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-
- THE THIRTY-NINE STEPS
-
- by JOHN BUCHAN
-
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- THOMAS ARTHUR NELSON
-
- (LOTHIAN AND BORDER HORSE)
-
- My Dear Tommy,
-
- You and I have long cherished an affection for that
- elemental type of tale which Americans call the
- 'dime novel' and which we know as the 'shocker' - the
- romance where the incidents defy the probabilities, and
- march just inside the borders of the possible. During
- an illness last winter I exhausted my store of those
- aids to cheerfulness, and was driven to write one for
- myself. This little volume is the result, and I should
- like to put your name on it in memory of our long
- friendship, in the days when the wildest fictions are so
- much less improbable than the facts.
-
- J.B.
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- 1. The Man Who Died
- 2. The Milkman Sets Out on his Travels
- 3. The Adventure of the Literary Innkeeper
- 4. The Adventure of the Radical Candidate
- 5. The Adventure of the Spectacled Roadman
- 6. The Adventure of the Bald Archaeologist
- 7. The Dry-Fly Fisherman
- 8. The Coming of the Black Stone
- 9. The Thirty-Nine Steps
- 10. Various Parties Converging on the Sea
-
-
-
- CHAPTER ONE
- The Man Who Died
-
-
- I returned from the City about three o'clock on that May afternoon
- pretty well disgusted with life. I had been three months in the Old
- Country, and was fed up with it. If anyone had told me a year ago
- that I would have been feeling like that I should have laughed at
- him; but there was the fact. The weather made me liverish, the talk
- of the ordinary Englishman made me sick, I couldn't get enough
- exercise, and the amusements of London seemed as flat as soda-
- water that has been standing in the sun. 'Richard Hannay,' I kept
- telling myself, 'you have got into the wrong ditch, my friend, and
- you had better climb out.'
- It made me bite my lips to think of the plans I had been building
- up those last years in Bulawayo. I had got my pile - not one of the
- big ones, but good enough for me; and I had figured out all kinds
- of ways of enjoying myself. My father had brought me out from
- Scotland at the age of six, and I had never been home since; so
- England was a sort of Arabian Nights to me, and I counted on
- stopping there for the rest of my days.
-
- But from the first I was disappointed with it. In about a week I
- was tired of seeing sights, and in less than a month I had had
- enough of restaurants and theatres and race-meetings. I had no real
- pal to go about with, which probably explains things. Plenty of
- people invited me to their houses, but they didn't seem much
- interested in me. They would fling me a question or two about
- South Africa, and then get on their own affairs. A lot of Imperialist
- ladies asked me to tea to meet schoolmasters from New Zealand
- and editors from Vancouver, and that was the dismalest business of
- all. Here was I, thirty-seven years old, sound in wind and limb,
- with enough money to have a good time, yawning my head off all
- day. I had just about settled to clear out and get back to the veld,
- for I was the best bored man in the United Kingdom.
-
- That afternoon I had been worrying my brokers about
- investments to give my mind something to work on, and on my
- way home I turned into my club - rather a pot-house, which took
- in Colonial members. I had a long drink, and read the evening
- papers. They were full of the row in the Near East, and there was
- an article about Karolides, the Greek Premier. I rather fancied the
- chap. From all accounts he seemed the one big man in the show;
- and he played a straight game too, which was more than could be
- said for most of them. I gathered that they hated him pretty blackly
- in Berlin and Vienna, but that we were going to stick by him, and
- one paper said that he was the only barrier between Europe and
- Armageddon. I remember wondering if I could get a job in those
- parts. It struck me that Albania was the sort of place that might
- keep a man from yawning.
-
- About six o'clock I went home, dressed, dined at the Cafe Royal,
- and turned into a music-hall. It was a silly show, all capering
- women and monkey-faced men, and I did not stay long. The night
- was fine and clear as I walked back to the flat I had hired near
- Portland Place. The crowd surged past me on the pavements, busy
- and chattering, and I envied the people for having something to
- do. These shop-girls and clerks and dandies and policemen had
- some interest in life that kept them going. I gave half-a-crown to a
- beggar because I saw him yawn; he was a fellow-sufferer. At Oxford
- Circus I looked up into the spring sky and I made a vow. I would
- give the Old Country another day to fit me into something; if
- nothing happened, I would take the next boat for the Cape.
-
- My flat was the first floor in a new block behind Langham Place.
- There was a common staircase, with a porter and a liftman at the
- entrance, but there was no restaurant or anything of that sort, and
- each flat was quite shut off from the others. I hate servants on the
- premises, so I had a fellow to look after me who came in by the
- day. He arrived before eight o'clock every morning and used to
- depart at seven, for I never dined at home.
-
- I was just fitting my key into the door when I noticed a man at
- my elbow. I had not seen him approach, and the sudden appearance
- made me start. He was a slim man, with a short brown beard and
- small, gimlety blue eyes. I recognized him as the occupant of a flat
- on the top floor, with whom I had passed the time of day on the
- stairs.
-
- 'Can I speak to you?' he said. 'May I come in for a minute?' He
- was steadying his voice with an effort, and his hand was pawing my arm.
-
- I got my door open and motioned him in. No sooner was he
- over the threshold than he made a dash for my back room, where I
- used to smoke and write my letters. Then he bolted back.
-
- 'Is the door locked?' he asked feverishly, and he fastened the
- chain with his own hand.
-
- 'I'm very sorry,' he said humbly. 'It's a mighty liberty, but you
- looked the kind of man who would understand. I've had you in my
- mind all this week when things got troublesome. Say, will you do
- me a good turn?'
-
- 'I'll listen to you,' I said. 'That's all I'll promise.' I was getting
- worried by the antics of this nervous little chap.
-
- There was a tray of drinks on a table beside him, from which he
- filled himself a stiff whisky-and-soda. He drank it off in three
- gulps, and cracked the glass as he set it down.
-
- 'Pardon,' he said, 'I'm a bit rattled tonight. You see, I happen at
- this moment to be dead.'
-
- I sat down in an armchair and lit my pipe.
-
- 'What does it feel like?' I asked. I was pretty certain that I had to
- deal with a madman.
-
- A smile flickered over his drawn face. 'I'm not mad - yet. Say,
- Sir, I've been watching you, and I reckon you're a cool customer. I
- reckon, too, you're an honest man, and not afraid of playing a bold
- hand. I'm going to confide in you. I need help worse than any man
- ever needed it, and I want to know if I can count you in.'
-
- 'Get on with your yarn,' I said, 'and I'll tell you.'
-
- He seemed to brace himself for a great effort, and then started on
- the queerest rigmarole. I didn't get hold of it at first, and I had to
- stop and ask him questions. But here is the gist of it:
-
- He was an American, from Kentucky, and after college, being
- pretty well off, he had started out to see the world. He wrote a bit,
- and acted as war correspondent for a Chicago paper, and spent a
- year or two in South-Eastern Europe. I gathered that he was a fine
- linguist, and had got to know pretty well the society in those parts.
- He spoke familiarly of many names that I remembered to have seen
- in the newspapers.
-
- He had played about with politics, he told me, at first for the
- interest of them, and then because he couldn't help himself. I read
- him as a sharp, restless fellow, who always wanted to get down to
- the roots of things. He got a little further down than he wanted.
-
- I am giving you what he told me as well as I could make it out.
- Away behind all the Governments and the armies there was a big
- subterranean movement going on, engineered by very dangerous
- people. He had come on it by accident; it fascinated him; he went
- further, and then he got caught. I gathered that most of the people
- in it were the sort of educated anarchists that make revolutions, but
- that beside them there were financiers who were playing for money.
- A clever man can make big profits on a falling market, and it suited
- the book of both classes to set Europe by the ears.
-
- He told me some queer things that explained a lot that had
- puzzled me - things that happened in the Balkan War, how one
- state suddenly came out on top, why alliances were made and
- broken, why certain men disappeared, and where the sinews of war
- came from. The aim of the whole conspiracy was to get Russia and
- Germany at loggerheads.
-
- When I asked why, he said that the anarchist lot thought it
- would give them their chance. Everything would be in the melting-
- pot, and they looked to see a new world emerge. The capitalists
- would rake in the shekels, and make fortunes by buying up wreckage.
