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diff --git a/9852.txt b/9852.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8e693b5 --- /dev/null +++ b/9852.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7766 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Man From the Clouds, by J. Storer Clouston + +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 Man From the Clouds + +Author: J. Storer Clouston + +Posting Date: December 5, 2011 [EBook #9852] +Release Date: February, 2006 +First Posted: October 24, 2003 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAN FROM THE CLOUDS *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + + + + + + + + + +THE MAN FROM THE CLOUDS + +BY + +J. STORER CLOUSTON + +1919 + + + + + + + +CONTENTS + + + +PART I + + +CHAPTER + + I In the Clouds + + II The Man on the Shore + + III Alone Again + + IV The Suspicious Stranger + + V The Doctor's House + + VI A Petticoat + + VII At the Mansion House + + VIII Sunday + + IX An Ally + + X The Coast Patrol + + XI A Near Thing + + XII The Key Turned + + XIII On the Drifter + + XIV My Cousin's Letter + + + +PART II + + +CHAPTER + + I An Idea + + II A Little Dinner + + III The Alcoholic Patient + + IV The Test + + V Waiting + + VI The Spectacled Man + + VII A Reminiscence + + VIII H.M.S. _Uruguay_ + + IX Bolton on the Track + + X Where the Clue Led + + XI An Eye-Opener + + XII The Confidant + + XIII Jean's Guesses + + XIV The Pocket Book + + XV Part of the Truth + + XVI Tracked Down + + XVII The Rest of the Truth + +XVIII The Frosty Road + + XIX Our Morning Call + + + + +THE MAN FROM THE CLOUDS + + + + +PART I + + + +I + +IN THE CLOUDS + + +"My God," said Rutherford, "the cable has broken!" + +In an instant I was craning over the side of the basket. Five hundred +feet, 700 feet, 1000 feet, 2000 feet below us, the cruiser that had been +our only link with the world of man was diminishing so swiftly that, as +far as I remember, she had shrunk to the smallness of a tug and then +vanished into the haze before I even answered him. + +"Anything to be done?" I asked. + +"Nothing," said he. + +It had been growing steadily more misty even down near the water, and now +as the released balloon shot up into an altitude of five, ten, and +presently twelve thousand feet, everything in Heaven and earth +disappeared except that white and clammy fog. By a simultaneous impulse +he lit a cigarette and I a pipe, and I remember very plainly wondering +whether he felt any touch of that self-conscious defiance of fate and +deliberate intention to do the coolest thing possible, which I am free to +confess I felt myself. Probably not; Rutherford was the real Navy and I +but a zig-zag ringed R.N.V.R. amateur. Still, the spirit of the Navy is +infectious and I made a fair attempt to keep his stout heart company. + +"What _ought_ to happen to a thing like this?" I enquired. + +"If this wind holds we might conceivably make a landing somewhere--with +extraordinary luck." + +"On the other side?" + +He nodded and I reflected. + +It was towards the end of August, 1914. We were somewhere about the +middle of the North Sea when the observation balloon was sent up, and I +had persuaded Rutherford to take me up with him in the basket. Five +minutes ago I had been telling myself I was the luckiest R.N.V.R. +Sub-Lieutenant in the Navy; and then suddenly the appalling thing +happened. I may not give away any naval secrets, but everybody knows, I +presume, that towed balloons are sometimes used at sea, and it is pretty +obvious that certain accidents are liable to happen to them. In this case +the most obvious of all accidents happened; the cable snapped, and there +we were heading, as far as I could judge, for the stars that twinkle over +the German coast. At least, our aneroid showed that we were going upwards +faster than any bird could rise, and the west wind was blowing straight +for the mouth of the Elbe when we last felt it--for, of course, in a free +balloon one ceases to feel wind altogether. + +Neither of us spoke for some time, and then a thought struck me suddenly +and I asked:-- + +"Did you notice what o'clock it was when we broke loose?" + +Rutherford nodded. + +"I'm taking the time," said he, "and assuming the twenty knot breeze +holds, we might risk a drop about six o'clock." + +"A drop" meant jumping into space and trusting one's parachute to do its +business properly. I felt a sudden tightening inside me as I thought of +that dive into the void, but I asked calmly enough: + +"And assuming the breeze doesn't hold?" + +"Oh, it will hold all right; it will rise if anything," said he. + +We had only been shipmates for a week (that being the extent of my +nautical experience), but I had learned enough about Rutherford in that +time to know that he was one of the most positive and self-confident men +breathing. One had to make allowance for this; still, that is the kind of +company one wants in an involuntary balloon expedition across the North +Sea through a dense fog. + +"And where are we likely to come down?" I enquired. + +"We might make the German coast as far south as Borkum or one of the +other islands, or we might land somewhere as far north as Holstein." + +"Not Holland or Denmark?" + +He shook his head positively, "No such luck." + +Though this was a trifle depressing, it was comforting to feel that one +was with a man who knew his way about the air so thoroughly. I looked at +our map, judged the wind, and decided that he was probably right. The +chances of fetching a neutral country seemed very slender. Curiously +enough the chances of never reaching any country at all had passed out of +my calculations for the moment. Rutherford was so perfectly assured. + +"And what's the programme when we do land?" I asked. + +"Well, we've got to get out of the place as quickly as possible. That's +pretty evident." + +"How?" + +"You know the lingo, don't you?" + +"Pretty well." + +"Well enough not to be spotted as a foreigner?" + +"I almost think so." + +"First thing I ever heard to the credit of the diplomatic service!" he +laughed. "Well, you'll have to pitch a yarn of some kind if we fall in +with any of the natives. Of course we'll try and avoid 'em if we can, and +work across country either for Denmark or Holland by compass." + +"Have you got a compass?" I asked. + +"Damn!" he exclaimed, and for a few moments a frown settled on his bull +dog face. Then it cleared again and he said, "After all we'll have to +move about by night and the stars will do just as well." + +He was never much of a talker and after this he fell absolutely silent +and I was left to my thoughts. Though I had fortunately put on plenty of +extra clothes for the ascent, I began to feel chilly up at that altitude +enshrouded in that cold white mist, and I don't mind admitting that my +thoughts gradually became a little more serious than (to be quite honest) +they usually are. I hardly think Rutherford, with all his virtues, had +much imagination. I have a good deal--a little too much at times--and +several other possible endings to our voyage besides a safe landing and +triumphant escape began to present themselves. Two especially I had to +steel my thoughts against continually--a descent with a parachute that +declined to open, whether on to German or any other soil, or else a +splash and then a brief struggle in the cold North Sea. I am no great +swimmer and it would be soon over. + +And so the hours slowly passed; always the same mist and generally the +same silence. Occasionally we talked a little, and then for a long space +our voices would cease and there would be utter and absolute quiet,--not +the smallest sound of any sort or kind. We had been silent for a long, +long time and I had done quite as much thinking as was good for my +nerves, when Rutherford suddenly exclaimed, + +"We are over land!" + +He was looking over the edge of the basket, and instantly I was staring +into space on my side. There was certainly nothing to see but mist. + +"I can smell land," said he, "and I heard something just now." + +"At this height!" I exclaimed. + +"We are down to well under six thousand feet," said he. + +I wanted to be convinced, but this was more than I could believe. + +"The smell must be devilish strong," I observed. "And I'm afraid I must +have a cold in my head. Besides, it's only five-thirty." + +As I have said, poor Rutherford was the most positive fellow in the +world. He stuck to it that we were over land, but I managed to persuade +him to wait a little longer to make sure. He waited half an hour and +when he spoke then I could see that his mind was made up. + +"We are falling pretty rapidly," said he, "and personally I'd sooner take +my chance in a parachute than stick in this basket till we bump. If one +is going to try a drop, the great thing is to see that it's a long drop. +Parachutes don't always open as quick as they're intended to. At any +moment we may begin to fall suddenly, so I'm going overboard now." + +My own career has hitherto failed to convince my friends that prudence is +my besetting virtue, but whether it was the sobering effect of those long +hours of chilly thinking, or whether my good angel came to my rescue, I +know not; anyhow I shook my head as firmly as he nodded his. + +"We have only been going the minimum time you allowed for making land," I +argued, "and quite possibly the breeze may have dropped a bit. Honestly I +haven't heard a sound or smelt a smell that faintly suggested land +underneath, and we can still drop a lot more and have room to take to the +parachutes. Let's wait till we get down to one thousand feet." + +"You do as you please," said he. "I'm going over." + +"And I'm not going yet," said I. + +We looked at one another in silence for a moment, and then he held +out his hand. + +"Well, good-bye and good luck!" said he. + +"Wait a little bit longer!" I implored him. + +"My dear Merton," he said, "I feel it in my bones that we've been going a +lot faster than we calculated. In fact I _know_ we have! One gets an +instinct for that sort of thing, and also one gets a sort of general idea +when to cut the basket and jump. I tell you we've been over land for the +last half hour. Come on, old chap, I honestly advise you to jump too." + +I almost yielded, but some instinct seemed to hold me back. The thought +that he might think I was deserting him, the suspicion that he +suspected I was a little afraid of the drop, nearly drove me over the +edge of the basket with him. I felt a brute for hanging back, but in my +heart I felt just as certain he was jumping too soon as he felt that I +was waiting too long. So I shook his hand, and over he went; I had one +glimpse of something dark below me, and then the mist swallowed him up. +Rutherford was gone, and I may as well say now that not a sign of him +was ever seen again. + +If you want to know what loneliness--real horrifying loneliness--is like, +I know no better recipe than drifting through a fog in a balloon, with +your only companion gone, and not the faintest belief in your heart that +you are within a hundred miles of any square inch of earth. I almost +think the fact that the balloon was steadily sinking and that sooner or +later I should have to leap from it too was the one thing that kept my +spirits anyways up to the mark. The prospect of even the most desperate +action was better than interminably facing that clammy void. + +Though the chance of making land seemed to me infinitesimally remote by +this time, yet in case I had such almost inconceivable luck, it was well +to make some preparations for having a run for my money in an enemy +country. I took off my uniform coat, transferring everything I wanted to +keep from its pockets to those of my oilskin. I then put this on and +buttoned it up, and of course I took off my cap. + +And then I smoked another pipe and watched the aneroid and tried not to +think at all, till with a start I realised we were considerably less than +a thousand feet above--the land or the sea? Heaven knew which, but we +were falling fast and there was no more time to lose. I hitched the +parachute on to my leg, got on the edge of the basket, and then--well, I +all but funked it. I remember my last thought was a horrible simile of a +man jumping off a tree with a rope round his neck, and then somehow or +other I forced myself to let go. + +Concerning the next few seconds I can give no statistics, whether as to +height or pace. I only know that when I first became conscious of +anything, I was drifting like a snow flake down through the mist, and +that I could fill several pages with my thoughts in the course of that +drift. It seemed to me that there was hardly an incident in my life +which didn't fly through my brain like a cinema being worked at lightning +speed. Some of the most vivid incidents were the last three balls of the +over in which I topped the century in the 'Varsity match, my interview +with my poor dear uncle when I broke the news that I had to face the +official receiver and chuck the diplomatic service, and the first night +of "Bill's All Right" when I made my debut on the stage. A brilliant +career! And very swiftly reviewed, for just as I had reached the +theatrical episodes, there was an extraordinary change in the light, and +my thoughts very abruptly shifted from my past misdemeanours. + +It had been evening when I dropped from the clouds, but the mist kept the +light very white though rather dim. Now a sudden blackness seemed to rise +up underneath my descending feet, and at the same moment the mist thinned +out till I could see for a space all round below me. This space was green +and almost before I realised what the greenness meant I was sitting in a +field of clover. + + + +II + +THE MAN ON THE SHORE + + +The breeze that had been driving the balloon along high overhead was +evidently an upper current only, for it was almost quite still in that +clover field. What between the falling of evening and the thin mist, my +vision was limited to a radius of about a quarter of a mile or so, but I +can assure you I studied that visible space more intently than I have +ever studied anything in my life. It seemed to be an almost flat country +I had landed in, all cultivated but very bare. I was within fifty yards +or so of a low rough stone wall, and on the further side of that lay a +field of corn. On every other side other fields faded into the evening +and the mist, and that was all there was to be seen. I saw no sign of a +house, or of a tree, or of a hedgerow, and I heard not a sound but the +cry of a distant sea bird. + +In the gay days when I was attache at Berlin I had acquired a fair +general acquaintance with Germany, and I instantly put down the place I +had landed in as some part of the flat wind-swept country not far from +the North Sea coast. In fact the crying seagull suggested that the shore +was fairly close at hand. This so exactly fitted in with our calculations +that I made up my mind definitely and at once to start with it as a +working hypothesis and behave accordingly. + +But how precisely was one to behave accordingly? In which direction +should I turn? What should I aim at? Should I look for a house or a +native and trust to my German still being up to its old high water mark, +or should I lie low for the night? I simply stood and wondered for some +minutes, and then I decided on one prompt and immediate deed. The +parachute must be hidden, so far as that countryside was capable of +hiding anything. + +I packed it up as neatly as I could, and then started for the low wall. +My first steps on the firm ground with its soft mat of clover and grasses +gave me an extraordinary sensation of pleasure. Merely to be alive and on +the earth again seemed to leave nothing to wish for. Close to the wall a +peewee rose suddenly from my feet and flapped off into the dusk with one +melancholy cry after another. "Peewee! Peewee!" I shall never hear that +sound without thinking of that lonesome misty field. I stopped and looked +round me anxiously, but not a living thing besides had been disturbed, +and presently I was stowing the parachute away in a bed of high rank +grass and docken just under the wall. + +Then I stood still and listened again. Once more a distant sea bird +cried and I decided to make for the sound on the chance of finding the +coast line and getting at least one bearing. I followed the line of the +wall, crossed another low wall and another field of thin rough grass, and +then I realised that I was almost on the brink of the sea. The wash of +the swell on rocks met my ear and the dull misty green of the land faded +into the misty grey of wide waters. + +I stepped over yet another of those low tumbledown walls and now I was on +the crisp short grass that fringes coasts, with rocks before me and the +sea quite visible about thirty feet below. So I had just made land and no +more! Poor Rutherford; I guessed his fate at once. + +A little aimlessly I set out to the left. Somehow or other I had got it +into my head that I was nearer the Dutch than the Danish border and my +idea was to head for a neutral country. The coast line swung inland round +a cove and at the same time dipped sharply, and hardly had I turned to +follow it when a figure seemed to spring up out of the dip. + +Whether the man had been squatting down, or whether it was the slope of +the ground that suddenly revealed him, I know not, but there he was not +ten paces away. I could see that he wore an oilskin and sou'wester and +judged him at once as a fisherman. + +"Good evening!" I cried genially in my best German. "It's a fine night!" + +"Good evening!" said he, also in German and quite involuntarily it +seemed, for the next instant he spoke again in a very different key, and +_in English_. + +"My God! Are you insane?" he said in a low intense voice and with a +distinct trace of guttural accent. "Don't speak German here! Have you no +other language? Don't you speak English?" + +I don't know whether you could have literally knocked me down with a +feather, but a stout feather would certainly have come pretty near doing +it. I simply gaped at him. + +Again he spoke; this time in German, but almost in a whisper. + +"Do not speak German here so loudly! Do you not know any English?" + +A dim perception of the almost incredible truth began to dawn on me +and I did my best to grapple with the situation. I had to account +for my astonished stare; that was the first thought that flashed +through my head. + +"Of course I speak English," I said, and by the favour of Heaven I found +myself instinctively saying those words in the very accents of the German +waiter in "Bill's All Right" (my first offence on the professional +stage), "but I thought you were Hans Eckstein. I could hardly believe my +own eyes!" + +"Hans Eckstein? Who is he?" demanded my new acquaintance, and I was +pleased to observe no suspicion in his voice, merely a little +astonishment. + +"A friend," I answered glibly, "one of us." + +He looked at me for a moment, very narrowly, and in those seconds of +silence I began to realise more exactly what must have happened. The +upper current of air had been blowing _westwards_--not eastwards as the +wind blew on the surface. The good land under my feet was assuredly not +Germany; almost certainly it must be part of my own blessed native +island, or why this insistence on my speaking English, rather than, say, +Dutch or Danish? And then the man I was speaking to, what must he +obviously be? There was only one answer possible. + +I may add that I had the presence of mind not to stare blankly at him +while I thought these thoughts. I let him do the staring while I fished +my pipe out of my oilskin pocket and began to fill it. + +"So!" he murmured, and I thought he seemed satisfied enough, especially +as he asked with manifest curiosity but without any apparent suspicion in +his voice, "And how did you get here?" + +Yet when I looked up from my pipe-filling to answer him I could almost +swear that he had done something to make his features less +visible--pulled his sou'wester further down and sunk his chin into the +high collar of his oilskin, it certainly seemed to me. As I had gathered +a very insufficient impression of him before, this was a little +provoking. Still, I told myself that our acquaintance was only beginning. +How to ripen it--that was the problem. I tried the effect of merely +winking and saying with a cool, knowing air: + +"The usual way. Do you have to ask?" + +He looked sharply up and down the rocks and out to sea and I saw +instantly what was in his mind. + +"Impossible! There was no signal. I have been looking out all the +time," said he. + +I merely laughed. + +"How else do you think I could have come?" + +"So!" he murmured again, and then he asked a curious question. + +"Do you know if there are many sheep on this island?" + +So I had landed on an island! That was the first and chief deduction +I drew from this enquiry. The second was that the man's English must +be a little weak. Obviously he meant something rather different from +what he said. + +"Sheep?" I said with a laugh. "No, my friend, I have something else to do +than count sheep." + +Again he looked at me for a moment, his face now almost completely +hidden by the peak of his sou'wester. If by any chance he were still +doubting me the best thing seemed to be a touch of candour and an appeal +he could scarcely resist. + +"See here," I said, lowering my voice, "I want to stop in this island +to-night. In fact those are my orders. Now where can you find me a +safe place?" + +He lowered his voice too. In fact he seemed to reciprocate my confidence +very satisfactorily. + +"We must be very careful. I must see that the coast is clear first. Just +you sit and wait here for ten minutes. I will be back." + +He nodded at me to enforce his injunctions and added as he turned away, + +"Keep sitting down. Mind that!" + +I sat down, finished filling my pipe, lit it, and waited. And as I waited +I frankly confess I fairly hugged myself. Never before was there such a +bit of luck, thought I. That that vagabond balloon should actually bring +its passenger back to his native land instead of dropping him in the sea +or landing him in Germany was fortunate almost beyond belief, but that he +should then stumble on a German spy and actually convince the man that he +was a confederate and lead him straight into the net already spreading +for him, surely showed that after a considerable run of ill luck (and, I +must confess, ill guidance), the passenger had suddenly become Fortune's +prime favourite. Several very eligible and commodious castles were +constructed in the night air by that lonely shore as I sat and smoked. + +And then I heard a cautious but distinct whistle, and up I jumped and +looked all round me. There was no one to be seen, but the sound came from +the right--the way I had come, and I set off through the thickening dusk +in that direction. But the odd thing was that I walked considerably +further than the sound of the whistle could have carried and never a sign +of human being or of house did I see--nothing but that desolate grassy +sea-board and the faintly gleaming waters. + +I stopped and began to wonder, and then I heard the whistle again. It was +still ahead of me, so on I walked and once more the same thing occurred. +This time I paused for at least another ten minutes, but nobody appeared +and nothing whatever happened. There I was, utterly alone once more, with +the land growing black and the sea dim and not a sound now even from the +sea gulls. + + + +III + +ALONE AGAIN + + +"The man has suspected me!" I said to myself. + +It was an unpleasant conclusion, but the more carefully I thought over +every little circumstance the more certain I felt it was the true one. To +begin with, there was the way in which he kept his face concealed after +the first few sentences we exchanged. Then there was that curious +question about the sheep. It must have been a password--I saw that now, +and I could have kicked myself for not seeing it sooner. Of course I had +no idea of the proper answer, but I might at least have replied with some +equally cryptic sentence and tried to bluff him into thinking I was using +a different code. As it was, I had made it perfectly obvious that I had +missed the point absolutely. + +Finally there was his conduct in slipping away and leaving me stranded +like this. Surely it was the very last trick to play on an accomplice. In +fact it settled the matter. But why then did he whistle--and, moreover, +whistle twice? + +For a few minutes I was utterly puzzled, and then an explanation flashed +upon me. He wished to lead me in this particular direction! And why? +Evidently because he himself was living or hiding in the other. I tried +to put myself in his shoes and think what I would do myself, and if I had +had the wit to think of it, that would obviously be the soundest thing. +So obvious did it seem to me that I decided to set to work on that +assumption. + +First of all I walked a little further to see if I could test this +theory, and in a minute or two I saw dimly ahead of me houses near the +beach. I stopped and thought again. Could it possibly be that this was +the refuge he was providing and that he did not suspect me after all? + +"In that case," I said to myself, "would any man in his senses use such +a vague and misleading method of conducting a friend, especially when a +mistake might be--and probably would be--fatal to his schemes? +Obviously not!" + +On the other hand, these houses fitted excellently into the theory that +he wanted me to take shelter there simply because they were well removed +from his own lair. + +"And then what's the fellow doing himself all this time?" I thought. +"Evidently scuttling back in the opposite direction!" + +So back I turned and set out on a very cheerless and solitary walk. There +was no sense of immediate action ahead now, no anticipation of any +further excitement this night, and, the more I came to think of it, not +one chance in a thousand of stumbling upon the man again even though I +were really heading towards him. + +As I walked along that dark shore, I tried to think out all the +possibilities of the situation. + +"Is the man living on this island?" (assuming it is an island, and as the +sheep weren't real sheep it may not be a real island) I asked myself. "Or +has he simply landed from a submarine or some other enemy craft, and by +this time is hurrying off again?" + +I recalled our conversation, especially his words when I said I had +arrived in "the usual way." "Impossible! There was no signal. I have been +looking out all the time," he had answered. Surely that implied he was +living here on shore, and indeed his very presence alone by himself and +his whole attitude and behaviour were consistent only with that theory. + +"What conclusions has he come to about me?" was my next question, and as +I debated this problem my spirits began to rise a little. + +"Hang it, he must be puzzled!" I said to myself confidently, and I do +think justly. "For supposing I were on his job in Germany and an entire +stranger suddenly sprang up out of nowhere, hailed me in excellent +English, and then (even if he didn't know the particular riddle I used +as pass-word) conducted himself like a confederate, made no attempt to +arrest me or interfere with me, and spoke German with a distinct English +accent, what would I think?" + +I debated the answer for some minutes and then it came to me +involuntarily and inevitably. + +"I'd be dashed if I'd know what to think! And that's just exactly the +hole this fellow must be in. I may be a fellow Hun and I may be an enemy, +and he has got to make up his mind which. So far I'm quite certain he +hasn't enough evidence either way." + +The obvious corollary to this was that he must be presented with evidence +which would make him think me a fellow Hun. Of course this assumed that +he would have some means of getting news of my doings and my movements +and forming conclusions from what he heard. But I thought it a pretty +safe assumption to make. Confederates the man must have, and he would +certainly tell them of the mysterious stranger, and the whole gang as +certainly would make it their business to learn everything about me. + +"What would a fellow Hun do in my place?" I said to myself. "Knowing the +breed as I do, he would certainly overdo the patriotic John Bull +business, he would be a little too polite to everybody, and he would eat +like a hog." + +This then should be my role, and I may as well confess honestly that the +last item appealed to me particularly. I kept on smoking till my head +reeled in the hope of forgetting my hunger, but between pipes I felt +ready to chew my oilskin. Of course I should also keep up a touch of the +German waiter accent, and if this programme failed to lead either to my +arrest or to my friend coming to my rescue, I felt that my reputation +both as an ex-diplomatist and a rising young actor would be seriously +tarnished. + +And then all at once a light seemed to be extinguished in my brain. I +ceased to be able to think any longer and my knees felt shaky as I +walked. It was the reaction after what had really been a pretty long +strain of one kind and another. Looking back, it seems now inevitable +enough, but at the time I felt desperately ashamed of myself. Perhaps I +might have been able to pull myself together had I chanced to fall in +with that oilskinned figure again, but I thought at the moment I had +become utterly useless and I felt inclined to throw myself down on the +grass and go to sleep and forget everything. In fact I very soon should +have, when I saw at last some farm buildings close ahead. They stood on +the edge of a small cove and the ground dipped down to them so that they +were not against the sky line, and I had nearly walked straight into the +wall of an out-house before I saw a sign of them. + +And then I remember rather hazily knocking at a door and presently +finding myself in a low kitchen with a peat fire burning on an open +hearth and what seemed to be dozens of people sitting round it. I +probably counted each of them three or four times over. + +They gave me a huge bowl of milk and a pile of oat cakes and cheese, and +the one item of my programme I carried out faithfully was to eat like a +famished animal. I believe I put some sort of an accent into the few +words I murmured, but most of the time my mouth was too full for much +conversation. I know that I never attempted any explanation of how I got +there, and that night nobody asked me, and I certainly postponed the +patriotic John Bull business. + +When I finished my supper I felt better, but still a little dazed. There +now seemed to be fewer in the family, but my eyes must still have been +multiplying them for I thought there were three or four rather pretty +girls, presumably daughters, with high pink cheeks, when there actually +turned out next morning to be only two; and two poor idiots, presumably +sons, with unpleasant stares and stubbly beards and open mouths, when +daylight revealed only one. In fact the father of the household and his +wife were the only people I counted accurately. + +And then I remember being led to the barn, and seeing a vast pile of soft +hay and throwing myself into the midst of it; and there my recollections +of that day end. I actually had not even enquired into what part of the +world I had dropped. + + + +IV + +THE SUSPICIOUS STRANGER + + +There seem to be two distinct kinds of dreamers; to judge at least from +their confessions next morning. There is the superior kind which dreams a +condensed novel and remembers it distinctly to retail at breakfast, and +there is the inferior kind which only carries away a vague impression of +having vaguely striven to stride out and escape from some nebulous +horror, or of trying to purchase a pound of golf balls at a counter which +would persist in turning into a couple of parallel bars or a roll-top +writing desk. Personally I belong to the inferior species, and I cannot +even swear that I really had a dream at all that night. I only know that +when I woke up at last I found that my oilskin was unbuttoned and thrown +back, whereas I thought I had gone to sleep with it buttoned up; and that +when I noticed this, I then began to have a confused memory of a dream +wherein I was seized by some one or something and struggled violently to +free myself. + +I sat up in my bed of straw and looked round me. The sunshine was +streaming through a small window and under the door, but the door was +closed, the bar was very still and quite empty save for my own presence, +and the crowing of a cock and the clucking of hens were at first the only +sounds that reached me from outside. Then I became conscious of a soft +and regular "swish," rising and falling constantly and perpetually, and I +remembered the sea close at hand, and a shiver of gratitude ran through +me to think how narrowly I had escaped having that heaving surface +fathoms over my head. + +I have often wished since that I had lain there for a little while and +tried to remember the dream, and whether I had actually gone to sleep +with my oilskin buttoned, while the circumstances, such as they were, +were fresh in my memory. When I thought of them afterwards I could swear +to nothing and finally concluded the whole thing was probably fancy. + +But if by any chance it were not, then evidently _some one_ had tried to +search me in the night, and who would it be likely to be but my vanished +acquaintance on the shore, or his confederates? And in that case one of +them must have been lurking very close at hand. However, when I tried to +piece my recollections together afterwards it was too late to make +anything of them at all. + +I only know for certain that I missed nothing from my pockets, and that +as a matter of fact I had actually carried nothing in them that would +have given me away--so far at least as I could judge. + +These, as I say, were my subsequent reflections. What I did at the time +was not to think about the matter any further, but jump up, open the barn +door and walk out into the sunshine. It was now about ten o'clock on a +flawless August morning, and not easily shall I forget the picture of +that blue sea gently heaving far out to a bright horizon, and the +semi-circle of white sand fringing the little cove, and the glimpse of +green and smiling inland country, and the group of low grey farm +buildings just out of reach of the wash of the waves. Whatever part of +the world it might be, I felt entirely satisfied with it. + +I stood for a few minutes gazing absently out to sea, and rehearsing in +my mind my plan of campaign. My voice, manners and conduct must be such +that if by some stroke of luck I actually fell in with my friend of last +night or one of his confederates they would assume I was a friend and at +least give me a nod, wink, password, or something to test me--and I vowed +I would overlook nothing suspicious this time. + +If, however, as was unfortunately far more likely, I met mere honest +folk, they would quickly spread the news that a suspicious stranger was +in the neighbourhood, and surely the report would reach at least one of +the gang (for I confidently assumed a gang), and they would make it +their business to seek me out. Finally I decided I had no time to waste, +for several reasons. Through the clucking hens I strolled across to the +dwelling house and there in the kitchen I found the mother, one of the +pink-cheeked daughters, and the idiot son. They set about getting me some +breakfast, and a few minutes later in came the father and another son, a +strapping fellow not in the least resembling the idiot, and shortly +afterwards appeared the other daughter. + +I gave them my proper name, Roger Merton, since it was just the sort of +ultra English name which a disguised Hun would adopt, and I learned +that theirs was Scollay:--Peter Scollay, the father, Mrs. Scollay, +Peter, the younger, Maggie, and Jane; besides Jock, the idiot. I was +excessively affable, and they were not openly cool, but I noticed with +satisfaction that they were far from demonstrative, with the marked +exception of Jock who burst into several very loud and friendly laughs +on extremely small provocation. He was horrid to look at, but I could +not help feeling rather friendly towards the only member of the +household who exhibited a glimpse of geniality, even though I was doing +my level best to chill them. + +As for the others, Peter Scollay the senior was a big tawny-bearded +fellow, undeniably handsome despite one small defect. His eyes were a +trifle too hard and cautious, and in one of them was a distinct cast. +Curiously enough, his wife also had a slight cast, and so it was not +surprising to see a trace of this in Peter junior and his red-cheeked +sisters. Jock, however, seemed to have been endowed with imbecility +instead of a cast. Apart from him, they were all good-looking, despite +the family defect; and they were all very reticent this morning. I seemed +indeed to trace the father's wariness as well as the cast in each pair of +eyes that furtively studied me. + +"And your very beautiful island," I enquired, in guttural accents that +would have made me flee for the police instantly, had I been in their +shoes, "so pleasantly situated in the sea--what is its name?" + +They looked a little astonished, as well they might, and then in dry +accents the father replied, "Ransay." + +"Ransay?" I repeated, and then all at once I realised where I was. +Ransay was one of the northern isles of that not unknown archipelago +which at the present moment it is safer to leave unnamed. Or perhaps for +purposes of reference one may call it The Windy Isles. Somewhere in the +same archipelago, twenty or thirty miles to the south'ard, was a +particularly important naval base and I began to realise what I had +stumbled up against. + +In those early days of the war one heard a great many tales of spies and +spying, but many of them were so palpably absurd and there was as yet +such a total lack of evidence to support any one of them, that I--like a +good many other people--felt sceptical of the whole thing. The +distinguished General in German pay, the well known member of the Cabinet +in hourly communication with the Kaiser, the group of German strategists +working in the cellars of a West End London mansion, and all the rest of +the early legends had made even the very moderately sensible extremely +chary of believing anything we heard. But I thought very hard and +seriously now. A real spy--seen and heard--actually living in the Isle of +Ransay, in the back premises, so to speak, of that all important base, +with Heaven only knew what means of the information concerning matters to +the south'ard, and in immediate touch with any marauders who might tap +gently at the back door on a dark night; here was something to sober even +a bankrupt ex-light-comedian. + +I kept my mouth very full while I thought these thoughts and +conscientiously made the typical German chewing noise, and by the time my +lips were cleared for action again a beaming smile enwreathed them. + +"Do you have many ships which pass this way?" I enquired. + +The question was a great success. Jock laughed with vacant glee and the +rest of the family exchanged glances. + +"No' very many," said Mr. Scollay warily. + +Now I decided to give them the John Bull turn. + +"No German ships I am sure!" I cried through a mouthful of porridge. +"They are cowards! They will not venture _here_--no fears! They fear our +brave sailors too much! Aha! We know that, eh?" + +They agreed as coldly as I could wish. Evidently I was producing a +thoroughly bad impression. At the same time nobody broke into whispered +German, or made any comment that could conceivably be taken for a +pass-word. I thought I would try giving them one myself. + +"Are there many sheep in this island?" I asked. + +Jock emitted another blast of genial laughter and Mr. Scollay as +cautiously as ever replied, + +"A good few." + +But there was no sign of any secret understanding of my words, and +reluctantly I began to come to the conclusion that neither my friend of +last night nor any of his confederates were here. It is true that the +position of the house fitted my theory, and that its lonely situation on +the very edge of the sea was ideal, and quite possibly these people might +know more than they ought, they might in fact be abettors of treason and +concealers of traitors, but that they were not the principals seemed +evident enough. + +Still, in any event it seemed to me of prime importance to disseminate a +report of a suspicious stranger as widely and quickly as possible, so I +selected the middle of another mouthful as the moment of enquiring. + +"This pretty farm, my friend, does it belong to you?" + +"No," said my host, "the island a' belongs to Mr. Rendall." + +"So!" said I. "And this Mr. Rendall, where does he live--in London?" + +"Not him!" said Mr. Scollay, "he bides in Ransay." + +I pricked up my ears at this, and my spy-hunt seemed suddenly a much more +promising venture. Some of the difficulties of playing a lone hand had +already become apparent. But with some one I could confide in, some one +who would know everybody in the island and a good deal about them, and +who could advise and abet me, it seemed heavy odds against my vanished +friend evading me for long. + +"I think perhaps I ought to pay my respects to Mr. Rendall," I said in a +doubtful ruminating way, as though I were debating whether it were quite +a safe move. + +"You'll find him at home," was all the comment my host made. + +But now that there was a prospect of losing their suspicious visitor, +the family all at once set about extracting some information regarding +the