short and positively refused to go a step
+farther.
+
+"It's no' canny," he said, "besides I ken where it will lead us tae'"
+
+"Where, then?" I asked.
+
+"Tae the Hole o' Cree," he answered. "It's no far frae here, I'm
+thinking."
+
+"The Hole of Cree! What is that, then?"
+
+"It's a great, muckle hole in the ground that gangs awa' doon so deep
+that naebody could ever reach the bottom. Indeed there are folk wha
+says that it's just a door leadin' intae the bottomless pit itsel'"
+
+"You have been there, then?" I asked.
+
+"Been there!" he cried. "What would I be doin' at the Hole o' Cree? No,
+I've never been there, nor any other man in his senses."
+
+"How do you know about it, then?"
+
+"My great-grandfeyther had been there, and that's how I ken," Fullarton
+answered. "He was fou' one Saturday nicht and he went for a bet. He
+didna like tae talk aboot it afterwards, and he wouldna tell a' what
+befell him, but he was aye feared o' the very name. He's the first
+Fullarton that's been at the Hole o' Cree, and he'll be the last for me.
+If ye'll tak' my advice ye'll just gie the matter up and gang name
+again, for there's na guid tae be got oot o' this place."
+
+"We shall go on with you or without you," Mordaunt answered. "Let us
+have your dog and we can pick you up on our way back."
+
+"Na, na," he cried, "I'll no' hae my dog scaret wi' bogles, and running
+down Auld Nick as if he were a hare. The dog shall bide wi' me."
+
+"The dog shall go with us," said my companion, with his eyes blazing.
+"We have no time to argue with you. Here's a five-pound note. Let us
+have the dog, or, by Heaven, I shall take it by force and throw you in
+the bog if you hinder us."
+
+I could realise the Heatherstone of forty years ago when I saw the
+fierce and sudden wrath which lit up the features of his son.
+
+Either the bribe or the threat had the desired effect, for the fellow
+grabbed at the money with one hand while with the other he surrendered
+the leash which held the lurcher. Leaving him to retrace his steps, we
+continued to make our way into the utmost recesses of the great swamp.
+
+The tortuous path grew less and less defined as we proceeded, and was
+even covered in places with water, but the increasing excitement of the
+hound and the sight of the deep footmarks in the mud stimulated us
+to push on. At last, after struggling through a grove of high
+bulrushes, we came on a spot the gloomy horror of which might have
+furnished Dante with a fresh terror for his "Inferno."
+
+The whole bog in this part appeared to have sunk in, forming a great,
+funnel-shaped depression, which terminated in the centre in a circular
+rift or opening about forty feet in diameter. It was a whirlpool--a
+perfect maelstrom of mud, sloping down on every side to this silent and
+awful chasm.
+
+Clearly this was the spot which, under the name of the Hole of Cree,
+bore such a sinister reputation among the rustics. I could not
+wonder at its impressing their imagination, for a more weird or gloomy
+scene, or one more worthy of the avenue which led to it, could not be
+conceived.
+
+The steps passed down the declivity which surrounded the abyss, and we
+followed them with a sinking feeling in our hearts, as we realised that
+this was the end of our search.
+
+A little way from the downward path was the return trail made by the
+feet of those who had come back from the chasm's edge. Our eyes fell
+upon these tracks at the same moment, and we each gave a cry of horror,
+and stood gazing speechlessly at them. For there, in those blurred
+footmarks, the whole drama was revealed.
+
+_Five_had_gone_down,_but_only_three_had_returned_.
+
+None shall ever know the details of that strange tragedy. There was no
+mark of struggle nor sign of attempt at escape. We knelt at the edge of
+the Hole and endeavoured to pierce the unfathomable gloom which shrouded
+it. A faint, sickly exhalation seemed to rise from its depths, and
+there was a distant hurrying, clattering sound as of waters in the
+bowels of the earth.
+
+A great stone lay embedded in the mud, and this I hurled over, but we
+never heard thud or splash to show that it had reached the bottom.