- Capital, he said, had no conscience and no fatherland. Besides,
- the Jew was behind it, and the Jew hated Russia worse than hell.
-
- 'Do you wonder?' he cried. 'For three hundred years they have
- been persecuted, and this is the return match for the pogroms. The
- Jew is everywhere, but you have to go far down the backstairs to
- find him. Take any big Teutonic business concern. If you have
- dealings with it the first man you meet is Prince von und Zu Something,
- an elegant young man who talks Eton-and-Harrow English.
- But he cuts no ice. If your business is big, you get behind him and
- find a prognathous Westphalian with a retreating brow and the
- manners of a hog. He is the German business man that gives your
- English papers the shakes. But if you're on the biggest kind of job
- and are bound to get to the real boss, ten to one you are brought up
- against a little white-faced Jew in a bath-chair with an eye like a
- rattlesnake. Yes, Sir, he is the man who is ruling the world just
- now, and he has his knife in the Empire of the Tzar, because his
- aunt was outraged and his father flogged in some one-horse location
- on the Volga.'
-
- I could not help saying that his Jew-anarchists seemed to have
- got left behind a little.
-
- 'Yes and no,' he said. 'They won up to a point, but they struck a
- bigger thing than money, a thing that couldn't be bought, the old
- elemental fighting instincts of man. If you're going to be killed you
- invent some kind of flag and country to fight for, and if you
- survive you get to love the thing. Those foolish devils of soldiers
- have found something they care for, and that has upset the pretty
- plan laid in Berlin and Vienna. But my friends haven't played their
- last card by a long sight. They've gotten the ace up their sleeves,
- and unless I can keep alive for a month they are going to play it
- and win.'
-
- 'But I thought you were dead,' I put in.
-
- 'MORS JANUA VITAE,' he smiled. (I recognized the quotation: it was
- about all the Latin I knew.) 'I'm coming to that, but I've got to put
- you wise about a lot of things first. If you read your newspaper, I
- guess you know the name of Constantine Karolides?'
-
- I sat up at that, for I had been reading about him that
- very afternoon.
-
- 'He is the man that has wrecked all their games. He is the one
- big brain in the whole show, and he happens also to be an honest
- man. Therefore he has been marked down these twelve months
- past. I found that out - not that it was difficult, for any fool could
- guess as much. But I found out the way they were going to get
- him, and that knowledge was deadly. That's why I have had to decease.'
-
- He had another drink, and I mixed it for him myself, for I was
- getting interested in the beggar.
-
- 'They can't get him in his own land, for he has a bodyguard of
- Epirotes that would skin their grandmothers. But on the 15th day of
- June he is coming to this city. The British Foreign Office has taken
- to having International tea-parties, and the biggest of them is due
- on that date. Now Karolides is reckoned the principal guest, and if
- my friends have their way he will never return to his admiring
- countrymen.'
-
- 'That's simple enough, anyhow,' I said. 'You can warn him and
- keep him at home.'
-
- 'And play their game?' he asked sharply. 'If he does not come
- they win, for he's the only man that can straighten out the tangle.
- And if his Government are warned he won't come, for he does not
- know how big the stakes will be on June the 15th.'
-
- 'What about the British Government?' I said. 'They're not going
- to let their guests be murdered. Tip them the wink, and they'll take
- extra precautions.'
-
- 'No good. They might stuff your city with plain-clothes detectives
- and double the police and Constantine would still be a
- doomed man. My friends are not playing this game for candy. They
- want a big occasion for the taking off, with the eyes of all Europe
- on it. He'll be murdered by an Austrian, and there'll be plenty of
- evidence to show the connivance of the big folk in Vienna and
- Berlin. It will all be an infernal lie, of course, but the case will look
- black enough to the world. I'm not talking hot air, my friend. I
- happen to know every detail of the hellish contrivance, and I can
- tell you it will be the most finished piece of blackguardism since the
- Borgias. But it's not going to come off if there's a certain man who
- knows the wheels of the business alive right here in London on the
- 15th day of June. And that man is going to be your servant,
- Franklin P. Scudder.'
-
- I was getting to like the little chap. His jaw had shut like a rat-
- trap, and there was the fire of battle in his gimlety eyes. If he was
- spinning me a yarn he could act up to it.
-
- 'Where did you find out this story?' I asked.
-
- 'I got the first hint in an inn on the Achensee in Tyrol. That set me
- inquiring, and I collected my other clues in a fur-shop in the Galician
- quarter of Buda, in a Strangers' Club in Vienna, and in a little
- bookshop off the Racknitzstrasse in Leipsic. I completed my evidence
- ten days ago in Paris. I can't tell you the details now, for it's
- something of a history. When I was quite sure in my own mind I
- judged it my business to disappear, and I reached this city by a mighty
- queer circuit. I left Paris a dandified young French-American, and I
- sailed from Hamburg a Jew diamond merchant. In Norway I was an
- English student of Ibsen collecting materials for lectures, but when I
- left Bergen I was a cinema-man with special ski films. And I came
- here from Leith with a lot of pulp-wood propositions in my pocket to
- put before the London newspapers. Till yesterday I thought I had
- muddied my trail some, and was feeling pretty happy. Then ...'
-
- The recollection seemed to upset him, and he gulped down some
- more whisky.
-
- 'Then I saw a man standing in the street outside this block. I
- used to stay close in my room all day, and only slip out after dark
- for an hour or two. I watched him for a bit from my window, and I
- thought I recognized him ... He came in and spoke to the porter
- ... When I came back from my walk last night I found a card in
- my letter-box. It bore the name of the man I want least to meet on
- God's earth.'
-
- I think that the look in my companion's eyes, the sheer naked
- scare on his face, completed my conviction of his honesty. My own
- voice sharpened a bit as I asked him what he did next.
-
- 'I realized that I was bottled as sure as a pickled herring, and that
- there was only one way out. I had to die. If my pursuers knew I
- was dead they would go to sleep again.'
-
- 'How did you manage it?'
-
- 'I told the man that valets me that I was feeling pretty bad, and I
- got myself up to look like death. That wasn't difficult, for I'm no
- slouch at disguises. Then I got a corpse - you can always get a
- body in London if you know where to go for it. I fetched it back in
- a trunk on the top of a four-wheeler, and I had to be assisted
- upstairs to my room. You see I had to pile up some evidence for
- the inquest. I went to bed and got my man to mix me a sleeping-
- draught, and then told him to clear out. He wanted to fetch a
- doctor, but I swore some and said I couldn't abide leeches. When I
- was left alone I started in to fake up that corpse. He was my size,
- and I judged had perished from too much alcohol, so I put some
- spirits handy about the place. The jaw was the weak point in the
- likeness, so I blew it away with a revolver. I daresay there will be
- somebody tomorrow to swear to having heard a shot, but there are
- no neighbours on my floor, and I guessed I could risk it. So I left
- the body in bed dressed up in my pyjamas, with a revolver lying on
- the bed-clothes and a considerable mess around. Then I got into a
- suit of clothes I had kept waiting for emergencies. I didn't dare to
- shave for fear of leaving tracks, and besides, it wasn't any kind of
- use my trying to get into the streets. I had had you in my mind all
- day, and there seemed nothing to do but to make an appeal to you.
- I watched from my window till I saw you come home, and then
- slipped down the stair to meet you ... There, Sir, I guess you
- know about as much as me of this business.'
-
- He sat blinking like an owl, fluttering with nerves and yet
- desperately determined. By this time I was pretty well convinced
- that he was going straight with me. It was the wildest sort of
- narrative, but I had heard in my time many steep tales which had
- turned out to be true, and I had made a practice of judging the man
- rather than the story. If he had wanted to get a location in my flat,
- and then cut my throat, he would have pitched a milder yarn.
-
- 'Hand me your key,' I said, 'and I'll take a look at the corpse.
- Excuse my caution, but I'm bound to verify a bit if I can.'
-
- He shook his head mournfully. 'I reckoned you'd ask for that,
- but I haven't got it. It's on my chain on the dressing-table. I had to
- leave it behind, for I couldn't leave any clues to breed suspicions.