manner of his arrival in their midst. + +"You'll no have been long in Ransay?" began my hostess. + +"Oh no, just a short time," I beamed. + +"You'll not have come by the boat," pronounced my host. + +"Not _the_ boat, but surely I must have come by _a_ boat!" I smiled. "I +cannot swim from Aberdeen!" + +I don't know exactly why I mentioned Aberdeen, but it seemed to have a +distinctly sedative effect. + +"You'll not be a dealer?" enquired my host. + +Here was a simple solution thrust into my hand. For a moment I +thought of confessing I actually was a dealer and had got too drunk +last night to remember how I arrived. But then I feared the tale +might sound too credible and the reports of a suspicious stranger be +stifled at their birth. + +"Well," I said, "I do deal in some things." + +I could see that suspicion had revived and I thought it better to leave +it at that, and be off. With a little difficulty I made my hosts take +payment for my night's lodging, and then asked for directions to the +laird's mansion. + +"You'll no can miss it," said Mr. Scollay. + +"It's the big house. Just keep along the road and you'll see it +afore you." + +So off I set through this unknown isle, still hatless and buttoned +up in my oilskin, but smoking a peculiarly soothing pipe and +thoroughly enjoying my adventure. The prospect of an ally ahead was +delightfully cheering. + +"Provided Mr. Rendall isn't an utter ass, we ought to have these fellows +sitting!" I said to myself. + + + +V + +THE DOCTOR'S HOUSE + + +The rough road from the shore kept gently mounting and I soon stood high +enough to get a very good general idea of the island of Ransay. It was a +green, low-lying, undulating fragment of the world, set that morning in +a sea of sapphire blue, open to the horizon on the one hand and strewn +with sister isles on the other. The Scollay's house stood near the +northwest end, and beyond it there seemed to be little save sea-turf and +rocks, but in the direction I was walking one small green farm followed +another for what I guessed to be four or five miles, and from side to +side perhaps a couple of miles or less. There was only one rise in the +land that could be called a hill, and that only by courtesy; elsewhere +nothing but green undulations with a small reedy loch or two tucked away +in their gentle folds. + +Far to the southward, on other isles, higher hills, brown and blue, broke +the horizon, but apart from these one saw nothing but a green and blue +plain lying beneath an immensity of white and blue sky. With sea birds +hovering and crying and larks mounting and singing over this, and the sun +shining, and a northwest breeze that tasted like dry champagne, and +myriads of wild flowers, yellow, blue, white, red, pink, and purple, +underfoot, I felt almost too light-hearted. In fact I actually started +singing, and only stopped when I bethought me that it was a trifle +inconsistent with the character of a man slinking about in fear of his +life, looking for a fellow miscreant to befriend him. + +But it was quite impossible not to feel elated. Now that I realised the +limited size of the place and its open surface, it was obvious that no +man could lurk there unknown to the inhabitants. He must live in a house +and pass for one of themselves. It seemed then impossible to believe +(especially with an ally in prospect) that a spy whom I had actually seen +and talked with (and knew moreover to have a foreign accent) could escape +my clutches. And, apart from patriotic motives, of what a lift that would +give to my tarnished character! + +"Let me recall the fellow carefully," said I to myself, "and get his face +and voice well into my head against our next meeting." + +I tried to reconstruct our first meeting exactly as it had happened, to +see again that dark figure rise in my path, and look into the face +beneath the sou'wester. I shall not say precisely that this endeavour +shook my confidence, but it certainly made me realise that I should have +to set to work very warily to trap the man, for the harder I tried to see +in my mind's eye that face distinctly, the less distinct it grew. I could +certainly swear to a moustache, and I felt pretty sure there was a beard +as well, but not absolutely certain. He was of middle height, say between +5 feet 6, and 5 feet 10; but that was a fairly wide margin. In fact all I +could positively swear to was that he was neither an obviously tall nor +an obviously short man. + +As to his build, he seemed thick-set and sturdy, but then who does not in +an oilskin coat? It would take a very slight figure indeed to look +slender in an oilskin. So here again I could only say that he was neither +a remarkably stout man nor a remarkably thin man. And this was really all +I could swear to in the matter of his outward appearance; though I told +myself confidently enough that if I actually fell in with him again I +should recognise him fast enough. + +"He can't disguise his voice anyhow," I said to myself. + +And then here again I began to realise a small difficulty; though +nothing, it seemed to me very serious. After his first involuntary reply +to me in German, the man had spoken in low, half-whispered tones. In +ordinary conversation, especially if he were on his guard, he would speak +quite differently. But could he eradicate his distinct touch of foreign +accent? No; I thought decidedly that was beyond him. + +I was so immersed in my thoughts that I had become quite oblivious to +everything outside them. Beyond the fact that I had struck a hard +macadamed road and was striding down it, I realised nothing else, till of +a sudden I looked up and noticed a large house close before me, and at +that I stopped dead and awoke from my reverie. + +That it was Mr. Rendall's mansion I never doubted. I saw now that it was +not a really big house, but it was large compared with the small farm +houses, and its utterly bare situation and the way in which it was set on +a slight rise in the ground made it seem obviously the "big hoose" I was +looking for. But somehow or other at the sight of it my spirits were +instantly damped. Indeed I never saw a chillier, less inviting looking +habitation, or one that seemed to repel confidence in it more subtly. + +The road ran straight at it and then curved round the low wall that +bounded the domains. And these domains consisted of absolutely nothing +more than a rough grass paddock with a short straight drive leading from +an open and dilapidated iron gate in the wall just where the curve began. +There was no ivy, or any sort of creeper on the walls, but, instead, a +sort of grey-green damp hue, broken only by a very few staring windows. +I passed through that dilapidated gate with no temptation at all to sing. + +The drive was covered with an infamous species of large pebble, so +uncomfortable to walk on that I chose the grass at the side and I only +stepped on to this apology for gravel when I was quite close to the +house; approaching the front of it, I may say, at an angle. My footsteps +made a noise like a cart and horse, and instantly down went the blind of +the nearest window of the ground floor. + +I stopped dead instinctively and looked at this bleak mansion narrowly. +At the angle from which I had approached the front, I could see the blind +go down quite plainly, but it was impossible to get even a glimpse into +the room behind it. + +"What the devil!" I murmured. + +And then I told myself that I was really getting too suspicious. It +must be a lady's bed-room obviously. The ground floor near the front +door seemed an odd place for such an apartment. Still, one never knows +what a lady's fancy may be. In any case there was nothing to be +achieved by standing there staring, so I resumed my resounding progress +across the pebbles. + +I was at the front door and just going to ring, when round the corner of +the house, right ahead of me, appeared a gentleman, and my spirits fell +still further. I can't exactly say that his was a face I disliked, but +it was decidedly not one I took to. He had eyes set somewhat close +together, a well trimmed short black beard, and an expression in which I +seemed to read impudence and certainly read suspicion. He stopped at the +sight of me and looked me up and down at least as curiously as I studied +him. Only I trust I conducted my inspection less obviously. + +"Mr. Rendall?" I enquired, and though I had come here meaning to confide +in him, I found myself instinctively putting in a touch of accent; not +with a wet brush as I did for the Scollays' benefit, still I threw in a +little, and, as I say, quite without intending it. + +Curiously enough I saw his face clear the moment I spoke. + +"Oh," said he, with an air of relief, "it's the doctor you're wanting, is +it? Well, he's at home. Come in." + +So the laird was a doctor? Of which sort, I wondered; medical, +theological, or what? + +"I'm Mr. O'Brien," added my new acquaintance as he opened the front door +for me. "You're quite sure it's not me you're wanting?" + +I had noticed more than a trace of accent in his own voice when he spoke, +and there was no doubt now what it was; a very palpable Irish brogue. As +he asked this question he looked at me with a curious mixture of humour +and defiance. It seemed to me that the humour was assumed and the +defiance genuine, but that may have been simply because the man impressed +me unfavourably. + +"No," I replied with a continental bow, "I am not so fortunate." + +And then suddenly a thought flashed across me. Ought I to have answered +in a very different key? But we were in the hall now and the next moment +another gentleman appeared. + +"Here's Dr. Rendall," said Mr. O'Brien, and I bowed again. + +"My name is Mr. Roger Merton," I explained. "I have taken the liberty of +calling upon you." + +"Come into my study, Mr. Merton," said Dr. Rendall. + +He spoke in a friendly enough voice, but if there was not a trace of +suspicion in his eye too, I am greatly mistaken. And in both cases it +seemed to me that it was suspicion tinged with apprehension, rather than +the suspicion I was so deliberately cultivating. Indeed, I had not +intended to cultivate any suspicion at all in this house, but fortunately +(I think) I simply acted automatically. + +Taking him altogether, Dr. Rendall was a decidedly more prepossessing +looking man than O'Brien. In fact he was rather good-looking, with grey +hair and moustache, face of a deep bronze-red hue and very blue eyes. He +was well set up, and quite well dressed too in rough tweeds, and the +only thing against him was that look in his eye as we exchanged our first +sentences. + +My wits were very wide awake by this time; I carried a picture of the +outside of the house distinctly in my head as we turned out of the hall, +and when we entered the study I knew it for the room where the blind had +shut down. + +"Is Mrs. Rendall at home?" I enquired. + +O'Brien laughed. + +"There are no ladies in this house, but just the doctor and me!" said he. + +So no modest matron or maid had pulled the blind down. It had been Dr. +Rendall's study blind, whipped down obviously by the doctor himself the +instant he heard a strange footstep, and now raised again. Why had it +been dropped? What had it hidden? In the look of the room itself there +was not a suggestion of an answer to either question. It was just an +ordinary man's study, a cross between a smoking room and a library, a +much more comfortable room than the outside of that house promised. Yet +people do not suddenly pull down blinds in the middle of the forenoon for +no reason at all. + +For a moment I thought of a passage at arms with a pretty housemaid as a +solution. But it would obviously have been much quicker and simpler for +any other party to flee the room than to make for the window and lower +the blind. No; something had to be done which took a few minutes to do. +I thought instantly of one possibility--the folding up or putting away of +maps or plans. No doubt there were several other possibilities, but there +seemed the best of reasons for not giving these worthy gentlemen my +confidence. In fact quite a different course of action suggested itself. + +Transfixing the doctor suddenly with a significant eye, I demanded in +rather a low voice, "Are there many sheep in this island?" I still think +it was a shot well worth risking, but to be quite candid it failed to +come off. At least it did not come off entirely. Both the gentlemen +certainly looked a little startled, but all Dr. Rendall did was to stare +at me very hard, while O'Brien exclaimed. + +"Faith, he's a dealer!" + +But again I refused the proffered explanation, even though it was quite +evidently the easiest way of accounting for myself. + +"No," said I, "but I am very greatly interested in your beautiful island, +Dr. Rendall. What a convenient spot to own!" + +I still threw a touch of significance into my remark--especially on the +word "convenient"--but this time I got a wholly unexpected answer. + +"But I am sorry to say I don't own it," said the doctor. "I am afraid you +must be mistaking me for my cousin, Philip Rendall. He's the laird; I'm +only the doctor." + +"The damned doctor," added Mr. O'Brien with a grin. + +I began to apologise, but O'Brien who was by this time in capital +spirits, interrupted me with, + +"Faith, you needn't apologise, Mr. Merton. As long as you're not one of +my damned relations I'm delighted to see you, and the doctor here is +always pining for a fresh face. He's getting sick of mine!" + +This remark seemed to have a spice of malice behind it, and the doctor +certainly frowned, but I was so anxious to seize this opportunity of +putting a question or two that I did not stop to wonder what was implied; +not, at least, till afterwards. + +"I suppose you have little society in this charming island?" I suggested. + +O'Brien was certainly ready enough to give me exactly the information I +was after. + +"There are just four civilised houses in the whole place, counting this," +said he. "There's the laird's--and saving the dear doctor's presence I +must say his cousin is a damned queer fish, besides being as poor as he's +cranky, and there are the two ministers, only one's away and the other's +as dry as my own throat's getting. What do you say to a drink, doctor?" + +He grinned at Dr. Rendall with a malicious significance I could make +nothing of. I could see that it perturbed the doctor, who answered in +evident embarrassment, + +"If Mr. Merton would care for a glass of lemonade" + +A hoot of laughter interrupted him. It reminded me of Jock, except that +Mr. O'Brien's laugh had such a flavour of ill-nature. The man might or +might not be what I suspected, but he was indubitably objectionable. + +"No, thank you," I answered him. "I set out to call on Mr. Rendall and +the time is passing." + +"Damned pleasantly in our society, eh?" put in O'Brien with the same +sardonic laugh. + +They both saw me to the door, and we said good-bye, without enthusiasm on +the doctor's part, with a grin on Mr. O'Brien's, and with very mixed +emotions on my own. + + + +VI + +A PETTICOAT + + +I was very thankful to get out of that depressing house and away from Mr. +O'Brien's laugh, and yet hardly was I on the high road again before I was +blaming myself for not having lingered longer and pursued my +investigations there a little further. + +The other "Civilised" households in the island apparently numbered only +three. Now, if my spy were working single handed he might conceivably be +some better educated farmer who had lived abroad and turned traitor, but +it seemed to me most unlikely that he should have no confederates, and it +was scarcely possible for two or three men of that particular type to be +gathered in so small a community. Brains and education seemed implied in +every step of the dangerous game they were playing. Therefore it was only +common sense to suspect one at least of these "civilised" houses, unless +they could all manifestly clear their characters. Anyhow it were +foolishness to neglect this consideration. + +And what had I discovered already? A couple of men living by themselves +in a criminal looking mansion, who hurriedly pulled down blinds, looked +both suspicious and apprehensive at the sight of a stranger, and made odd +innuendoes and allusions in their conversation. Why hadn't I stayed on +and pursued my investigations? Well, because the moment I discovered I +was in the wrong house, my insistent idea was to push on to Mr. Rendall's +and consult with him about the whole situation. But now I began to +reconsider this decision very seriously. + +I was out of sight by this time in a secluded part of the road, where it +ran through a dip in the ground, with the head of one of those little +reedy lochs only a yard or two away, and a bright glimpse of the sea +beyond. The marshy shores were a perfect blaze of yellow wild flowers and +it looked so jolly that I sat down on the water's edge and began to think +things over. + +First I thought Mr. O'Brien over. Middle height, a beard, and an Irish +brogue. Could the German accent have been put on to conceal the brogue? +Looking to what I was doing myself, why not? Then I thought Dr. Rendall +over. Also middle height, a moustache, and no particular accent. But then +again, if I put on an accent, why not he? Then I thought over what I had +learned of the laird. A cousin of the doctor's, a "damned queer fish," +almost the only associate of this couple, and hard up. Ought I to go +straight off and confide in him? + +"Not to begin with anyhow!" I said to myself, and up I jumped and +continued my walk. + +About a hundred yards further on I rounded a corner and came upon a very +miserable figure. He was an old, old man with tinted spectacles and a +long white beard, and the raggedest overcoat I ever saw, and he was +sitting on the grass with his feet in the ditch apparently doing nothing +but simply sitting still. As I approached he peered at me as though he +were more than half blind and then in an extraordinary thin, high, piping +voice he said, + +"A fine day, mister!" + +This time I did the Teutonic bully. It went horribly against the grain to +strafe such a miserable object, but with no one looking on I thought that +the kind of Hun I was supposed to be would probably treat a worm like +this to a touch of the All-Highest. + +"Be dashed and damned to you!" I growled. + +The old boy started perceptibly, and in rather an eager voice he asked, + +"Have you got a wax match, mister?" + +"Wax match? No, and be confounded!" said I. + +For the next quarter of a mile or so I felt too ashamed of myself and too +contrite to think much about what the old fellow had said, and then +suddenly it began to strike me that a _wax_ match was rather a curious +thing to ask for. A match was natural enough, but why need it be wax? + +And then I stopped, wheeled round, and walked back. I told myself that I +was growing absurd and getting passwords on the brain. Still, there +seemed no harm in exchanging a few more remarks with the old man. + +But when I reached the same spot on the road he was gone. There were one +or two small houses not far away and it was quite possible he had +reached them by now, especially if he wanted his match badly; though it +would mean moving a little faster than I had given him credit for. Or he +might be lying down out of sight having a nap, and as the day was warm +and he had apparently nothing better to do, that seemed a very possible +solution. Anyhow, there was no sign of him, and if there had been, I +told myself he would probably have proved to be merely the island +patriarch with a senile fancy for wax vestas, so I resumed my journey to +the "big house." + +As I topped another rise I got the best view I had yet seen of the lie of +the island. A group of larger buildings on another hillock, still well +over a mile ahead, was evidently the mansion at last. Behind me I saw the +doctor's house and noted with a nod unto myself that it stood distinctly +in the northwest district of the island. It was no long walk from that +bleak habitation to the Scollays' on the shore. + +And now I addressed myself to a delicate question. If I were going to +keep up the part of suspicious stranger at the Rendall's, at all events +to begin with, what account of my arrival should I give? It must be a +tale plausible enough to keep them in doubt, for unless the laird himself +were actually up to his neck in treason (and though I was prepared for +anything by this time, there were limits to the assumptions I ventured to +make), he would certainly wire either to the police or the naval +authorities and I should immediately become a mere spectator. In fact, I +would probably not be allowed even to stay and look on. + +And this was not mere selfish desire for glory and excitement. I was +quite capable of seeing that my tale might not convince older and wiser +people as thoroughly as it convinced myself. In fact I felt a strong +presentiment that I should merely be put down as a brilliant liar and the +spy hunt would come to an end--_with the spy still in the island_. That +was where I still do think I was justified in playing the hand myself. + +But what tale could I tell? The truth--that I had dropped out of a +balloon? Who would believe it for an instant unless I produced the hidden +parachute? And if I unearthed the parachute the whole island would know +in a couple of hours and the people I was after would also be convinced. +And it would not be a conviction that I was a fellow Hun. + +And then I chanced to turn my head and I had an inspiration. About five +miles out to sea I saw a ship, quite distinctly enough to spot her as a +cruiser of much the same type as the ship I had soared out of yesterday. +I filled in the details of the inspiration as I walked and when at last I +saw her head away into the far distance the final touch was given. + +When I drew near the house the road showed a tendency to meander, and as +I was getting pretty hungry and counted on luncheon with the laird, be he +patriot or traitor, I left the highway and followed a path across a +clover field. Though the house and its farm were so near, and I could see +half a dozen other homesteads not far away, yet there was not a living +soul in sight, or any sound save from the peewees and the gulls. I don't +know how to convey the impression of out-of-the-worldness and +back-of-beyondness produced by this sense of silence and space, and by +the look of the house and its whole surroundings. The path sloped up to +it through a grass paddock, rather like the approach to the doctor's +house, only this grass was short and well-tended and there were one or +two flower beds before the door and ivy on one of the walls (where the +wind was least destructive); and though the mansion was weather-beaten +and plain and grey, it had nothing of the bleak and chilly aspect of the +other house. It simply looked as though it had lived a long and stormy +life and had now gone to sleep. + +At one side stretched a high-walled garden with the tops of a few stunted +trees just showing their heads, and close at the back of the place one +could see a collection of farm buildings, very like the mansion +architecturally, only greyer and more weathered. A fairly steep roof, +crow-stepped gables, rough-cast walls, and rather small windows seemed to +my untutored eye to be the chief features of the whole stone gathering. + +"Somebody very primitive obviously lives here," I said to myself as I +pulled the bell. + +Out it came bodily in my hand, so I carefully pushed it back, and tried a +large brass knocker instead, a massive affair that looked as though it +had once been part of a shipwreck. I knocked once, I knocked twice, I +knocked thrice, and then the door opened and I enjoyed a fresh sensation. + +Instead of the prehistoric being I had expected, a girl stood in the open +door looking at me out of a quite remarkably bright pair of +eyes--disconcertingly bright in fact. She was dressed in the very +smartest and most-up-to-date country kit; short tweed skirt of a pleasing +greenish hue, stockings to match, brown brogued shoes, and a blouse that +might have come from Paris. Her hair was dressed as fashionably as the +rest of her, and her face was of precisely the kind I had least expected +to see, rather thin with neatly chiselled features and delicate +eye-brows, and an entirely sophisticated expression. There was no doubt +she was decidedly pretty, and quite delightfully fresh and trim looking. +But her eyes were her best feature. As I looked straight into them for an +instant I could scarcely bring myself to play the part I had arranged. +They seemed as though they would be a little difficult to deceive. + +However, thank Heaven I have lived down most of the virtues that +embarrass the young. I had lied before, been found out, and lived through +it; so I clicked my heels together, bowed, and enquired, + +"Is Master Rindall in?" + +(My accent wasn't really quite as bad as that, but I should have to +invent fresh vowels to illustrate what it actually sounded like.) + +I had expected some slight symptoms of alarm, but she answered with +perfect composure and in a voice that matched the hair and blouse, + +"Yes, he is. Will you come in?" + +I bowed again and entered the mansion of Mr. Rendall. + + + +VII + +AT THE MANSION HOUSE + + +As I followed the girl through the hall, a man's voice asked, + +"Is that O'Brien?" + +"No," she said, "it's some one to see you, father." + +She showed me into a room and closed the door, and in the course of the +next few minutes I came to one or two pretty obvious conclusions. She was +clearly Mr. Rendall's daughter, and they were equally clearly in the +habit of receiving visits at odd times from Mr. O'Brien; in fact they +evidently concluded it was he, or Miss Rendall herself would scarcely +have opened the door to me. Also, her reply might be taken as implying +that if Mr. O'Brien had been the visitor, it would not have been her +father he had come to see. But whether or no this were the true +interpretation, I so thoroughly disliked and suspected O'Brien that any +suggestion of intimacy was alone enough to make me glad I had started on +the defensive. + +"Otherwise," said I to myself, "what a charming girl to find in +such a place!" + +However, I reminded myself that I had not come here to be charmed, and +proceeded next to take stock of the room. + +It was not large, but pleasantly proportioned, low in the ceiling, and +pervaded with a delicate yet distinct flavour of the past, I found myself +instinctively wondering how one could reproduce this particular flavour +on the stage; no armour or tapestry or any of the usual antique +paraphernalia to be allowed, for beyond the thick walls and rather small +windows, it was so difficult to lay one's finger on any one specific +thing that palpably suggested age. Finally I decided that it was +impossible to re-create such an atmosphere. It was compounded of +stillness within and the glimpses of primeval quiet without, of a touch +of comfortable shabbiness, of plenty of elderly books, and of a faint +odour of the dampness of centuries mingled with the scent of honeysuckle. +My suspicions were suddenly lulled, and with that prompt decision which +has landed me in and pulled me out of so many holes, I decided to drop my +German accent. That the charming Miss Rendall might miss it, and wonder +what had become of it, was (I must confess) a reflection which did not +occur to me till afterwards. + +Just as I had come to this decision, in walked the laird, and in two +minutes I had come to another decision, which was to adhere to the plan +of campaign I had thought of as I walked, in so far as keeping my +business to myself was concerned. My first impression of Mr. Rendall was +of height, and a certain quiet, formidable quality. He was grey-haired, +with a close-clipped grizzled moustache, loose clothes as though he had +shrunk a little in girth, and the unmistakable air of a man who had seen +considerably more of the world than the island of Ransay. He received me +quite politely and hospitably, but with every moment that passed I grew +more acutely conscious of something deterrent behind his courtesy. A +sense of a strong personality in the background, not actually hostile as +yet, but ironic and critical, set me instinctively and instantly on +guard. Not that I actually suspected the man; but to take him straightway +into my confidence was simply impossible. A man of another temperament +might have done so--and quite possibly have been right; but his effect on +me was like tapping a limpet. + +I gave him my name and then I said in a quiet confidential way, + +"Forgive this intrusion, Mr. Rendall, but the fact is my ship has +evidently been called away." + +I glanced towards the window, and following my look he could see the +smoke of the cruiser just visible on the horizon. He gave a little nod +but said nothing. + +"I was landed last night on a certain piece of business," I went on, +"and it is no part of that business to make myself conspicuous, and so I +have taken the liberty of coming to your house." + +"You wish to wait here till your ship returns?" he enquired. + +"I thought perhaps you might know of some lodging where I might +remain quietly." + +He smiled slightly. + +"You had better stay here. There is no other lodging." + +I began to thank him, but he cut me short. + +"It is Hobson's choice," said he, "and my house is not overcrowded at +present. Have you lunched?" + +"I am afraid I haven't." + +"Come and join us. My daughter and I had just sat down." + +He moved towards the door. + +"I have no luggage," I said. + +"I can lend you what you want." + +I thanked him again, and said brazenly, + +"May I ask for the loan of a coat. I am anxious not to exhibit my uniform +coat in the island if I can help it." + +I thought he looked a trifle surprised (it must be remembered that all +this time I was in a buttoned-up oilskin), but he merely nodded again and +led me upstairs to a pleasant bed-room with a low ceiling and some heavy +old-fashioned mahogany furniture. There he left me and in a moment +returned with a brush and comb and a tweed coat. + +I had noticed that in one of the drawers there was a key, and as I took +the coat I said, + +"I hope you won't think me unduly cautious if I lock my uniform coat up +in one of these drawers. There are certain papers in the pockets which I +am bound to be careful of." + +Again I fancied I caught a brief look of surprise, but it must have been +very brief, for his face was as inscrutable as ever as he answered, + +"Do exactly as you like." + +A maid came with a jug of hot water and then I was alone. + +"I wonder if the man believes me?" I said to himself. "Things are going a +little too dashed smoothly!" + +However, there was nothing for it now but playing the game out. I first +took the precaution of suddenly and quietly opening the door. There was +nobody at the key hole, so I took off my oilskin and put on the tweed +coat, and then locked up the top drawer and put the key in my pocket. +Hardly necessary to say that drawer remained as empty as the others. + +"I call that either a very neat dodge, or a devilish silly one," I said +to myself. "And which it is depends entirely on the results." + +As I brushed my hair I thanked my stars I was fair, for a shave was now +long overdue. + +"What a pirate I'd look if I were a brunette!" I thought, and as it was, +the recollection of dainty Miss Rendall made me determined to borrow a +razor forthwith. + +I foresaw that lunch would be a function demanding considerable tact. +Seeing that I had decided, rightly or wrongly (and the Lord knew which!), +not to trust these people, they had to be kept in a nice equilibrium +betwixt doubt and confidence. To persuade them too thoroughly that they +were entertaining a genuine British naval officer would be fatal if they +were treasonably inclined, and a serious mistake if they were not, for +then they might reassure the other islanders and my gang would go to +earth, not to be dug up again in a hurry. On the other hand, to have them +too suspicious would be all right if they were treasonable, but would +probably end my adventure if they were honest. + +The line I selected was a blend of mystery regarding my business, breezy +chat on non-committal topics, and an occasional oddity of conduct, such +as might have been caused by a guilty conscience or a harmless strain of +eccentricity (and I left them to make their choice). + +Here are a few choice excerpts from our conversation, which I happen to +remember more or less verbatim. + +_Myself (chattily):_ "Delightful air you have in your island! +Like champagne--or perhaps in these parts I ought to say like +whisky and soda." + +_Mr. Rendall (somewhat drily_): "We do happen to be acquainted with +champagne." + +_Miss Rendall (smiling pleasantly as she ate_): "We probably don't look +as though we were, father. Mr. Merton's metaphor was safer." + +_Myself (feeling rather an ass, but outwardly gay):_ "I meant no +reflection on your cellar, Miss Rendall. I was merely aiming at +local colour." + +At this point I fell abruptly silent, the laugh, as it were, frozen on my +lips. I gazed at my plate and then glanced furtively at my host (I was +giving them their choice). The next fragment of conversation which I +remember ran somewhat thus:-- + +_Myself (leading up deliberately to the test question):_ "There's one +thing I envy the natives of this happy island. What a wonderful show of +wild flowers they have! Do they make good grazing?" + +_Mr. Rendall (again drily_): "If one happens to have ruminant tastes, I +believe they are edible." + +_Miss Rendall (brightly, but evidently unkindly):_ "Mr. Merton was +probably thinking chiefly of the ruminant natives." + +_Myself (keeping sternly to the point):_ "I was thinking chiefly of +sheep." _(With a direct and steady look at the laird.)_ "Are there many +sheep on this island?" + +_Mr. Rendall (quite calmly):_ "A good many. Are you anxious for +statistics?" + +_Myself (concealing my disappointment under a brave smile):_ "Oh no. +Please don't mistake me for an intelligent enquirer." + +I turned the brave smile on to Miss Rendall. She smiled back very +slightly. In her face I seemed to read a trace of scepticism; as if +she did not quite agree with my modest estimate of myself, but at the +same time thought none the better of me. I would have given a good +deal to know exactly what was in her mind. Did she suspect something? +And if so, what? + +I had one more shot. It was an inspiration which came to me at the end of +lunch when my host offered me a cigar. + +"Matches?" he observed, pushing a box towards me. + +Again I looked at him hard and asked, + +"Have you such a thing as a _wax_ match?" + +His eyebrows rose slightly. + +"If you prefer to light a cigar with a wax match I daresay I can +find one." + +"If Mr. Merton doesn't mind waiting for half an hour perhaps I might +discover a box in the store room," said Miss Rendall, and she added +demurely, "beside the champagne." + +My only consolation was that I was making an idiot of myself in a +good cause. + + + +VIII + +SUNDAY + + +I said good-night early that evening and did a heap of thinking in my +bed-room. Nothing that seems to me now to be worth recording had been +said or done since luncheon. I went for a solitary walk in the +afternoon, as much to carry out the part of one with some business in +the isle as for any other reason. It is true I actually did do some +business in the way of accosting a few inhabitants and trying tactfully +to convey a suspicious impression. None of them, however, had seemed in +the least likely to belong to the gang I was after, and the sheep and +wax match conundrums had left them cold. I was the less concerned at +this since I had realised that the day was Saturday. To-morrow in church +I meant to take stock of the islanders--and give them a chance of taking +stock of me. + +That night my thoughts ran chiefly on my host and hostess. I had learnt a +few more facts about them and these I now put together to see what +picture they suggested. In the first place, the Rendalls were an ancient +family in these parts and had owned their property for some centuries. +As all my prejudices ran in favour of old families, old port, and old +furniture, this was so far reassuring. + +On the other hand, Mr. Rendall had apparently lived much abroad but he +dropped no hint as to whether he had sojourned in foreign parts for +reasons of pleasure, health, or business. In fact he was close as a clam +on the subject, and, indeed, on every other subject. Add to this that I +had heard he was hard up, that he had no wife to look after him, and that +he evidently took a caustic rather than an enthusiastic view of life, and +in my present state of mind there seemed a _prima facie_ case for +suspicion. Anyhow he was a man to be watched. + +As to his daughter, I had learned that her name was Jean, that she had +been to school at a somewhat select seminary which I chanced to have +heard of, and that she had finished her education a couple of years ago +in Switzerland. + +"Nothing very suspicious in all that," I thought. "Still, what is this +surprising apparition doing in this out of the way island? 