+
+As we hung over the noisome chasm a sound did at last rise to our ears
+out of its murky depths. High, clear, and throbbing, it tinkled for an
+instant out of the abyss, to be succeeded by the same deadly stillness
+which had preceded it.
+
+I did not wish to appear superstitious, or to put down to extraordinary
+causes that which may have a natural explanation. That one keen note
+may have been some strange water sound produced far down in the bowels
+of the earth. It may have been that or it may have been that sinister
+bell of which I had heard so much. Be this as it may, it was the only
+sign that rose to us from the last terrible resting-place of the two who
+had paid the debt which had so long been owing.
+
+We joined our voices in a call with the unreasoning obstinacy with which
+men will cling to hope, but no answer came back to us save a hollow
+moaning from the depths beneath. Footsore and heart-sick, we retraced
+our steps and climbed the slimy slope once more.
+
+"What shall we do, Mordaunt?" I asked, in a subdued voice. "We can but
+pray that their souls may rest in peace."
+
+Young Heatherstone looked at me with flashing eyes.
+
+"This may be all according to occult laws," he cried, "but we shall see
+what the laws of England have to say upon it. I suppose a _chela_ may
+be hanged as well as any other man. It may not be too late yet to run
+them down. Here, good dog, good dog-here!"
+
+He pulled the hound over and set it on the track of the three men.
+The creature sniffed at it once or twice, and then, falling upon its
+stomach, with bristling hair and protruding tongue, it lay shivering and
+trembling, a very embodiment of canine terror.
+
+"You see," I said, "it is no use contending against those who have
+powers at their command to which we cannot even give a name. There is
+nothing for it but to accept the inevitable, and to hope that these poor
+men may meet with some compensation in another world for all that they
+have suffered in this."
+
+"And be free from all devilish religions and their murderous
+worshippers!" Mordaunt cried furiously.
+
+Justice compelled me to acknowledge in my own heart that the murderous
+spirit had been set on foot by the Christian before it was taken up by
+the Buddhists, but I forbore to remark upon it, for fear of irritating
+my companion.
+
+For a long time I could not draw him away from the scene of his father's
+death, but at last, by repeated arguments and reasonings, I succeeded in
+making him realise how useless and unprofitable any further efforts on
+our part must necessarily prove, and in inducing him to return with me
+to Cloomber.
+
+Oh, the wearisome, tedious journey! It had seemed long enough when we
+had some slight flicker of hope, or at least of expectation, before us,
+but now that our worst fears were fulfilled it appeared interminable.
+
+We picked up our peasant guide at the outskirts of the marsh, and having
+restored his dog we let him find his own way home, without telling him
+anything of the results of our expedition. We ourselves plodded all
+day over the moors with heavy feet and heavier hearts until we saw the
+ill-omened tower of Cloomber, and at last, as the sun was setting, found
+ourselves once more beneath its roof.
+
+There is no need for me to enter into further details, nor to describe
+the grief which our tidings conveyed to mother and to daughter.
+Their long expectation of some calamity was not sufficient to prepare
+them for the terrible reality.
+
+For weeks my poor Gabriel hovered between life and death, and though she
+came round al last, thanks to the nursing of my sister and the
+professional skill of Dr. John Easterling, she has never to this day
+entirely recovered her former vigour. Mordaunt, too, suffered much for
+some time, and it was only after our removal to Edinburgh that he
+rallied from the shock which he had undergone.
+
+As to poor Mrs. Heatherstone, neither medical attention nor change of
+air can ever have a permanent effect upon her. Slowly and surely, but
+very placidly, she has declined in health and strength, until it is
+evident that in a very few weeks at the most she will have rejoined her
+husband and restored to him the one thing which he must have grudged to
+leave behind.
+
+The Laird of Branksome came home from Italy restored in health, with the
+result that we were compelled to return once more to Edinburgh.
+
+The change was agreeable to us, for recent events had cast a cloud over
+our country life and had surrounded us with unpleasant associations.