- The gentry who are after me are pretty bright-eyed citizens. You'll
- have to take me on trust for the night, and tomorrow you'll get
- proof of the corpse business right enough.'
-
- I thought for an instant or two. 'Right. I'll trust you for the
- night. I'll lock you into this room and keep the key. just one word,
- Mr Scudder. I believe you're straight, but if so be you are not I
- should warn you that I'm a handy man with a gun.'
-
- 'Sure,' he said, jumping up with some briskness. 'I haven't the
- privilege of your name, Sir, but let me tell you that you're a white
- man. I'll thank you to lend me a razor.'
-
- I took him into my bedroom and turned him loose. In half an
- hour's time a figure came out that I scarcely recognized. Only his
- gimlety, hungry eyes were the same. He was shaved clean, his hair
- was parted in the middle, and he had cut his eyebrows. Further, he
- carried himself as if he had been drilled, and was the very model,
- even to the brown complexion, of some British officer who had
- had a long spell in India. He had a monocle, too, which he stuck in
- his eye, and every trace of the American had gone out of his speech.
-
- 'My hat! Mr Scudder -' I stammered.
-
- 'Not Mr Scudder,' he corrected; 'Captain Theophilus Digby, of
- the 40th Gurkhas, presently home on leave. I'll thank you to
- remember that, Sir.'
-
- I made him up a bed in my smoking-room and sought my own
- couch, more cheerful than I had been for the past month. Things
- did happen occasionally, even in this God-forgotten metropolis.
-
- I woke next morning to hear my man, Paddock, making the deuce
- of a row at the smoking-room door. Paddock was a fellow I had
- done a good turn to out on the Selakwe, and I had inspanned him
- as my servant as soon as I got to England. He had about as much
- gift of the gab as a hippopotamus, and was not a great hand at
- valeting, but I knew I could count on his loyalty.
-
- 'Stop that row, Paddock,' I said. 'There's a friend of mine,
- Captain - Captain' (I couldn't remember the name) 'dossing down
- in there. Get breakfast for two and then come and speak to me.'
-
- I told Paddock a fine story about how my friend was a great
- swell, with his nerves pretty bad from overwork, who wanted
- absolute rest and stillness. Nobody had got to know he was here,
- or he would be besieged by communications from the India Office
- and the Prime Minister and his cure would be ruined. I am bound
- to say Scudder played up splendidly when he came to breakfast. He
- fixed Paddock with his eyeglass, just like a British officer, asked
- him about the Boer War, and slung out at me a lot of stuff about
- imaginary pals. Paddock couldn't learn to call me 'Sir', but he
- 'sirred' Scudder as if his life depended on it.
-
- I left him with the newspaper and a box of cigars, and went
- down to the City till luncheon. When I got back the lift-man had an
- important face.
-
- 'Nawsty business 'ere this morning, Sir. Gent in No. 15 been and
- shot 'isself. They've just took 'im to the mortiary. The police are
- up there now.'
-
- I ascended to No. 15, and found a couple of bobbies and an
- inspector busy making an examination. I asked a few idiotic questions,
- and they soon kicked me out. Then I found the man that had
- valeted Scudder, and pumped him, but I could see he suspected
- nothing. He was a whining fellow with a churchyard face, and half-
- a-crown went far to console him.
-
- I attended the inquest next day. A partner of some publishing firm
- gave evidence that the deceased had brought him wood-pulp propositions,
- and had been, he believed, an agent of an American business.
- The jury found it a case of suicide while of unsound mind, and the few
- effects were handed over to the American Consul to deal with. I gave
- Scudder a full account of the affair, and it interested him greatly. He
- said he wished he could have attended the inquest, for he reckoned it
- would be about as spicy as to read one's own obituary notice.
-
- The first two days he stayed with me in that back room he was
- very peaceful. He read and smoked a bit, and made a heap of
- jottings in a note-book, and every night we had a game of chess, at
- which he beat me hollow. I think he was nursing his nerves back to
- health, for he had had a pretty trying time. But on the third day I
- could see he was beginning to get restless. He fixed up a list of the
- days till June 15th, and ticked each off with a red pencil, making
- remarks in shorthand against them. I would find him sunk in a
- brown study, with his sharp eyes abstracted, and after those spells
- of meditation he was apt to be very despondent.
-
- Then I could see that he began to get edgy again. He listened for
- little noises, and was always asking me if Paddock could be trusted.
- Once or twice he got very peevish, and apologized for it. I didn't
- blame him. I made every allowance, for he had taken on a fairly
- stiff job.
-
- It was not the safety of his own skin that troubled him, but the
- success of the scheme he had planned. That little man was clean grit
- all through, without a soft spot in him. One night he was very solemn.
-
- 'Say, Hannay,' he said, 'I judge I should let you a bit deeper into
- this business. I should hate to go out without leaving somebody
- else to put up a fight.' And he began to tell me in detail what I had
- only heard from him vaguely.
-
- I did not give him very close attention. The fact is, I was more
- interested in his own adventures than in his high politics. I reckoned
- that Karolides and his affairs were not my business, leaving all that to
- him. So a lot that he said slipped clean out of my memory. I remember
- that he was very clear that the danger to Karolides would not begin
- till he had got to London, and would come from the very highest
- quarters, where there would be no thought of suspicion. He mentioned
- the name of a woman - Julia Czechenyi - as having something
- to do with the danger. She would be the decoy, I gathered, to get
- Karolides out of the care of his guards. He talked, too, about a Black
- Stone and a man that lisped in his speech, and he described very
- particularly somebody that he never referred to without a shudder -
- an old man with a young voice who could hood his eyes like a hawk.
-
- He spoke a good deal about death, too. He was mortally anxious
- about winning through with his job, but he didn't care a rush for
- his life.
- 'I reckon it's like going to sleep when you are pretty well tired
- out, and waking to find a summer day with the scent of hay coming
- in at the window. I used to thank God for such mornings way back
- in the Blue-Grass country, and I guess I'll thank Him when I wake
- up on the other side of Jordan.'
-
- Next day he was much more cheerful, and read the life of Stonewall
- Jackson much of the time. I went out to dinner with a mining
- engineer I had got to see on business, and came back about half-past
- ten in time for our game of chess before turning in.
-
- I had a cigar in my mouth, I remember, as I pushed open the
- smoking-room door. The lights were not lit, which struck me as
- odd. I wondered if Scudder had turned in already.
-
- I snapped the switch, but there was nobody there. Then I saw
- something in the far corner which made me drop my cigar and fall
- into a cold sweat.
-
- My guest was lying sprawled on his back. There was a long knife
- through his heart which skewered him to the floor.
-
-
- CHAPTER TWO
- The Milkman Sets Out on his Travels
-
-
- I sat down in an armchair and felt very sick. That lasted for maybe
- five minutes, and was succeeded by a fit of the horrors. The poor
- staring white face on the floor was more than I could bear, and I
- managed to get a table-cloth and cover it. Then I staggered to a
- cupboard, found the brandy and swallowed several mouthfuls. I
- had seen men die violently before; indeed I had killed a few myself
- in the Matabele War; but this cold-blooded indoor business was
- different. Still I managed to pull myself together. I looked at my
- watch, and saw that it was half-past ten.
-
- An idea seized me, and I went over the flat with a small-tooth
- comb. There was nobody there, nor any trace of anybody, but I
- shuttered and bolted all the windows and put the chain on the door.
- By this time my wits were coming back to me, and I could think
- again. It took me about an hour to figure the thing out, and I did
- not hurry, for, unless the murderer came back, I had till about six
- o'clock in the morning for my cogitations.
-
- I was in the soup - that was pretty clear. Any shadow of a doubt
- I might have had about the truth of Scudder's tale was now gone.
- The proof of it was lying under the table-cloth. The men who
- knew that he knew what he knew had found him, and had taken
- the best way to make certain of his silence. Yes; but he had been in
- my rooms four days, and his enemies must have reckoned that he
- had confided in me. So I would be the next to go. It might be that
- very night, or next day, or the day after, but my number was up
- all right.