'Looking after +my father,' she'd say. But why look after him here instead of some more +amusing place. Perhaps because they are hard up. On the other hand, +perhaps not." + +Then I thought over the pair simply as one thought of any new +acquaintances before war was dreamt of, and I am bound to say they came +out of the ordeal very creditably. He was well born, well bred, and very +far from a fool. She was--well, I don't mind confessing that that night I +considered her charming, in spite of the pretty obvious fact that she was +not at all charmed with me. Or if she was, she concealed her feelings +admirably. She had a good enough excuse, either way; whether she were +honest and thought me a traitor, or whether she were treacherous and +thought me honest. Besides, I had not yet shaved. + +So I forgave Miss Jean her prejudice and reflected on her attractions. I +changed my mind about them later, as will appear, but that first evening +she seemed to me a most piquant and dainty young lady. Slim, trim, and +demure, with eyes like stars (I borrow the metaphor unblushingly), and a +pleasant spice of mischief in her tongue, and a touch of the devil very +carefully and properly hidden away; that was my first impression of Miss +Jean Rendall. + +And then I turned in, and slept that night without a dream. + +Sunday was another gorgeous day. The breeze had almost quite died away, +the sea glimmered through a heat haze, and the colours of the wild +flowers were brighter than any palette. I came down shaved, but found +Miss Rendall still cool, and her father as inaccessible as ever. + +"Anyhow," I consoled myself by reflecting, "I have eliminated my +bristles as a cause for my unpopularity. They have something else on +their minds!" + +The laird lent me a felt hat and as the hour of noon drew nigh we set +off for the parish kirk. There was another church in the island (as in +every self-respecting Scottish parish, I believe), but by the greatest +good luck the rival minister was away and the congregations were +assembled together. I gathered afterwards that this happy result was +partly due to the hope of seeing the laird's mysterious guest, and that +several very prickly theological scruples were swallowed by divers of +the other congregation. At all events the church was crowded and I had +the chance I wanted. + +As we approached the kirk I thought I had never seen a plainer, more +primitive little building even in a Scottish kirkyard; no spire, no +ornament, nothing but grey roughcast walls (what they call in +Scotland "harled") and a roof of small yellowish flagstones, set in +a bed of mingled nettles and tombstones. Amid the tombstones stood +the congregation, all in black and staring steadfastly at the +mysterious stranger, while over the door a plaintive little bell +creaked and clanged. + +We entered the little church and I shall never forget my surprise. It was +the year 1914 without; it became the year 1514 (or perhaps some centuries +earlier still) within. On one side two minute windows pierced a wall +quite four feet thick. The other wall was broken only by a great empty +niche whence an image once adored had vanished. It is true there were now +pews, but they were not of yesterday--square boxes where people sat and +faced in four directions, and the odour of damp bibles smelt prehistoric. + +The bell ceased clanging, the people trooped in and filled the boxes, and +presently there uprose in the pulpit a grim venerable man in black. By +this time my better feelings were under control and I studied this figure +critically. He represented one of those four "civilised" and suspect +houses. One was untenanted, two I had now visited, and the fourth I was +now almost ready to discharge with a cleared character. Outwardly at +least this sedate divine suggested nothing but the austerer virtues. + +For two hours the minister prayed, the minister read and the minister +preached to us; at intervals we were allowed to sing, and abused the +privilege shockingly; and all the time I studied that congregation. I +recognised the Scollay family, Peter elder, Peter younger, Mrs. +Scollay, the two rosy daughters, and even poor Jock. The three or four +people I had spoken to in the afternoon were all there too. In fact I +saw every one I had consciously met before in that island, with three +exceptions. The doctor and O'Brien were not in church, and narrowly +though I looked, I saw no sign of the ancient with tinted spectacles +and a taste for wax matches. + +I very soon was made aware that there was no fear of myself going +unobserved. At one time or another I caught every eye in that +congregation rivetted on me, and it only remained for me to give the +proper impression to carry away with them. + +As I was unable to see myself as others saw me, I cannot say precisely +what effect I produced, but if a habit of looking suddenly and guiltily +at the floor when I caught a hard staring eye, a conspicuous difficulty +in following the order of the service and knowing what book to be picked +up and whether to kneel, sit, or stand, and peculiarly unpleasant shake +which I introduced into my top note--if all these manifestations failed +to convey the impression that I was a very suspicious person indeed, +well, all I can say is that they ought to have done so, and that that +congregation must have been singularly deficient in the proper kind of +imagination. Of course I could hardly expect a sympathetic signal to be +actually made in church, but I did hope my performance would surely bear +fruit before many hours had passed. + +At last the service ended, the commons crowded out, and the laird and his +daughter rose in their wake and greeted the minister on their way to the +door. I noticed that they did not introduce me, and also that the +Reverend Mr. Mackenzie regarded me--over Miss Rendall's shoulder--with a +sternly suspicious glance. Evidently he had heard ill of me already, and +hope burned higher. If the minister had heard dark rumours, surely the +spies had! Or anyhow they would when that congregation had all reached +their homes (if they were not among the congregation themselves). + +We passed again through many eyes in the kirkyard, and then the Rev. Mr. +Mackenzie and the laird walked together for a short way and I found +myself alone with Miss Jean. + +"I didn't see Dr. Rendall or Mr. O'Brien in church," I remarked. + +"They very seldom come to church," said she. + +"I gather that Mr. O'Brien is visiting the doctor," I observed. + +"Yes," said she, in a tone that promised little further information. + +"Has he been staying with him long?" I preserved. + +"For some time." + +"Old friends, I suppose." + +She did not seem to hear me, and I gave it up--in the meanwhile; but to +myself I said complacently, + +"Some mystery here!" + +Presently I remarked, + +"There was another face I didn't see--the island patriarch." + +She looked at me quickly. + +"The patriarch--who do you mean?" + +"An old gentleman with a white beard, tinted spectacles, and overcoat +somewhat the worse for wear. He hailed me on the road yesterday and asked +for a match. I imagine he must live somewhere near the doctor's house." + +She looked very thoughtful for a moment and then said: + +"There is no one in the island with tinted spectacles, and nobody in the +least like that living anywhere near Dr. Rendall's." + +I looked at her sharply. + +"Are you quite sure?" + +She seemed to think again for a moment and then said: + +"Perfectly." + +I had something to think about on my way home to lunch. + + + +IX + +AN ALLY + + +After lunch I set out by myself with pretty high hopes. It seemed to me +inconceivable that men (or even one man for the sake of argument, though +I felt sure there must be more), who were lurking here on the business +this gang were engaged upon, would actually take no steps one way or the +other to deal with a stranger who knew of their existence, and who to all +seeming was one of their own kidney. I flattered myself by this time that +every report they could have heard and every observation they might have +made must incline them to the view that it was their duty to get in touch +with me again. And now I proposed to take a solitary ramble along the +very shore where I had stumbled upon my oil-skinned friend, and give them +a chance of getting in touch. + +It was an afternoon of sunshine and gleaming seas. At first the air was +redolent of clover, and then--as I drew near the shore--of seaware. On +this day of rest there was hardly any one to be seen about, so that a +quiet meeting by the beach could be simply arranged. Only a meeting +implies two, and though I walked right along the coast till I got +within a stone's throw of the Scollays' farm I remained as solitary as +when I started. + +I turned back and slowly retraced my steps for a mile or so, my hopes +fading and my perplexity increasing. + +"What ought I to have done that I haven't done?" I asked myself. "And +what have I done that I oughtn't to?" + +I paused and sat down on the crisp sea turf with a rough stone wall to +landward, and below me the shelving rocks and the glassy ocean, and it +was then the idea struck me that I might do something to attract +attention to my presence. A thoughtful aunt had presented me with a +revolver when I got my commission, and as anything to do with hitting +things, from cricket balls to pheasants, has always amused me, I used to +carry it in my hip pocket regardless of chaff (one happily inspired wag +dubbed me "jolly Roger"). I took it out now, descended to the beach, set +up a stone as a mark, and proceeded to combine business with pleasure by +doing a little fancy shooting. The thing made just enough noise to +attract anybody fairly near at hand without scandalising the inhabitants, +and as I chanced to be in good form I quite enjoyed myself. + +I had just brought off a pretty sequence of snap shots and was thinking +regretfully that in one of the happy lands which still encouraged the +duel I should be a much more respected member of society, when I suddenly +realised that I had a spectator of my prowess. He was standing on the +turf above me, a little indistinct owing to the wall at his back, and for +an instant my heart leapt and I thought I had met the friend I was +seeking at last. And then I saw that it was only poor Jock. + +I waved to him and he came scrambling down to the beach, his mouth wide +open as usual and wreathed in smiles. As he approached a wild thought +struck me. He was bearded, thickset, and of medium height. Wrap him in an +oilskin, and there you were! I mention all my inspirations to show that I +really did cover the ground pretty thoroughly in that blessed island. It +is true that the conduct of my oil-skinned acquaintance was scarcely that +of a congenital idiot; still, I was resolved to leave no stone unturned. + +"Shoots, shoots!" he babbled in his curious thick voice. "Jock +heard shoots!" + +I looked at him fixedly and in a serious voice replied in a German accent +you could have cut with a knife, + +"I vant to know zomezing about sheeps, Herr Jock, not about shoots. How +many sheeps are zere in zis island, eh?" + +Did I see a gleam of intelligence for an instant in Jock's eye? I cannot +honestly say. I only know that he looked not unnaturally surprised, and +then thickly answered what sounded like "A hundred and six." Anyhow it +was nothing that seemed to illuminate the subject very brightly. + +"And how many wax matches?" I enquired. + +Jock hooted with laughter. He sounded so cheerful, that I perforce +laughed too, and then I gazed at him sombrely. + +"Jock," I said, "you are a fraud and a disappointment." + +He laughed again, and then all at once a much more sensible idea struck +me. He was not a very promising ally, but he might prove better than +none at all. + +"Jock," said I, "I am a stranger." + +He nodded and seemed to understand. + +"Have you seen any other strangers in this island of yours?" I asked. + +He seemed a little confused. + +"No, no," he began, and then altered it into "Yes, yes." + +Which did he mean, or did he mean anything at all. + +"A man in an oilskin coat, with a moustache on his lip--here," I went on, +touching my own lip. "Who goes out at night and walks along the shore; +have you seen any one like that?" + +Again he seemed to look intelligent, but he only shook his head vaguely. + +"Well," I said, "if you do see any one like that let me know, and you +will see some more shoots. Also I shall give you this." + +I held up a new half crown and he laughed so joyfully that I began to +have a faint hope he might prove of some use after all. + +And yet when I had left him and resumed my walk back to the Rendalls' +house, my spirits were not very high. As an ally Jock did not impress me +with a feeling of great confidence, while his failure to recognise my +description of the oil-skinned man depressed me unreasonably. I told +myself that the opinion of the parish idiot on the subject of strangers +was of small value. Besides, quite likely the oilskinned man would not be +a stranger to the people in the neighbourhood. They might know him +familiarly as a prosperous farmer or a hardy fisherman--or as their own +doctor or their doctor's guest, or--no, he could not be their laird for +Mr. Rendall was too tall. In short my talk with Jock had proved nothing +one way or the other. + +And yet my whole failure to come upon any trace of the gang in spite of +all my ingenuity did set me thinking. Could it possibly be that my entire +adventure had been an hallucination? I confessed frankly to myself that I +have a pretty lively imagination, and I recalled vividly how I had +almost collapsed on my way to the Scollays under the strain of an intense +reaction, how my brain had whirled, and how I peopled the farm kitchen +with full thrice the number of persons actually assembled. I had been +conscious of all that, but supposing my brain had actually begun to whirl +half an hour sooner, before I had become conscious of it? Might I not +have imagined my whole mysterious adventure? + +It was a nasty thought, for in that case what a superfluous fool I had +made of myself since! But I faced it manfully, and sternly asked myself +what the opinion of the average hard-headed, soberly reasoning man would +be, if he were given the facts and requested to pronounce his verdict on +them. What would be my own verdict if I were told such a yarn? Would I +swallow it without demur? + +"Be hanged if I would!" I said candidly. + +By the time I got back to the big house, I had very nearly ceased to +believe in the tale myself. + + + +X + +THE COAST PATROL + + +That evening we were all three sitting in the library (the same old-world +room into which I had first been shown), when a servant entered and gave +a message to Mr. Rendall. He rose and went out, leaving his daughter and +myself each apparently immersed in a book. She may genuinely have been, +but I was making the covers of mine a screen for inward debate. Had I +made a mere fool of myself and should I make a clean breast of everything +to my hosts? Or should I wait a little longer before deciding? I went on +thinking after the laird had left the room, and Miss Jean still kept her +eyes immovably on her page. I frankly confess I have never cut less ice +with any woman--especially one who decidedly attracted me. + +In a few minutes her father returned and said to her: + +"John Howiseon has cried off to-night. I must go myself." + +She started up with a word of expostulation, but he merely smiled in his +grim way, nodded at her (not at me, I noticed) and was gone. With a +little sigh she sat down again and plunged into her book, but my +curiosity had been roused and in a moment I enquired, + +"Is your father going out for long?" + +Her concern seemed to have broken down her reticence + +"All night," she said. "I wish he wouldn't!" + +"What's the matter?" I asked. + +"The coast patrol," said she. + +"The coast patrol!" I exclaimed. "What's that?" + +She seemed to look at me for an instant a little doubtfully before +she answered, + +"The Admiralty have asked all the Justices of Peace to have the coast +patrolled." + +"By whom?" + +"Anybody they can get. We have the whole island mapped out into beats and +the different; farmers take it night about." + +For the moment I only half believed her. Such an amateur way of keeping +watch and ward in such a vital area seemed hardly credible, but I learned +afterwards that in those early days of the war that was one of the things +which actually happened. Another fact also made me doubtful. On the night +I landed I had met no watchers. + +"Who watches the shore up at the north end--near the Scollays' +farm?" I asked. + +"Oh, Dr. Rendall and Mr. O'Brien look after that beat," said she. + +In a flash my belief in my own adventure had begun to return. Either that +couple neglected their duty--or I had met one of the watchers! + +"Do the doctor and Mr. O'Brien ever go out themselves--like your father +to-night?" I asked. + +"Mr. O'Brien goes out pretty often, I believe." + +I thought for a moment longer and then I jumped up. + +"This seems the very job for an able-bodied young man," I said with a +laugh. "I'm going out to join the watchers!" + +"You!" she exclaimed, springing up too. + +I looked her straight in the eye. + +"Why not me?" I enquired. + +She said nothing for an instant, and then she remarked in quite a matter +of fact voice, + +"Very well; if you are going, I'll come with you." + +I could not resist parodying her. + +"You!" I exclaimed. + +But I got no smile in response. + +"I'll be ready in five minutes," she said as she left the room. + +"Now what the devil does this mean?" I said to myself. + +Five minutes of course meant quarter of an hour, and then we sallied +forth into the night, she in a long tweed coat and I in my +inevitable oilskin. + +"Which way do you want to go?" she asked. + +"Suppose we work our way towards the north end," I suggested. + +She said nothing more and we made our way by a track to the shore and +then turned toward the left. I had been filling my pipe and when we got +to the last stone wall, I stopped, bent under its shelter and struck a +match. My face was towards her and in the fraction of a second before +the first match blew out I caught a glimpse of something just visible in +the mouth of one of the big pockets of her tweed coat. It was the butt +end of a pistol. + +I struck three more matches before I got my pipe alight and I contrived +to face her each time, but she had turned and kept her other side towards +me. When we resumed our walk I noticed that she consistently kept two or +three yards away from me. + +"Just shooting distance!" I said to myself. + +"By the way, what are we supposed to be looking for?" I enquired +presently. + +"Chiefly periscopes, I think," said she. + +I stopped short and gazed over the inky sea. + +"Do they light them up for us?" I asked. + +She laughed despite herself. + +"That is what I've been wondering myself," said she. + +This was her only sympathetic relapse, and to tell the truth I made no +further remarks worthy of being smiled at. That pistol kept me thinking. +That she had come out to watch me, and if necessary shoot me, seemed a +pretty obvious deduction, and much as I admired her nerve, it made +humorous conversation a trifle difficult. + +On we walked, on and on for what seemed an interminable distance. It was +quite moonless and only a few stars twinkled here and there through a +veil of light clouds that had drifted up with the sunset. The grass +underfoot was black, the sea was nearly as dark, and the inland country +invisible. Once I remarked: + +"It's a curious thing that we haven't met any of our fellow watchers." + +"The beats are very long," she said, "and I'm afraid all the watchers +don't keep at their posts all the time." + +"What; they take a nap now and then?" + +She seemed as though she were going to agree, and then to change her +mind. + +"Oh, we shall meet some one very soon. I think father is taking +this beat." + +But we met no one, and as we pursued our lonely way I began to think that +here was quite a possible reason for my not having come upon one of these +coast patrols two nights ago. Still, it was only a possible reason; the +other alternative remained. + +And then, I know not how it was, but I began gradually to get a curious +impression that _something_ was in the air, _something_ was going to +happen. It is easy to say I only imagine now in the retrospect that I had +this feeling. But I noted the sensation clearly and positively at the +time. I strained my eyes, I looked this way and that, so strong did the +feeling become. Once I thought for a moment I heard soft footsteps +somewhere on the inland side and I stopped short then and listened, but +when I stopped I heard nothing. + +It can only have been a few minutes after this that the figure at my side +(which had been so silent that I had almost forgotten it was a girl, and +a pretty girl too) stopped suddenly, and I stood still beside her. + +"Do you hear anything?" she asked, and there seemed to be a little catch +in her breath. + +I listened and shook my head. I could see that she was gazing intently +down at the beach. + +"Do you see anything?" I asked in a voice instinctively hushed. + +"No," she answered in the same low tone, "but I thought I heard +something." + +Again I strained my ears, and this time I distinctly did hear something; +it might have been a movement among the rocks below, or on the bank ahead +of us. She said nothing more but she seemed to be peering down into the +gloom that veiled the beach. + +"I'll go down and see what it is," I said. + +For an instant I thought she was going to demur, but she said nothing, +and with a bold air I stepped off the turf and began to make my way +down, first through loose boulders and then along a ledge below. I +confess frankly that I felt a trifle less bold than I looked, especially +when I discovered the hazardous nature of the going. I remember that the +sky began to seem lighter by contrast, but that the rocks were sheer +chaotic darkness. + +I must have been feeling my way along for some minutes, with a growing +sense of the futility of the performance, when I first heard the sharp +tinkle of a loose stone on rock. I turned towards the sound and heard it +again. Either three or four times I had heard it distinctly when I found +myself close to the grass again, only at this place there was a steep +little cliff, higher than my head, between it and me, instead of a slope +of boulders, so that any one on the bank above would be looking straight +down on to me. All this I can swear to. + +And then when my shoulder was rubbing this low cliff face, I +thought--indeed I am sure--I heard something move above, and certainly +there was a sharp grating sound on the rock at my back; within an inch of +me, it seemed. I looked round quickly just in time to catch a glimpse of +something thin and curved and sinister passing upwards, against the +night sky. I did not see it descend again, but the next moment came the +sharp grating, close to my head this time, and once more the long curved +menace passed up, faintly visible against the sky. + +I did not wait for it to descend again. That somebody was striking at +me from above and that I had better get out of the way seemed so +evident that I spent no further time in watching the operation. I +started from the cliff, my foot struck a patch of seaweed, and with a +half smothered "Damn!" I did the next few yards sliding seawards on my +side. A peculiarly hard ledge stopped my career and for a moment I lay +there wondering what bones were broken. By the time I had found there +were none, and scrambled to my feet, the sky line above the bank was +clear. Whoever had struck at me was gone and there was not even the +slightest sound, save the gurgling of the sea below. And then I +gingerly picked my way back. + +I drew near the turf bank at the top and now again I stopped. Low voices +reached my ear distinctly and presently I spied two vague forms standing +close together. Before I moved again I had transferred something from my +hip pocket to my oilskin jacket and I kept my hand there too, closed upon +it and ready. Then I advanced. + +"Is that you, Mr. Merton?" said a voice I knew. + +"It is, Mr. Rendall," I answered drily. + +"Did you see anybody?" + +"No," I answered truthfully. + +"We thought we heard a cry," said Miss Jean. + +"I may have startled a sea gull," I suggested; and then I asked with a +sharpness in my voice I could not quite control, "Where did Mr. Rendall +spring from?" + +"I told you I thought we should meet him," she answered, with a cool note +in her voice that countered mine. + +"What a curious chance that we should all meet here!" I exclaimed. + +"It is precisely what I expected," said she. + +"Did you think then it was Mr. Rendall down among the rocks?" I enquired. + +"No," she said, "and it wasn't." + +"Oh," I replied in a tone which (if I achieved my intention) might have +meant anything--or nothing. + +Her father had been standing perfectly silent during this bout, a +towering figure muffled in a heavy ulster and scarf, with the rim of his +hat turned down over his face. Now he spoke in his dry caustic way, + +"Have you had enough exercise, Mr. Merton?" + +"Quite, thank you." + +"Then we can all go back together." + +He turned and his daughter took his arm. I walked behind them--it seemed +on the whole safer, and I kept my hand in my pocket all the while. + +I had seen no one, it is true; I had heard no sound that could be sworn +to as made by a human being, the thing I saw so dimly might possibly not +have been a lethal weapon (and if it was a weapon, what in Heaven's name +could it be? I wondered); it might conceivably have been a large bird +some distance off, just as by a reverse illusion men are said to have +fired at bumble bees when grouse driving. Also, it was within the bounds +of possibility that the tinkling stones might not have been thrown down +by some one above in order to draw me under that face. Everything had +been so vague that all these alternatives were conceivable. But my own +mind was quite and finally determined now that my adventure with the +stranger on the shore had been no figment of my fancy, and I felt sure +moreover that _they_ had made up their minds about me and decided to act. +How and why they had come to such a definite conclusion despite all my +efforts to mislead them, beat me at first completely. And then I stopped +short and almost shouted "Idiot!" + +I had addressed Miss Rendall at her own door in a German accent. Then I +had abruptly dropped it and through all my deliberate mystifications one +fact had been clear--that I spoke in the accents of an ordinary more or +less educated Englishman. The Rendalls clearly had the material for +coming to a conclusion, and now in their company I had all but ended my +days on earth. + +Yet somehow or other now that I saw all this so clearly, I found myself +singularly reluctant to accept the logical conclusion that this gentleman +of good lineage and standing and this attractive high-spirited girl were +actually traitors of the basest sort, and murderous traitors too. + +"Hang it, I may be wrong after all!" I said to myself. "I know I'm +young: I am told I'm rash; I have made a fool of myself periodically as +long as I've known myself, I'll give them the benefit of the doubt a +little longer." + +At the door Mr. Rendall left us to resume his conscientious patrol. I +said a brief and cool good-night to Jean, went up to my room and tumbled +straight into bed. + +"In the morning I'll think things over," I decided. + + + +XI + +A NEAR THING + + +Being an optimist has compensations. Indeed, it would need to have, for +no virtue has ever landed any one in more damnable scrapes than optimism +has landed me. But before the crash comes it does help to keep one happy. + +Next morning, after that nasty night, I was singing in my bath and full +of wild hopes; the fact being that a new and consoling way of looking at +things had suggested itself in the very act of shaving. + +"They are afraid of me!" I said to myself. + +After a night's sleep the adventure by the shore had grown perhaps a +little blurred in some of its details. I wished I could see that curved +thing rising against the night sky a trifle more distinctly in my mind's +eye; so that I could take my oath in court it was a weapon. Still, I +remained perfectly assured I had been attacked, and the sustaining +conclusions I now drew were, firstly, that "they" (whoever they were; and +I tried to keep an open mind on that point) were so afraid of me that +they were ready to stick at nothing to lay me out; secondly, that they +were afraid to tackle me by day but had to choose a dark night and a +lonely place; and thirdly, that with such a splendid chance it must have +been nerves that made them bungle it. + +"People in that state of mind will do something or other to give +themselves away," I thought hopefully. + +In this confident state of mind I came down for breakfast. My host, I +found, was staying in bed after his night's vigil, and my hostess was +daintier and more inaccessible than ever. After breakfast I reflected for +a little over a pipe and then I asked her for a bit of lunch to put in my +pocket and told her I was going for a long walk. She got the lunch and +gave it to me without wasting a superfluous word, and off I set. + +It was a breezy morning with a lot of thin cloud in the sky and a ruffled +sea; cool and stimulating; the very day for a walk. I followed the exact +route we took the night before, trying to identify such landmarks as +rises and falls in the ground and sharp curves in the shore and farms +close to the coast, but I found it was practically impossible; every +feature seemed so utterly altered in daylight. My object was to find the +spot where I had been attacked, and at last I had to be content with +knowing that it must have been one of three or four places where the +feature of a low cliff immediately under the turf was to be seen. + +At one such place there was a long stretch of wall following the shore +line, which could have given shelter for any one to stalk me practically +from the start. At another I noticed a farm close by, and from this an +assailant could easily have slipped down to the beach and run back again. +At a third the configuration of the rocks was such that it would have +been simple for him to have waited below the bank till he heard us +coming, made a noise to bring me down, and then gone up above without +exposing himself against the sky. In fact one could draw no definite +conclusions at all. + +Besides, there was the very distasteful alternative (and the more +plausible it seemed, the more distasteful it grew) that there might well +have been two people in it; one--who might have followed me, the stone +thrower; and the other--who might, for instance, have been patrolling the +shore from the opposite direction, the attacker. + +Suspicious as I had felt at the moment, I shrank from this alternative, +and in justification I asked myself, + +"Why didn't she use her pistol, and be done with it?" + +But, on the other hand, it was a most extraordinary coincidence that her +father should have passed that spot certainly within three or four +minutes previously, and that he should have seen no sign of my enemy. So +far as I could remember the length of time I had spent groping among the +rocks, it was just possible for Mr. Rendall to pass by and for the other +man then to begin his work of decoying me, but certainly it was an +unpleasant coincidence. + +And finally there was a last alternative: that I might have been mistaken +in thinking I was actually assailed and instead of that--But what +other conceivable explanation could there be? I tried hard but could +think of none. + +With the flame of optimism burning now somewhat low, I kept on following +the shore till I was well past the scenes of both my night adventures and +had come to the little sandy bay with the huddle of low grey farm +buildings just clear of the tide. I found Peter senior painting his boat +on the shore and hailed him cheerfully with the same old guttural accent. + +"Painting your boat, I see," said I. + +He gave me a long look and one word. + +"Ay," said he, and went on painting. + +It struck me at once that he was even more wary and more reticent than +before, but I was determined to extract some information. + +"I have been guarding you against the Germans! Last night I patrolled +your coast!" I informed him with great enthusiasm. + +He looked at me rather curiously, I thought. + +"Did ye see anything?" he enquired. + +"I thought I did, but ach! how can one be sure in the dark?" + +"It's no easy," he agreed. + +"Then you have tried too, my friend?" + +"Ay," he admitted, splashing on the paint. + +"Were any of your family patrolling last night?" + +"No," said he curtly. + +"Who was guarding this part here?" I asked. + +"I dinna ken." + +I wondered, but I saw that there was not much more to be learned here. He +had denied that any of his household were out, for what that was worth, +and at that I bade him good morning and turned back. + +I fell to walking more and more slowly and at last I stopped and decided +to accompany my thoughts with a little lunch. The boundary wall at this +point ran close to the edge of the rocks and was rather higher than +usual. I thought for a moment of sitting down and lunching under its lee, +and then I noticed that it was very loosely built of large beach boulders +and that the off shore breeze was whistling through it like a sieve; so I +decided to descend to the sheltered beach and lunch there. That decision +saved my life. + +I clambered down, chose a rock to sit behind, and was just putting my +hand in my pocket for my packet of sandwiches, when "Crack!"--something +whistled close to my head and smacked against a ledge behind me. "Crack!" +again, and the smack this time resounded from the rock beside me. At the +third "Crack!" I was flat on my face behind that rock and my hand was in +another pocket. It brought out something more to the point than +sandwiches. + +I had a pretty good idea by this time where the shots were coming from +and I risked a quick rise of my head to make quite sure. I just had time +to see a flash through one of the holes in the wall and down went my head +again as a bullet smacked once more upon the ledge behind. Yet another +shot followed and seemed to miss everything, for I heard no sound of lead +on stone, and then up went my head and hand together and I was covering +that bit of wall with my own revolver. I saw that my enemy was no very +dead shot and I meant to risk his fire and snap at the flash through the +wall. I knew I could get quite near enough his peep hole to startle him, +and after I had sprinkled the near neighbourhood of that aperture for +five or six seconds I thought it probably odds against his keeping his +head sufficiently to do much aiming. To be quite candid I must confess +that it was a soothing sensation to feel I was the better man with a gun, +and that I should have been in a proper fright if it had been the other +way about. One hears a good deal of discussion on the quality of courage +nowadays, and there is my own small contribution. + +The seconds passed, my finger on the trigger and my eyes glued to the +largest crevice I could spy in that wall, but there was never another +flash or crack. And then it suddenly struck me that the man might be +moving down the wall to get a shot at me from another angle. As usual I +acted on impulse, and this time I think correctly. Scarcely had the +thought struck me than I was up and rushing forward to the shelter of the +grass bank where the rocks began. There, quite safe but rather cramped, I +crept along parallel to the wall for about a hundred yards. And then I +jumped up, charged the wall, and brought half of it down as I hurled +myself over. As my feet touched the ground I looked in both directions, +very nearly simultaneously, and saw--nothing. + +Whether in that first instant I was more disappointed or relieved, I +should be afraid to say, but as soon as I had had a few seconds to think, +my one feeling was disgust that the fellow had given me the slip. I took +to my heels and ran along that wall first in one direction and then in +the other, but there was not a sign of a living creature. And the +sickening thing was that by this time he might have done one of several +things--headed away from the shore at top speed as soon as he ceased +firing, in which case he would be far enough by now, or lain down in one +of the several fields of corn near by, or crossed the wall further along +and hidden among the rocks; and it was quite impossible to guess which. I +pondered over the problem for a few moments and then decided that as it +was perfectly hopeless to search the corn or the beach I would risk it +and hasten inland on the off chance of getting a clue, so I chose a grass +field and set off across it at a trot. + +The ground rose for about fifty yards and then fell sharply, and as I +topped this rise I came right on to a familiar figure. It was my friend +Jock and he seemed unusually excited; almost, in fact, intelligent. + +"Stranger!" he gabbled, pointing in the direction I was going. "Jock seen +stranger!" + +I followed his dirty finger and a couple of hundred yards or so ahead I +spied a figure strolling along a by road, rather ostentatiously +strolling, it seemed to me. + +"Thank you, Jock," said I, "you're a good man! Here's your half crown!" + +I dropped to a walk now and by the time the stranger and I met I think I +looked about as cool as he did. It was Mr. O'Brien, as I had guessed at +the first glance. + +"Been for a walk?" he enquired. + +"Having a stroll along the shore," said I. + +He started a little and looked at me hard. + +"Hullo!" said he, "I could have sworn you talked like a foreigner the +last and first time I had the honour of meeting you. Were we both sober, +do you think?" + +I in turn looked at the man keenly. If his surprise was not genuine, it +was as good a bit of acting as I ever saw, on or off the stage, and it +was exactly the most disarming thing he could possibly say. Indeed it +turned the tables on me completely and it was I who was now left in the +position of having something awkward to explain away. + +"It must have been the weather," I said lightly, "I'm never drunk +before lunch;" + +"And be damned if I get the chance at any time of day! You've heard of my +sad complaint, eh?" + +"No," said I, "I'm afraid I haven't. Nothing infectious?" + +He gave one of his unpleasant hoots of laughter. + +"Lord, you think I'm a respectable member of society then? Good for you, +keep on thinking it--but you'll have to keep away from my friends!" + +"It takes me all my time to keep clear of my own," said I. + +His narrow eyes seemed to approve of me. + +"You're not Irish?" he enquired. + +"No; I've enough to answer for without that." + +"You ought to be," said he. "You've got some wit. Damn the English, and +double-damn the Scotch! Well we're evidently both going in the other +direction, so good-bye to you!" + +What was I to make of this? What was to be thought of the whole morning's +adventure? Only one thing was perfectly clear to me: that I had a very +dangerous, very determined, and very artful enemy in this island--or, +almost certainly, several enemies, and that instead of the hunter I had +become the hunted. They might fear me but they certainly did not fear to +attack me whether by day or night. Had I sat down behind that +trellis-like wall as I intended, I shivered a little to think of my fate. +I should have been shot at twelve inches range, and that would have been +the end of my spy hunt. I began to realise that it was much longer odds +on my being dead within the next forty-eight hours than on my getting on +the traces of that oilskinned man. + +And then as I was walking back thinking these none too cheery thoughts, +something put the parachute into my head. I had not thought of it before +since the first night when I hid it. It took me a little time to get my +bearings, but I found my way to the clover field at last and then made +for the low wall with the bed of rank grass and docken leaves beneath it. +I hunted up that wall and down that wall, but never a sign of the +parachute was there. + +"That is how they've bowled me out!" I said to myself. "They have heard +by this time of the missing balloon; then they found the parachute, saw +that the dates coincided, and spotted me!" + + + +XII + +THE KEY TURNED + + +When I got back I felt very little inclined for society. I passed through +the hall as quietly as I could, went straight up to my room, and heaved a +sigh of relief when the door was safely shut behind me. Perhaps my +adventures had been following a little too quickly on the heels of one +another; anyhow it was quiet which I craved at that moment. It was a +reposeful room, scented with honeysuckle, and for a few minutes I enjoyed +an unwonted sensation of peace; and then my eyes chanced to fall on the +chest of drawers. I stared for a moment and then bent over the lock of +the upper drawer, that drawer which concealed the mythical uniform coat +with the important mythical papers in the pocket. + +There could not be a shadow of doubt as to what had happened. The lock +had been taken off and put in again since I last saw it. And now of +course my hosts knew as well as I did that no uniform coat had ever lain +there, and consequently that their guest had never worn one. + +I had meant to slack, but this situation obviously required some thinking +over, so I lit a pipe, threw myself down on the bed, and began. + +"Bowled out again!" I thought. "At the rate the wickets are going down, +the innings must be dashed near over. They've found out my German accent +was a fake, they've discovered the parachute and know I neither landed +from a British cruiser nor a German submarine, and now they know that I +lied about that coat. + +"And what is my own score? By Gad, I don't honestly think I've made a +single run! I have no idea whether these discoveries have been made by +people in league with one another, who pool their knowledge, or whether +my enemies only know part of all this, and if so which part. However, +that matters less since they know enough to shoot at sight. + +"Furthermore, I don't know which of them are my enemies, or how many +there are, or in fact any dashed thing about them. Therefore--" + +At that point I fell fast asleep. My late night, the long morning in that +stirring air, and the excitement of two missed-by-a-hair's-breath +murders, had trundled me out again. The last wicket was down and the +innings over as I slept. The one bit of luck I did have was not setting +the bed on fire with my pipe. + +It was about three o'clock when I went up to my room. It was 6-10 when I +was awakened by a sharp click. I opened my eyes stupidly and looked all +round the room. There was absolutely nothing to be seen there. Then with +a strong presentiment I jumped up and tried to open the door. It was as I +suspected. I was locked in. + +My hand went to my hip pocket and found my revolver all right. They had +not ventured to try and get at that. Then I began to wonder why the key +had not been turned sooner. + +"Something has just happened to make them lock the door," I thought, and +thereupon I went to the window and looked out. + +My room faced right down the island, the north shore to the right--the +scene of all my adventures, the sheltered south shore to the left. +Craning my head to the left I could just spy a small vessel of the +trawler or drifter type lying close inshore. She seemed to be flying a +white flag--it might have been the white ensign at the distance. And then +I got a glimpse of three or four figures walking towards the house, and +one of these wore a white cap. + +"Now we shan't be long!" I said to myself. "But what the dickens does it +all mean?" + +About ten long minutes passed before I heard voices and footsteps on the +stairs. The lock clicked again, the door opened, and there stood a +square-shouldered man in dark blue, with three gold rings on his sleeve +and a familiarly firm mouth and pair of steady eyes. For an instant I +could scarcely believe my own eyes, and then I knew that it actually +was--of all people--my own cousin. Commander John P. N. Whiteclett, R.N., +whom I had last heard of two years before the war when he was on the East +Indies Station. And behind him I caught a glimpse of Jean Rendall. There +may have been others, but all I was conscious of was her eager face, the +eyes brighter than ever, and the lips a little parted in tense +excitement. + +My cousin Jack spoke first. + +"Good Lord, _you_ of all people, Roger!" + +"My dear Jack!" I cried, and then I checked myself and shut that door. + +"Well," said my cousin, with more candour than politeness, "I always +thought you would end in gaol, Roger, and you've had a dashed near squeak +this time, let me tell you. What new form of lunacy have you bust out +into?" His eye fell on my revolver. "And what are you doing with that +thing? If it's going to be suicide, let me fetch in a witness before you +begin. I hate being found alone with a body." + +"Is that your ship?" I demanded. + +"She's one of 'em. I'm boss of a few dozen of these floating palaces at +present. In fact we're a patrol and I've caught you red-handed on my own +beat, and what I want to know is what the devil are you doing on it? Not +trying to elope with that little bit of fluff, I hope, because I can +assure you she doesn't love you in the least, Roger." + +"You mean well, old thing," I said, "but you've guessed wrong as usual, +Jack. Take me to your ship, for the Lord's sake, and I'll tell you the +whole yarn there." + +"These good people probably expect a bit of explanation," he suggested. + +"The Rendalls? Not yet! Wait till you've heard everything yourself. Tell +'em then if you like--but I don't think you will." + +He looked at me curiously. + +"Well," said he, "let's be off then. Don't you even want to say +good-bye?" + +"I'll send them a Christmas card," I said. + +"What, after all the trouble they've taken to round you up?" + +"Do you mean to say they sent for you?" + +"Rather! Urgent wire." + +The