+Besides, a highly honourable and remunerative appointment in connection
+with the University library had become vacant, and had, through the
+kindness of the late Sir Alexander Grant, been offered to my father,
+who, as may be imagined, lost no time in accepting so congenial a post.
+
+In this way we came back to Edinburgh very much more important people
+than we left it, and with no further reason to be uneasy about the
+details of housekeeping. But, in truth, the whole household has been
+dissolved, for I have been married for some months to my dear Gabriel,
+and Esther is to become Mrs. Heatherstone upon the 23rd of the month.
+If she makes him as good a wife as his sister has made me, we may both
+set ourselves down as fortunate men.
+
+These mere domestic episodes are, as I have already explained,
+introduced only because I cannot avoid alluding to them.
+
+My object in drawing up this statement and publishing the evidence which
+corroborates it, was certainly not to parade my private affairs before
+the public, but to leave on record an authentic narrative of a most
+remarkable series of events. This I have endeavoured to do in as
+methodical a manner as possible, exaggerating nothing and suppressing
+nothing.
+
+The reader has now the evidence before him, and can form his own
+opinions unaided by me as to the causes of the disappearance and death
+of Rufus Smith and of John Berthier Heatherstone, V.C., C.B.
+
+There is only one point which is still dark to me. Why the _chelas_ of
+Ghoolab Shah should have removed their victims to the desolate Hole of
+Cree instead of taking their lives at Cloomber, is, I confess, a mystery
+to me.
+
+In dealing with occult laws, however, we must allow for our own complete
+ignorance of the subject. Did we know more we might see that there was
+some analogy between that foul bog and the sacrilege which had been
+committed, and that their ritual and customs demanded that just such a
+death was the one appropriate to the crime.
+
+On this point I should be sorry to be dogmatic, but at least we must
+allow that the Buddhist priests must have had some very good cause for
+the course of action which they so deliberately carried out.
+
+Months afterwards I saw a short paragraph in the _Star_of_India_
+announcing that three eminent Buddhists--Lal Hoomi, Mowdar Khan, and Ram
+Singh--had just returned in the steamship _Deccan_ from a short trip
+to Europe. The very next item was devoted to an account of the life and
+services of Major-General Heatherstone, "who has lately disappeared from
+his country house in Wigtownshire, and who, there is too much reason to
+fear, has been drowned."
+
+I wonder if by chance there was any other human eye but mine which
+traced a connection between these paragraphs. I never showed them to my
+wife or to Mordaunt, and they will only know of their existence when
+they read these pages.
+
+I don't know that there is any other point which needs clearing up.
+The intelligent reader will have already seen the reasons for the
+general's fear of dark faces, of wandering men (not knowing how his
+pursuers might come after him), and of visitors (from the
+same cause and because his hateful bell was liable to sound at all
+times).
+
+His broken sleep led him to wander about the house at night, and the
+lamps which he burnt in every room were no doubt to prevent his
+imagination from peopling the darkness with terrors. Lastly, his
+elaborate precautions were, as he has himself explained, rather the
+result of a feverish desire to do something than in the expectation that
+he could really ward off his fate.
+
+Science will tell you that there are no such powers as those claimed by
+the Eastern mystics. I, John Fothergill West, can confidently answer
+that science is wrong.
+
+For what is science? Science is the consensus of opinion of scientific
+men, and history has shown that it is slow to accept a truth. Science
+sneered at Newton for twenty years. Science proved mathematically
+that an iron ship could not swim, and science declared that a steamship
+could not cross the Atlantic.
+
+Like Goethe's Mephistopheles, our wise professor's forte is
+"stets verneinen." Thomas Didymus is, to use his own jargon, his
+prototype. Let him learn that if he will but cease to believe in the
+infallibility of his own methods, and will look to the East, from
+which all great movements come, he will find there a school of
+philosophers and of savants who, working on different lines from his
+own, are many thousand years ahead of him in all the essentials of
+knowledge.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Mystery of Cloomber, by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
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