- Then suddenly I thought of another probability. Supposing I
- went out now and called in the police, or went to bed and let
- Paddock find the body and call them in the morning. What kind of
- a story was I to tell about Scudder? I had lied to Paddock about
- him, and the whole thing looked desperately fishy. If I made a clean
- breast of it and told the police everything he had told me, they
- would simply laugh at me. The odds were a thousand to one that I
- would be charged with the murder, and the circumstantial evidence
- was strong enough to hang me. Few people knew me in England; I
- had no real pal who could come forward and swear to my character.
- Perhaps that was what those secret enemies were playing for. They
- were clever enough for anything, and an English prison was as
- good a way of getting rid of me till after June 15th as a knife in
- my chest.
-
- Besides, if I told the whole story, and by any miracle was believed,
- I would be playing their game. Karolides would stay at home,
- which was what they wanted. Somehow or other the sight of
- Scudder's dead face had made me a passionate believer in his
- scheme. He was gone, but he had taken me into his confidence, and
- I was pretty well bound to carry on his work.
-
- You may think this ridiculous for a man in danger of his life, but
- that was the way I looked at it. I am an ordinary sort of fellow, not
- braver than other people, but I hate to see a good man downed,
- and that long knife would not be the end of Scudder if I could play
- the game in his place.
-
- It took me an hour or two to think this out, and by that time I
- had come to a decision. I must vanish somehow, and keep vanished
- till the end of the second week in June. Then I must somehow find
- a way to get in touch with the Government people and tell them
- what Scudder had told me. I wished to Heaven he had told me
- more, and that I had listened more carefully to the little he had told
- me. I knew nothing but the barest facts. There was a big risk that,
- even if I weathered the other dangers, I would not be believed in
- the end. I must take my chance of that, and hope that something
- might happen which would confirm my tale in the eyes of the Government.
-
- My first job was to keep going for the next three weeks. It was
- now the 24th day of May, and that meant twenty days of hiding
- before I could venture to approach the powers that be. I reckoned
- that two sets of people would be looking for me - Scudder's
- enemies to put me out of existence, and the police, who would
- want me for Scudder's murder. It was going to be a giddy hunt,
- and it was queer how the prospect comforted me. I had been slack
- so long that almost any chance of activity was welcome. When I
- had to sit alone with that corpse and wait on Fortune I was no
- better than a crushed worm, but if my neck's safety was to hang on
- my own wits I was prepared to be cheerful about it.
-
- My next thought was whether Scudder had any papers about him
- to give me a better clue to the business. I drew back the table-cloth
- and searched his pockets, for I had no longer any shrinking from
- the body. The face was wonderfully calm for a man who had been
- struck down in a moment. There was nothing in the breast-pocket,
- and only a few loose coins and a cigar-holder in the waistcoat. The
- trousers held a little penknife and some silver, and the side pocket
- of his jacket contained an old crocodile-skin cigar-case. There was
- no sign of the little black book in which I had seen him making
- notes. That had no doubt been taken by his murderer.
-
- But as I looked up from my task I saw that some drawers had
- been pulled out in the writing-table. Scudder would never have left
- them in that state, for he was the tidiest of mortals. Someone must
- have been searching for something - perhaps for the pocket-book.
-
- I went round the flat and found that everything had been ransacked
- - the inside of books, drawers, cupboards, boxes, even the
- pockets of the clothes in my wardrobe, and the sideboard in the
- dining-room. There was no trace of the book. Most likely the enemy
- had found it, but they had not found it on Scudder's body.
-
- Then I got out an atlas and looked at a big map of the British
- Isles. My notion was to get off to some wild district, where my
- veldcraft would be of some use to me, for I would be like a trapped
- rat in a city. I considered that Scotland would be best, for my
- people were Scotch and I could pass anywhere as an ordinary
- Scotsman. I had half an idea at first to be a German tourist, for my
- father had had German partners, and I had been brought up to
- speak the tongue pretty fluently, not to mention having put in
- three years prospecting for copper in German Damaraland. But I
- calculated that it would be less conspicuous to be a Scot, and less in
- a line with what the police might know of my past. I fixed on
- Galloway as the best place to go. It was the nearest wild part of
- Scotland, so far as I could figure it out, and from the look of the
- map was not over thick with population.
-
- A search in Bradshaw informed me that a train left St Pancras at
- 7.10, which would land me at any Galloway station in the late
- afternoon. That was well enough, but a more important matter was
- how I was to make my way to St Pancras, for I was pretty certain
- that Scudder's friends would be watching outside. This puzzled me
- for a bit; then I had an inspiration, on which I went to bed and
- slept for two troubled hours.
-
- I got up at four and opened my bedroom shutters. The faint
- light of a fine summer morning was flooding the skies, and the
- sparrows had begun to chatter. I had a great revulsion of feeling,
- and felt a God-forgotten fool. My inclination was to let things
- slide, and trust to the British police taking a reasonable view of my
- case. But as I reviewed the situation I could find no arguments to
- bring against my decision of the previous night, so with a wry
- mouth I resolved to go on with my plan. I was not feeling in any
- particular funk; only disinclined to go looking for trouble, if you
- understand me.
-
- I hunted out a well-used tweed suit, a pair of strong nailed boots,
- and a flannel shirt with a collar. Into my pockets I stuffed a spare
- shirt, a cloth cap, some handkerchiefs, and a tooth-brush. I had
- drawn a good sum in gold from the bank two days before, in case
- Scudder should want money, and I took fifty pounds of it in
- sovereigns in a belt which I had brought back from Rhodesia. That
- was about all I wanted. Then I had a bath, and cut my moustache,
- which was long and drooping, into a short stubbly fringe.
-
- Now came the next step. Paddock used to arrive punctually at
- 7.30 and let himself in with a latch-key. But about twenty minutes
- to seven, as I knew from bitter experience, the milkman turned up
- with a great clatter of cans, and deposited my share outside my
- door. I had seen that milkman sometimes when I had gone out for
- an early ride. He was a young man about my own height, with an
- ill-nourished moustache, and he wore a white overall. On him I
- staked all my chances.
-
- I went into the darkened smoking-room where the rays of morning
- light were beginning to creep through the shutters. There I
- breakfasted off a whisky-and-soda and some biscuits from the cupboard.
- By this time it was getting on for six o'clock. I put a pipe in
- My Pocket and filled my pouch from the tobacco jar on the table by
- the fireplace.
-
- As I poked into the tobacco my fingers touched something hard,
- and I drew out Scudder's little black pocket-book ...
-
- That seemed to me a good omen. I lifted the cloth from the body
- and was amazed at the peace and dignity of the dead face. 'Goodbye,
- old chap,' I said; 'I am going to do my best for you. Wish me
- well, wherever you are.'
-
- Then I hung about in the hall waiting for the milkman. That was
- the worst part of the business, for I was fairly choking to get out of
- doors. Six-thirty passed, then six-forty, but still he did not come.
- The fool had chosen this day of all days to be late.
-
- At one minute after the quarter to seven I heard the rattle of the
- cans outside. I opened the front door, and there was my man,
- singling out my cans from a bunch he carried and whistling through
- his teeth. He jumped a bit at the sight of me.
-
- 'Come in here a moment,' I said. 'I want a word with you.' And
- I led him into the dining-room.
-
- 'I reckon you're a bit of a sportsman,' I said, 'and I want you to
- do me a service. Lend me your cap and overall for ten minutes, and
- here's a sovereign for you.'
-
- His eyes opened at the sight of the gold, and he grinned broadly.
- 'Wot's the gyme?'he asked.
-
- 'A bet,' I said. 'I haven't time to explain, but to win it I've got to
- be a milkman for the next ten minutes. All you've got to do is to
- stay here till I come back. You'll be a bit late, but nobody will
- complain, and you'll have that quid for yourself.'
-
- 'Right-o!' he said cheerily. 'I ain't the man to spoil a bit of sport.
- 'Ere's the rig, guv'nor.'
-
- I stuck on his flat blue hat and his white overall, picked up the
- cans, banged my door, and went whistling downstairs. The porter
- at the foot told me to shut my jaw, which sounded as if my make-up
- was adequate.
-
- At first I thought there was nobody in the street. Then I caught
- sight of a policeman a hundred yards down, and a loafer shuffling
- past on the other side. Some impulse made me raise my eyes to the
- house opposite, and there at a first-floor window was a face. As the
- loafer passed he looked up, and I fancied a signal was exchanged.