prospect of facing my grim host and his disdainful daughter struck me +forcibly as less pleasing than ever. + +"Come on!" I said. "I'm going to bolt!" + +We went downstairs and out of the front door like a couple of burglars. +The Commander did not appear to relish this performance particularly, but +I went first and he had to keep pace with me. + +At the door we found the escort provided for me, and very surprised they +looked as they followed us to see their Commander so unaccountably +intimate with his captive; but fortunately there was no sign of the laird +or his daughter. I looked round me and felt sure I saw a well known slip +of a figure standing against the weather beaten wall of the old mansion, +gazing after us--with what sensations? I wondered very much. + +"When did they wire for you?" I asked. + +"Somewhere round about mid-day." + +"And what did they say?" + +"'They'?" repeated my cousin. "Why drag in the fair Miss Rendall? Her +father did the wiring. At least I presume so." + +"Assuming he did, what did he say?" + +"Suspicious stranger come to Ransay--gave incorrect account of +himself--that was the gist of it. Oh, he used the word 'urgent' I +remember." + +"Incorrect account? That was probably after they had picked the lock of +my drawer and had something to go upon." + +Again my cousin looked at me curiously. + +"This sounds interesting," he said, and quickened his stride. + +We reached a little unfrequented pier and jumped into the drifter's boat. +Sitting in the stern I looked over my shoulder with very mixed feeling at +the receding shores of the island of Ransay. It had baffled me, made a +fool of me, nearly murdered me; but after all it had saved my life when +the odds were a million to one against me, and it had crowded into that +life the four most exciting days and nights I had ever spent. + + + +XIII + +ON THE DRIFTER + + +My cousin led me into the small deck house that served as his cabin when +he was aboard. Through the windows we could see the afternoon gradually +fading into evening, and the western sky turn crimson as we ploughed our +way up winding sounds between the low-lying isles. + +He produced a flask and a couple of bottles of soda water, lit his pipe, +saw that door and windows were safely closed, and leaned over the table. + +"Now," said he, "how the devil did you get to this place? That's the +first question. They told me some yarn about a parachute, which I take it +was really a hair net or a lobster pot--" + +"It wasn't," I interrupted, "it was a parachute and I landed in it. +Do you mean to say you hadn't heard of my disappearance in a +runaway balloon?" + +"What!" he exclaimed. "Are you the same Merton? I noticed the name of +course, but do you mean to tell me they're giving away R.N. V.R. +commissions as promiscuously as all that?" + +"They give 'em to the pick of young England's manhood," I assured him. +"The idea is to make the Navy into a real live force, capable of +originality and enterprise." + +He grinned. + +"They've struck the originality all right," he admitted, "but, Lord, the +time that will be wasted court-martialling you fellows! However, let's +hear the whole yarn from the beginning." + +I began at the snapping of the cable and told him my adventures +faithfully down to the moment when he unlocked my bedroom door. He only +interrupted once or twice to get some point or other clear, and then when +I had finished he leaned back and looked at me hard across the table. + +"Roger," he said, "I've known you long enough and well enough to know +that you are not a deliberate liar, but I hope you'll forgive my saying +that this is a damned tough bullet to chew." + +"It sounds a tall order," I admitted, "but it's true." + +He filled his pipe thoughtfully. + +"I may as well tell you," he said in a moment, "that I am not at present +a very credulous person. From the moment this blessed war began and I got +this job, I have done little else than investigate spy legends, and I +have come to the deliberate conclusion that there is either a lot more +imagination in the world than any one has ever dreamt of, or that +mankind are chronic and inveterate liars. I haven't yet had the luck to +find one single true bill in any story I've investigated." + +"Your luck has turned now, Jack." + +"Possibly," he said slowly, "and mind you, Roger, there's no doubt +whatever that a devilish secret service system exists; or that it's being +used against us for all it's worth. Secret petrol bases for their +submarines, secret signallying from the shore, mine-laying by so-called +neutral ships; all that sort of thing is going on under our noses. I've +got several very shrewd suspicions and hope to bring off one or two +little discoveries not a thousand miles from this very spot. In fact, if +you had pitched on any one of three or four other islands for the scene +of your tale, or if what you'd seen had been just a little different I +wouldn't have questioned a word of your story. But Ransay is not one of +the suspected islands, and your friend in oilskins doesn't fit into +anything I happen to have heard from other sources." + +"Look here," I said, "what's the good of being cousins if we aren't +candid? Do you or don't you believe me?" + +John Whiteclett looked at me very steadily and spoke in his most +deliberate accents. + +"I believe that you believe every word of it. But I know you're an +imaginative fellow and I can see for myself already that at least three +quarters of your yarn can be explained away very easily." + +"Explain it." + +"Well, my dear fellow, just look at things for a moment from the point of +view of a perfectly innocent and loyal inhabitant of Ransay--the Rendalls +for instance. You appear on their shores absolutely mysteriously in the +dead of night, you admit yourself you lay yourself out to behave like a +thinly disguised Hun--d----d thinly too, apparently! You blow in from +nowhere on the doctor and talk with a German accent. You blow in on the +laird, begin talking with an accent and then drop it. You pitch him a +cock and bull yarn about being landed from a cruiser and wanting to hide +your uniform coat and so on. You conduct yourself like a criminal in +church and wander out at night. Naturally the Rendalls--and everybody +else--eye you strangely to your face and try to find out a little more +behind your back. Do you see?" + +"There's something certainly in all this," I had to admit. + +"Then they find your parachute--" + +"Who found it?" + +"I haven't asked that yet; but I shall of course. Anyhow it was found, +and as evidently you had hid it. One point discovered against you. Then +the Rendalls decide on stronger measures--and very rightly too, I think. +They open your drawer and find you never had a uniform coat at all. Most +wisely they then wire to me, and to keep you from bolting, lock you in +your room." + +"Dash it," said I, "I seem at least to have succeeded in providing them +with a devilish good excuse for every blessed thing they did!" + +"I don't honestly think you have left yourself with any grounds whatever +for suspecting the Rendalls of anything." + +"On the other hand, sending for you and having me arrested would be an +excellent way of getting rid of me when they were certain who I was--or +rather, wasn't." + +"And who did they make apparently certain you were not? A British +officer! That was the natural conclusion when they opened that drawer. +No, no, the Rendalls come out of it all right. Then let's take the +doctor. He looks at you suspiciously--as well he might." + +"Before I spoke!" I interjected. + +"And do you flatter yourself that your appearance, without a cap and in a +buttoned-up oilskin on a fine day, was reassuring?" + +"But the blind?" + +"Did you never see a blind come down with a run by mistake? There's a +blind in my smoking room at home that comes down like that whenever you +touch it. There's nothing against the doctor either--so far anyhow." + +"And his friend O'Brien?" + +"Ah, that's a different story. Mind you, you have shown me not a shred of +evidence against the fellow. Still, what's he doing there? That's a thing +I'm going to find out within the next four and twenty hours. But you +can't prove that he _did_ anything, and you can't suspect a man of +treason just because you don't like his looks. There are possibly +prejudiced people who don't like ours." + +"Wait till you see him." + +"I shall," said my cousin with an emphasis that hardly seemed to mean +what I meant. "As for the Scollay family--nothing against them whatever, +except that they live at a lonely spot on the shore, which I should say +was rather their misfortune than their fault." + +"And the old boy on the road, who, Miss Rendall declared, doesn't exist?" + +"How long did you give her to run over all the inhabitants of the island? +Did she look up a list of them, or a rent roll or anything?" + +"No," I admitted. "Still, she seemed very positive, and she lives in the +place and must know everybody. If she fibbed, that's certainly +suspicious. If she was correct, then I met some one in disguise." + +"Well," said he with an indulgent and extremely irritating smile, "I +shall enquire about that old gentleman too. But, frankly, I've no doubt +whatever that Miss Rendall simply forgot him when you asked her." + +"All the characters seem cleared except mine," I remarked. + +"Wait a bit, old chap. Now we'll come to the really suspicious things +that you actually did see. First, the man on the shore." + +"Can't he be explained away?" + +"Possibly," said Jack imperturbably, "but he needs a good deal more +explaining. You admit you became a bit light-headed soon afterwards." + +"I've thought of that explanation myself, but it won't wash when he or +one of his friends went for me on the shore." + +"Are you dead certain anybody did try to go for you? You admit you +saw nobody." + +"I saw that curved thing--like a scimitar." + +"But who on earth would be using a scimitar in these islands? And what a +futile way to use it--jabbing down at you from overhead!" + +"The point of it hit the rock hard enough." + +"You had only the sound to go by." + +"That's all," I admitted. + +"And you heard that in the dark." He shook his head, "My dear fellow! I +know you are telling me honestly what you _think_ happened, but to be +quite frank--" + +He broke off and shook his head again. + +"Well," said I, "that's explained away very happily. What I saw was only +something else and what I heard was something else too. You put the +alternatives so clearly, Jack, that one can't help being convinced. And +what about the shooting affair? I only heard a thingumabob and saw a +what-you-may-call-it, I suppose?" + +"My dear Roger, I only want to test the alternatives and see what _can't_ +be explained away. Have you ever been under fire before?" + +"No, but I've seen pictures of it in the illustrated papers." + +"Dash it, be serious!" said he. "You have no doubt whatever that somebody +blazed either at you or at something else from behind that wall?" + +"Or at something else? What do you mean?" + +"There weren't any duck about, or anything of that kind? I've known a +wild shot blaze both barrels within six inches of my own head and explain +he had never noticed me." + +"I was rather too preoccupied to notice whether there were any duck there +when he began," said I, "but unless they were deaf duck there certainly +wouldn't be any left after he'd loosed off his first bullet. Besides one +doesn't usually shoot duck with bullets." + +"One might with a rook rifle." + +"I admit that one might; also that a very excitable person might go on +shooting after the duck had gone. But do you really mean to tell me, +Jack, that that explanation satisfies you?" + +"I don't say that it does absolutely, and I quite admit that the +weakness of my explanations is that your story requires three of them; +none being perfectly satisfactory. However, it comes to this, that we +have narrowed the field down to three incidents that want a bit of +explanation. Everything else points as much one way as the other." + +"Which way?" + +"To your being mistaken for a spy yourself." + +A horried thought struck me. It was so horrid that it took a little pluck +to get it out. + +"In that case, supposing some patriotic individual had tried first to +stab and then to shoot me, for his country's sake?" + +"By Jove!" exclaimed my cousin and gazed thoughtfully into space for a +bit. Then he said, "That's possible, but it's a tall order too; and it +leaves out the man on the shore." + +I was visited by another horrid thought. + +"He might have been spy hunting!" + +"Well, in that case we can easily get on to his tracks. There will be no +point in his denying it. But would the conversation fit that theory?" + +I thought for a moment and then said with heart-felt relief, + +"No, it couldn't possibly." + +My cousin fell silent and stared into the thickening dusk. Then he looked +round with a start and said, + +"We're nearly in." + +We both went out on deck and saw at the head of the bay before us houses +and lights on shore and a church tower against the evening sky. + +"Well, Roger," said he, "I'll go into this business very carefully and +make the most thorough enquiry. Don't think I'm not keen on getting at +the bottom of it. You've got to get off at once and rejoin your ship +of course?" + +I said I must. + +"I tell you what I'll do," he went on; "of course we've got to lie very +low about this sort of thing, but I feel I owe you some account of what +happens. I'll write and let you know as soon as I have finished my +investigation." + +John Whiteclett was the best of fellows, shrewd and level-headed and a +first class officer, but somehow or other I felt small confidence in his +getting the better of the cunning foe on Ransay. However, it was all that +could be done now. My own part was finished and I had to confess I had +failed ignominiously. + + + +XIV + +MY COUSIN'S LETTER + + +Three weeks later I received this letter from my cousin: + +"My dear Roger, + +"As I promised I am sending you a chit to tell you the result of our +enquiry into the Ransay mystery. Of course you will understand that this +is strictly for your own eye and mustn't be talked about. + +"Well, I wanted to leave no stone unturned to get at the bottom of the +affair so we got up a pukka detective from London, a man named Bolton, +said to be a first class fellow at the job. He spent a solid week in the +island and seems to have poked his nose into pretty nearly every house +and spoken to pretty nearly every inhabitant from the laird down. Taking +a tip from your tale he posed as a cattle dealer (which is precisely what +he looks like) and of course he never let on that he knew of your +existence--or mine either. + +"The result of his enquiries is, firstly--nothing proved against anybody +and no evidence of anything fishy going on in the place. This last point +confirms my own experience, for, as I told you, I haven't yet been able +to associate this particular island with any of the suspicious ongoings +which undoubtedly are happening. + +"Secondly, your friend O'Brien turns out to be a gentleman with a failing +for liquor who was sent up by his relations in Ireland about six months +ago to live under Dr. Rendall's charge, there being no pubs in +Ransay--and many in the island he came from. I find that it is by no +means unusual to send thirsty souls to publess isles, and beyond the fact +that O'Brien came up very 'convanient' for this war and is pretty free +with his tongue on the subject of England's sins and shortcomings, there +is really nothing positive against the man. However we are running no +risks, and as we are God and Destiny rolled into one in these islands, we +gave Mr. O'Brien his marching orders and by this time he has presumably +either secured a drink at last or his friends have shut him up in some +teetotal paradise a little further from the scene of war. + +"Bolton's opinion is that O'Brien was without doubt the man who fired at +you, looking to the type of gentleman he is, and the fact that you ran +into him immediately afterwards, and especially the fact that he actually +does possess an old rook rifle. He thinks he may have done it out of +sheer Irish deviltry, you offering so convenient a target, just as they +pot landlords in his own happy country. A man can hardly have drunk as +heavily as he must have done without upsetting his brain a bit, and this +theory seems to me not at all unlikely. + +"Bolton thinks it hardly conceivable that O'B. can have had any +deliberate idea of getting rid of you, since it is certain that he wasn't +the man in oilskins you met the night you landed--or rather, dropped. He +can't have been _because he doesn't know a word of German_. We ought to +have thought of that clue ourselves. Bolton was on to it at once and +points out that it puts out of court the whole inhabitants of the island +except Miss Rendall who has a pretty good school-girl's knowledge of +German, and her father who has been abroad a lot and knows a bit of the +language. And apart from all other considerations, the man in oilskins +can't have been either of them owing to their height. Miss R. is too +short and Mr. R. too tall. + +"Assuming therefore that you weren't a bit light-headed or anything of +that kind (which, I am bound to say, Bolton thinks quite a likely +explanation), the man you met _must_ have landed from a submarine and +gone away again in her. Bolton feels positive on this point, and I must +say I agree with him. + +"The only remaining difficulty is the attack on the shore. Here Bolton +takes exactly the same line as I did when I questioned you. He thinks +that as you didn't actually see anybody, and as what you think you saw +and heard are so vague and indefinite and so difficult to fit into any +known method of murder, one can't really draw any conclusions, and he +quotes various cases he has known of people who fancied they were struck +or seized or fired at in the dark, when actually there was some other +explanation. + +"By the way, as to the old gentleman with tinted spectacles who asked for +a match, Bolton made enquiries of a number of people about the old men in +the island, and he even took the trouble to interview them all. None have +tinted spectacles and all deny having spoken with you. I am afraid that +this discovery made him a bit sceptical about some of the other +incidents. However he went into the whole thing very carefully indeed and +I think we can all feel satisfied that with the departure of Mr. O'Brien +the possibility of trouble within the island has been eliminated. Of +course the Lord only knows who may not land in the place by night, and +they may quite possibly have squared one or two of the natives to show a +light, or to keep their eyes shut, or help them in one way or another. +But that's rather a different story. + +"I am sorry I have nothing better to satisfy your dramatic soul, but hang +it, a fellow who flies from the middle of the North Sea in a balloon and +then drops through a fog and hits an island a few miles square, and +afterwards gets mistaken for a spy, and shot at and finally arrested, +oughtn't to complain! + +"Good luck to you. Keep out of balloons and don't part with that +revolver. + +"Yours ever, + +"J.P.N. WHITECLETT." + +And there for the present--and perhaps for ever--the story ends. I sat +down straight off and began to write out this full, true, and particular +account of the whole adventure, partly to keep my memory of everything +fresh, and partly because it strikes me as not half a bad yarn in itself. +Now that I have finished the job I must say that whether or no it will +convince anybody else, it makes me feel more certain than ever that more +has been going on in that island than met Mr. Bolton's eye. + +Professional detectives are no doubt very useful men at jobs they are +accustomed to and when pitted against the ordinary criminal. But these +war problems are quite new, and utterly different even from the German +secret service machinations in time of peace. And the men they are +opposed to are very extraordinary criminals indeed; they are a highly +trained, scientific force, as much a wing of the German fighting forces +as their air service or their submarines. + +What chance has a man who looks like a cattle-dealer against these +experts, especially when he is only in action for a week and starts with +the assumption that the few invaluable facts given him are mostly works +of imagination? Possibly he may have fluked upon the remedy by removing +O'Brien, and if the island of Ransay gives no more trouble for the rest +of this war, it will certainly look as though he had. But in that case he +will have been uncommon lucky, because he seems to me to have overlooked +or dismissed practically everything significant. + +Take, for instance, the actual words used by my oilskinned friend. They +most distinctly implied that he was living on shore. Take the incident of +the blind, which may perhaps have been, as John Whiteclett says, an +every-day accident, but which certainly happened in the house where the +one man they do suspect was living, and would certainly involve the +doctor if it were not a mere accident. Look at my security while I was +humbugging them by my suspicious conduct, and then the unscrupulous and +quickly repeated attempts to get rid of me after two things had +happened--my dropping of my accent at the Rendalls and the discovery of +the parachute. Take that night on the shore when Miss Rendall escorted me +armed with a pistol and her father joined her at the very place and the +very time when the attack was made on me. As to its being an imaginary +attack, my last doubts dissipated when I was fired at next day. + +Then as to the idea of Mr. O'Brien trying to shoot duck, or suddenly +being inspired by high-spirited homicidal mania, I simply decline to +accept such absurd interpretations. I am not in the least sure it was +he, to begin with. I feel convinced that more than one man is in it, +and which conspirator took which part, who can say on the little +evidence one has? + +Again, take Mr. Bolton's brilliant idea of enquiring who could speak +German. How did he enquire? Probably asked them! Is he a German scholar +himself? The odds are a thousand to one against it. Or take the +mysterious old man with the tinted spectacles. His appearance by that +roadside and subsequent disappearance into space is one of the oddest +features of the case. I have no doubt at all now that the wax match +enquiry was the beginning of a series of questions and answers which +would have proved me a fellow conspirator if I had only known them. They +probably became doubly suspicious of me from that moment and only waited +to make quite sure before going all out to kill me. And yet, Bolton by +coolly assuming I was a liar or a dreamer missed the entire significance +of the incident. + +But when it comes to asking myself honestly which people precisely I +suspect, and how I propose to separate the incidents which (I freely +admit) are perfectly consistent with the theory that I was genuinely +suspected myself, from the incidents which cannot be explained on those +grounds, and work out a water-tight case against anybody in particular, I +must confess that I am fairly beaten. I know that I don't want to suspect +that girl, though she did treat me like a member of a lower race and +scored off me badly at the end; and I do want to suspect O'Brien. By the +way, was he a real drunkard? I rather begin to wonder. + +And that is the very unsatisfactory end of the matter so far. + + + + +PART II + + + +I + +AN IDEA + + +I wish I had said that I felt sure my cousin's letter was not the last of +the business on Ransay. One would like to be the only correct prophet +this war has produced. It was not the end by any manner of means, as I +learned within two days of finishing that last chapter. I wrote it, and +the two or three before it, in the convalescent hospital at Winterdean +Hall, finishing it, I remember, on a Wednesday; and I picked up the scent +again on the very Friday following. + +I had been laid out in an insignificant North Sea scrap, but though the +scrap was small the wounds were unpleasant and I was still rather glad to +lie easy in a moveable summerhouse on the terrace. I was well on the mend +but had walked a little too far that morning and there I lay stretched +half asleep in a deck chair, out of the wind and basking in the sun. It +was the end of the first week in February, but the day was mild as milk +and in my overcoat I felt positively hot. Rooks were cawing over the +winter woodlands below the terrace, a faint, restful line of blue hills +rose far away beyond, and a gorgeous peacock was strolling sedately on +the lawn. I was utterly content to lie there and doze, when I heard a +familiar voice. + +"Right! I see where he is, thank you," it said. + +"Jack Whiteclett!" I said to myself. + +It was always pleasant to see Jack, but at that moment a bore to be +disturbed. Little did I guess how thorough and final that disturbance was +going to be. + +He appeared in the open door of my shelter, keen eyes, blue serge, three +rings, and all complete. I expected a jibe at my beard, but evidently I +struck him too sorry an object for mirth. + +"Well, old chap," said he, "you've earned a rest and I'm glad to see +you're taking it." + +This from Jack was subtily flattering and I did my best to look the +wounded hero. + +"Where did they get you?" he asked. + +"In my beard," said I, "left side of the jaw. Also right ankle and a +souvenir under the ribs." + +"Lame?" + +"Still a little, but improving." + +"The beard is quite becoming," he observed. + +"Look at it well then while you have the chance for they say they'll let +me shave it in a week." + +"You're well on the mend then?" + +"Thank the Lord." + +"Then I needn't give you any more sympathy. Congratulations instead." + +"On getting a bit of Blighty?" + +"On getting a bit of ribbon." + +I opened my eyes, for this was the first I had heard of it. + +"It isn't out yet," said he, "but I believe it's to be your doom. +Somebody has presumably bribed some one at the Admiralty. Uncle Francis +tipped me the wink. You've evidently quite made your peace there, Roger, +so congratulations again." + +This hint of a decoration was gratifying enough, and to hear, on top of +it, his assurance that my dear old uncle had really opened his heart +again nearly upset me disgracefully. I was evidently still a little +weaker than I realised. However, Jack was tact itself and the talk turned +to every-day matters. + +He had been sitting beside me for some little time discussing the war, +the world, and the devil, before it began to strike me as quite +remarkably kind, even for so good a fellow as Jack Whiteclett, to come so +far out of his way to look me up. His own wife was at Portsmouth last I +heard of her, all his other interests were in London, and yet here he +was looking up a cousin in a hospital a couple of hundred miles away from +either place. + +"By the way, how long have you got?" I asked. + +"A week." + +I sat up in my deck chair. + +"Only a week! I say this is extraordinarily good of you to come down here +and see me." + +"Oh, I wanted to see how heroes bear their wounds," he smiled, but I felt +certain there was something more left unsaid. + +"Jack, old chap, what's up? I see in your eye there's something else." + +He hesitated a moment and then said, + +"There was, but I'm not going to bother you with it now. I didn't know +how fit you might be." + +Naturally I made him go on. + +"Would it worry you if I were to yarn a little about that adventure of +yours in Ransay?" he asked. + +"Worry me! I've been thinking of little else since I came to this restful +place. In fact I've been finishing off a full, true, and particular +account of the adventure. Any further news?" + +His mouth grew compressed and a frown settled over his eyes. + +"Nothing definite, except that the infernal island has been worrying me a +lot lately. You were quite right, Roger, and I withdraw my last doubt +with many apologies. Something is very far wrong in that place. +Submarines have been seen for certain two or three times, and signals on +shore, and the devil knows all what. But we can't find a clue or a trace +of anything to lay our hands on!" + +"And all this is since O'Brien left?" + +He nodded. + +"Yes. If he were in it you were quite right in suspecting a gang. If he +wasn't, then the fellow, or fellows, are still there. I am quite certain +now, Roger, that you were absolutely right. Some one is actually living +in that comparatively small island, and working a lot of mischief, and we +haven't even the foggiest notion who to suspect." + +"Have you applied to Mr. Bolton?" I asked a little maliciously. + +"Damn Mr. Bolton! The fellow botched the whole business. He lost the +scent while it was still warm, and now it's as cold as mutton and one has +to begin all over again! I wanted badly to have a yarn with you about it, +Roger. You may have some ideas. Bolton had none and I have none." + +"Are you allowed to tell me exactly what has been seen?" + +"I am not allowed, but I can tell you, if you won't repeat anything." + +And so I may not go into particulars in this narrative. However, that +makes no difference, for beyond indicating that the northwest end, out +by the Scollays' farm, and the barren uninhabited tip of the island +beyond, was the danger zone, these particulars gave no clue and suggested +no fresh idea. Of course they naturally suggested people living in that +vicinity, and yet this was far from inevitable because that coast was the +best for the enemy's purpose, and his friend or friends on shore might +come some considerable distance to get in touch with him. In fact, it +would be a pretty obvious precaution to live as far from the scene of +actual operations as possible; though equally obviously it would be a +less convenient arrangement. + +As for the precautions which Whiteclett was able to take, all that I am +permitted to say about them is that, instead of the amateur coast patrol +arrangement in vogue when I was there, a few men from a certain unit were +put on to the job instead. But my cousin had no control over this, and as +he alone realised--in fact, could realise--the peculiar danger on this +particular island. The number of men spared for Ransay was very small +(you could count them on one hand with something over) and they were but +ordinary honest members of this unit at that--not experts at the game. +Consequently he was a little doubtful whether the safeguard was any +better than before. + +Well, we talked the whole thing over and over again, and I honestly +could suggest nothing to add to what I had told him before. And then I +asked him, + +"Have you yourself seen no cause whatever to suspect any one? Nothing +happened--even a very little thing?" + +He began to shake his head, and then said, + +"Well, there was just one thing that made me suspicious for a moment, but +then I came to the conclusion that my suspicious wouldn't hold water. A +short time ago Dr. Rendall came in to see me and begged for leave to keep +another drunk--what he called an alcoholic patient. He said he had heard +of a man whose friends wanted to send him up to him, and offered to give +me all sorts of guarantees of his honesty, et cetera, et cetera. I +gathered that the doctor must be pretty hard up and this patient would +make all the difference to him. In fact he practically told me so." + +"Of course you said no?" + +"I was sympathetic but told him I was afraid it was no good. I didn't +want to seem too sharp with him, just in case he might be a wrong 'un and +would be the better of a little show of guilelessness. Of course I let +him know later he couldn't have the fellow. But honestly, Roger, I can't +think there was really anything suspicious in his request. In the first +place the trouble is going on without his inebriate. In the second +place, the request would be too bareface if he meant mischief." + +"Still," I said, "it shows the man is hard up. Suppose he has been +tempted?" + +"In that case we must also suppose he has fallen and pocketed a bribe; +and then he wouldn't be hard up any more." + +"One doesn't know his difficulties. He might require a lot to cover them, +and be in need of a fresh cheque now. And there's one thing, Jack, that +has made me wonder sometimes. He is a cut above the ordinary local doctor +in such a place. What's he doing there?" + +"Well," said my cousin after a moment's thought, "the problem in my mind +always comes back to this, that we are never likely to get much forrader +until we can station a spy of our own in the place to watch what's going +on. And how can one possibly manage that without giving away who the +watcher is? If they know who he is, he will find out nothing, and +probably have his throat cut. That's the difficulty." + +I said nothing for a moment. A brilliant idea was beginning to dawn +upon my mind. + +"Nothing to suggest?" he asked. + +"I suppose," I said, thinking hard, "that if you had wanted to, you could +have let Dr. Rendall have that man?" + +My cousin stared at me. + +"I shouldn't take the responsibility myself, but I daresay if I were +lunatic enough to back him up, the powers that be might agree." + +"Jack!" I exclaimed, "I'll be the alcoholic patient!" + +For a moment I thought my cousin's eyes were going to start out of his +head. Then they subsided and a grin began to steal over his face instead. + +"By Gad!" he murmured. + +"I'm the very man for the job! I've actually spoken to at least one of +the gang in that island, apart from the old chap with spectacles. I know +the ropes, so far as they are knowable. In fact I've a kind of +prescriptive right to the job." + +He nodded. + +"I quite admit that you have; also that I'd sooner have you there than +anyone else. Looking back, I think you had a most sporting try last time, +and I must say it seems to me that only some devilish bit of bad luck +prevented you from bringing it off. Though what actually the bit of bad +luck was has often puzzled me. But then," he added, "you aren't the +fellow he wants." + +"One drunk is as good as another so long as he pays the fee." + +"But supposing, for the sake of argument, he had some reason for wanting +this other man. Would he take you in that case?" + +"He must or he'd give himself away!" + +"True for you, Roger. But how are we going to open negotiations without +arousing suspicion? One might as well face all the difficulties." + +"Oh, we can easily fix that up," said I. "My guardians will write and say +they have heard of his excellent system, et cetera, and have hopes of +making arrangements with the naval authorities, and so on. There will be +no difficulty at all so far as that part goes." + +"But, my dear chap, when you'd got there they'd spot you." + +"With this beard--dyed black?" I cried, as inspiration trod on +inspiration's heels. "And a pair of gold-rimmed glasses, and this +limp--which will hide even my walk, and a complete change of clothes; +who will spot me? Remember I was only there for a very few days six +months ago." + +"Your voice?" + +"I only spoke in my natural voice to the two Rendalls; never to the +doctor; in fact I've only met him once." + +"But his cousins saw a good deal of you." + +"I haven't been on the stage for nothing," I assured him. "I'll change my +voice very little, not enough to make it difficult to keep up--throw in a +lisp or something of that kind. You can trust me to do the thing +thoroughly, Jack." + +My cousin looked at me carefully. + +"Yes," he admitted, "I think you are changed enough already to puzzle +'em; and with your beard dyed black--by the way, don't forget to dye +your hair too, old chap!