-
- I crossed the street, whistling gaily and imitating the jaunty
- swing of the milkman. Then I took the first side street, and went
- up a left-hand turning which led past a bit of vacant ground. There
- was no one in the little street, so I dropped the milk-cans inside the
- hoarding and sent the cap and overall after them. I had only just
- put on my cloth cap when a postman came round the corner. I gave
- him good morning and he answered me unsuspiciously. At the
- moment the clock of a neighbouring church struck the hour of seven.
-
- There was not a second to spare. As soon as I got to Euston
- Road I took to my heels and ran. The clock at Euston Station
- showed five minutes past the hour. At St Pancras I had no time to
- take a ticket, let alone that I had not settled upon my destination. A
- porter told me the platform, and as I entered it I saw the train
- already in motion. Two station officials blocked the way, but I
- dodged them and clambered into the last carriage.
-
- Three minutes later, as we were roaring through the northern
- tunnels, an irate guard interviewed me. He wrote out for me a
- ticket to Newton-Stewart, a name which had suddenly come back
- to my memory, and he conducted me from the first-class compartment
- where I had ensconced myself to a third-class smoker,
- occupied by a sailor and a stout woman with a child. He went off
- grumbling, and as I mopped my brow I observed to my companions
- in my broadest Scots that it was a sore job catching trains. I had
- already entered upon my part.
-
- 'The impidence o' that gyaird!' said the lady bitterly. 'He needit a
- Scotch tongue to pit him in his place. He was complainin' o' this
- wean no haein' a ticket and her no fower till August twalmonth,
- and he was objectin' to this gentleman spittin'.'
-
- The sailor morosely agreed, and I started my new life in an
- atmosphere of protest against authority. I reminded myself that a
- week ago I had been finding the world dull.
-
-
- CHAPTER THREE
- The Adventure of the Literary Innkeeper
-
-
- I had a solemn time travelling north that day. It was fine May
- weather, with the hawthorn flowering on every hedge, and I asked
- myself why, when I was still a free man, I had stayed on in London
- and not got the good of this heavenly country. I didn't dare face
- the restaurant car, but I got a luncheon-basket at Leeds and shared
- it with the fat woman. Also I got the morning's papers, with news
- about starters for the Derby and the beginning of the cricket season,
- and some paragraphs about how Balkan affairs were settling down
- and a British squadron was going to Kiel.
-
- When I had done with them I got out Scudder's little black
- pocket-book and studied it. It was pretty well filled with jottings,
- chiefly figures, though now and then a name was printed in. For
- example, I found the words 'Hofgaard', 'Luneville', and 'Avocado'
- pretty often, and especially the word 'Pavia'.
-
- Now I was certain that Scudder never did anything without a
- reason, and I was pretty sure that there was a cypher in all this.
- That is a subject which has always interested me, and I did a bit
- at it myself once as intelligence officer at Delagoa Bay during the
- Boer War. I have a head for things like chess and puzzles, and I
- used to reckon myself pretty good at finding out cyphers. This one
- looked like the numerical kind where sets of figures correspond to
- the letters of the alphabet, but any fairly shrewd man can find the
- clue to that sort after an hour or two's work, and I didn't think
- Scudder would have been content with anything so easy. So I
- fastened on the printed words, for you can make a pretty good
- numerical cypher if you have a key word which gives you the
- sequence of the letters.
-
- I tried for hours, but none of the words answered. Then I fell
- asleep and woke at Dumfries just in time to bundle out and get into
- the slow Galloway train. There was a man on the platform whose
- looks I didn't like, but he never glanced at me, and when I caught
- sight of myself in the mirror of an automatic machine I didn't
- wonder. With my brown face, my old tweeds, and my slouch, I was
- the very model of one of the hill farmers who were crowding into
- the third-class carriages.
-
- I travelled with half a dozen in an atmosphere of shag and clay
- pipes. They had come from the weekly market, and their mouths
- were full of prices. I heard accounts of how the lambing had gone
- up the Cairn and the Deuch and a dozen other mysterious waters.
- Above half the men had lunched heavily and were highly flavoured
- with whisky, but they took no notice of me. We rumbled slowly
- into a land of little wooded glens and then to a great wide moorland
- place, gleaming with lochs, with high blue hills showing northwards.
-
- About five o'clock the carriage had emptied, and I was left alone
- as I had hoped. I got out at the next station, a little place whose
- name I scarcely noted, set right in the heart of a bog. It reminded
- me of one of those forgotten little stations in the Karroo. An old
- station-master was digging in his garden, and with his spade over
- his shoulder sauntered to the train, took charge of a parcel, and
- went back to his potatoes. A child of ten received my ticket, and I
- emerged on a white road that straggled over the brown moor.
-
- It was a gorgeous spring evening, with every hill showing as
- clear as a cut amethyst. The air had the queer, rooty smell of bogs,
- but it was as fresh as mid-ocean, and it had the strangest effect on
- my spirits. I actually felt light-hearted. I might have been a boy out
- for a spring holiday tramp, instead of a man of thirty-seven very
- much wanted by the police. I felt just as I used to feel when I was
- starting for a big trek on a frosty morning on the high veld. If you
- believe me, I swung along that road whistling. There was no plan
- of campaign in my head, only just to go on and on in this blessed,
- honest-smelling hill country, for every mile put me in better humour
- with myself.
-
- In a roadside planting I cut a walking-stick of hazel, and presently
- struck off the highway up a bypath which followed the glen of a
- brawling stream. I reckoned that I was still far ahead of any pursuit,
- and for that night might please myself. It was some hours since I
- had tasted food, and I was getting very hungry when I came to a
- herd's cottage set in a nook beside a waterfall. A brown-faced
- woman was standing by the door, and greeted me with the kindly
- shyness of moorland places. When I asked for a night's lodging she
- said I was welcome to the 'bed in the loft', and very soon she set
- before me a hearty meal of ham and eggs, scones, and thick sweet milk.
-
- At the darkening her man came in from the hills, a lean giant,
- who in one step covered as much ground as three paces of ordinary
- mortals. They asked me no questions, for they had the perfect
- breeding of all dwellers in the wilds, but I could see they set me
- down as a kind of dealer, and I took some trouble to confirm their
- view. I spoke a lot about cattle, of which my host knew little, and I
- picked up from him a good deal about the local Galloway markets,
- which I tucked away in my memory for future use. At ten I was
- nodding in my chair, and the 'bed in the loft' received a weary man
- who never opened his eyes till five o'clock set the little homestead
- a-going once more.
-
- They refused any payment, and by six I had breakfasted and was
- striding southwards again. My notion was to return to the railway
- line a station or two farther on than the place where I had alighted
- yesterday and to double back. I reckoned that that was the safest
- way, for the police would naturally assume that I was always making
- farther from London in the direction of some western port. I
- thought I had still a good bit of a start, for, as I reasoned, it would
- take some hours to fix the blame on me, and several more to
- identify the fellow who got on board the train at St Pancras.
-
- it was the same jolly, clear spring weather, and I simply could
- not contrive to feel careworn. Indeed I was in better spirits than I
- had been for months. Over a long ridge of moorland I took my
- road, skirting the side of a high hill which the herd had called
- Cairnsmore of Fleet. Nesting curlews and plovers were crying everywhere,
- and the links of green pasture by the streams were dotted
- with young lambs. All the slackness of the past months was slipping
- from my bones, and I stepped out like a four-year-old. By-and-by I
- came to a swell of moorland which dipped to the vale of a little
- river, and a mile away in the heather I saw the smoke of a train.
-
- The station, when I reached it, proved to be ideal for my purpose.
- The moor surged up around it and left room only for the single
- line, the slender siding, a waiting-room, an office, the station-
- master's cottage, and a tiny yard of gooseberries and sweet-william.
- There seemed no road to it from anywhere, and to increase the
- desolation the waves of a tarn lapped on their grey granite beach
- half a mile away. I waited in the deep heather till I saw the smoke
- of an east-going train on the horizon. Then I approached the tiny
- booking-office and took a ticket for Dumfries.
-
- The only occupants of the carriage were an old shepherd and his
- dog - a wall-eyed brute that I mistrusted. The man was asleep, and
- on the cushions beside him was that morning's SCOTSMAN. Eagerly I
- seized on it, for I fancied it would tell me something.
-
- There were two columns about the Portland Place Murder, as it
- was called. My man Paddock had given the alarm and had the milkman
- arrested. Poor devil, it looked as if the latter had earned his
- sovereign hardly; but for me he had been cheap at the price, for he
- seemed to have occupied the police for the better part of the day. In
- the latest news I found a further instalment of the story. The milkman
- had been released, I read, and the true criminal, about whose identity
- the police were reticent, was believed to have got away from London
- by one of the northern lines. There was a short note about me as the
- owner of the flat. I guessed the police had stuck that in, as a clumsy
- contrivance to persuade me that I was unsuspected.
-
- There was nothing else in the paper, nothing about foreign
- politics or Karolides, or the things that had interested Scudder. I
- laid it down, and found that we were approaching the station at
- which I had got out yesterday. The potato-digging station-master
- had been gingered up into some activity, for the west-going train
- was waiting to let us pass, and from it had descended three men
- who were asking him questions. I supposed that they were the local
- police, who had been stirred up by Scotland Yard, and had traced
- me as far as this one-horse siding. Sitting well back in the shadow I
- watched them carefully. One of them had a book, and took down
- notes. The old potato-digger seemed to have turned peevish, but
- the child who had collected my ticket was talking volubly. All the
- party looked out across the moor where the white road departed. I
- hoped they were going to take up my tracks there.
-
- As we moved away from that station my companion woke up.
- He fixed me with a wandering glance, kicked his dog viciously, and
- inquired where he was. Clearly he was very drunk.
- 'That's what comes o' bein' a teetotaller,' he observed in bitter
- regret.
-
- I expressed my surprise that in him I should have met a blue-
- ribbon stalwart.
-
- 'Ay, but I'm a strong teetotaller,' he said pugnaciously. 'I took
- the pledge last Martinmas, and I havena touched a drop o' whisky
- sinsyne. Not even at Hogmanay, though I was sair temptit.'
-
- He swung his heels up on the seat, and burrowed a frowsy head
- into the cushions.
-
- 'And that's a' I get,' he moaned. 'A heid hetter than hell fire, and
- twae een lookin' different ways for the Sabbath.'
-
- 'What did it?' I asked.
-
- 'A drink they ca' brandy. Bein' a teetotaller I keepit off the
- whisky, but I was nip-nippin' a' day at this brandy, and I doubt I'll
- no be weel for a fortnicht.' His voice died away into a splutter, and
- sleep once more laid its heavy hand on him.
-
- My plan had been to get out at some station down the line, but
- the train suddenly gave me a better chance, for it came to a standstill
- at the end of a culvert which spanned a brawling porter-coloured
- river. I looked out and saw that every carriage window was closed
- and no human figure appeared in the landscape. So I opened the
- door, and dropped quickly into the tangle of hazels which edged
- the line.
-
- it would have been all right but for that infernal dog. Under the
- impression that I was decamping with its master's belongings, it
- started to bark, and all but got me by the trousers. This woke up
- the herd, who stood bawling at the carriage door in the belief that I
- had committed suicide. I crawled through the thicket, reached the
- edge of the stream, and in cover of the bushes put a hundred yards
- or so behind me. Then from my shelter I peered back, and saw the
- guard and several passengers gathered round the open carriage
- door and staring in my direction. I could not have made a more
- public departure if I had left with a bugler and a brass band.
-
- Happily the drunken herd provided a diversion. He and his dog,
- which was attached by a rope to his waist, suddenly cascaded out of
- the carriage, landed on their heads on the track, and rolled some
- way down the bank towards the water. In the rescue which followed
- the dog bit somebody, for I could hear the sound of hard swearing.
- Presently they had forgotten me, and when after a quarter of a
- mile's crawl I ventured to look back, the train had started again and
- was vanishing in the cutting.
-
- I was in a wide semicircle of moorland, with the brown river as
- radius, and the high hills forming the northern circumference. There
- was not a sign or sound of a human being, only the plashing water
- and the interminable crying of curlews. Yet, oddly enough, for the
- first time I felt the terror of the hunted on me. It was not the police
- that I thought of, but the other folk, who knew that I knew
- Scudder's secret and dared not let me live. I was certain that they
- would pursue me with a keenness and vigilance unknown to the
- British law, and that once their grip closed on me I should find
- no mercy.
-
- I looked back, but there was nothing in the landscape. The sun
- glinted on the metals of the line and the wet stones in the stream,
- and you could not have found a more peaceful sight in the world.
- Nevertheless I started to run. Crouching low in the runnels of the
- bog, I ran till the sweat blinded my eyes. The mood did not leave
- me till I had reached the rim of mountain and flung myself panting
- on a ridge high above the young waters of the brown river.
-
- From my vantage-ground I could scan the whole moor right
- away to the railway line and to the south of it where green fields
- took the place of heather. I have eyes like a hawk, but I could see
- nothing moving in the whole countryside. Then I looked east
- beyond the ridge and saw a new kind of landscape - shallow green
- valleys with plentiful fir plantations and the faint lines of dust
- which spoke of highroads. Last of all I looked into the blue May
- sky, and there I saw that which set my pulses racing ...
-
- Low down in the south a monoplane was climbing into the
- heavens. I was as certain as if I had been told that that aeroplane
- was looking for me, and that it did not belong to the police. For an
- hour or two I watched it from a pit of heather. It flew low along
- the hill-tops, and then in narrow circles over the valley up which I
- had come' Then it seemed to change its mind, rose to a great
- height, and flew away back to the south.
-
- I did not like this espionage from the air, and I began to think
- less well of the countryside I had chosen for a refuge. These
- heather hills were no sort of cover if my enemies were in the sky,
- and I must find a different kind of sanctuary. I looked with more
- satisfaction to the green country beyond the ridge, for there I
- should find woods and stone houses.
- About six in the evening I came out of the moorland to a white
- ribbon of road which wound up the narrow vale of a lowland
- stream. As I followed it, fields gave place to bent, the glen became
- a plateau, and presently I had reached a kind of pass where a
- solitary house smoked in the twilight. The road swung over a
- bridge, and leaning on the parapet was a young man.
-
- He was smoking a long clay pipe and studying the water with
- spectacled eyes. In his left hand was a small book with a finger
- marking the place. Slowly he repeated -
-
- As when a Gryphon through the wilderness
- With winged step, o'er hill and moory dale
- Pursues the Arimaspian.
-
- He jumped round as my step rung on the keystone, and I saw a
- pleasant sunburnt boyish face.
-
- 'Good evening to you,' he said gravely. 'It's a fine night for
- the road.'
-
- The smell of peat smoke and of some savoury roast floated to me
- from the house.
-
- 'Is that place an inn?' I asked.
-
- 'At your service,' he said politely. 'I am the landlord, Sir, and I
- hope you will stay the night, for to tell you the truth I have had no
- company for a week.'
-
- I pulled myself up on the parapet of the bridge and filled my
- pipe. I began to detect an ally.
-
- 'You're young to be an innkeeper,' I said.
-
- 'My father died a year ago and left me the business. I live there
- with my grandmother. It's a slow job for a young man, and it
- wasn't my choice of profession.'
-
- 'Which was?'
-
- He actually blushed. 'I want to write books,' he said.
-
- 'And what better chance could you ask?' I cried. 'Man, I've often
- thought that an innkeeper would make the best story-teller in the world.'
-
- 'Not now,' he said eagerly. 'Maybe in the old days when you had
- pilgrims and ballad-makers and highwaymen and mail-coaches on
- the road. But not now. Nothing comes here but motor-cars full of
- fat women, who stop for lunch, and a fisherman or two in the
- spring, and the shooting tenants in August. There is not much
- material to be got out of that. I want to see life, to travel the world,
- and write things like Kipling and Conrad. But the most I've done
- yet is to get some verses printed in CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL.'
- I looked at the inn standing golden in the sunset against the
- brown hills.