--and glasses, et cetera, by jingo I do believe +you'll pass!" + +"Now the thing is how to get permission: first, leave for me, and second, +leave to land an alcoholic on the island. What about Uncle Francis--could +he pull any strings for us? And will he if he can?" + +"The very man!" said Jack, "if he really will take the thing up. He's in +it with the best kind of big-wig for our purpose. And I rather think the +idea might appeal to his sense of humour. Anyhow, I'll see him to-night +when I get back to town, and failing him I'll try some one else." + +And that was the abrupt end of those restful days, dozing in a deck chair +listening to the cawing rooks at Winterdean Hall Convalescent Hospital. + + + +II + +A LITTLE DINNER + + +On the Tuesday evening, just four days later, I hobbled up the steps of +my Uncle's club and put the same question I had so often put before to +the same sleek benignant hall porter. + +"Sir Francis Merton?" + +He was as benignant as ever, but he handed me over to an attractive war +worker with a detached air that showed he was quite unconscious of ever +having seen me before. For an instant I was chilled, and then I realised +the happiness of the omen. If my beard alone so changed me, there would +be no fear of recognition when art had reinforced nature. + +The only other guest had already arrived:--Commander John Whiteclett. My +uncle was talking to him confidentially before the fire, and at the sight +of that familiar upstanding figure with the dominating nose above the +determined mouth and the fresh complexion and snow-white hair and genial +eyes, all just the same as ever, I felt a sudden sense of confidence in +the issue of my adventure. With such an ally at my back, the chances of +failure seemed almost negligible. + +"Well, Roger," he cried in his bluff strong voice (though I noticed it +was discreetly lowered while there was any one within earshot), "I hear +you've taken to liquor so badly that your friends have got to remove you +from society! We always did think it would come to something of this +kind; eh, Jack?" + +"He always was a bad egg, sir," said my cousin. "I don't mind betting he +hasn't brushed his beard." + +"And that limp!" added Sir Francis. "Gad, I believe he's been kicked +downstairs by an indignant husband!" + +However, he pressed my arm as he laughed, and it was not a +critical pressure. + +"I can't shave owing to my shaky hand," I explained, "and the limp is +port in the big toe." + +"Port?" exclaimed my uncle. "No, no, my dear fellow, it's whisky +poisoning you suffer from. You began in secret in your sixteenth year and +have been a trouble to your friends since you were twenty-one. However, +I've got all the particulars written out for you, and mind you get 'em +into your head and don't contradict yourself or me when you go to live +with that doctor fellow." + +Jack winked at me from the shelter of our respected uncle's back and I +hid a responsive smile. With all his virtues, Sir Francis Merton had +never been fond of playing second fiddle, and this masterful seizure of +our scheme and dictation of all the details was exceedingly +characteristic. At the same time he was as shrewd as he was peremptory +and I felt satisfied his details would be sound. + +"It's all right so long as he doesn't insist on disguising himself too +and coming with me," I whispered to Jack as we went into dinner. + +"What I'm afraid of is that he'll go _instead_ of you!" said Jack. "I +never saw him keener about an idea." + +We dined at a corner table whence we could see at once if any one +approached too near, and I think my uncle must have arranged that neither +of the nearest tables should he occupied; so he was able to get to work +with the soup. + +"I've arranged everything, Roger," he said, "you are on furlough so long +as this job lasts. No questions will be asked and you'll have a free +hand. Only of course Jack will always keep an eye on you, and I shall be +able to advise both of you according to circumstances." + +Jack winked again hurriedly, and said with as much deference as though he +were speaking to an Admiral, + +"That's very good of you, sir. I shall keep you in touch with the +situation, for I take it it will be safer for Roger not to write more +letters than necessary." + +I glanced my thanks at him, and our Uncle, after frowning for a moment +dubiously, agreed that he feared he must be content with hearing from the +Commander only. + +"But there will be no harm in my writing to you, Roger, now and +then," he added. + +"No harm at all," I agreed. + +"Well then," continued our host, "we come to the specific arrangements. +Only two persons at the Admiralty know of this scheme, but they are quite +powerful enough to get you into this island of yours all right. Of course +people who happen to hear of it may open their eyes a bit and talk of the +slackness of our Naval Authorities, and it will do no harm, Jack, if you +damn them a bit yourself--confidentially, you know, in case any one asks +you how the devil this drunken fellow here has got into the place." + +"If I simply give 'em my candid opinion of the drunken fellow's +character," said Jack, "no one will dream for an instant we're supposed +to be friends." + +"They may guess we're near relations however, old fellow," I suggested. + +Sir Francis guffawed. + +"I wonder if Roger will be as witty after a few weeks teetotal diet?" he +chuckled. "Mind you, Roger, you've got to play the game properly. No +bringing a flask in your baggage or any humbug of that sort!" + +"Don't you think an occasional relapse would add a touch of realism?" I +suggested. + +"Oh, if you can find liquor in the place, relapse by all means, so long +as you don't give yourself away in your cups. But you've got to arrive +without bottle, flask, or cup in your possession." + +"It might be rather a happy touch, sir, if I were to go round sponging +for drinks." + +My uncle's earnestness was delightful. At this suggestion he put on his +spectacles, and drew a paper from his pocket. + +"Let me see," said he. "Here are a few directions given me by my own +doctor, Sir James Macpherson. I had to give him some inkling of what I +was after, but he is sworn to secrecy. Hum--No, Roger, you are trying +religiously to cure yourself, and only very occasionally must the craving +so far overcome you that you actually endeavour to secure alcoholic +refreshment, as Sir James calls it. No promiscuous sponging, my boy, but +a sponge now and then at considerable intervals might be advisable." + +There was an interval of general conversation while one course succeeded +another, and then Sir Francis resumed his instructions. + +"With the help of a few tips from Sir James and my friends at the +Admiralty, I have worked out the scheme very carefully, and I must beg +you to get every detail most firmly into your head, Roger. Mind you, +these poisonous fellows won't hesitate to stick a knife or a bullet into +you, if they have the least suspicion of you. You know that as well as I +do, and I don't want you to go and throw your life away, my boy." + +I felt half inclined to smile, and half to do something more sentimental. +He was such a dictatorial boss, and yet such a dear old fellow. + +"I assure you I set more value on my life even than my friends +do," I said. + +"Well then get these instructions off by heart--and don't forget one of +them! I'll give you the paper to take away with you to-night, but +meanwhile here are the principal points. In the first place, your name is +Hobhouse--Thomas Sylvester Hobhouse." + +I saw he was very pleased with this selection and asked tactfully, + +"How did you manage to choose such excellent names, Uncle Francis?" + +"I chose one name from the Red Book, another from the Peerage, and +another from the Clerical Directory, so that one gets--er--a more natural +and lifelike combination in that way; and yet avoids a real name. I think +Thomas came from the Clerical directory--or was it the Peerage? Well, no +matter, that's your name." + +"And my occupation?" + +"None: it saves prevarication and confusion. You've always been +an idle dog, Roger, so I think 'a gentleman of no occupation' will +be a sufficiently correct description. You are very well connected +by the way." + +"I am aware of it," I said, with a polite bow to my uncle and cousin. + +But my uncle had grown too serious to appreciate such small change of +conversation. + +"Your relatives," he continued, "are in such high positions that they are +entitled to ask Dr. Rendall not to make any indiscreet enquiries of his +patient regarding his family, and also to appeal with success to a +certain influential gentleman in the Government for permission to dump +you in these prohibited islands. You, of course, know nothing of these +steps. You have just recovered from a severe attack of _delirium +tremens_--" + +"My dear uncle!" I gasped, "is that Sir James's idea?" + +"It is putting into definite terms what he obviously suggested. Under +those circumstances you naturally know nothing of what your friends have +been doing on your behalf. Dr. Rendall being informed of all these facts +will of course refrain from putting awkward questions, the answers to +which you might forget, even if I composed them for you." + +"And how did my relatives hear of Dr. Rendall and the island of Ransay?" +I enquired. + +"I have thought over that point very carefully, Roger, and I think the +best plan will be to take Sir James a little more into my confidence and +get him to write a personal letter to Dr. Rendall. He will do it if I +assure him it is for his country's sake, and his name will lull all +suspicions." + +My cousin and I thoroughly agreed with this last suggestion. In fact we +found little fault with any part of the programme dictated to us, except +the _delirium tremens_. Even Jack, though he itched to see me thus +labelled, agreed with me that a less definite form of drunkenness would +be safer, and finally Sir Francis decided to substitute "an alcoholic +breakdown." + +As for the rest of my instructions, I made one or two mental +reservations. For instance, if Dr. Rendall himself was mixed up in the +affair, he would scarcely refrain from putting questions to find out all +about his guest; but I felt I need scarcely trouble my worthy uncle to +compose the replies before hand. + +I remember that little dinner very vividly. As it chanced it was my one +glimpse of the old life of town and clubland and everything that goes +with evening dress, seen just for that brief evening between months of +mine-dodging and blizzard-facing in the North Sea followed by a hospital +bed, and the lonely tempestuous isle of Ransay. The white napery, the +gleam of glasses, the shaded electric lamps, the blazing fire, and the +lofty soft-carpeted room left an impression that stayed with me for +many a month to come. And in an easy chair after dinner, smoking the +special cigar that my uncle conscientiously recommended and sipping the +ancient cognac he advised, I should have been perfectly willing to +listen to him had he suggested pushing me into a soft shore billet and +letting some other poor devil grow a beard and hunt for spies in +northern gales instead. + +But he was not that sort of uncle. + +"It's the chance of your life, Roger," he said. "By Gad, I wish I were +young enough to take on the job myself. But you'll do the family credit +I'm sure--if you only remember that this business requires discretion and +caution quite as much as daring and resource!" + +"Hear, hear!" said Jack. "Put that in your pipe and smoke it +thoroughly, Roger." + +"Whatever you do, don't trust one living soul in that place! The +unlikeliest person may prove to be up to the neck in the business." + +"Or only up to the ankles, yet they may give you away to some one else," +added my cousin. + +"And _a propos_ of ankles," said my uncle, who was a confirmed bachelor, +"Beware of women most of all! Never trust a secret to a woman, +Roger--never!" + +"There are none to confide in," I assured him, "except Miss Rendall--and +she is one of the suspected; whatever Jack's gallantry may say." + +"My gallantry is a thing of the past," said Jack, "I suspect everybody in +that d----d place. And I'd advise you to do the same." + +"Everybody!" echoed Sir Francis. "And confide in no one." + +The evening came to an end at last, and with a sigh I left that +comfortable smoking room. As I passed out into the hall, however, my +uncle took my arm and made one brief but comforting speech in my ear. + +"Don't worry about money matters, Roger, old fellow. Of course I'm paying +the doctor's fee, and if you ever need anything more just let me know. If +you bring this off--" + +He did not finish his sentence but pressed my arm and gave me a nod +and a smile. + + + +III + +THE ALCOHOLIC PATIENT + + +On a raw grey February morning Mr. Thomas Sylvester Hobhouse bade a +polite farewell to the medical gentlemen who had escorted him thus far, +and stepped aboard the little steamer sailing from a certain small and +ancient port out into the northern isles of that archipelago. This +medical escort was a typical instance of my uncle's relentless +thoroughness. He was not in the secret, and so all the way from Euston to +those remote islands I had to endure the ordeal of sitting under the eye +of a conscientious middle-aged gentleman with a strong Yorkshire accent +and but one idea in his head:--to keep in readiness to seize me at each +station in case I leapt out of the carriage and headed for the +refreshment rooms. We parted, I think, with equal relief on either side. + +Under a heavy sky and a chilly wind we steamed through divers waterways, +touched at divers islands, and shipped and unshipped many cattle. At +last, when it had turned afternoon and the wind was beginning to feel wet +as well as chilly, Thomas Sylvester stepped ashore on the modest pier at +Ransay. Already he had noted from the deck his prospective host, pipe in +mouth and hands in his knickerbocker pockets among a small knot of +inhabitants, but to his relief there were no other familiar faces. + +"Let me be firmly established as Mr. Hobhouse, the doctor's new paying +guest, before they look at me too closely!" he said to himself. + +In the doctor's blue eyes there was not a sign of recognition or +suspicion. I noticed again his habit of glancing at one askance which had +raised my ready suspicions last time we had met, but apart from that his +greeting was cordial and pleasant enough. + +"I've only got an open trap, Mr. Hobhouse," he said, "and it's a three +mile drive. I hope you have got a warm coat." + +Mr. Hobhouse, I may mention, was a gentleman with an extremely polite, +nervously effusive manner, who always agreed with everybody and blinked a +little as he looked at them with apologetic friendliness through his +gold-rimmed glasses. Those who have seen that sprightly comedy "Heels Up" +may perhaps remember the not unsuccessful character of Sir Douglas +Jenkinson Bart (played by Mr. Roger Merton). Mr. Thomas Sylvester +Hobhouse would have reminded them of Sir Douglas forcibly. + +"Oh yes, doctor, a beautifully warm coat; you needn't worry about me at +all. I shall be very comfortable--very comfortable indeed, thank you," +Mr. Hobhouse assured him. + +Dr. Rendall eyed his patient again, and there seemed to be a gleam of +satisfaction in his glance, as though this were the kind of polite, +acquiescent gentleman he liked. + +There was a weary delay in getting my baggage out of the hold, and the +February afternoon had grown greyer by the time we started in the +doctor's pony trap. As the road was heavy with mud and covered with +patches of loose metal every here and there, those three miles proved the +longest I have ever driven. By this time the wind was sweeping clouds of +fine rain into our faces, and seen through this driving vapour the island +looked another place from the Ransay of summer time. The flowers were +gone, and the corn, and even the greenness of the grass, which now was of +a pale yellowish-olive hue; and I thought that a nakeder, more +inhospitable looking spot surely man had never visited. + +Under such circumstances we talked little; the doctor only making a +remark now and then in a dutiful way, and Mr. Hobhouse effusively +agreeing with him. That gentleman was quite content to postpone his +enquiries until he had got a little warmer and drier, and at times he +even felt acute anxiety lest the bleak house that loomed ahead, visible +afar over the treeless country, was actually moving away from them. They +seemed to approach it so slowly. + +Evening was near at hand when Mr. Hobhouse entered his teetotal haven, +and his effusiveness was quite sincere as he rubbed his hands over a +blazing fire in the doctor's smoking room, and still sincerer when he +faced an excellent high tea. + +The conversation naturally turned on the war, and Thomas Sylvester showed +an anxiety to learn his host's opinions and an enthusiastic agreement +with each one of them that seemed to please the doctor. He became more +and more talkative and genial, but though his guest mentally went through +his words with a tooth-comb as he uttered them, he had to confess at the +end of a chatty hour that the doctor exhibited neither any special +knowledge of military and naval affairs, nor any lack of zeal for the +cause of his country. + +"No treason so far!" said Thomas to himself. + +Then with what he flattered himself was the art which conceals art, Mr. +Hobhouse brought the conversation round to the subject of the doctor +himself and his household. He enthusiastically assured his host that each +arrangement he mentioned was the best imaginable--from the doctor's being +a bachelor to his having no hot water laid on in the bathroom but large +cans brought when necessary. And presently he blinked more amiably than +ever and enquired, + +"And do you often have--er--guests, doctor; guests such as myself?" + +The doctor's geniality seemed suddenly to contract a little. + +"Occasionally," he said briefly. + +"Quite so," agreed Mr. Hobhouse. "Too often would be a great nuisance. +Occasionally--yes, yes, that must be much pleasanter. Just when you feel +inclined; I see. And I hope you get decent fellows as a rule, doctor. It +would be very unpleasant otherwise." + +"It is," said Dr. Rendall with distinct emphasis. + +"I trust _I_ won't be a nuisance," said Mr. Hobhouse anxiously. + +"Oh, no, no," said the doctor hurriedly, "I was thinking of--" + +He broke off, and his amiable guest tactfully changed the subject. A +little later, with what he hoped was equal tact, he returned to it again. +Assuring the doctor of his anxiety to give no trouble, he said, + +"I'll do just as the last fellow did. You just put me into his shoes, +doctor, and then you'll always know where you are." + +There was no doubt about the oddness of the glance which Dr. Rendall shot +at his guest this time. His answer was a murmur that might have meant +anything. Mr. Hobhouse innocently rattled on. + +"I presume he fitted into your ways all right and so will I if you tell +me first what--er--you did mention his name--or didn't you?" + +"O'Brien," said the doctor. + +"O'Brien?" repeated Mr. Hobhouse with a distinct air of distaste for so +mild a gentleman. + +The doctor looked at him quickly. + +"Do you know him?" he asked sharply. + +"Oh, no, no! Oh dear me, no! It's only that I have a very foolish and +very stupid prejudice against Irishmen--as I presume he was." + +Mr. Hobhouse laughed pleasantly, and inwardly he laughed still more +pleasantly, for his shot came off. + +"So have I," agreed the doctor, and there was no doubt that he was +in earnest. + +Mr. Hobhouse decided that he had probed the matter sufficiently for the +present, and with what he was now beginning to consider his usual tact he +changed the subject. + +Before they parted that night he could not resist one touch of art +despite the counsels of Sir Francis. + +"Before we go to bed, doctor," he said, with his most ingratiating smile, +"do you think one little drop would do us any harm? I feel as though I +might have a little cold coming on--" + +But the doctor was shaking his head, kindly but firmly. + +"Well, well, better not; I quite agree with you, doctor," gushed his +guest. "Good-night, doctor. Good-night!" + +"I wonder if the doctor ever had such a blinkin' ass in his house +before!" said the amiable gentleman to himself as he shut his bed-room +door behind him. + +Looking at myself in the glass with a kind of chastened complacence, I +decided that the man who could perceive in Mr. Hobhouse any reminiscence +of the mysterious young stranger of six months ago would have a +singularly piercing eye. At the same time it was a sobering experience to +gaze at that black-bearded gentleman, with his hair parted in the middle +and brushed low down over his forehead, and his foolish looking +pince-nezs, and reflect that there was no artificial difference between +him and the vanished Roger Merton save those eye-glasses and a little +hair dye. That was my own face, and my own hair, and, I presumed, my own +natural latent idiocy blinking behind those glasses. I turned away from +the mirror with mingled feelings. + +As the hour was not late (early to bed being part of the cure), I put on +my dressing gown and sat down to smoke and chew the cud of my evening's +conversation with Dr. Rendall. The more I saw of him, the more favourably +on the whole the man impressed me. He was a gentleman and seemed a good +fellow. Being a bachelor with outdoor tastes and an easygoing +disposition, it was not at all impossible to understand his choosing the +estate of his family to settle down on, isolated though it was. Certainly +one could not honestly charge it against him as a suspicious +circumstance. + +By far the most interesting discovery was his obvious dislike to Mr. +O'Brien. Not once but several times he had shown it in the course of our +talk. He conveyed the suggestion moreover that the man had oppressed him +in some way and that it was a relief to have got rid of him. In view of +the fact that he had been so anxious to secure another resident patient, +this seemed a little odd, and a theory began to take shape in my mind. +Supposing O'Brien had in some way induced the doctor unwillingly to abet +a treasonable scheme, that would account for his feelings very well, +especially looking to O'Brien's unpleasing personality. But on the other +hand, events had made it clear that treason was going on without O'Brien, +so how could the doctor have got clear of it? And if he were still in it, +this theory of his relations to his late patient was manifestly weak. + +"To bed!" said Thomas Sylvester to himself, after an hour of these +reflections. "You are theorizing too soon." + +In the morning he was up betimes and downstairs a good ten minutes +before he knew the doctor was likely to appear. Into the smoking room +he went, shut the door carefully behind him, and made for the window. A +grey and windy prospect met his eyes, but they scarcely glanced at it. +Mr. Hobhouse had something else to think of. Twice or thrice he pulled +the blind up and down, and minutely examined the string and the little +brass pulley. + +"That blind certainly does not come down at a touch," he said to himself, +"and there is not a sign of its having been repaired within the last few +years. Therefore it did not drop accidentally six months ago." + + + +IV + +THE TEST + + +That afternoon, as the weather had cleared somewhat, Dr. Rendall +proposed walking over to his cousin's house and presenting Mr. Hobhouse +to the laird and his daughter. This ordeal had to be undergone sooner or +later, so I decided I had better fall in with his suggestion and get it +over at once. Besides, it was an obvious part of my programme to make a +great deal of outdoor exercise a principal feature of Mr. Hobhouse's +cure, and I felt bound to agree at once with any proposal to take a +walk. We had taken the precaution, by the way, of telling the doctor +beforehand of my limp (caused by a motoring accident when I was at the +wheel in a condition I should not have been in) and assuring him that +the surgeon encouraged exercise to complete the cure. So off we set for +the "big house." + +On the way the doctor gave his guest a certain amount of general +information concerning the people they were going to meet, but as Mr. +Hobhouse happened to know it already, it need not be chronicled here. + +As the pair approached the weather beaten old mansion, looking now in +its true setting against the wintry sky, Thomas Sylvester became acutely +conscious of the return of a familiar sensation. It was, in fact, +precisely the sensation which one Roger Merton had enjoyed when waiting +for his cue to step from dim obscurity into the flare of the footlights +on the first night of a new drama. Would his old acquaintances accept Mr. +Hobhouse without question as an entire stranger? If he spied so much as +one suspicious questioning glance, his whole scheme was exploded. + +We were shown into the drawing room, and to my great relief Mr. Rendall +was the first to appear, for I felt I could stand the scrutiny of Jean's +bright eyes a deal more readily if I had once got into the swing of talk +with her father. In his eye there was certainly no trace of question. +With his dry and formidable courtesy he greeted Mr. Hobhouse and in a +minute or two they were talking away in that friendly fashion which Mr. +Hobhouse was pleased to notice people fell into very readily with him. +And small wonder, for the creature was so grossly affable, and (if I say +it myself) so infernally plausible. + +His great hobby, it appeared, was antiquarian research, and though he let +slip a few remarks that showed he was well versed in his subject, his +role, as usual, was that of the flatteringly eager enquirer. Needless to +say, his learning had been acquired by diligent application within the +last week, and that it had a very definite object behind it. The laird +had but a smattering of the subject, but being an intelligent, well-read +man, he was quite able to discuss Mr. Hobhouse's favourite pursuit, so +that when his daughter entered the room she found herself in an +atmosphere as little reminiscent of the mysterious stranger as it was +possible to create in the time. + +All the same, it was an anxious moment when Jean's eyes first fell upon +him, and he heaved a deep sigh of relief when he saw not a spark of +recognition in them. On his part, Thomas Sylvester was scrupulously +careful to avoid the least resemblance to the conduct of the mysterious +Merton, even in the smallest point. There was no assurance, no tribute of +attention and consciousness of her presence, such as a girl as charming +as Miss Rendall has the right to expect from every man with an eye in his +head; and which I must confess the mysterious stranger used to pay her, +for all her dislike to him. Mr. Hobhouse of course was dreadfully polite, +but seemed a little shy of the sex, and after a few commonplaces on +either side, she turned to her cousin and he to his host. + +Tea was brought in, and the party chatted away as amicably as any party +of four in the kingdom. Thomas had found his tea party legs by this time +and quite enjoyed the situation. Mr. Rendall impressed him much more +favourably than he had impressed Roger Merton. The grimness seemed to +fall off the man when one got him going in talk and a vein of kindliness +opened instead. + +"I'm dashed if there seems to be anything suspicious in anybody this +time!" said Mr. Hobhouse to himself rather disconsolately. + +He had hardly made this reflection when he happened to glance at Jean. +This as a matter of fact had happened several times previously. For one +thing she was looking a picture, and for another the alcoholic visitor +liked to reassure himself at intervals that she was still without shadow +of suspicion. And each time he had felt perfectly reassured. + +But this time he was conscious of a sudden thrill of certainty that Miss +Rendall had been covertly studying him, and that now (though her eyes +turned away instantly) she had some new food for thought. Instantly he +asked for another cup of tea and blinked at her benignantly as their eyes +met. Did he actually read in hers confirmation of his first instinctive +feeling, or was it only a too quick imagination? Mr. Hobhouse wondered +very seriously. + +Thereafter for some little time, as he talked with her father, he was +acutely aware that both she and the doctor were very silent, and when now +and then he glanced at her, she seemed to be thinking rather than +listening. And then, just as he was beginning to grow a trifle uneasy, +this phase seemed to pass away and the next time he looked at her she met +his glance with a faint smile. In fact she had smiled several times +before the doctor and his patient took their departure, and as they shook +hands at the end Thomas Sylvester was agreeably conscious of the kindest +look she had ever favoured him with. And finally when her father hoped +they might see their new acquaintance soon again, she joined him in +hoping, both with her words, and (it seemed to him) her eyes. + +During the first part of their walk home, Mr. Hobhouse was very silent. +Going back over their call, while everything was fresh in his memory, he +had to confess that his prejudices against Mr. Rendall were ready to +vanish altogether if he were ready to let them. In fact the grim ironic +Mr. Rendall conversing with the suspicious stranger was an entirely +different person from the friendly Mr. Rendall who conversed with the +innocent-looking Thomas Sylvester Hobhouse. On the face of it this was +obviously to be explained by his suspicions of the stranger. But of what +did he suspect him? Of being a German spy, as he professed? Or of being +what he was? That was the whole point, and it seemed to me that getting +him arrested and removed was equally consistent with either alternative. + +But what of his daughter, that slim, dangerously dainty piece of mystery? +Were her two changes of attitude in the course of this afternoon mere +mirages seen by an eye disordered by suspicion? They might be, but Mr. +Hobhouse was prepared to stake his davy that they were real. And what +then did they imply? Surely not that she suspected the truth. He could +not read them into that. That she was simply a coquette and for want of +more amusing game (such for instance as Mr. O'Brien) was prepared to have +a little flirtation with his successor? This was, somehow or other, not a +very agreeable solution, but I began to suspect it might be the true one. +In any case she was a puzzling factor, and the best course of action +seemed to me to be to avoid her society in the meanwhile, and to keep my +eyes wide open for possible trouble. I hardly thought there would be +trouble, but it were well to be on the lookout. + +This being decided, the amiable Mr. Hobhouse started conversation with +the doctor, and gradually by gentle and circuitous methods led the talk, +via the war in general, to the part in the war played by these islands, +and to any interesting events that might have happened in them. He was +heading in his devious way for the visit of the suspicious stranger, but +at this point the doctor brought him in of his own accord. + +"We had one most extraordinary thing happen in this place," said he. +"Nobody has got to the bottom of it yet." + +"Really!" cried Mr. Hobhouse. "How very interesting! What was it?" + +"Well," said the doctor, "one morning when I had that fellow O'Brien +staying with me, a young man walked into my house under the +impression--so he said--that it was my cousin's. Whether he told the +truth or not I've often wondered since. He had no cap, was buttoned up in +an oilskin coat (though I may say it was a fine morning) and talked with +a distinct foreign accent. I could swear it was German, but O'Brien, who +contradicted everything, stuck to it it was Russian. A lot he knew about +Russian! He was only in the house about five minutes, for when he +discovered his mistake--or what he said was his mistake--he went off. And +that is all I saw of him personally." + +"But did he go to Mr. Rendall's then?" + +The doctor nodded. + +"He turned up there and spent two or three nights in the house. The chap +had the impudence of the devil. He said he had been landed from one of +our own cruisers and didn't want to be recognised as an officer, so would +they be kind enough to lend him a coat and let him lock his uniform coat +up in a drawer! He was in his oilskin all this time, you must remember. A +day or two later my cousins grew suspicious and opened that drawer. What +do you think they found?" + +"Maps!" guessed Mr. Hobhouse. + +"Nothing at all! He had never had a uniform coat. They promptly wired to +the Naval Authorities, locked him in his room meanwhile, and when +Commander Whiteclett appeared he arrested him and took him off." + +"And who was he?" + +The doctor turned to his guest with an expression of considerable +indignation. + +"The damned secrecy of these navy people is past belief! Do you know that +not even my cousins who caught the man for them were ever told a single +word about him! Whiteclett took him straight off to his drifter without +so much as saying good-bye--much less thank you--to my cousin Philip, and +that was the last of it!" + +"Then you never learned who the fellow was?" + +"He gave his name as Merton--George or was it Roger?--Merton. But you can +believe as much of that as you like." + +"And did he land from a cruiser?" + +"Not likely! But nobody was ever told how he did land. They found what +they said was a parachute, but it's my belief that was either a blind or +it was really some kind of collapsible boat. I never saw the thing +myself, and O'Brien, who did see it, having heard somebody say it was a +parachute, of course swore it was not." + +"And did the man do nothing while he was on the island?" + +"God knows what he may not have done! Naturally he told nobody what he +was after, and no one actually saw him doing anything, but there are +plenty of stories." + +"What kind of stories?" + +"Oh, the usual kind, that he was seen flashing lights on the shore and +carrying petrol tins. But you can believe as much of them as you like." + +"And have your cousins no theory? They apparently saw a good deal of +him." + +"My cousin Philip says frankly he is absolutely beaten by the whole +performance. Jean--well girls are rum things." + +"What are Miss Rendall's views then?" I enquired. + +"She is generally quick enough at guessing, and as fond of gossip as most +of her sex, but for some reason she keeps very quiet about it. It's my +belief she knows something. In fact I shouldn't be surprised if +Whiteclett had told her a little and sworn her to secrecy. Men do tell +women things sometimes, as I daresay you have noticed for yourself, Mr. +Hobhouse." + +"What a very strange story!" murmured Mr. Hobhouse. + +So this was the tale of my escapade as it was told in Ransay. The +doctor's manner of telling it was the best guarantee of his own good +faith I could wish, and I was ready now to dismiss the blind incident as +a misleading trifle. But O'Brien seemed to have gone out of his way to +throw doubt on every point raised,--and curiously enough to have always +offered a wrong solution. It might be sheer contrariness, but it stuck me +as odd. As to Miss Jean's silence, what did that mean? I resolved to keep +my eyes very wide open indeed. + + + +V + +WAITING + + +By a fortunate chance Dr. Rendall was no expert in antiquarian matters, +and yet had sufficient respect for those who were to give them every +encouragement and make all allowances for any irregularity in their hours +caused thereby. Mr. Hobhouse possessed several very learned looking +volumes, such as "The Early Christian Monuments of Scotland," "The Windy +Isles in Early Celtic Times," "Ecclesiological Notes on Some of the +Islands of Scotland," and other tomes of that nature, and from these he +could quote whole paragraphs without so much as pausing for breath (in +fact he dared not pause, lest he forget). Mr. Hobhouse moreover talked in +his garrulous way of adding his own modest contribution to this +literature in the shape of a monograph on the antiquities of Ransay. + +With this end in view it was therefore very natural that he should spend +much of his time rambling over the island, particularly along the coasts, +where he declared the early monuments he was especially interested in +were mostly to be found, and should even at times be detained by his +enthusiasm till darkness had fallen. It was also very natural that he +should wish to consult all the most ancient inhabitants, and should in +consequence seek out and interview every native over sixty years of age. +In short this hobby not only gave this enthusiastic gentleman a sound +pretext for being in the most out of the way places at the most unlikely +hours, but also for inspecting narrowly with his own eyes each white +bearded patriarch who might, or might not, have worn six months ago a +pair of tinted spectacles; which--to descend slightly in the literary +scale--accounts for the milk in the cocoanut. + +All this of course was not only perceived by his guardian medical +attendant, but blessed with his strong approval, for nothing counteracts +the taste for liquor so effectually as another hobby. But what Thomas +Sylvester devoutly prayed the doctor did not see was his patient slipping +out of his window in the small hours of the morning, and from the roof of +an out-house just below, examining the shore through a night glass. In +February and March weather this was far too uncomfortable to last long or +to be repeated every night, and the shore was too far away to make it +very effective. Still, he did think he noticed a glimmer once or twice, +and each time his antiquarian expedition next day included certain +artless enquiries which might have thrown some light on the matter had +the answers been satisfactory. As a matter of fact, however, they never +were, and the extraordinary appearance of interest with which the +effusive gentleman listened to useless information reflected more credit +on his resolution than any one will ever realise. + +I may add that the professional watchers in the island were not of course +in the secret of Mr. Hobhouse's identity, and therefore could not report +to him directly anything they might see or suspect. But if they did see +or suspect anything he would very quickly be informed through another +source. However Commander Whiteclett based no great hopes on the +possibility of catching our wily enemy out by means of a palpable man in +uniform, and Mr. H. had been instructed to act exactly as though he were +alone on the job. + +One of his earliest expeditions was made to the site of a prehistoric +building in the near vicinity of the Scollays' farm. At least there was a +grassy knoll visible which Mr. H.'s expert eye at once pronounced to be +worthy of very careful inspection, and in order to confirm his theories +he decided to visit the farm to make enquiry as to any possible +traditions regarding it. + +He passed round the knoll with this purpose, to discover that he was no +longer meditating alone. A familiar figure confronted him, with dark +staring eyes, gaping mouth, and stubby beard; my old friend Jock. For a +moment there returned that feeling of stage fright. Next to the +Rendalls, the Scollay household, and particularly Jock, had seen and +conversed most often with the mysterious Merton. Jock was only an idiot, +but where reason is lacking instinct is apt to be strong, and instinct +might distinguish an old acquaintance through all my disguise. Anyhow, +rightly or wrongly, I felt that this was another delicate moment. + +"Good-day, my good fellow. Good-day to you!" said the friendly Mr. +Hobhouse. "A little better weather to-day!" + +The surprise of the affable gentleman at getting only a grunt in reply, +his air of gradual comprehension, and then of friendly sympathy, were +acted for all they were worth. And to my vast relief, Jock showed no +glimmer of recognition of the young man with the revolver. + +"Do you know who lives at that farm?" enquired Mr. Hobhouse speaking very +distinctly. "Tolly, you say? Oh, jolly? Yes, very jolly! Ha, ha! +Good-bye, my lad, good-bye to you!" + +Jock's hoot of laughter was answered by Mr. Hobhouse's giggle, and they +set off down to the farm, the antiquary in front limping rather more +markedly than usual, and the idiot rambling behind. + +The visit to the Scollays was a distinct success, so far as establishing +the personality of Mr. Thomas Sylvester Hobhouse went. At first they +looked at him with an obvious suspicion and replied to his questions +with a reticence that gave him a few uneasy moments. But in ten minutes +his indefatigable friendliness had conquered the household and he knew +that he was safe to visit that knoll whenever the fancy took him. Peter +senior told him a long story about the fairies who were seen dancing +round the knoll in his father's time, and though his family were +evidently a little distressed by his reference to anything so +unfashionable, and Jock hooted several times, their visitor exhibited the +liveliest interest and put the tale religiously down in his note book. + +This was all that could be done at the moment; the establishment of a +perfectly harmless reputation and of a natural reason for visiting that +particular place at odd times. Mr. Hobhouse obtained permission to do a +little digging there if he desired it, and parted with the family on the +best of terms. + +"Slow work!" he said to himself as he struck out for home, with his limp +rapidly vanishing. "But what the devil else can one do? What is there +definite to take hold of?" + +That was the baffling feature of the business. As my cousin said, such +scent as there was had grown cold by this time, and one had to begin at +the beginning again. And so far there seemed to be no beginning. The +detectives of fiction might have found some clue to start a train of +logical and inevitable reasoning that led straight to the criminal, but +the detective of fact had utterly failed, and the brilliant young amateur +of fact was likewise completely at sea. + +What good for instance had my visit to the Scollays done? I asked +myself. If they were innocent I had wasted my time. If they were guilty, +what had I discovered to bring it home to them? Absolutely nothing! And +the same with each inhabitant of that island whom I had seen. Some +cunning and powerful organisation was certainly at work, to the +detriment of my country, but the only point I had scored against them, +was that I had got into the place without their recognising me. At least +I presumed I had or I should scarcely still be alive to tell the +tale--unless they had grown either more merciful or more timid since I +was here last. And their continued immunity would scarcely be likely to +produce either of those effects. + +The only specific thing I could think of looking for was the old man with +the tinted spectacles. So far I was well on the way to proving one thing +about him, and that the least satisfactory thing I could prove. +Apparently Bolton was right and no such person existed. Therefore I was +as far off catching him as ever, and had merely the added certainty that +my enemies were extremely resourceful and spared no trouble to make sure +of things when in doubt. However, I meant to go on looking till I had +exhausted all the old men in the place. I was about half way through them +by this time, so far as I could calculate. + +Thus the winter days passed, growing longer but no warmer and no finer. +One would have had early touches of spring by this time in the South, but +here it was still winter undiluted. The violence and frequency of the +winds was amazing. Indeed I seldom remember having less than a stiff +breeze, and every now and then a full tearing howling gale would scour +the bare low-lying island till it seemed as if even the houses could +scarcely stand up to it much longer, while the sea would be one +bewildering chaos of breaking and subsiding crests, white against the +leaden furrows, surging on till they smashed into a continuous line of +foam along our iron coast. + +How the wind howled and whistled round that melancholy mansion of the +doctor's! I forget who had built it, or why; some land agent or factor, I +think, who had once lived on the estate, but I know I frequently cursed +him. It stood up just high enough to catch the full force of every blast +that blew, and not quite high enough to get a really fine view. There was +too much bleak foreground, so that one got no value from the site +whatever so far as I could see. And, lord, it was draughty! + +My only company was the doctor, and he was out most of the day. Even at +nights I began to find him a curiously moody companion. There were +moments when my suspicions revived again; he used to glance at me +furtively, leave the room mysteriously for half an hour at a time, and do +little more than grunt when he was spoken to. And then next day he would +be such a pleasant, sensible, downright sort of fellow that I could only +remember his simple telling of the tale of my own visit, and dismiss him +from my calculations. + +And so life went on for some three weeks uneventfully enough for a +desperate and disguised adventurer. I received several letters from my +uncle, and I was thankful it had been arranged I should not answer them. +The dear man had evidently such a twopenny-coloured conception of the +hazardous life I was leading that a truthful recital of my adventures +might have brought him down in person to stir things up. But there was +nothing to stir; I could only wait. + + + +VI + +THE SPECTACLED MAN + + +It was, I remember, on a rare day of bright, still, frosty weather, that +Mr. Hobhouse returned a little late for the doctor's mid-day dinner. The +garrulous creature was looking thoughtful and, as it were, subdued; +wanting a dram, no doubt, thought any who chanced to spy him in this +unusual condition. But as he opened the front door he became his foolish +self instantaneously. The sound of a strange voice had reached him +distinctly. + +"Let me introduce Captain Whiteclett--Mr. Hobhouse," said the doctor, + +He and the stranger had already begun dinner, and Commander Whiteclett +rose and bowed politely. Mr. Hobhouse bowed still more politely and +having the advantage of being at the doctor's back for the moment, was +able to embellish his low obeisance with several curious facial +expressions. The Commander at the same moment was attacked with a sharp +bout of coughing, but presently recovering, the meal proceeded very +pleasantly. + +It appeared that Commander Whiteclett was visiting the island in the +course of a tour of inspection, and having some acquaintance with the +doctor had dropped in for lunch. He seemed pleased to meet Mr. Hobhouse +and was as affable as naval officers always are, though every now and +then it might have been noticed by a very close observer that after +meeting that gentleman's eye, he showed a tendency to stare suddenly +out of the window for several moments. Mr. Hobhouse on his part was in +his most gushing humour, and in fact chatted almost continuously +through the meal. + +As they passed out of the dining room ahead of the doctor, the two guests +exchanged a whisper, and about quarter of an hour later Mr. Hobhouse +declared that he must set forth and resume his antiquarian researches, +and effusively bade the Commander good-bye. Thereupon the Commander said +he also must be off and wondered in which direction his fellow guest was +walking. It chanced that they were both going the same way and so they +departed together. + +"Well, you ridiculous looking dipsomaniac, how do you like water for +dinner?" enquired