-
- 'I've knocked a bit about the world, and I wouldn't despise such
- a hermitage. D'you think that adventure is found only in the tropics
- or among gentry in red shirts? Maybe you're rubbing shoulders
- with it at this moment.'
-
- 'That's what Kipling says,' he said, his eyes brightening, and he
- quoted some verse about 'Romance bringing up the 9.15'.
-
- 'Here's a true tale for you then,' I cried, 'and a month from now
- you can make a novel out of it.'
-
- Sitting on the bridge in the soft May gloaming I pitched him a
- lovely yarn. It was true in essentials, too, though I altered the
- minor details. I made out that I was a mining magnate from Kimberley,
- who had had a lot of trouble with I.D.B. and had shown up a gang.
- They had pursued me across the ocean, and had killed my best friend, and
- were now on my tracks.
-
- I told the story well, though I say it who shouldn't. I pictured a
- flight across the Kalahari to German Africa, the crackling, parching
- days, the wonderful blue-velvet nights. I described an attack on my
- life on the voyage home, and I made a really horrid affair of the
- Portland Place murder. 'You're looking for adventure,' I cried;
- 'well, you've found it here. The devils are after me, and the police
- are after them. It's a race that I mean to win.'
-
- 'By God!' he whispered, drawing his breath in sharply, 'it is all
- pure Rider Haggard and Conan Doyle.'
-
- 'You believe me,' I said gratefully.
-
- 'Of course I do,' and he held out his hand. 'I believe everything
- out of the common. The only thing to distrust is the normal.'
-
- He was very young, but he was the man for my money.
-
- 'I think they're off my track for the moment, but I must lie close
- for a couple of days. Can you take me in?'
-
- He caught my elbow in his eagerness and drew me towards the
- house. 'You can lie as snug here as if you were in a moss-hole. I'll
- see that nobody blabs, either. And you'll give me some more
- material about your adventures?'
-
- As I entered the inn porch I heard from far off the beat of an
- engine. There silhouetted against the dusky West was my friend,
- the monoplane.
-
- He gave me a room at the back of the house, with a fine outlook
- over the plateau, and he made me free of his own study, which was
- stacked with cheap editions of his favourite authors. I never saw the
- grandmother, so I guessed she was bedridden. An old woman called
- Margit brought me my meals, and the innkeeper was around me at
- all hours. I wanted some time to myself, so I invented a job for him.
- He had a motor-bicycle, and I sent him off next morning for the daily
- paper, which usually arrived with the post in the late afternoon. I
- told him to keep his eyes skinned, and make note of any strange
- figures he saw, keeping a special sharp look-out for motors and
- aeroplanes. Then I sat down in real earnest to Scudder's note-book.
-
- He came back at midday with the SCOTSMAN. There was nothing in
- it, except some further evidence of Paddock and the milkman, and a
- repetition of yesterday's statement that the murderer had gone
- North. But there was a long article, reprinted from THE TIMES, about
- Karolides and the state of affairs in the Balkans, though there was no
- mention of any visit to England. I got rid of the innkeeper for the
- afternoon, for I was getting very warm in my search for the cypher.
-
- As I told you, it was a numerical cypher, and by an elaborate
- system of experiments I had pretty well discovered what were the
- nulls and stops. The trouble was the key word, and when I thought
- of the odd million words he might have used I felt pretty hopeless.
- But about three o'clock I had a sudden inspiration.
-
- The name Julia Czechenyi flashed across my memory. Scudder
- had said it was the key to the Karolides business, and it occurred to
- me to try it on his cypher.
-
- It worked. The five letters of 'Julia' gave me the position of the
- vowels. A was J, the tenth letter of the alphabet, and so represented
- by X in the cypher. E was XXI, and so on. 'Czechenyi' gave
- me the numerals for the principal consonants. I scribbled that
- scheme on a bit of paper and sat down to read Scudder's pages.
-
- In half an hour I was reading with a whitish face and fingers that
- drummed on the table.
-
- I glanced out of the window and saw a big touring-car coming
- up the glen towards the inn. It drew up at the door, and there was
- the sound of people alighting. There seemed to be two of them,
- men in aquascutums and tweed caps.
-
- Ten minutes later the innkeeper slipped into the room, his eyes
- bright with excitement.
-
- 'There's two chaps below looking for you,' he whispered.
- 'They're in the dining-room having whiskies-and-sodas. They asked
- about you and said they had hoped to meet you here. Oh! and they
- described you jolly well, down to your boots and shirt. I told them
- you had been here last night and had gone off on a motor bicycle
- this morning, and one of the chaps swore like a navvy.'
-
- I made him tell me what they looked like. One was a dark-eyed
- thin fellow with bushy eyebrows, the other was always smiling and
- lisped in his talk. Neither was any kind of foreigner; on this my
- young friend was positive.
-
- I took a bit of paper and wrote these words in German as if they
- were part of a letter -
-
- ... 'Black Stone. Scudder had got on to this, but he could not
- act for a fortnight. I doubt if I can do any good now, especially
- as Karolides is uncertain about his plans. But if Mr T. advises
- I will do the best I ...'
-
- I manufactured it rather neatly, so that it looked like a loose page
- of a private letter.
-
- 'Take this down and say it was found in my bedroom, and ask
- them to return it to me if they overtake me.'
- Three minutes later I heard the car begin to move, and peeping
- from behind the curtain caught sight of the two figures. One was
- slim, the other was sleek; that was the most I could make of my
- reconnaissance.
-
- The innkeeper appeared in great excitement. 'Your paper woke
- them up,' he said gleefully. 'The dark fellow went as white as death
- and cursed like blazes, and the fat one whistled and looked ugly.
- They paid for their drinks with half-a-sovereign and wouldn't wait
- for change.'
-
- 'Now I'll tell you what I want you to do,' I said. 'Get on your
- bicycle and go off to Newton-Stewart to the Chief Constable. Describe
- the two men, and say you suspect them of having had something to do
- with the London murder. You can invent reasons. The two will come back,
- never fear. Not tonight, for they'll follow me forty miles along the
- road, but first thing tomorrow morning. Tell the police to be here
- bright and early.'
-
- He set off like a docile child, while I worked at Scudder's notes.
- When he came back we dined together, and in common decency I
- had to let him pump me. I gave him a lot of stuff about lion hunts
- and the Matabele War, thinking all the while what tame businesses
- these were compared to this I was now engaged in! When he went
- to bed I sat up and finished Scudder. I smoked in a chair till
- daylight, for I could not sleep.
-
- About eight next morning I witnessed the arrival of two
- constables and a sergeant. They put their car in a coach-house under the
- innkeeper's instructions, and entered the house. Twenty minutes
- later I saw from my window a second car come across the plateau
- from the opposite direction. It did not come up to the inn, but
- stopped two hundred yards off in the shelter of a patch of wood. I
- noticed that its occupants carefully reversed it before leaving it. A
- minute or two later I heard their steps on the gravel outside the window.
-
- My plan had been to lie hid in my bedroom, and see what
- happened. I had a notion that, if I could bring the police and my
- other more dangerous pursuers together, something might work
- out of it to my advantage. But now I had a better idea. I scribbled a
- line of thanks to my host, opened the window, and dropped quietly
- into a gooseberry bush. Unobserved I crossed the dyke, crawled
- down the side of a tributary burn, and won the highroad on the far
- side of the patch of trees. There stood the car, very spick and span
- in the morning sunlight, but with the dust on her which told of a
- long journey. I started her, jumped into the chauffeur's seat, and
- stole gently out on to the plateau.
-
- Almost at once the road dipped so that I lost sight of the inn,
- but the wind seemed to bring me the sound of angry voices.
-
-
- CHAPTER FOUR
- The Adventure of the Radical Candidate
-
- You may picture me driving that 40 h.p. car for all she was worth
- over the crisp moor roads on that shining May morning; glancing
- back at first over my shoulder, and looking anxiously to the next
- turning; then driving with a vague eye, just wide enough awake to
- keep on the highway. For I was thinking desperately of what I had
- found in Scudder's pocket-book.
-
- The little man had told me a pack of lies. All his yarns about the
- Balkans and the Jew-Anarchists and the Foreign Office Conference
- were eyewash, and so was Karolides. And yet not quite, as you
- shall hear. I had staked everything on my belief in his story, and
- had been let down; here was his book telling me a different tale,
- and instead of being once-bitten-twice-shy, I believed it absolutely.