the Commander when they were safely out of earshot. + +"It lies cold on the tummy," said I, "and if you've brought a +flask, Jack--" + +"I have," said my cousin, "but wait a bit till there are no +witnesses. And by the way, old chap, I must tell you that you're a +d----d good actor." + +"My photograph has appeared in the _Tatler_" I confessed. + +"And what news?" he asked. + +"Up till this morning I should have said 'none.' My dear Jack, it has +been the most hopelessly baffling business you can possibly imagine. I +think I am quite a success as an alcoholic patient, and also accepted by +this time as the typical harmless antiquary. So I am able to wander all +over the place and talk to everybody, but there has been nothing to take +hold of! I have seen no sign of anything happening--" I caught his eye +and asked quickly, "Has anything happened?" + +He nodded. + +"Signalling night before last and a submarine seen yesterday that we +suspect of having been here." + +"Under my nose!" I groaned. "A fat lot of good I am!" + +"My dear chap, you can't possibly watch the whole coast all night and +every night. This time the signals were seen from the sea as a matter of +fact. But you can note the night, and also the hour, which was 2:45 a.m., +G.M.T., as near as I can make out from the report. By the way, you had +better set your watch by mine now while we remember. Possibly you may be +able to discover who was out at that hour night before last." + +"I may, but it's a thousand to one against it. Give me a thousand +such chances, and I'll get him! That's just about how it seems to +work out so far." + +"Haven't you got any new ideas?" + +"Without new evidence, what new ideas can one get? And I only got my +first piece of evidence this morning. In fact, I haven't had time to +think it over yet." + +"Let's hear it," said my cousin keenly. + +"I have been on the track of that old boy with spectacles, as being the +only definite thing to look for so far. I did what Bolton did--went to +see every old man in the place, and this morning I polished off the last +of them and came to the same conclusion as he did. There is no such old +gentleman on the island. But there _was_ one, for a short time one +morning; and he was a fake like Thomas Sylvester Hobhouse; and this +morning I've heard of some one else who saw him!" + +"By Gad!" exclaimed my cousin. "That sounds like the beginning of +business." + +"Only the beginning, I'm afraid. This morning I interview my last old +man--to find of course he wasn't the fellow I was after. I interviewed +him on the usual subject--ancient traditions of the island, and from that +we passed on to the latest tradition, the legend of the mysterious +visitor last August. He told me all about it, with many embellishments. +However he was shrewd enough not to believe all he heard, and to show me +what absurd stories are put about, he informed me that his own small +grand-daughter, aged six, had declared that she had seen the mysterious +visitor, only she described him as having a white beard and funny +spectacles. I asked him exactly where this phenomenon had been observed, +and by Jingo, Jack, it was at the very place I met him; only when she saw +him he had left the road and was hurrying down to the sea. She described +him as running, which finally demolished her reputation for truthfulness, +for as her grandfather observed, men of his age don't run. But that was +my friend right enough!" + +"Heading for the sea?" + +"For the beach, I take it. You see you can pop over the edge almost +anywhere along that shore, and get out of sight among the rocks in a +moment. I presume he squatted down there, pocketed his spectacles and +beard, took off his disreputable overcoat, and either hid it or possibly +pinned up the skirts and put it on under his other coat, and walked off +looking like--well, that's the rub, what did he look like then? And +that's just where I seem no forrader." + +"Still, this is something." + +"Yes, and I suppose we ought to deduce something more from the episode. +I've already concluded that the high piping voice he used might well +have concealed an accent, and I've also decided from what I've heard of +the local language since that he hadn't the native intonation." + +"And he headed for the beach," added my cousin. "Therefore he certainly +did not come from any house in the near neighbourhood." + +"That puts the doctor's house out of court, if you're right. But he may +possibly have thought it better not to do his dressing up at home." + +"I see you've still got you knife into O'Brien!" laughed my cousin. "But +I think my notion is the likeliest--" + +He broke off suddenly and we instinctively moved a pace further apart. A +figure had appeared round a turn of the road just ahead of us, a trim, +dainty figure, delightful to see in such a place, but a little +disconcerting to see so suddenly and so close to us. It was Jean Rendall, +looking her best, but not, it seemed to me, quite in the right place. + +Had she noticed anything? There was not a sign of it in her greeting. She +gave us both one of her quick smiles, and as Jack pulled up to speak to +her, she stopped too, and in talking to him, I noticed afresh how full of +expression those neatly chiselled, rather petite, features became when +she talked, and what a charming little air of knowing her way about the +world she had. Young though she was, I could see in her very clearly +either a valuable friend or a dangerous enemy--and what an easy girl to +fall in love with, had circumstances been very different! + +Jack explained in a very natural off-hand manner how he came to be in Mr. +Hobhouse's company, and Mr. Hobhouse corroborated his statement in his +own effusive way. And then as we parted, she threw her smile full on that +gentleman, and asked, + +"Why haven't you been to see us again, Mr. Hobhouse? Do come to +tea one day!" + +Mr. Hobhouse gabbled a polite but slightly, evasive reply, and we +walked on. + +"Do you mean to say," demanded my cousin, "that you have only been to see +this delectable lady once?" + +"That's all," I admitted. + +"What's the reason? It isn't very like our methods, Roger." + +"It isn't," I admitted again. "But then you see what with pestilential +weather and all these antiquarian visits to pay, my available time has +been pretty well occupied." + +"But that house is one to keep a particular eye on." + +"That house has got a pair of particularly bright eyes in it. On my one +visit there I felt a little too like walking on the edge of a precipice +to wish to repeat the experience often. If that girl suspects me, Jack, +and _if_ she isn't the right sort, we are dished." + +"Oh, dash it. I can't believe she's mixed up in this business!" he +declared. "Of course one mustn't trust anybody; still, that doesn't +prevent your going to tea with her. In fact what you really ought to be +doing is making love to her--so long as you keep your head." + +"I am handicapped," I pointed out, "by drunken habits, a beard, and +Mother Beagle's Beautiful Black Dye. No, Jack, I do not see orange +blossom this trip." + +"Apart from these romantic dreams," persisted my cousin, "she is far more +likely to be inquisitive about you if you never go near the house. In +fact I could see it in her eye to-day." + +"Well," I said, "I'll call to-morrow and dispel her interest in me." + +Since my talk with the doctor, his theory about Jean Rendall had crossed +my mind occasionally, and improbable as it was, I thought I might as +well test it. + +"By the way," I asked, "did you by any chance ever speak to Miss Rendall +about my last visit to the island?" + +His look of surprise was a sufficient answer in itself. + +"Speak to her of your adventure? Not a word at any time! Why?" + +"The doctor has an idea that she knows more than she says, and that you +may have told her something." + +"Rubbish!" + +"I knew it was," I assured him. + +And so that possibility was finally eliminated. + +We thought it wiser that our ways should part some little distance +from the pier. + +"Good-luck, old chap," said he, shaking my hand. "Keep playing the game +you're at and don't worry about trying to keep a lookout at nights. +That's being done already, and though I don't believe the fellows are +much use--not with such crafty devils against them--you can't do anything +to help 'em. Getting out at night is too risky, and you're too far away +at the house. Your game is to work it from the other end. Sooner or later +they are absolutely bound to give you a clue." + +His spirit and my little discovery of the morning sent me back in a +distinctly more hopeful mood. + + + +VII + +A REMINISCENCE + + +Next day I set out in the early afternoon to pay my call. The fine +weather still held, bright sunshine with a nip in the air and the road +underfoot firm with frost, and I strode along in a wonderfully confident +mood, all things considered. For to tell the truth, I had been funking +this visit. Instinctively I did not trust myself with Miss Jean Rendall. +If she had any suspicions and if she turned on to me the art of her sex +and the charms of her particular self, I was well aware that Thomas +Sylvester would have a bad time of it. In fact I really dared not answer +for the fellow's nerve. He being both critical and susceptible, a girl +with Jean's distinctive aroma was dangerous company with a job of this +kind on hand. And playing the whisky-enfeebled fool in a dirty black +beard ceased entirely to amuse me when the other party was Miss Rendall. +However, this morning Mr. Hobhouse felt braver, and stepped out briskly, +resolved to do his bit. + +As he approached the house, the front door opened and the very lady +herself appeared. She carried a stick and was evidently setting forth +on a walk. + +"This is very nice of you to come so soon, Mr. Hobhouse," she said. "I am +glad I hadn't gone further before you appeared." + +"Oh, but don't let me stop you, Miss Rendall," said Mr. Hobhouse +anxiously. "Really, I can't allow it; no, no, really not. You mustn't +turn back, indeed you mustn't! Perhaps I shall find Mr. Rendall at home." + +"I was only going for a walk to nowhere in particular." She looked at +him with an irresistible mixture of coyness and frankness and +suggested, "Would you care to come for a little walk too? It's far too +early for tea." + +What could the poor gentleman do? He gushed over the suggestion of +course, and accepted it. + +"I was going to walk down to the shore," she said. "Will that suit you?" + +Mr. Hobhouse assured her that anywhere would suit him; he had no choice +at all: anywhere, everywhere, nowhere would be all the same to him. + +As they walked side by side down towards the sea, he was suddenly struck +with the sense of being in a familiar situation, of a repetition of +something that had happened before. And then he realised that this was +actually the walk that the same girl and a young man Merton had taken on +a memorable August night. He noted through his glasses the very wall +behind which he had lit his pipe when the flare of his match revealed the +butt end of a pistol, and presently they were following the same winding +way above the beach. + +This did not serve to make the playing of his part any the easier. It +filled him in fact with a continual fear of giving himself away by doing +something he had done before. It was really a most irrational fear; but +there it was. Under the circumstances his sustained babble and blink were +distinctly creditable. + +But what gave him a more excusable cause for apprehension was Miss +Rendall's own attitude. That there was something on her mind, something +behind her words, he felt morally certain. She spoke in the most natural +way and on the most commonplace topics, but there were frequent silences +and it was during those he felt that without looking directly at him, +she was watching him. And once or twice he got it into his head that she +was a little puzzled and uncertain, though whether it was about what to +think or what to do, he had no conception. He told himself that all this +was only his own morbid imagination. Still, it made that walk an +uncomfortable ordeal and seldom did actor have to work harder to keep +his end up. + +Luckily however the man had the virtue of impudence and not only did +he manage to entertain the lady with a garrulous account of his +antiquarian researches (reasoning acutely that women are seldom experts +in such matters), but he even ventured to broach a delicate subject for +his own ends. + +"The gentleman who--er--resided with Dr. Rendall last summer was not, I +believe, very interested in antiquities," he observed. "Did you know him, +Miss Rendall? Mr. O'Brien was his name, I believe." + +"Yes," she said, "I knew Mr. O'Brien." + +There was certainly no trace of any feeling, whether of like or dislike, +in her voice. + +"Not a very pleasant fellow, I believe," Mr. Hobhouse went on. "At least +I should judge not; I should gather not. But I trust he wasn't a friend +of yours, Miss Rendall?" + +"Not a particular friend. But why do you think he was unpleasant?" + +"Oh, only from Dr. Rendall's references to him--only from that, I assure +you," said Mr. Hobhouse with propitiating eagerness. + +"Really?" said she, her eyes opening. + +There was no doubt that this information genuinely surprised her. + +"I thought they seemed great friends," she added. + +"Oh, they may have been--they may have been. I may be doing Mr. O'Brien +an injustice. Possibly I misunderstood your relative--quite possibly." + +She was silent for a little while after this, and Mr. Hobhouse too ceased +chatting. He was eyeing the shore line very curiously and trying to piece +together his recollections of it. + +"I think perhaps we have gone far enough now," said she, and for a minute +or two they stood still; and a very distinct sense of being in a familiar +situation was borne in upon her companion. + +And then all at once she exclaimed, + +"Do you hear anything?" + +I started and stared at her. For the moment I had ceased to be Mr. +Hobhouse, so straight had I been carried back to that night six months +ago. Those were her very words, and if I were not much mistaken this was +the very place. I nearly answered as I had answered before, but was just +able to check myself. And then she broke the spell by laughing. + +"It's only the sea! But it sounded so funny and hollow." + +There was indeed a low gurgle just audible, as if the waves were +breaking into some cave. It struck me that she must have singularly +sharp ears to have noticed it. We stood there for a minute or two +longer, and then she asked, + +"Do you see any ancient remains, Mr. Hobhouse?" + +It was not in fact ancient remains that the eye glasses were looking at, +but I jumped at the chance of making sure of my bearings, and with an +appearance of great eagerness told her that there seemed to be something +decidedly interesting in the appearance of the rocks at that place. + +"I can wait for a moment if you'd like to look at them nearer," she said. + +"This is luck!" I said to myself as I scrambled down. "I believe I've +found the actual place." + +A few minutes exploration left no doubt in my mind. I found the very +cliff face under which I had been decoyed and was able to clear up one +point. A man above could easily have struck at me with some implement, +say, six feet long. I shut my eyes and pictured that curved mystery, +and then in a flash I had it: a scythe blade tied to a pole! If I +could find a scythe blade fastened to a pole, or a blade and pole +separate, I should not be far off the end of my quest. The next moment +I smiled at my own optimism when I realised what a house to house hunt +that would imply. Still, I saw a fresh possibility and came back +silently thanking my guide. + +Conversation was rather easier coming back, perhaps because I felt in +higher spirits and could play my absurd part with more gusto. Still, the +girl remained a little disquieting. She was now in a very smiling and +friendly mood, and a man who blinked through gold rimmed glasses and +giggled through a dyed beard ought to have felt exceedingly flattered. +But now I was saying to myself that for a girl of fastidious taste she +was really too nice to such a fellow. And then I remembered that O'Brien +had a black beard too, and the thought struck me, + +"Can she have such pleasant recollections of black beards that I am +providing her with reminiscent romance?" + +I think it was just as this idea occurred to me that she roused me very +sharply from my meditations. + +"I suppose you have heard of the mysterious man who appeared here last +summer?" she enquired. + +It took Mr. Hobhouse all this time to adjust himself to this question, +but I think he managed it not unsuccessfully. + +"The--ah? Oh, yes, oh, yes. The doctor told me the story. Most +mysterious--most mysterious! What do you make of it yourself, Miss +Rendall?" + +"Did the doctor tell you that I once walked with him along this very +shore? It was at night too, and he was armed with a pistol!" + +A single stare of astonishment was fortunately able to cover two +emotions. My own was expressed in the thought, "What the devil is she +driving at now?" Mr. Hobhouse's was expressed otherwise. + +"You don't say so! God bless me; what a risk to run! He didn't--er--shoot +at you, I hope?" + +"No," she said, "he seemed pretty harmless." + +"Ah, but you shouldn't run such risks, my dear young lady; you really +shouldn't! Now I remember a young lady whom I used to know--" And +thereupon Mr. Hobhouse launched into an improbable anecdote which tried +his inventive powers considerably. However, he was able to make it, and +the comments thereupon lasted till they were back at the house. + +The fact was that my hardihood was not quite sufficient to stand a +conversation about my own self behind my own back. It might have been +amusing, and it might have been instructive, but it would certainly have +been embarrassing. However the incident served to reassure me that +whatever she suspected me of (and I could not get that sense of being +watched out of my head), it was not the correct suspicion. Had she +guessed the truth I could see no point at all in her reminiscence of the +mysterious stranger, unless it were sheer pointless mischief, and she did +not seem a pointless lady. Besides, when I glanced at myself in the +drawing room mirror, I said to myself, "Who could possibly guess!" + +After that walk, tea and a talk with her father were unexciting +episodes. She kept very much in the background, but when we parted I +seemed to note again that flicker of a very alluring smile. + +"Can it be that she has a morbid taste for inebriates?" I wondered. "One +has heard of women with curiously diseased fancies. Or perhaps she has +simply a passion for reforming them. One of those smiles for every sober +hour would be a distinct inducement to behave!" + +But this was not business and as I walked home I turned my thoughts +sternly to that scythe blade. + + + +VIII + +H.M.S. _Uruguay_ + + +As I neared my bleak sanatorium I said to myself, + +"If only something would happen!" + +Week after week spent within those walls or in wandering over this +limited space of muddy roads and sodden fields, with nothing to show for +it, was an unexhilarating prospect. Perhaps the recollection of the +comfortable house and the pleasant company I had just left accentuated +this feeling, and the swift disappearance of our glimpse of crispness and +sunshine did nothing to raise the heart. In that low-lying isle one got +the most extraordinary views of the weather and could see storms +approaching when they were still leagues away, and portents of rain or +wind hours ahead of their coming. This evening the frost had vanished, +the sun was sinking into a grey-blue bank, little filaments of wind +clouds were reaching all over the sky, and a stiff chilly breeze was +already blowing in from the sea. + +"We are going to have a change," I thought. + +And we were indeed going to have a change; and of more than weather. +Those storm clouds were blowing up the something I wanted to happen, +though how promptly would I have changed my wish had I but guessed! But +Fate had loosed that nor'west gale and there was no stopping the order of +things now. + +In the night I remember waking once or twice to hear the wind shouting +down the chimney, and to feel very snug in bed. When I got up it was +still blowing a full gale, and looking out of my window I could just +catch a glimpse of the masts and funnels of a large steamer which seemed +to be lying under the lee side of the island for shelter. What she was +precisely I could not see enough of her to say, nor when we met at +breakfast, did the doctor know more about her. + +Like many a storm that springs up very suddenly, this one began to +subside as fast, and in the course of the morning I set out to have a +closer look at the strange ship. Quarter of an hour's walk in that +direction told me all I wanted to know about her. In fact I recognised +her as no stranger at all but an old acquaintance, H.M.S. _Uruguay_, a +great lump of an ex-liner once running to South American ports with a +band in the saloon at nights. Now, painted grey, with the white ensign +flying over her, and some hundreds of blue jackets and a formidable +complement of six inch guns aboard, she was one of those auxiliary +cruisers which have been doing so many odd jobs and getting through so +much dirty, risky, arduous work during this war. + +What had brought her under the lee of Ransay I could but guess; some +engine trouble and that gale on top of it most probably, but there she +was, and there were the islanders standing at each door gazing at her. I +gazed too for a while and then came back to our early dinner. + +Going out again in the afternoon, the affable Mr. Hobhouse was passing +the time of day with a couple of petty officers within five minutes, and +as he continued his walk he saw that, whatever was the reason, H.M.S. +_Uruguay_ was not going to leave immediately. The wind had now fallen to +a stiff breeze, and as she lay under the shelter of the island, shore +leave had evidently been given to a number of the men. First at one farm +and then at another he could spy parties of blue jackets buying butter +and eggs, poultry and cheeses, everything fresh from the land they could +get. It was cheerful to see them again, and yet one uncomfortable thought +did cross my mind as I looked at their great grey ship anchored there. + +"What a sitting target for a submarine!" I said to myself. "Pray Heaven +no submarine turns up here to-day!" + +I had gone out to the bare northern headland and was heading home again +for tea when I happened to see on the road a small knot of these blue +jackets, just parting from a couple of countrymen. This pair turned +towards me and in a moment I recognised my acquaintances Peter Scollay +junior and Jock. Mr. Hobhouse had visited their house several times by +now and was on the most friendly terms with the family. + +"Good-day, Peter!" he cried as he passed them. "Have you been taking your +brother to look at the ship?" + +For some reason Peter stared at him in an odd way, and Jock burst into +one of his loudest laughs. Peter seemed to mumble something which Mr. +Hobhouse failed to catch, and then when they had passed, he could see him +laughing too. + +To be laughed at without knowing the reason why is always irritating, +even to one of Mr. Hobhouse's exceptionally amiable temperament, and it +had the effect of suddenly sharpening his critical faculties. A thing +struck him that had never happened to strike him before. What was that +great strapping Scollay fellow doing at home on a small croft where he +was quite superfluous, when his country needed every man? And why did +the lout stare and then laugh? Considering what a vigilant eye was +watching him behind Mr. Hobhouse's glasses, it seemed to me unwise as +well as rude. + +In a moment I passed the blue jackets, who were distributing some +purchases among their party before they set out for their ship, and I +saw a possible excuse for Peter's amusement, though it seemed a poor +one. The men were carrying a couple of baskets of eggs, two or three +large cheeses, a parcel which probably contained butter, and one or two +poultry. Presumably the pair had been selling them some of this +assortment, and perhaps my suggestion that they had been merely +sight-seeing struck them as humorous. It argued a poor sense of humour; +still, there was one possibility. + +Once more the amiable Mr. Hobhouse showed his friendly spirit by +addressing a few kindly words to the good fellows (that was what he +called them, as being the phrase most suited to his foolish appearance), +and in his artless way he was able to gather that he had been correct in +supposing that Peter and Jock had been amongst their purveyors. +Unfortunately he had not the foresight to enquire particularly which of +the articles those two had purveyed. But I wonder very much whether any +possible reader of this account, given what I knew up to this point, can +honestly say that he would have put that question? + +Well, I got home and sat down to high tea with Dr. Rendall, and of course +he began to talk of the _Uruguay's_ visit. Even if nothing else had +happened afterwards, such an event would have given Ransay food for +several days' conversation. + +"We are probably eating our last eggs and our last butter for the next +week to come," he said with a laugh. "These sailors have cleared the +island out, from all I can hear. They've even been to this house and +got what they could, and I believe they practically cleaned out my +cousin's farm." + +"Really?" said Mr. Hobhouse. "Really indeed? Ha, ha! Do you know I found +even the Scollays selling them things." + +"Oh, I expect every one has been making hay while the sun shines," said +he. + +He had had one of his moody attacks so lately as the day before, but he +had quite recovered his good humour by now, and in fact was in an extra +jovial mood that evening. We sat up till about half-past ten, and then +went up to our bedrooms. + +I had reached the stage of pyjamas and was just opening my window for the +night when the dreadful thing happened. Suddenly the whole island seemed +to be illuminated. I turned my eyes instinctively to the place where the +_Uruguay_ lay, and there high into the heavens mounted a blinding pillar +of flame. The wind was still blowing pretty fresh away from me and +towards the ship, but even against it the roar that followed shook every +window and door in the house. The pillar of flame vanished the next +instant, but high in the air fire-balls seemed to linger for some +minutes. And then the pillar of smoke rose up. It rose and rose, swift +and gigantic, growing all the while greater and more terrible in girth, +till at last when it was some hundreds of feet high it slowly stretched +out at the top until it looked like some huge evil tree seen in a +nightmare. + +And there I stood at the window and stared. And there on the spot where +H.M.S. _Uruguay_ with her crew of hundreds and all her complement of +officers (largely R.N.R. and R.N.V.R. men like myself) had lain, stood +that gigantic pillar of smoke. Then all at once I realised that +everything living in that ship and most of her inanimate self was +represented now only by that foul column. + +I heard the doctor's door open and his voice say: "Mr. Hobhouse! +Hobhouse!" + +I had presence of mind to clap my glasses hurriedly on my nose, before I +rushed into the passage. + +"What has happened? Is that the ship gone, do you think?" he asked in a +low voice. + +I noticed that he seemed a man with a good control over his feelings. I +had mine, too, pretty well in hand, but to play the absurd Thomas +Hobhouse at such a moment was more than I cared to do. I preferred to +show a little of what I felt and get away from him on that excuse. So I +stammered something, and then we looked at one another for a moment, and +I hurriedly went back to my room. + + + +IX + +BOLTON ON THE TEACK + + +"Only one survivor." + +The doctor looked into my room about eight o'clock next morning to give +me this brief bulletin. At breakfast he told me he had been out most of +the night, but there had only been that single case for him. A boat from +the island had picked a solitary living seaman out of the scum of oil, +blackened by it like a negro and without a stitch of clothing. Some of +the dead had been found, but not in a condition to be discussed, and of +course many fragments of debris. And now a number of patrol boats were on +the scene, he had handed over his patient to a naval doctor, and that was +all the news of the tragedy up till eight o'clock. + +I knew that John Whiteclett would certainly be in one of the patrol +boats, and I spent the morning in looking out for him. Thus by an +apparent accident when the Commander did land about noon he very soon +walked into Mr. Hobhouse. My cousin's face was grave and set, and there +being no witnesses, neither of us luckily had to act. + +"Well, Jack?" I said. + +"Did you see it happen?" he demanded. + +"I happened to be at my window." + +"Tell me what you saw," said he. + +I told him and he nodded at intervals. + +"Just what a couple of other witnesses have told me," he said. + +"Submarines?" I asked. + +He shook his head. + +"The odds against a torpedo sending a ship straight up like that are +enormous. And one would have heard two explosions--which nobody did. +Besides, the one man who was picked up has luckily been able to talk a +little already. I am certain there was no torpedo attack." + +"She simply blew up then?" + +"That was it." + +"Accident or design?" + +"God knows! Perhaps no one else ever will. It may have merely been the +ammunition. As you know, that has happened before now. But it's a very +curious coincidence that it should have happened off Ransay, knowing what +we know. I hear a lot of the men were ashore buying things. I wonder what +they brought aboard with them!" + +"I can tell you what one lot brought: eggs, poultry, cheeses, and a large +parcel in newspaper which I took to be butter. But that was only one +party I happened to see. They were all over the island." + +He thought in silence for a few moments, and then he glanced at +his watch. + +"Look here, old chap," he said, "I'm afraid I must be getting off again +now. Walk back with me as far as it's safe and I'll tell you something +that you must know. We can discuss the evidence later, when a little more +has been collected. The point that concerns you is that Bolton has been +sent for again." + +"The devil he has! Do I retire then?" + +"Not at all. You see nobody in these parts is in the Hobhouse secret, so +they sent for Bolton at once to make his own kind of enquiries while we +make ours. You of course go on making yours in your own way just the +same. All the same I think it would be tactful to stand aside--with your +eyes open of course--while Bolton is on the job." + +"Tactful," I agreed, "but a little annoying." + +"Well, Roger, it can't be helped, I'm afraid. I'm not the boss here and +the man is on his way now as fast as he can travel. And now what about +telling him who you really are? I've been thinking it over, and if you +are agreeable I think I ought to." + +I saw that this meant that he had decided he was going to, so I +merely said: + +"If you think it best, certainly tell him. Only swear him to secrecy." + +"Certainly. And I'm sure the man himself will see the point in that. But +you see if I didn't tell him who you really were, he'd very likely put +you down as a suspicious character and recommend your removal." + +"You're quite right," I agreed. + +"Besides what you know may help him, and it would be a dog in the manger +kind of game to keep back anything, now that he has taken up the +business." + +"Right again. Well, I'll keep my nose out of the business till Bolton has +had his innings." + +"Good man!" said Jack. "Well, we'd better separate now. Good luck to +you both!" + +I trust I am not of an unduly jealous disposition, but being thus asked +to take a back seat just as something really definite had happened was a +strain on my philosophy. The tragedy of the _Uruguay_ might not have +anything to do with the secret agency in the island--though I felt in my +bones it had, and Mr. Bolton might come and go and leave me possibly with +a little information to help my own quest. Still, it was annoying. + +At the same time, my cousin's arguments were absolutely sound and I saw +perfectly that it would have been both foolish and ungenerous to play +Hobhouse with the man. So I went back and picked up a novel and tried to +dismiss the whole business from my mind in the meantime. + +For the next twenty-four hours the island was full of gruesome stories +and the wildest rumours, but for most of the time Mr. Hobhouse stayed at +home and finished his novel. It was on the evening of the day after the +tragedy, when the doctor and he were sitting over the smoking room fire, +lighting their pipes after tea, that the bell rang. "Hallo, who's that at +this hour?" said the doctor. + +I heard a heavy footstep in the passage, and guessed, but the only +announcement was that a gentleman wished to see Dr. Rendall. He was out +of the room for a long time, nearly an hour by the clock, and when he +came back his manner was serious and a little apologetic. + +"I'm sorry to disturb you, Mr. Hobhouse," said he, "and I assure you +there is nothing to worry about, but the fact is a detective is here and +wants to have a word with you." + +"A detective!" exclaimed Mr. Hobhouse nervously. "You don't say so? Dear +me, what can he want me for!" + +"He's a man Bolton," said the doctor, "the very man who came up about six +months ago under the name of Thompson and gave himself out as a cattle +dealer. By Jove, I can see now what he came for! But anyhow it's about +the _Uruguay_ business this time and he is interviewing everybody, and if +you don't mind, he'd like a few words with you." + +I went into the dining room and saw for the first time my rival. He was +a big, sturdy, red-faced man, with a plain bluff manner, an ideal +dealer; but his eyes were shrewd and keen. In fact once I had looked into +them I put him down as a better man than I had fancied. We exchanged a +conventional word on either side, and then both of us instinctively +glanced at the door. + +"Better speak quietly, Mr. Merton," said he. + +I nodded and said with a smile: "So you are not here as a dealer this +time, Mr. Bolton?" + +"No," said he, "I want to get straight to business, and there's too much +humbug and waste of time if one has to talk cattle for half an hour +first. Besides, after what has just happened they'd be quite sharp enough +here to tumble to the game. Anyhow, the people I want to get at would be, +and there's no point in humbugging the others." + +"Well," I said, "you know what I'm here for, and though I'm sorry to say +I haven't been able to pick up much so far, anything I have picked up is +at your service." + +"Much obliged, Mr. Merton," said he. "We're like a couple of terriers +after the same rat, and as long as we get him that's all that matters. +You've had your go and now I'm going to have a little go." + +He laughed genially, but it was clear enough that when he said two +terriers, he meant one terrier at a time, and I accepted the +situation frankly. + +"Right you are," I said. "I'll take a breather while you go in and finish +him off. Only of course if you want me to lend a hand, here I am, with +nothing else to do." + +He seemed distinctly relieved by this declaration and grew more friendly +than ever. + +"Well now to come to business," he said. "I must tell you frankly in the +first place, Mr. Merton, that there were some things in your story last +time you were here that I didn't know just how much to believe in. The +most truthful people sometimes imagine the queerest things. If you'd had +my experience, Mr. Merton, you'd feel just the same about a tale like +yours. But now I know you and know what's been happening here, and +particularly what's happened yesterday, it's a different story. Do you +mind just telling me in your own words about what you saw last time and +anything you've noticed this trip?" + +My opinion of Mr. Bolton's shrewdness continued to rise as I noticed his +close attention to my tale and how much to the point his questions were. +Every now and then he stopped me while he made a jotting in a fat little +brown leather pocket book, and at the end he observed. + +"Well, Mr. Merton, it's a queer case but I daresay I may be able to +throw a bit of light on things before I've done." + +I wondered very much, and from the look on his face I do not believe for +a moment that he saw a single blink of light at that time. + +"And now," said he, "coming to this explosion, I don't want to hear +anything more about the flames and smoke and such like. All that is for +the Navy people. It doesn't come under the head of my department, Mr. +Merton; but this buying of stuff ashore and taking parcels aboard the +ship, that does come under it. In fact that's what I'm up here to +investigate, for it's pretty clear even to a man like me that knows +nothing of ships that any one on this island couldn't swim out and hold a +match to a ship o' war and blow her up that way! If it _was_ done from +here, it must have been by one of those parcels." + +"Obviously," I agreed. "And I also agree that it's for the experts to +decide whether a bomb could be slipped into a paper parcel of butter or a +large cheese, or anything else they bought; and for you simply to find +out exactly what was bought and who sold it." + +"A paper parcel of butter and a large cheese," he repeated. "Did you +happen to see any of those things being sold yourself?" + +"I happened to pass some blue jackets who had just bought them." + +He made me tell him exactly the circumstances of my seeing the men and +my passing Peter and Jock previously; precisely in fact as I have told it +in this account. He thought for a few moments in silence after I had +finished and then asked me if I knew definitely of any other people who +had sold anything to the sailors. + +"I happen to know for certain of Dr. Rendall and his cousin Mr. Philip +Rendall--or rather Mr. Philip Rendall's farmer, but from all I saw and +all I heard I fancy the difficulty will be to find a house that did not +sell something." + +He nodded thoughtfully. + +"That's exactly the difficulty," he said, and then he rose and held out +his hand. "Goodnight, Mr. Merton, I'm much obliged to you and I'll +promise you to make an excuse for looking you up very soon again and +letting you know how I am getting on. By the way, you had better tell the +doctor I was much interested in your account of how the explosion +happened. That will account for my calling again." + +"I must have detective instincts myself," I smiled. "I had already +thought of the same lie." + +In fact it came in very handy no later than Mr. Bolton's departure that +night. The doctor wondered very much what the detective had to say to his +patient that took him so long to tell, and his curiosity was satisfied as +per arrangement. + + + +X + +WHERE THE CLUE LED + + +I saw nothing of Bolton next day, nor as a matter of fact did I expect +to. Indeed, when he called for me on the morning after, it was a good +deal sooner than I had counted on. The doctor was out, so no fable was +necessary, and I took him into the smoking room and offered him an +easy chair. + +"Well, Mr. Bolton, any news?" I enquired. + +He remained standing, and shook his head at the chair. + +"I've no time to sit down," he said, "but I thought I'd just look in as +I passed." + +There was a note in his voice that made me look at him sharply. + +"Have you discovered anything?" I asked. + +He nodded his head slowly. + +"Not very much, Mr. Merton, but something." + +Yet there seem to be a hint of jubilation in his eye. + +"Won't you tell the other terrier?" + +His face relaxed a little and for a moment I half thought he was going +to confide in me, and then he said, + +"It's a little too soon to say much. But I'm on the track of something, I +don't mind admitting; something pretty surprising too, if it's the right +track. Possibly I may be able to tell you more to-night. Could you come +out this evening with me if I needed you?" + +"Rather!" + +"Well," he said, moving towards the door, "any time after dark I may look +in--if this leads to anything." + +"Even if it doesn't, look in and put me out of suspense, like a good +fellow-'tec,' Mr. Bolton." + +He smiled again. Evidently he was decidedly pleased with himself +this morning. + +"All right, Mr. Merton. I'll do that much for you." + +Just before I opened the door for him I had one last shot. + +"Won't you even give me a hint, Mr. Bolton?" + +He looked at me for a moment, and then said in a low voice (for we were +near the door), + +"There's some one in this island who hasn't lived in it all their +life--not by any means. I've found that out." + +He nodded significantly at me, but his lips closed tight again and I saw +there was no more to be got out of him, so I wished him luck and returned +to my chair to think. + +Whether excitement at the prospect of actually reaching the crisis of +this adventure that very night, or chagrin at seeing the problem which +had eluded me solved straight off by this great drover of a fellow was my +uppermost feeling, I should be afraid to say. I know both were strongly +mingled and for a few minutes it never even occurred to me to question +whether the man really was within sight of a solution. And then I began +to wonder. + +Who was this mysterious person who had not lived all "their" life on the +island? He had concealed, probably deliberately, "their" sex. And was it +then a fact of which I myself was unaware? Bolton said he had found it +out. But it might be no news to me. I thought of several people, a woman +and at least two men, who had certainly lived a considerable part of +their lives out of the island. But there was no use speculating with the +test so near at hand. + +All the same I felt so restless that I should have gone out to walk it +off there and then had it not been for the fear that I might chance to +follow in Bolton's tracks and lead him to think I was doing it +deliberately. At all costs I wanted him to see that I was playing the +game (as I was playing it), so I waited till after our early dinner and +then set off. + +I well remember the day, a nasty raw specimen of March weather, not +exactly raining, but trying to all the time, and altogether grey and +dismal. The spring ploughing was proceeding apace, and as the fields grew +brown, there was less and less trace of colour left in the landscape. In +fact it was a day when something evil could scarcely help happening; or +at least it seems so looking back. + +I walked briskly to keep the chill out, following the winding road, but +so wrapt in my thoughts that I hardly noticed where I was going till I +found myself passing from the metalled highway on to the rough track that +led one beyond the last of the farms out to the desolate stretch of +country at the nor' west end of the island. At both sides, and especially +on the north, the rocks rose here till they became genuine cliffs, not +very high, but rugged and broken, with little hollows dipping down +through them here and there and giving scrambling access to small coves. +I kept along near this northern cliff line, still thinking all the while, +until with a start and a quickening of my heart I became abruptly +conscious of a figure fifty yards or so ahead. + +I had a sudden dim recollection; he seemed disturbingly familiar, and +then in a moment I recognised Jock, though why the sight of Jock should +rouse a disturbing thought was more than I could say. When I saw him he +was close to one of those little dips, but whether he had been down at +the shore or not, I could not say, for up to that instant I had been +quite inattentive. But in any case Jock was such a chronic aimless +wanderer that his appearance anywhere never surprised his acquaintances. + +Evidently he recognised the harmless eccentric Mr. Hobhouse quickly +enough, for he broke into a shambling trot and came towards me with an +unusual air of eagerness. + +"Stones!" he cried as he came up to me. "Jock knows stones!" + +"Stones?" said I genially. "Dear me, Jock, this is great news. Are these +the stones?" and I pointed to the rocks all about us. + +"Stones here!" cried Jock pointing eagerly across towards the other side +of the promontory, and catching me by the arm in a friendly way. + +I had never seen the creature so excited before and for a moment could +make neither head nor tail of it. And then I remembered. On my last visit +to the knoll near the Scollays', Jock had been watching me, and by way of +playing my part thoroughly I had affected a vast interest in certain +large slabs of stone showing here and there through the grass. Looking at +stones was the last thing I was keen about this afternoon, but there was +simply no resisting Jock. With the air of a pleased child he led me in +the way he wished me to go, only letting go my arm when he saw I really +meant to inspect his stones. + +"This is an unusual exhibition for Jock," I thought, but in the +character of Mr. Hobhouse there was nothing for it but pretending high +gratification and going where he led me. + +The promontory was about a third of a mile across at this point and when +we had made this journey, my intelligent guide triumphantly pointed out a +few ordinary boulders at the end of it. They were large, it is true, but +there their merits ended. However, I examined them with every appearance +of pleasure, thanked Jock effusively and even gave him a sixpence, and at +last bade him good-day and started for home. + +It had been a queer little episode, and had I been in my usual +clue-hunting humour I should no doubt have dissected it carefully--and +then abused myself for being a fanciful fool. But this afternoon I had +too much else to think of and the incident passed out of my mind in +the meantime. + +At tea I prepared the doctor for the possibility of my going out at night +by a long-winded, babbling, and entirely fictitious account of Bolton's +morning call, from which it appeared that Mr. Bolton was so interested in +Mr. Hobhouse's account of how he saw the ship blow up that he would +probably call in the evening to verify certain particulars and might even +want Mr. Hobhouse to come with him to the house where he was lodging. +And then after tea I smoked and read and waited. + +Darkness was beginning to fall when we finished tea that night and the +lamps were lit when we went into the smoking room. At any moment the +summons might come, and yet eight o'clock struck, and nine, and ten, and +I even induced the doctor to sit up till after eleven, but still there +was no sign of Bolton. And then at last I said some severe things to +myself about the man, and we went to bed. + +Next morning was equally chilly and dismal, and after the doctor went +out to visit a case, I sat over the fire resolved to stay there till Mr. +Bolton came and explained himself. I stayed there all morning, but he +never came, and no more did Dr. Rendall. Our dinner hour approached and +passed, and at last I sat down and had my meal alone. I had just +finished when I heard the front door open sharply and the doctor's step +in the passage. It struck me instantly as curiously quick for him. He +entered the dining room and I saw at once that something was very much +the matter. + +"Bolton has been murdered," he said abruptly. "His body has just been +found in the sea." + + + +XI + +AN EYE-OPENER + + +I leapt to my feet and stared at him. "Drowned?" I gasped. + +"No, he was shot first with a pistol at close quarters. I've just been +examining the body." + +"Where was it found?" + +"Away right at the very North end." + +Yesterday's episode rushed into my mind. + +"At the very end?" + +"Practically." + +"It wasn't by any chance as much as half a mile on this side?" + +He stared at me curiously and I remembered that this was certainly an odd +enquiry, and also that Mr. Hobhouse was speaking very concisely. + +"No," he said. "Why do you ask?" + +I took refuge in an ultra-Hobhousian explanation of how I had been there +myself a few days ago, and it had struck me as a very murderous looking +place, and then I asked, + +"Is anything more known, doctor?" + +"No," he answered, and then added abruptly and with unusual energy, +"This is absolutely damnable!" + +He walked out of the room again as he spoke, and I was left to my +thoughts. I went into the smoking room but forgot to light my pipe. With +my head in my hands I bent over the fire and tried in the first place to +grasp this second tragedy, and then to piece things together and see some +sequence in them. + +That Bolton had really been on the right scent now seemed highly +probable, though as he made no concealment of his business, it was +possible that an agency which had tried to murder me, defied all efforts +to check it for months, and to all seeming had lately blown up a cruiser, +might get rid of him simply on general principles. Still, the working +hypothesis must be that he had got on to their track. And, oh, if he had +only told me what he had discovered! But that secret had died with him, +and now once more one must begin all over again. + +Yet this time I had secured one significant-looking starting point. The +coincidence of Jock's appearance out at that lonely place more or less +about the time when the murder must have taken place, and his leading me +away in another direction from that in which I was heading, was certainly +suggestive. The creature had exhibited more appearance of intelligence +than I had given him credit for, and might he not then be used by some +one who knew him well and had strong influence over him, to play such a +simple part as he had acted? Supposing he were with such a person and +that person saw me coming and did not wish me to spy him, how easy it +would be to say, "Go, Jock, and show that gentleman stones over there!" + +As to whom to suspect of having such influence over him, that was easy +enough. I recalled young Peter Scollay's stare and laugh when I suggested +that they were going to look at the ship, and it sounded to me now a very +sinister laugh. + +And yet the more I thought over all this, the more objections I saw. In +the first place the body was not found where I had seen Jock. True, it +might have been moved if the murderer had been wily and suspicious enough +to think that the simple Mr. Hobhouse was capable of connecting the +harmless episode of the stones with his gruesome work, though even that +seemed to imply more than was likely; but a more formidable difficulty +was the evidence of educated cunning in every crime committed or +attempted by that hand. For "that hand" I decided I must certainly +substitute "those hands." I had always thought there was more than one in +it, and now I felt surer of this than ever. + +With the back of my head, as they say, I heard Dr. Rendall go into dinner +and then come out again into the hall, and then I heard him, instead of +coming into the smoking room, open and shut the front door. He had +evidently gone out again and I was not sorry to be left alone. + +A little later, in the same absent-minded way, I heard the front door +bell faintly ring and I only woke out of my reverie when the smoking room +door opened. + +"Dr. Rendall is out, I hear," said a voice that made me jump up very +hurriedly. + +It was Jean Rendall, delightful to look at as ever, but with a new +expression on her face. If she was not anxious, and very keenly anxious +too, about something, I was much mistaken. + +Unwillingly I resumed the role of Thomas Hobhouse and informed her +nervously that the doctor had gone out, I knew not where. + +She said nothing for a moment, but still lingered. Then she said, + +"What a dreadful thing about poor Mr. Bolton!" + +"Dreadful!" agreed Mr. Hobhouse. "Terrible! Dreadful! Terrible!" + +"Did my cousin tell you much about it?" + +"Oh, no, not much, very little. He was upset, very much upset, I +could see." + +"Everybody is," she said, and then added, "I should think you must be, +Mr. Hobhouse." + +There seemed to be an odd note in her voice set up a vague chain +of disquieting emotions, but Mr. Hobhouse answered in the same +tone as before: + +"Oh, yes, I am distressed; dreadfully distressed." + +Again she was silent, but still she lingered. + +"I am going to walk home again," she said suddenly. "Would you care to +walk a little way with me?" + +At that moment I wanted my own company and had a certain shrinking from +hers; so the voice of Mr. Hobhouse bleated something about having caught +a slight chill. + +"Please come a little way," she said. "I want to speak to you +particularly." + +There was a note of appeal in her voice which would have taken a stouter +man than Thomas Hobhouse to resist. Besides, he felt exceedingly curious. +Her whole manner during the interview in fact roused a very strong +sensation of curiosity. + +He got his hat and his coat (Mr. Hobhouse always wore a topcoat) and they +crunched their way down the knobbly drive and passed out into the road, +neither saying a word. And then Mr. Hobhouse got the most rousing +eye-opener of his career, or of Roger Merton's either. She turned to him +and said quietly, + +"I hope you are taking care of your own life, Mr. Merton." + + + +XII + +THE CONFIDANT + + +A second or two passed before I was able to answer at all, and even then +my first remark was not in the least worthy of the occasion; but it +expressed precisely what was in my mind. + +"How the--how on earth did you find me out?" + +She smiled a little, but her manner was anxious still. + +"I haven't lived all my life in Ransay," she said. "I have even been to +London and to quite a good many London theatres. In fact I've seen you +act before, Mr. Merton." + +"What an extraordinary way to be found out!" I thought, and aloud I said, + +"But my name isn't on the programme in Ransay." + +"It was, when you were last here, you must remember," said she. + +I looked at her for a moment, and she at me, and in that exchange of +glances I decided emphatically that there was no sign of evil in those +eyes. Anyhow, I stood to lose nothing if I got her confidence, and my +own could be withheld or not as I saw fit. + +"We might as well be frank," I said. "How exactly did you come to spot +me?" + +Again she smiled, and each time she smiled straight at me like that, I +confess frankly I grew less cautious. + +"Do you remember when Captain Whiteclett came to arrest you, your +bed-room door was open just for a minute?" + +I did remember now and recalled her face outside and its very +expression vividly. + +"I heard him call you 'Roger' and saw that you knew each other well, and +then of course I knew we had been utterly wrong in thinking you a--" + +She paused and I finished the sentence for her. + +"A spy." + +"Well, are you honestly surprised? You did do some most extraordinary +things, Mr. Merton! I only began to get the least idea of what you were +about some time afterwards." + +"And what idea did you get then? And how did you get it?" + +"It was when we began to hear of the bad name our island was getting. +_Then_ I guessed you must have been trying to investigate and catch the +traitor--and I had gone and interfered--and even locked you up!" + +"It was you, then?" + +"Well, father, of course, approved, but I locked the door. And after I +had found out the truth, I could have murdered myself! But why did you +puzzle us so?" + +Her charm and sincerity and animation almost made me tell her there and +then, but I had just enough hold of myself to ask instead, + +"But this doesn't explain how you came to find me out this time?" + +"Well in a way it does; for I knew then that Roger Merton was your real +name and then I remembered where I had heard it before, and I knew you +were the same person. When you called as Mr. Hobhouse that first day I +hadn't the least suspicion to begin with, and then suddenly you began to +look familiar--" + +"With this beard!" + +"Well, your face isn't all hidden by your beard and I thought I +recognised the other bits. If I hadn't known you were an actor--" + +"A pretty bad one, it appears," I interposed. + +"Oh, no, indeed, you were simply splendid! You still kept me puzzled and +only half certain even after I had met you and Captain Whiteclett +walking together and noticed you move apart when you saw me. In fact I +wasn't sure till that walk along the shore. I arranged that to make +quite certain." + +"You arranged it!" I exclaimed. "The deuce you did, Miss Rendall!" + +She laughed defiantly. + +"I was dying to make sure! So when I saw you coming towards the house, I +rushed into my things and went out to meet you. I thought if I could take +you the same walk as we had been before, you could hardly help doing +something to give yourself away. And at last you did!" + +"May I ask what my relapse was?" + +"When I got you to the same place as last time and said the same thing, +I noticed you jump. And then you did really rather give yourself away +when I asked you if you wanted to look at the rocks, and you jumped at +the chance. I know nothing about antiquities--not even as much as you +do, Mr. Merton--" + +"Hit me again!" I laughed. + +"Oh, but it was very clever of you to pretend to be so learned!" she +hastened to say. "Still, I did know that there are no antiquities below +high water mark, so I knew you just wanted to inspect the place where +something happened to you before." + +"Where what happened?" I enquired. + +"That's what I want you to tell me! Oh, if you only knew how I've died to +know what happened that night!" + +"How do you know anything happened?" + +"I guessed," she said. + +This may not sound convincing on paper, but it did as she said it. I was +almost ready, in fact, to swear by Jean Rendall now. + +"And so you made sure of Thomas Hobhouse!" I said. "But why then didn't +you unmask him at once?" + +"Oh, but it wasn't my business to! Of course I had guessed what you were +doing here--" + +"What?" + +"Trying to rid our island of traitors of course! I had interfered with +you once, but I wasn't going to do it again. In fact I tried to reassure +you by talking of my walk with Mr. Merton." + +"Miss Rendall," I said, "I am a child at this game. You did reassure +me. I have been as clay in your hands. But tell me one thing more. Why +on earth did you come out with me on that first walk--armed with that +horse pistol?" + +"Oh, you saw it then!" she exclaimed. + +"I almost smelt the slow match! But why did you do it?" + +"Well, you know what I thought you were then, and there was no one else +to go with you." + +"Then you actually went out with a spy at night to keep an eye on +him--and shoot him if he spied?" + +"I should probably have missed!" she laughed. + +I was quite ready to swear by Jean Rendall now. Talk of pluck! I never +heard of a more fearless performance! + +"Please understand, Mr. Merton," she went on earnestly, "that I should +never have dreamt of letting you know that I had recognised you--I +haven't even told father, I assure you!--only when I heard of this +dreadful death of Mr. Bolton--" + +She paused and glanced at me, half apologetically, half beseechingly, +it seemed. + +"Well?" I said. + +"Well, I realised the danger you were in supposing anybody else +guessed. And I thought I'd come and speak to you. I'm afraid I +sometimes act on impulse." + +"So do I," I confessed. "In fact I'm going to act on impulse now. Do you +care to hear some bits of the story you don't know?" + +Her eyes absolutely danced. + +"Oh, I'd love to! I've been longing--dying to know the rest of it! +I've guessed and guessed, but I haven't been able to make any sense +out of things!" + +I remembered my uncle's injunctions distinctly. I also remembered my +cousin's cautions and my own good resolutions. A woman, of all things, I +was to beware of; but I knew I was perfectly safe to throw overboard the +whole collection of cautions: and already I had a strong suspicion I +should be far from a loser by it. Miss Rendall seemed, in fact, to have +distinctly more natural capacity for detective work than I had, judging +by her performances so far. + +So I plunged straight into the tale of my first landing on Ransay and my +adventure with the oilskinned man on the shore, and may I always have as +attentive an audience when I tell a story. + +"So there is actually a German who dares to live on Ransay!" she +exclaimed, her cheeks flushing a little. + +"A man whom I certainly took to be a German--a man who talks German +fluently." + +She fell very thoughtful and presently repeated, + +"Middle-sized--with a beard--and dark eyes?" + +"Yes," I said confidently; for somehow or other I began to feel +singularly sure of these features. + +"Of course I know who you suspect," she said, looking up suddenly. "And +you had him removed from the island afterwards." + +"You mean O'Brien? Yes, I did suspect him--though, mind you, I had +nothing to go on. Do you know if he talked German?" + +"He once told me he did, but I never heard him, and I didn't +believe him." + +"Why not?" + +"One couldn't believe half he said, and I don't think he intended one to. +He was very Irish. But I don't believe he was the man." + +"Why not?" I asked again. + +"Oh, just because I don't. And what happened next?" + +I told her of my night at the Scollays' and my plan for trapping the +spies. My self-respect as a criminal catcher was distinctly soothed to +hear her hearty approval of this scheme. + +"It was awfully ingenious," she said decidedly. "I can't imagine a better +plan, and you did it so well that you took us all in completely. I +suppose you felt you had to count us among the suspicious characters, but +what a pity you hadn't confided in father or me as it happened! We would +have done everything we could to help you. I'd have loved to spread +dreadful rumours about you!" + +"I'm sure you would," I said, "but as things turned out, and in the light +of what has happened since, I believe you saved my life by arresting me." + +She turned on me and asked breathlessly. + +"Did they guess who you really were? Did they try to do anything to you?" + +"Merely murder me, as they murdered poor Bolton. The first attempt was +made that night on the shore." + +I saw her lips parting as I neared the end of telling her that story, and +the instant I finished she cried, + +"Of course you thought it was father!" + +I did my best to shuffle out, but she was a hopeless person to try +to deceive. + +"It was quite natural you should," she said, "but I can tell you +something now that throws some light on things. Next morning I heard that +a man had been calling for you after dinner and was told that you had +gone out with me. And the funny thing was that the maid didn't know him +by sight, or know his voice. He kept his face rather hidden, she said, +and talked in a low voice. Of course it simply increased our suspicions +of you. But that was how they knew where you were! And that was the man +who tried to kill you." + +"And who'd have done it for certain if he had found me at home that +night," I added. + +I must frankly confess that this little incident made me feel +uncomfortable. The audacity of the steps my enemies took, their +remorseless thoroughness, the extraordinary completeness with which they +covered their tracks, their appearances from nowhere and disappearances +into space, were particularly nasty to contemplate with Bolton's fate so +fresh in my mind. + +"They are pretty thorough," I said. + +She seemed to divine the thoughts behind this remark. + +"But they haven't suspected you yet," she said reassuringly, "and they +mustn't! And now, tell me some more, Mr. Merton." + +So I went on telling her more:--about the man with spectacles, the +shooting episode, every single thing in fact I could remember. As we +neared the house we walked more and more slowly, but my tale was barely +finished when we got there. + +"You'll come in, won't you?" she said. "I know father is out, so we can +go on talking." + +She saw me hesitate and her colour faintly rose. + +"You do trust me now, surely!" she said. + +"All the way, Miss Rendall. But these devils may be on to my track at any +moment, and if they suspect you are in my confidence--" + +"What nonsense!" she cried, "if there's any risk I _want_ to share it. +For the credit of our island these people have got to be hunted down, and +I'd like them to know I'm hunting them! Besides, there's rather a nice +cake for tea; you must come in." + +And in we went. + + + +XIII + +JEAN'S GUESSES + + +"Come into father's room and then you can smoke," said Jean. + +It was the same pleasant, well-remembered room into which she had shown +me that day when I first made her acquaintance, and as I followed her in +now it struck me forcibly that I had taken the wrong turning that August +morning. If I had taken these people into my confidence then, I should at +least have started on the right road. Better than ever I realised what +tricks my instincts play me. Or perhaps it may be my efforts to regulate +them by the light of what I am pleased to call my reason that produce +such unhappy results. + +"I am wondering how they found you out," she began. "It seems so +mysterious that they should have suddenly started to try and murder you +like that. They must have felt quite positive--and what made them feel +positive?" + +"Did you or your father say anything to anybody about my voice; that I +didn't seem to have so much accent as I had at first, or anything of +that kind?" + +"Not a word," she said positively. "Father is the most uncommunicative of +people, and I have inherited some of his closeness." + +"Your servants?" I suggested. + +"They are Ransay girls, and one foreign accent is the same as another to +them," she laughed. + +"Then it must have been finding the parachute. I always thought that +gave me away." + +"But it wasn't found till Monday morning, after we had been for +that walk." + +"It might have been found by these people sooner." + +"It might," she admitted without much conviction. "But still--who did you +see or speak to apart from us and Dr. Rendall and Mr. O'Brien?" + +"The Scollays," I said, "and several farmers I happened to meet; but +always with a most suspicious accent. Oh, and there was one incident I +forgot to mention. On the Sunday afternoon I was doing a little fancy +shooting with my revolver down on the beach when Jock turned up. You know +Jock the idiot?" + +"Well," she said, but her attention had evidently been caught by my first +words. "You were doing fancy shooting," she repeated. "Are you a very +good shot?" + +"Quite useful," I admitted with becoming modesty. "That afternoon I was +rather above myself." + +"Then," she cried, "you were seen, and that's why the man stopped +firing at you as soon as you aimed at him! He knew he would be hit if +he went on!" + +I opened my eyes a little and smiled. + +"That is a flattering solution," I said, "but if I may venture to say so, +it seems rather a bold inference." + +"I'm certain it's right," she said confidently. "Did you speak to Jock?" + +"Yes, I had a little talk with him; that's to say of course I did all +the talking." + +"In your natural voice?" + +"Latterly I did," I admitted. + +"Were you far from the wall above the beach." + +"Not very." + +"And I suppose there were lots of rocks about?" + +"The usual supply." + +"Then some one was behind either the wall or the rocks and you were +overheard! That's how you were found out!" + +"Miss Rendall," I said, "you arrive at solutions by such brilliant short +cuts that I feel like an old cart horse stumbling along out of sight +behind you. My models hitherto have been the classical detectives--" + +"Tuts!" she laughed, "they were only men!" + +"Yes," I agreed, "we are not much of a sex. And now, guess again please, +it's a very simple conundrum this time--for you. Who was the man behind +the wall--or the rocks?" + +She looked the least trifle hurt. + +"I am really trying to help," she said, + +"I know it!" I assured her. "And don't think I am laughing at you. This +jumping to conclusions is probably the right way of reaching them. Anyhow +my way has failed, and I am only too keen to try yours." + +But I could see that I had a sensitive as well as a clever ally, and her +ardour was evidently a little damped. I tried my best to rekindle it. + +"I haven't told you yet," I said, "about Mr. Hobhouse's attempts at +detection. He discovered one little fact. The old man with the tinted +spectacles was seen by a small child running towards the beach after he +had interviewed me." + +I could see her pricking up her ears again, but she said little this +time, and I went on to tell her of Bolton's two talks with me. When I +came to his discovery her ardour was fairly aflame again, yet she still +seemed to be holding herself in a little. + +"Some one who hasn't lived all 'their' life in the place," she repeated. +"Yes, it sounds as if he meant a woman." + +"Oh, I didn't say that," I interposed. + +"You thought it," she retorted, "and in that case I suppose it was me." + +"But surely he must have known that before!" + +"One would think so," she said thoughtfully, "but he didn't look a very +intelligent man--poor fellow! Still, it would be a stupid kind of +discovery to make a fuss about." + +"There's just one thing more to tell you," I said; and I told her of the +curious episode by the cliffs on the day Bolton was murdered, and +mentioned my own conclusions, such as they were, and my difficulties in +fitting them into the evidence. + +There was no doubt about her keenness now, yet I noticed that there were +no bold inferences this time. Nor did she even ask me many questions. But +I saw her grow very thoughtful. + +"Well," I said, "have you any ideas--any suspicions?" + +She gave no answer for a few moments, and then she said. + +"I am not going to jump to conclusions again, Mr. Merton. There is no use +trying to act on wild ideas till we have found a little more out. You +might just be running risks for no purpose, and you are in quite enough +danger as it is." + +"Hobhouse will look after me," I assured her. + +She glanced at me with a look in her eyes that gave me a little thrill, +and then I saw a slight shiver run over her. + +"You are too brave to realise what danger you are in! Remember Bolton!" + +"Believe me, Miss Rendall, I am just as careful of my skin as other +people, but there is absolutely no danger so long as they don't spot me." + +"But how long will that be? And you are taking no precautions at all!" + +"But I am! I assure you I am. I have a code wire arranged with my cousin +and when he gets the message 'Request permission to be visited by my own +doctor,' he will be in Ransay as fast as he can steam." + +She gave a little laugh, but looked anxious still. + +"What a delicious message! Well, that's better than nothing. But you +don't imagine they will give you warning, do you?" + +"You will," I said confidently. "When you guess there's danger I'll wire. +And now, I hope you have some idea in your head besides this notion of my +danger. Be honest! what's in your mind?" + +But I now perceived I had also an obstinate ally. + +"I have told you," she persisted, "we must find out a little more before +doing anything rash. And I promise not to keep anything back, and to tell +you at once if I find out anything worth knowing. Oh, if you only knew +how I want you to catch those people! As if I could possibly do anything +again to interfere with you!" + +What I should have liked to do was to take her hands and say something +very friendly. What I did do was to thank her and assure her I trusted +her, in words that I think she knew were sincere; and arrange to see her +accidentally next day. And then I set off for my sanatorium with thoughts +that were not in the least of the detective type. + +It was Jean Rendall's eyes, voice, smile and face--herself from her hair +to her ankles--that filled my mind as I hummed my way home. Unlike the +suspicious stranger, Thomas Sylvester Hobhouse had not been given to +singing, whistling, or humming as he walked, but he broke loose now. I +had instinctively dreaded a too close acquaintance with that girl while +the case was doubtful. I felt in my bones she would be dangerous. Now I +was enraptured to discover she was fatal. + + + +XIV + +THE POCKET BOOK + + +Out of the doctor's smoking-room window you saw nothing but a field or +two of bleached wintry grass, with a glimpse of grey sea beyond and that +iniquitous pebble drive close at hand. That at least was all I could see +on the blighting March morning after my tea with Jean Rendall. The chilly +damp weather had given place to chillier hard weather. With the +temperature below freezing and thin showers of dry snow driving up every +now and then before a biting nor'east wind, there was little temptation +to go abroad without excuse. My excuse was due in an hour's time when +Miss Rendall and Mr. Hobhouse proposed to encounter one another +accidentally on the road, and meantime I was turning away from the window +towards the fire when I heard the gravel crunch. + +On general principles I turned back and looked out, to see a certain +small farmer approaching the front door. I knew the man slightly and +was not in the least interested in him. Presumably, I thought, it was +a call for the doctor; and then my attention was sharply caught. He +was carrying in his hand a fat little brown leather pocket book and in +an instant I had remembered where I had seen exactly such a pocket +book before. + +A minute or two later it so chanced that as the maid was speaking to the +man at the door, the amiable Mr. Hobhouse came out into the hall, and in +his friendly way approached to see what the matter was; and very +interested indeed he became when he heard. The pocket book, said the +farmer, bore the name of James Bolton inside, and the maid was shuddering +over a dull stain on the cover when Mr. Hobhouse appeared. The man went +on to explain that he and a friend had been visiting the scene of the +tragedy early that morning and had discovered the pocket book among the +rocks close to where the body had been found. The local police had been +in the island and visited the spot yesterday afternoon, he said, and he +had meant to give his find to them, but now he heard that they had left +again. They were coming back, and London police with them, people said, +but meanwhile he thought the pocket book should be deposited either with +the doctor or the laird (being Justices of the Peace), and he had called +at the doctor's first. Now, the doctor being out, he meant to take it to +Mr. Rendall's. + +Hardly necessary to say, Mr. Hobhouse instantly took upon himself the +responsibility of seeing that the doctor got the pocket book the moment +he returned, and the farmer, glad enough to save himself a longer walk, +handed it over. And then Mr. Hobhouse put a few very natural questions. + +"Was the pocket book wet when it was found?" + +"No wetter than she is now," said the man. + +"Then it must have fallen out of poor Bolton's pocket before his body was +thrown into the sea! Dreadful! Dreadful!" exclaimed the distressed +gentleman. "And was it quite conspicuous--easily seen on the rocks?" + +"We saw it a' right," said the man. + +"And yet the police never noticed it? Dear me, dear me! Well, well, I'll +give it to the doctor. Good morning, my good fellow, and many thanks; +good morning!" + +Over the smoking room fire I examined this discovery very thoughtfully. +That it should have lain on the rocks all the time, and nobody, not even +the police, noticed it till now, seemed strange. Still, when one came to +think of it, the brown colour was very like the seaweed, and among that +jumble of boulders such a thing might readily have happened. But +certainly it had fallen out before the body was thrown into the sea, as +its condition proved. + +I glanced through the entries till I came to the very last the poor man +had made; and then I sat up and opened my eyes very wide indeed. Plainly +and distinctly these mems. were jotted: + +"Proof positive O'B. or confederate. + +"To be discovered whether O'B. himself--or the other? + +"Possibilities--Thomsons--No Scotts--No Scollays--No." + +The Thomsons and Scotts I knew to be tenants of seaboard farms like the +Scollays, and after the Scollays came three other names, each with "No" +written after them. A pencil mark also scored across all the six names. + +So here was Bolton's secret. Either O'Brien was actually in the island +himself, or he had a "confederate" here, and since that entry was made, +one of the two had crowned his series of crimes by murdering the man who +was on his track. And who was this confederate? Or alternatively, where +was O'Brien himself lurking? Obviously the six names were people +definitely acquitted, in Bolton's estimation anyhow; for the "No" and the +line through their names could only mean that. + +In this list certain names were not included--I had got so far when I +happened to glance at the clock and started to my feet. My appointment +with Jean was already overdue. + +No sign of her when I reached the road, so I set off to walk slowly +towards her house, thinking, thinking, thinking. Of course the man most +of all to be suspected was her own cousin. And if he were in it, I knew +that any person of common sense would warn me to beware of confiding in +his only relatives in the island. But I felt sure I knew better than any +person of mere common sense. Still, I could scarcely ask her to abet me +in convicting the doctor. Then I must not show her the note book. And +that meant a breach in our confidence at the very start. + +I had walked on till I was approaching her house, and still there was no +sign of her ahead, nor was there any conclusion in my mind. And then I +chanced to look round and saw her hastening after me, about a couple of +hundred yards away. I wheeled round and on the instant leapt to one of my +typical haphazard decisions. I would simply show her the pocket book and +see how she took it. + +She had evidently been running and met me half cross and half laughing +and divinely flushed after her stern chase. + +"I've been chasing you for miles!" she cried. "Why ever didn't you +look round?" + +"But I thought you were coming straight from home!" + +"I never said so, and I wasn't! I've been somewhere else first." + +There seemed to be a hint of something significant in these last +words, but I was so eager to come to the point that I never paused to +question her. + +"I am dreadfully sorry," I said, "but I was thinking so hard I never +thought of looking round. I have got some news for you." + +Her eyes sparkled. + +"What is it?" she cried. + +"Bolton's pocket book has been found among the rocks, and this was his +last entry before he was killed." + +I handed her the book open at the place and watched her face as she read. +And one thing her expression revealed beyond any possibility of doubt. +She was utterly and completely taken aback, and for some moments simply +stared at the jottings in dead silence. Then I saw a sudden gleam in her +eye, and a moment later she turned to me and cried, + +"This wasn't written by Bolton!" + +It was my turn to stare. + +"Not written by Bolton!" I exclaimed. "Let me look at it again." + +Standing there in the middle of the windy road, we quite forgot the +temperature, and a passing snow shower even whipped us unnoticed. + +"Look!" she said. "The writing is thicker and blacker and a little bigger +than the other entries." + +"It was evidently written with a different pencil, or with a blunt +pointed pencil. A man writing with a short blunt stump naturally +writes a little bigger and blacker. But look at the _t_s and the _r_s, +and the capital _P;_ in fact, look at all the letters. They are exactly +the same type." + +"Of course any one trying to copy another man's hand would make his +letters the same," she retorted, "but the character isn't the same. +Can't you see?" + +"There is a slight difference," I admitted, "but I really can't honestly +say I see any sufficient ground for putting this down as a fake. Besides, +what do you suppose it is--a practical joke?" + +"No, of course not. It was written by the real murderer to put people off +the scent." + +I tried not to smile, but I am afraid I did. + +"Another brilliant guess!" I said, and then hastened to add, "But a most +ingenious one and quite possibly--very probably, in fact, you are right." + +But she saw through my compliments, and I felt rather than observed an +instant change in her. + +"Oh, you may be right," she said, and handed me back the pocket book. + +"Or wrong," I replied, "but I mean to try and discover which." + +Instead of asking me what I meant to do, as I feared and expected, she +walked by my side very thoughtfully and in silence. I gave her a +moment or two to put the question which never came, and then changed +the subject. + +"And have you discovered anything?" I asked. + +"Not discovered--only guessed," she answered with a smile in her eyes, +half defiant, half mischievous. + +"And what have you guessed?" + +"Oh, I won't trouble you with more guesses. I must find something out +first--something really convincing, like that note book." + +I was a little piqued, but I merely laughed and said, + +"Well, we'll see!" + +By this time we were quite near the house. + +"Won't you come in and have lunch with us?" she asked. + +The temptation was strong, but the scent seemed too warm to lose, and I +said I must be back for lunch at home. We stopped, and as she looked at +me I noticed in her eyes what first seemed to be doubt and anxiety and a +moment later to become resolution. + +"Mr. Merton," she said; her voice rather low, "which ever of us is right, +I think we must be getting near rather a critical point. Don't you think +you had better send off that wire to Captain Whiteclett?" + +I shook my head. + +"Not quite yet," I said. "You see it's a serious matter dragging my +cousin out here unless one is quite certain he will be needed." + +"But then he may not be in time!" + +"I must risk that. But you may rest assured I'll wire the very instant I +know it won't be bringing him out on a wild goose chase." + +For an instant she was silent again, and then she suddenly said, + +"I'm sure that writing was forged!" + +It seemed to me that I read in her exclamation a kind of whipping up of +her unbelief, as though she needed to reassure herself. + +"A pair of gloves on it?" I suggested. + +I quite confess that it was not one of my most tactful suggestions. She +froze up again at once. Not that there was anything unkind in her eye as +we said good-bye, only it was clear that in the meantime we were each +going our own way. + +I set out at my best pace back for I was hot for instant action, and +Jean's doubts, though I dismissed them as quite unjustified by anything +in the writing, nevertheless made me anxious to settle the question at +once. The end might be very near indeed, I told myself, as I strode out +with the last remains of my limp quite vanished. But what prompted those +doubts; a genuine disbelief in the authenticity of the handwriting, or a +perception of the logical consequences and a very natural shrinking from +them? I wondered very much. The fact that she had refrained from asking +a single question as to what I meant to do, suggested the second +solution. And yet it was curiously unlike Jean Rendall's fearless spirit. + + + +XV + +PART OF THE TRUTH + + +I never remember feeling more intensely chagrined than when I reached our +bleak house twenty minutes late for our early dinner to find the doctor +had eaten a hurried meal quarter of an hour before the usual hour and +rushed out to attend an urgent case. + +I asked at once whether he had been told of the pocket book. Yes, it +appeared he had. He had seemed very interested, but had immediately +ordered his dinner hour to be advanced and then hurried away without +putting further questions. + +Was his haste a consequence of what he was told, or merely a +coincidence? Well, I was resolved to leave that point in doubt no later +than his return. I hardly debated at all the question of what to do. The +baffling business of groping in the dark, and daily scheming to discover +a window, without giving myself away, had gone on long enough. I had +found a head at last and I meant to hit it. It might turn out to be the +wrong head; still, I felt convinced I could scarcely fail to discover +something fresh. + +But though I proposed to take a bold course and make a short cut to the +heart of this infernal mystery, I realised perfectly that if the cut +actually led me there, it would prove an exceedingly dangerous by-way. +It was such a gamble that I shrank from summoning my cousin until it had +come off, but I wrote out the code telegram we had arranged and put it +in my pocket ready for emergencies. Of the doctor's two servants the +younger anyhow was absolutely trustworthy I was convinced, and I meant +to send her with the wire to the post office while I kept guard over the +prisoner. And then, to ensure there being a prisoner, I saw that all the +chambers of my revolver were loaded and put it in my coat pocket ready +to my hand. + +The afternoon dragged on, the wind still blustering round the house and +the hail now and then rattling on the windows; but no Dr. Rendall +appeared. Tea time arrived and still no sign of him. I gave him half an +hour's grace and then had my own tea and returned to the smoking-room. +The evening by this time had fallen and the curtains were drawn and the +lamps lit. + +And then at last I heard him enter the front door. I jumped up and, with +a dramatic instinct for taking the centre of the stage, placed myself +before the fire, but I heard him run upstairs and it was some minutes +before the sound of his descending steps reached me. The moment the door +opened I was conscious that one of those peculiar changes I had so often +noticed had taken place in the man. He smiled at me, but with a curiously +furtive eye, and then he shut the door and came forward. + +"You have had tea, I hope," said he. + +I wasted no time in preliminaries. Keeping my right hand closed over the +revolver in my pocket I held out the pocket book with my left. + +"Dr. Rendall," I said, "you have heard that Bolton's pocket book has been +found. Here it is. Kindly look at that entry." + +The man started perceptibly and stared at me. Speaking in that tone and +without my eye glasses I must have made an astonishing contrast to the +Thomas Hobhouse he had last seen that morning at breakfast. + +"Read that," I commanded. + +He took the pocket book and I watched him closely. I saw his eyebrows +rise as he read. + +"What's all this about?" he asked. + +"It is Bolton's last entry in his note book before he was murdered, and +it means that O'Brien is either still in this island, or that a +confederate of his is playing traitor in his place, and that one of the +two has just committed murder. It is quite impossible that you don't know +something of this!" + +His blue eyes now had considerably more anger than guilt in them. In +fact I was bound to admit that he looked a fine upstanding man, with +his grey moustache, high colour, and an air of unmistakable indignation +in his face. + +"Who the devil are you?" he demanded. + +"I may tell you that I am _not_ Thomas Sylvester Hobhouse, and that I +have never taken liquor enough in my life to hurt myself. I am here to +investigate certain things that have been going on in this island, and +I'll put one question to you straight, Dr. Rendall. You remember being +visited by a certain man Merton last August, When you heard him +approaching your house why did you pull down your blind?" + +That shot went straight home. All the indignation vanished and I saw on +the instant I had him at my mercy. + +"What--what--has that to do with it?" he stammered. + +"Don't trouble to try and hedge. As a matter of fact I am Merton and I +saw the blind go down myself. Since then we have always been on your +tracks, Dr. Rendall." + +"I swear that that had nothing to do with treason!" + +"You are accused of treason, your relations to O'Brien were very +peculiar, and if you can't explain that blind and this entry and a number +of other things, you will be in an extremely nasty position." + +The doctor made no further effort to stand up to me. He sank into a +chair while I stood over him, and I knew I was going to hear the truth at +last. And yet this sudden collapse, and indeed his whole attitude, were +so unexpected that I felt more puzzled than triumphant. + +"Mr. Merton," he said, "for God's sake don't give me away and I'll tell +you the whole truth. My cousin Philip can confirm it--or at least part of +it. I came up here because--well, I'd married the wrong woman and gone +off the rails a bit and Philip settled me here to keep me straight. I had +debts too--I have them still, I may tell you frankly. That's why I took +in O'Brien. I wasn't supposed to keep any liquor in the house--that was +one of the conditions. But damn it, I wasn't born to be a teetotaler, and +that's the plain truth, Mr. Merton. That devil O'Brien found me out and +started to blackmail me--" + +"Blackmail?" I asked. + +"In his own way. He made me give him liquor--and there we were the pair +of us! That's why I pulled down the blind. The decanter and glasses were +all out on this table here! And that's why O'Brien was afraid you might +be sent by his relations. That was the one thing he was afraid of,--that +he might be found out and taken away." + +I bent over him and sniffed. + +"You have had a dram now!" I exclaimed. + +"And it's not the first since you've been here either. You see I'm +perfectly frank with you, Mr. Merton. If you like to give me away to +Philip--well be d----d, you can if you like. But you'll surely not? I've +told you what I've told to no one else." + +There rushed into my mind confirmation enough of part at least of the +poor devil's story. His curious moods, his manner as he entered the +room this evening, O'Brien's impish allusions to liquor when I first +visited the house, all fell into their places now. Yet utterly as this +had exploded my hopes, I think I was more glad than sorry to see the +doctor come out of the ordeal with only this kind of stain on his +character. He was a likeable man, we had been capital friends--and he +was Jean's cousin. + +"I promise you, doctor," I said, "that I shall repeat no word of this +story--except of course in confidence to those who are on the track of +this business in Ransay. Only in return you must tell me absolutely +frankly if you have seen any grounds for suspecting O'Brien of anything +treasonable--anything whatever." + +The doctor shook his head emphatically. + +"The only plotting the man was capable of was to get liquor. Otherwise he +was just a gas bag. I've seen him too often in a state when he'd have +given everything away, if there had been anything to give." + +And then I remembered the pocket book. + +"But this entry!" I cried. "How do you explain that?" + +The doctor looked at it again and his bewilderment was obviously sincere. + +"I'm frankly d----d if I can make head or tail of it," he said. "Bolton +must have got on the wrong scent; that's the only thing I can imagine." + +And then, like a sharp smack in the face, Jean's reading of that entry +came back to me. Could she have guessed right after all? It looked +uncommonly like it. + +"And yet," I said to myself, "it's a great thing to have tested the other +hypothesis." + +In fact, if one is not built to be easily dispirited, well, it is not +easy to dispirit one. I looked at the doctor, and something in my +expression seemed to make him smile. When he smiled he looked so pleasant +that my conscience smote me. I told myself he certainly deserved some +reparation for the ordeal I had put him through. + +"Doctor," I said, "I am devilish thirsty myself after this bout. Let's +each have a whisky and soda!" + +It may or may not have been the wisest suggestion to make. I am not an +expert in these matters. But anyhow if he enjoyed his drink as much as I +enjoyed mine, it was at least a happy idea. + +We had lit our pipes with our glasses at our sides, and I was in the +midst of giving the doctor some further reparation in the shape of the +true tale of my adventures, when I saw him suddenly start and glance +guiltily at his tumbler. + +"Is that some one in the hall?" he exclaimed. + +"Probably the servants," I suggested. + +The next instant the door opened and, without any announcement, in walked +my uncle Sir Francis Merton followed by my cousin Commander John +Whiteclett. + + + +XVI + +TRACKED DOWN + + +"I trust we are not interrupting you, Roger," said my uncle. + +His voice was caustic and his eye severe, and as the costume he had +selected for this thunderbolt entrance was apparently designed to suggest +a combination of North Sea pilot and pirate King (including a fur cap +with ear flaps tied under his venerable chin) one might have fired a +twelve inch gun into the room and produced much less impression. + +"Not a bit," I said, bounding to my feet, "but--er--wouldn't you like to +untie your bonnet, Uncle Francis?" + +He frowned at me heavily but I was thankful to notice that his eye did +twinkle for an instant. + +"What is the meaning of this?" he demanded. + +"That is just the question, sir, I was going to put." + +My cousin interposed. + +"Uncle Francis arrived this morning to see how things were getting on and +when I got your wire I brought him out with me. What has happened?" + +"Got my wire!" I exclaimed. "Surely--I'm certain I never sent it off!" + +I put my hand in my pocket, and there it was right enough. + +"My dear Jack, here it is. It never was sent." + +His hand dived into his own pocket and then held out a crumpled telegram. +I took it and read this message. + +"Request permission to be visited by my own doctor. Hobhouse." + +"Do you mean to say you never sent that off yourself?" exclaimed +Sir Francis. + +"Never!" + +"Then who the--!" My uncle's expression completed the sentence. + +Jack Whiteclett was looking uncommonly grave. + +"This is a somewhat serious matter, Roger," he said quietly. "Didn't you +write this either?" + +He handed me a half sheet of paper on which was written in pencil +these words. + +"GO TO DOCTOR'S. IF NO FURTHER MESSAGE THERE GO ON TO SCOLLAYS' +_IMMEDIATELY_." + +It was printed in capital letters so as to give no clue to the +handwriting. + +"When did you get that?" I cried. + +"It was handed to me as we landed. The messenger went off again at once, +but I assumed of course it was from you." + +"Roger!" thundered my uncle. "Who have you taken into your confidence?" + +His eye turned manacingly on the doctor and I hastened to intervene. + +"Dr. Rendall--Sir Francis Merton," I introduced. "But it certainly wasn't +Dr. Rendall who sent these messages. He has only just learned the facts." + +My uncle bowed very stiffly to the doctor and turned on me again. + +"And how many more people have 'learned the facts'--the facts, I may +remind you, which it was so vital they should _not_ learn?" + +I bared my metaphorical breast, and with as close an imitation of a +clear-conscienced young man revealing the harmless necessary truth as I +could achieve without rehearsal, I told him, + +"I have only informed one person, and she is thoroughly trustworthy." + +"She!" said my uncle, not very loudly but extremely unpleasantly. + +"She is Miss Rendall," I added. + +My revelations to the doctor not having reached this stage when we were +interrupted, I think I can honestly say that no utterance of mine ever +produced a more telling effect on these men simultaneously. + +"Jean!" exclaimed the doctor. + +"Oh, is that her name?" said my uncle as soon as he could trust +himself to speak. + +My cousin alone came straight to the point. + +"Then she has sent me this wire and this message?" + +"She must have," I agreed. + +"In that case we had better push on for the Scollays at once and see what +she means." + +"You don't think it's a trap?" asked my uncle. + +Jack Whiteclett smiled slightly. The idea of the Navy pausing to weigh +the risk appeared to amuse him. + +"We must take our chance," he said briefly. "We've both got our +shooting irons." + +"And so have I," I added, "and certainly _I_ am going to the Scollays. +You can trust Miss Rendall!" + +"You can that!" said the doctor heartily. "And if you don't mind I'll +come with you." + +I saw doubt in my uncle's eye and put in quickly. + +"Certainly, doctor! We may all be needed. Come on!" + +It was quite dark, and mortal cold; the road was frozen hard and the +nor'east wind swept over it without a break from wall or hedge-row. We +all four trotted for a little to get up our circulation and then settled +down to a fast five-mile-an-hour walk. About half the distance had been +covered when I first heard a little sound ahead. + +"What's that!" I exclaimed, and we stood still and listened. + +"Somebody running!" said my cousin. + +"Towards us?" asked Sir Francis. + +"Yes." + +Plainer and plainer sounded the pattering steps on the frozen road, and +as they drew nearer I thought I could tell that they were light steps--a +woman's or a boy's, they seemed. + +"Let's drop into the ditch and see who it is," whispered Jack. + +We broke, two of us to either side of the road, and I found myself with +my uncle stooping in one ditch, with Jack and the doctor across the road +in the other. Thus bent down, one could see objects against the sky more +distinctly and in a moment I spied the runner dimly, pattering down the +middle of the road straight for us. And then, in a few seconds, this +runner gradually took shape and my eyes at last could see the swing of a +skirt and thought they could even recognise the slim figure. I jumped up. + +"Wait!" muttered my uncle. + +"It's all right! We mustn't frighten her," I said. + +I came out into the middle of the road and saw the other three rising at +the sides. The runner was barely twenty yards away by now and I heard her +gasp as she stopped abruptly. + +"Miss Rendall?" I said. + +The next moment she had rushed up to me, her eyes sparkling, her voice +coming in pants. + +"Mr. Merton!" she panted and then her eyes fell on the others. "They've +come then--I'm so glad!--forgive me for wiring--but--look!" + +She handed me something small and long-shaped. It was a spectacle case. + +"Take them out!" she said. + +We were all four gathered round her now and I heard my uncle say, + +"Where's that torch of yours, Jack?" + +Then the flash of my cousin's electric torch fell on the spectacles and +my heart leapt. + +"The tinted spectacles!" I cried. + +"Where did you find them?" demanded my uncle and cousin +simultaneously, and I could tell from their voices that all doubts had +vanished, and that, like me, they were burning now only with the +excitement of the chase. + +"At the Scollays'!" she said, still panting. "But there's no time +to lose--you'll see everything if we only hurry--he may be back if +we don't!" + +Sir Francis (of course) pocketed the spectacle case, and the whole five +of us set out at the double, Jean trotting in front between Jack and me, +and Sir Francis and the doctor clattering behind. My cousin and I each +tried a question, but we saw that Jean's breath would be better saved for +whatever was ahead, and so our voices fell silent and presently as we +left the high road our feet fell almost silent too. We only dropped to a +walk when the farm buildings loomed up close ahead, and then for a moment +Jean stopped us and listened intently. + +"They are all in the house still," she whispered. "I think we are in +time!" + +She led us, walking in single file and on our toes, into the midst of the +huddle of low houses until we came to one open, pitch-dark door. And then +she flashed a little torch and we followed her into a building which I +remembered distinctly. One end was the barn where I slept that memorable +first night in Ransay. The other was filled with a litter of odds and +ends--coils of rope, fishing nets, a barrel or two, spades, a pick-axe, +and I cannot remember what else. With feverish energy she pushed and +pulled these things aside, my cousin's torch lighting up the jumble, +until a large rough wooden box became visible, standing in the very +corner against the wall. I could see at a glance that it had been locked +and the lock forced. + +"I broke it open!" she whispered. "So there was no time to lose or he'd +have known!" + +We raised the heavy lid and the very first thing my eyes fell on was a +white false beard. Jean picked it up and I could hear her voice shaking +with excitement. + +"There's the rest of the disguise!" she said. + +And there was the old coat, and a nasty looking scythe blade, and a +number of other things of which the powers that be have an inventory now, +but which they would scarcely thank me for mentioning here. I may say, +however, that they made a very thorough outfit for the job the owner of +them had been engaged on. Among them was one very curious looking find: +the two halves of a large cheese hollowed out, and one-half broken +across. Jack Whiteclett pointed to this with a grim look. + +"An unsuccessful experiment," he whispered. "He must have made a better +one for the _Uruguay_" + +"Do you mean," gasped Jean, "that this was for a bomb?" + +"Looks like it," he answered. + +"Hush!" I whispered. + +The torch went out on the instant and in absolute inky darkness we held +our breath and listened. Somebody was quietly approaching the barn. The +steps were not exactly stealthy, but guarded and wary, though quite +assured, as if the man were only exercising a general precaution. + +"Keep your faces hidden as much as you can!" whispered Whiteclett. + +There was enough light in the open door to silhouette a figure as it +entered, and a moment later I saw for an instant quite distinctly the +outline of that oilskinned man once more. And then for perhaps three +long seconds he was lost in the gloom within and we only knew of his +approach by the sound of his footsteps. Abruptly they stopped. He was +little more than a couple of paces from us now and I thought I heard him +move back a step. Probably he had seen the white of some one's face. + +There was a little click and Whiteclett's torch flashed full on him. In +that instant I saw his hand rise, and with my head down I charged him. +The report of his pistol rang through the barn and almost simultaneously +down he came, and I had a firm grip of those oilskins at last. + +How the man fought! Not till I was sitting on his legs and Jack and the +doctor each had an arm pinned to the floor did he cease to struggle, and +even then he did not cease to swear. Sir Francis standing up over him, +with the torch in his own hand, now turned the light on to his face. When +I saw what it revealed I nearly let go our prisoner's legs through sheer +bewilderment. For there in the torch's bright circle lay the poor idiot +Jock, cursing us in fluent German. + + + +XVII + +THE REST OF THE TRUTH + + +"Does any one know him?" demanded my uncle. + +"It's the Scollays' idiot son!" I gasped. + +I heard an exclamation both from Jean and the doctor. + +"Son?" said Jean. "What! Did you think Jock was a Scollay?" + +"He was sent up here about a couple of years ago to be looked after by +these Scollays," explained the doctor. "We always supposed he was +somebody's--?" he glanced at Jean and hesitated--"er--somebody's son." + +"Good Heavens!" I cried. "What a fool I've been!" + +Swiftly I ran over in my mind my first night with the Scollay household. +Had I ever been told Jock was a son? No, I had simply assumed it, and +gone on that assumption without ever once thinking anything more about +the matter. And so, with this impenetrable curtain between me and all +possibility of guessing the truth I had gone on uselessly groping. + +"Fool!" + +A harsh voice startled me. It was Jock, gazing viciously up at me and +talking guttural English now. His face was still framed in the circle of +the torch, and as I looked at it now I realised that the truth had +actually been written there all the time for a closely observing eye to +read. This man's features differed vitally from the Scollays' and, +especially, there was no cast in his eyes. + +"Fool!" he snarled, "yes, you have been a damned fool, you Hobhouse! Ach, +if I had known, you should have been a dead fool!" + +"You mean if you hadn't been made a bit of a fool of too?" I suggested. + +He was a brave man and a useful man to his country, but the German +boastfulness would out. + +"Ach, but I should have found you out soon! Me, you would have found +out never!" + +His eyes rolled round our party and I could see curiosity overcoming even +his bragging. + +"Who did tell you?" he demanded. + +"If it is any satisfaction to you to know," replied Sir Francis, "your +machinations were discovered and you were tracked down and caught by a +girl." He turned to Jean and added, "An exceedingly clever, brave and +patriotic girl." + +I am sorry to say our prisoner still further smirched his record. What he +said was fortunately in German and the words at the beginning of his +sentence were not the kind that Jean would know. Before he had finished +it my uncle had struck him with the butt end of the torch on the mouth. + +"Hold your foul tongue!" he cried and then turned away and I could see a +kind of shiver run over him. + +"God forgive me!" he murmured. "I never struck a man when he was down +before!" And then he recovered himself a little and added, "But is a +German a human being?" + +Meanwhile Jean was already bringing a bundle of rope from the corner +under my cousin's direction, and in a few minutes his practised hands had +knotted our prisoner up so securely that we were able to move aside from +him and hold a hasty council of war. + +"Now for the rest of the gang!" said my uncle. "Do you suppose they've +heard us and bolted?" + +"Do you mean the Scollays?" asked Jean. "Oh, I don't believe they knew!" + +"My dear young lady, it's very painful for you to think your tenants are +playing such games, but they simply must have known!" + +"We can't afford to give them the benefit of the doubt," said Jack +Whiteclett. "That's absolutely certain. I am afraid I must arrest them, +Miss Rendall, and the sooner it's over the better." + +"Jack!" commanded our uncle, "this is a matter I think I could handle +rather better than a hot-headed young man." (Commander Whiteclett, it +may be mentioned, was reputed in the Navy to have a remarkably cool +head.) "Dr. Rendall, perhaps you will be good enough to keep watch over +our prisoner for a few minutes while we are gone. Roger, give the doctor +your pistol. If we hear you fire, doctor, we'll be out in a few seconds. +Jack and Roger, come along with me." + +Jack and I exchanged a look but said nothing. Our uncle still held the +torch, and flashing it before him led the way out of the barn. We +followed him, but my eyes I am afraid were over my shoulder. I saw Jean +slip her own torch into the doctor's hand and then she ran after me. + +"May I come too!" she whispered. + +"Of course!" I said, "you're in command of the party--or ought to be!" +and out we went together. + +The farm yard made rough walking, and there seemed every excuse for my +taking her arm and none for her objecting; nor did she. + +"Who is this delightful, arbitrary old gentleman?" she asked in my ear. +"You never introduced me!" + +"Our uncle," I murmured back. "Jack and I both have expectations so we've +got to give him his head!" + +I must say Sir Francis stage-managed our entrance into the Scollays' +house very effectively. As he quietly opened the door, he got us all +close behind him, exactly like a band of robbers, so that we trod on one +another's heels down a yard or two of narrow passage. The Scollays were +all seated round the kitchen table when our uncle's figure suddenly +towered out of the gloom, his pistol covering Peter senior's head, and +his voice thundering: + +"Hands up!" + +At the first command they simply gasped. + +"Hands up or I fire!" thundered Sir Francis again, and up went every pair +of hands, and what is more they stayed up. + +"Your confederate is captured and has confessed everything!" announced +Sir Francis. + +The family visibly trembled but looked more amazed than ever. + +"This fellow they call--" My uncle looked over his shoulder and +whispered, "What the devil was the fellow's name." And then in his +stentorian voice again, "This fellow called Jock has confessed! So I know +all about it. What have you got to say for yourselves?" + +I saw their bewildered eyes wandering from one to the other of the +family, and in a moment Mrs. Scollay asked in a quavering voice, + +"What's come over Jock, do ye say, sir?" + +"He has _confessed_!" repeated my uncle. "We know that he is a +German spy!" + +He glared at each astounded face in turn and then exclaimed over +his shoulder, + +"By Heaven, I actually don't believe they knew!" + +"I think, sir, if you'll allow me," suggested my cousin, "I'd like to put +a few questions." + +"Well," growled our uncle, "fire away!" + +We all trooped into the kitchen and the whole four of us cross-examined +that family in turn, so that by the end of it we got a pretty good idea +of how the land lay. + +It seemed that two years before, the Scollays had been visited by a +polite stranger apparently of the tourist species. This gentleman, after +admiring the healthy yet retired situation of their residence, had +suddenly been seized with an inspiration. The very place for an +unfortunate young man of his acquaintance! he cried, and thereupon asked +them if they could take charge of a blameless, helpless, harmless idiot. +The stranger hinted that there were the best of reasons why the parents +of this unfortunate wished him kept in the background. He had been +boarded out previously, it appeared, but too near home, and now here was +an ideal out-of-the-way spot for his retirement! The terms were so +handsome that further enquiries on the Scollays' part seemed superfluous, +and so in a week's time Jock had arrived. + +His harmlessness had been absolutely guaranteed, provided always that no +restraints were put upon him and that any little innocent fancy was +indulged. Thus he wandered all over the island and at all hours, +sometimes even wandering out at night when the foolish fancy took him, +until this was accepted as the normal thing for harmless Jock. Another +innocent whim he had of making a collection of rubbishy odds and ends and +keeping them in a box in the barn. He had even repeated "Lock! Lock!" and +stamped his harmless foot till they good-naturedly provided him with a +lock and key for this treasure chest. And thus long before August, 1914, +Jock was provided with a character that rendered his habits above +suspicion, and a strong box which nobody would ever dream of examining. + +Two or three times the same polite tourist paid a visit to the island to +see how the poor demented young man was being looked after, and on these +occasions he would take Jock out for quite a long walk, and afterwards +assure the family that their guest's health was benefiting greatly. But +this gentleman had not visited the island since the war, it seemed. + +This was the Scollays' story and I think we all believed that in the main +it was true. In fact, since then it has stood the test of all the +evidence that could be got to check it. At the same time it seemed pretty +clear that their greed had made them blinder than any one without a +strong monetary interest could possibly have been. For fear of losing +their little gold mine they had shut their eyes when people of average +common sense would have opened them pretty wide. Our questions convicted +them of this much, and at the end Whiteclett said emphatically that the +two Peters must depart that night with him for further examination, if +for nothing more. + +"I'll leave you here with them, sir, for a moment, while I have a look at +the other prisoner," he said quickly before our uncle could begin to +issue the commands that we knew were coming, and with a sign to Jean and +myself, hurried out. + +We were at his heels and followed him to the barn. There Jock was still +lying bound with the doctor sitting over him. + +"Has he said anything to you?" asked my cousin when he had called the +doctor aside. + +Dr. Rendall smiled under his grey moustache. + +"He offered me L200 in gold to be paid on the nail if I would let him +loose. We must have a dig for that money to-morrow, Whiteclett." + +"Anything else?" + +"Not a word after I had refused, and it's my belief you'll never get +another word out of the man between now and his execution." + +"He seems that sort," my cousin agreed. "And now, doctor, you and I will +carry him into the house and keep Sir Francis company. The three of us +will have an eye on all the prisoners then, till I can get some fellows +up from the drifter to escort them. Do you mind going down to the boat, +Roger, and sending up a party? You can find your way in the dark?" + +"I'll make a shift to." + +"Perhaps if Miss Rendall is going home she might put you on the right +road," he suggested. + +"Of course I will!" said Jean. + +As I left him, Jack pressed my hand and whispered, + +"Never say again I'm not tactful, Roger! Congratulations, old chap, +you've brought off a triple event if I'm not mistaken!" + +"Triple?" + +"That's one," he said pointing to our prisoner, "Uncle Francis is +another, and I'll bet you sixpence I'm right about the third as soon +as you shave that filthy beard. Get off with you now and don't keep a +lady waiting!" + + + +XVIII + +THE FROSTY ROAD + + +Sometimes we walked and sometimes we trotted in step side by side, her +arm through mine, where I had persuaded it to venture, and where it +thrilled me by remaining. Personally I was not in the least anxious to +bring our errand to an early end, but Jean was fired with zeal to +astonish my relations by the speed with which we brought reinforcements, +and so, trot and walk, we hurried down the frosted road through that +black March night, talking, talking, almost every step of the way. + +It was she who began as soon as we were clear of the farm. + +"Are your uncle and Captain Whiteclett going back tonight?" she asked +anxiously, and when I said I didn't know, she cried, "Well then I must +come back and see them in case they go. There has been no time to explain +and they must be told that it was simply my stupidity that prevented you +from catching Jock sooner!" + +"Your--what?" I exclaimed. + +"Yes, I ought to have seen that you didn't know he wasn't one of the +family!" she insisted. "And that was one of the reasons why I went and +interfered again when I'd vowed I wouldn't. I thought if you didn't +suspect him, perhaps I was wrong, and if I had been, you'd never have +trusted my 'guesses' again; so I wanted to get some proof to show you. +But all the credit is really yours." + +Our debate on this point was too one-sided to be worth recording. And yet +though my arguments were irresistible, she would persist--and persists to +this day--that somehow or other I unmasked Jock the spy. + +"Well, let's leave it at that," I said at last. "Disguised as Miss +Rendall, alone I did it! And now tell me what made you suspect the man?" + +"It was only when you told me about meeting him by the cliffs on the day +of the murder that I suddenly thought of Bolton's discovery and then I +saw that he must have meant Jock. At least I guessed, but I knew it would +seem the wildest idea until there was a little more proof, and so I +determined to make a few enquiries and then tell you at once if there +seemed to be anything in my idea. So next morning I went to the Scollays +and paid them a friendly visit and began talking about Jock and his +habits and movements, and I found he had disappeared for a good part of +that day when Bolton was murdered. I also found he was often out at +nights, and that he kept that locked box in the barn." + +"So you felt sure?" + +"I would have if you hadn't made me rather less confident about my +guesses. Still, I'd have told you next morning, only when you showed me +that pocket-book you seemed so positive that you quite shook me. And then +I determined to go myself and break into the box and see if I could find +some proof." + +"That's the one thing I can't quite forgive you for; running all that +risk by yourself!" + +"But that was just the point! I had somehow got it into my head that +since I had found you out, perhaps he had too, and I remembered what +happened to Bolton, and I couldn't let you run the risk when it was quite +safe for me!" + +"Quite safe!" I exclaimed. "Quite safe if he had caught you +opening his box?" + +"Oh, one has to run a _little_ risk," she admitted. "But I knew unless he +actually caught me he would never suspect me." + +"Well," I said, "every one has his own idea of what's a soft job. But you +did think it worth wiring for my cousin?" + +"Believe me," she said earnestly, "I only really decided to do that +after you had gone back and I couldn't consult you! I did _think_ of +it while you were with me, but you were so positive that there was no +need for wiring that I thought you might absolutely refuse to let me +in any case--" + +"And so you decided to decide after I had gone? I see! Well, all I can +say is I have been very judiciously handled." + +"You are frightfully good-natured!" she declared, apparently in all +sincerity. + +I had given up debating my virtues by this time. + +"It's this sea air," I said modestly, and enjoyed the delicious sensation +of trying to see her smile in the dark, and imagining how sweet she would +look if it were lighter. + +Going over each incident together as we hurried down the island that +night, I was glad to find, however, one part of my conduct which events +had thoroughly justified. If on that first night I had not instantly +assumed the role of a fellow Hun, I assuredly should not have been +walking with Jean Rendall now. Undoubtedly I had kept my enemy thinking +up till that unfortunate Sunday afternoon when I had made my fatal +blunder of trying to enlist the gabbling Jock as an ally, or I should +have been dead long before then. + +"You guessed right," I said. "That was when I gave myself away--only it +was not to any one behind a wall! And do you know I believe the fellow +actually tried me with the proper answer for the sheep riddle, only I +could make nothing out of it. Was I an idiot, or would any one have done +the same?" + +"Any one!" she said with conviction. "And don't you think I was right now +about the reason why he stopped firing next day?" + +"I begin to think you were. He was cunning enough to see that it wasn't +worth while running any risks, when he could probably get a sitting shot +next time. And he would have got me if you hadn't arrested me. Heavens! +To think of that man single-handed defying the British Navy and the +British Police and actually making it impossible for any pursuer he +considered dangerous to remain alive in this island! Bolton went, poor +chap, and I would have gone but for you." + +Perhaps I pressed her arm a little. Anyhow, she answered nothing for a +moment, and then in a low voice said, + +"Poor Bolton! Oh, you've no idea how frightened I got that morning when I +heard the news!" + +I knew it was not for herself she was frightened, and my heart +beat quicker. + +"I wonder how it happened," she went on. "I've often wondered since!" + +"If I may venture to guess too," I said, "I should say that Bolton was +undoubtedly on the right track. He had found that Jock was not one of the +family and had got suspicious of his movements, but one may safely take +it Jock was watching him like a cat watching a mouse--very likely he +managed to overhear Bolton making enquiries, and he deliberately laid a +scent for him that took him to the cliffs." + +"That sounds very likely," said she. "And then he took Bolton's pocket +book and made those entries." + +"That pocket book is rather a sore subject!" I said. + +I heard a little gurgle of laughter, but then she did not know how sore +the subject was. My scene with the unfortunate doctor was hardly my +happiest recollection of Ransay. + +And so we went on trotting and walking and talking, and all the time I +was realising more and more vividly that if this could only be made the +first of ten thousand evenings with her, I should be the luckiest man in +the world. Also I was realising that for some reason she seemed to think +I had done something rather heroic in returning to the place where I had +nearly been scythed and shot, and tackling the unknown enemy +single-handed; especially after she happened to discover I had been +wounded. It made me feel--well, a little abashed and dreadfully afraid of +being found out when she knew me better, but extraordinarily happy for +the moment. + +But for one sobering fact I should have told her everything I felt and +hoped before that walk was over. The beard of Thomas Sylvester Hobhouse +still wagged between us. Till I had got rid of that black hirsute horror +I was not going to risk my chances of happiness. It was pitch dark, I +admit, but then in certain delicate situations, well, if I were a girl I +should strongly object, especially if I knew it were dyed and didn't know +if the dye would run. + +And so we sent up the reinforcements, and then I saw her home, and +hurried back myself with a dancing heart to meet the others. + + + +XIX + +OUR MORNING CALL + + +John Whiteclett and the three prisoners went aboard at once, but the +doctor and I easily persuaded my uncle to spend the night with us. He was +very stiff, poor old boy, after his exertions, and went early to bed, but +I had a busy night of it. With the aid of the doctor's razors and the +doctor's medical skill I finally got rid of the beard and the dye about 2 +a.m. and went to sleep a clean-shaved blonde once more. + +During breakfast next morning, I noticed more than once my uncle's eyes +fixed on me in a very significant way, and Dr. Rendall seemed to notice +it too, for when breakfast was over he tactfully left us to ourselves. + +"H'm, you have lost no time in making yourself look like a Christian +again, I notice," my uncle began. + +"I lost no time in beginning, sir, but I assure you it was a devilish +stiff conversion." + +"And what was your hurry, Roger?" + +"Anxiety to do you credit, Uncle Francis." + +"You are becoming a dutiful nephew damned suddenly," observed Sir +Francis. + +"It has come on during this lonely life," I explained. + +"In that case what shall we do with ourselves this morning? Revisit the +scene of last night's affair, eh?" + +"I thought a walk in the other direction might give you a better idea of +this interesting island," I suggested. + +"Is there anything to see in the other direction?" he enquired, still +with the same gravity, but with an eye that inadvertently twinkled every +now and then. + +"I thought of presenting you to the proprietor of the island, sir." + +My uncle looked at me fixedly for a moment and then abruptly enquired: + +"Do you mean to marry her, Roger?" + +"That's entirely for her to say, Uncle Francis." + +"Well, you'll be deuced lucky if she says 'yes'! By the way, what are you +going to marry on?" + +This was a somewhat delicate question but I thought it best to be candid. + +"The advertised reward," I replied. + +"For what, may I ask?" + +"For catching the spy." + +"Oh, _you_ claim that!" + +"No, she does." + +My uncle smiled beneficently. + +"That's all right, old fellow," said he, "and I'll intimate as much to +her father. Come on! Now you've shaved, what are you waiting for?" + +"Your blessing, sir; but I'm ready now." + +The very weather was encouraging, for the wind had fallen considerably, +and it was just cold enough to make us step out over the frozen road in +bursting spirits. My uncle literally whistled several times, and once he +remarked _a propos_ of nothing: + +"I've always admired that type myself!" + +On what decent pretext I managed to get Jean out of the library within +two minutes of her entrance with her father, or whether it actually was +decent, my memory is a blank. I knew she loved me because she came out +with me so quickly, and she knew my heart because I asked her to. And as +we both had really known the night before, there scarcely needed a +question to be asked and answered. And that is the end of Jean's and my +part in the story. + + * * * * * + +As for that brave, brutal and extraordinary man who had masqueraded as an +imbecile for two whole years to serve the ambitions of his country, +playing the part of a kind of isolated living base for the German Navy, +as a spy, as a destroyer, and as a murderer, I have never learned his +name or his past history to this day. After his first outburst of +blasphemy, I believe he kept doggedly silent up to his speedy end. He +lived and died like a savage, cunning, carnivorous beast; or, in other +words, like his masters who employed him. + + + + + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Man From the Clouds, by J. 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