-
- Why, I don't know. It rang desperately true, and the first yarn, if
- you understand me, had been in a queer way true also in spirit. The
- fifteenth day of June was going to be a day of destiny, a bigger
- destiny than the killing of a Dago. It was so big that I didn't blame
- Scudder for keeping me out of the game and wanting to play a lone
- hand. That, I was pretty clear, was his intention. He had told me
- something which sounded big enough, but the real thing was so
- immortally big that he, the man who had found it out, wanted it all
- for himself. I didn't blame him. It was risks after all that he was
- chiefly greedy about.
-
- The whole story was in the notes - with gaps, you understand,
- which he would have filled up from his memory. He stuck down
- his authorities, too, and had an odd trick of giving them all a
- numerical value and then striking a balance, which stood for the
- reliability of each stage in the yarn. The four names he had printed
- were authorities, and there was a man, Ducrosne, who got five out
- of a possible five; and another fellow, Ammersfoort, who got three.
- The bare bones of the tale were all that was in the book - these,
- and one queer phrase which occurred half a dozen times inside
- brackets. '(Thirty-nine steps)' was the phrase; and at its last time of
- use it ran - '(Thirty-nine steps, I counted them - high tide 10.17
- p.m.)'. I could make nothing of that.
-
- The first thing I learned was that it was no question of preventing
- a war. That was coming, as sure as Christmas: had been arranged,
- said Scudder, ever since February 1912. Karolides was going to be
- the occasion. He was booked all right, and was to hand in his
- checks on June 14th, two weeks and four days from that May
- morning. I gathered from Scudder's notes that nothing on earth
- could prevent that. His talk of Epirote guards that would skin their
- own grandmothers was all billy-o.
-
- The second thing was that this war was going to come as a
- mighty surprise to Britain. Karolides' death would set the Balkans
- by the ears, and then Vienna would chip in with an ultimatum.
- Russia wouldn't like that, and there would be high words. But
- Berlin would play the peacemaker, and pour oil on the waters, till
- suddenly she would find a good cause for a quarrel, pick it up, and
- in five hours let fly at us. That was the idea, and a pretty good one
- too. Honey and fair speeches, and then a stroke in the dark. While
- we were talking about the goodwill and good intentions of Germany
- our coast would be silently ringed with mines, and submarines
- would be waiting for every battleship.
-
- But all this depended upon the third thing, which was due to
- happen on June 15th. I would never have grasped this if I hadn't
- once happened to meet a French staff officer, coming back from
- West Africa, who had told me a lot of things. One was that, in
- spite of all the nonsense talked in Parliament, there was a real
- working alliance between France and Britain, and that the two
- General Staffs met every now and then, and made plans for joint
- action in case of war. Well, in June a very great swell was coming
- over from Paris, and he was going to get nothing less than a
- statement of the disposition of the British Home Fleet on mobilization.
- At least I gathered it was something like that; anyhow, it was
- something uncommonly important.
-
- But on the 15th day of June there were to be others in London -
- others, at whom I could only guess. Scudder was content to call
- them collectively the 'Black Stone'. They represented not our Allies,
- but our deadly foes; and the information, destined for France, was
- to be diverted to their pockets. And it was to be used, remember -
- used a week or two later, with great guns and swift torpedoes,
- suddenly in the darkness of a summer night.
-
- This was the story I had been deciphering in a back room of a
- country inn, overlooking a cabbage garden. This was the story that
- hummed in my brain as I swung in the big touring-car from glen to glen.
-
- My first impulse had been to write a letter to the Prime Minister,
- but a little reflection convinced me that that would be useless. Who
- would believe my tale? I must show a sign, some token in proof,
- and Heaven knew what that could be. Above all, I must keep going
- myself, ready to act when things got riper, and that was going to be
- no light job with the police of the British Isles in full cry after me
- and the watchers of the Black Stone running silently and swiftly on
- my trail.
-
- I had no very clear purpose in my journey, but I steered east by
- the sun, for I remembered from the map that if I went north I
- would come into a region of coalpits and industrial towns. Presently
- I was down from the moorlands and traversing the broad haugh of
- a river. For miles I ran alongside a park wall, and in a break of the
- trees I saw a great castle. I swung through little old thatched
- villages, and over peaceful lowland streams, and past gardens blazing
- with hawthorn and yellow laburnum. The land was so deep in
- peace that I could scarcely believe that somewhere behind me were
- those who sought my life; ay, and that in a month's time, unless I
- had the almightiest of luck, these round country faces would be
- pinched and staring, and men would be lying dead in English fields.
-
- About mid-day I entered a long straggling village, and had a
- mind to stop and eat. Half-way down was the Post Office, and on
- the steps of it stood the postmistress and a policeman hard at work
- conning a telegram. When they saw me they wakened up, and the
- policeman advanced with raised hand, and cried on me to stop.
-
- I nearly was fool enough to obey. Then it flashed upon me that
- the wire had to do with me; that my friends at the inn had come to an
- understanding, and were united in desiring to see more of me, and
- that it had been easy enough for them to wire the description of me
- and the car to thirty villages through which I might pass. I released
- the brakes just in time. As it was, the policeman made a claw at the
- hood, and only dropped off when he got my left in his eye.
-
- I saw that main roads were no place for me, and turned into the
- byways. It wasn't an easy job without a map, for there was the risk
- of getting on to a farm road and ending in a duck-pond or a stable-
- yard, and I couldn't afford that kind of delay. I began to see what
- an ass I had been to steal the car. The big green brute would be the
- safest kind of clue to me over the breadth of Scotland. If I left it
- and took to my feet, it would be discovered in an hour or two and
- I would get no start in the race.
-
- The immediate thing to do was to get to the loneliest roads.
- These I soon found when I struck up a tributary of the big river,
- and got into a glen with steep hills all about me, and a corkscrew
- road at the end which climbed over a pass. Here I met nobody, but
- it was taking me too far north, so I slewed east along a bad track
- and finally struck a big double-line railway. Away below me I saw
- another broadish valley, and it occurred to me that if I crossed it I
- might find some remote inn to pass the night. The evening was now
- drawing in, and I was furiously hungry, for I had eaten nothing since
- breakfast except a couple of buns I had bought from a baker's cart.
- just then I heard a noise in the sky, and lo and behold there was
- that infernal aeroplane, flying low, about a dozen miles to the south
- and rapidly coming towards me.
-
- I had the sense to remember that on a bare moor I was at the
- aeroplane's mercy, and that my only chance was to get to the leafy
- cover of the valley. Down the hill I went like blue lightning,
- screwing my head round, whenever I dared, to watch that damned
- flying machine. Soon I was on a road between hedges, and dipping
- to the deep-cut glen of a stream. Then came a bit of thick wood
- where I slackened speed.
-
- Suddenly on my left I heard the hoot of another car, and realized
- to my horror that I was almost up on a couple of gate-posts through
- which a private road debouched on the highway. My horn gave an
- agonized roar, but it was too late. I clapped on my brakes, but my
- impetus was too great, and there before me a car was sliding
- athwart my course. In a second there would have been the deuce of
- a wreck. I did the only thing possible, and ran slap into the hedge
- on the right, trusting to find something soft beyond.
-
- But there I was mistaken. My car slithered through the hedge
- like butter, and then gave a sickening plunge forward. I saw what
- was coming, leapt on the seat and would have jumped out. But a
- branch of hawthorn got me in the chest, lifted me up and held me,
- while a ton or two of expensive metal slipped below me, bucked
- and pitched, and then dropped with an almighty smash fifty feet to
- the bed of the stream.
-
- Slowly that thorn let me go. I subsided first on the hedge, and then
- very gently on a bower of nettles. As I scrambled to my feet a hand
- took me by the arm, and a sympathetic and badly scared voice
- asked me if I were hurt.
-
- I found myself looking at a tall young man in goggles and a
- leather ulster, who kept on blessing his soul and whinnying
- apologies. For myself, once I got my wind back, I was rather glad
- than otherwise. This was one way of getting rid of the car.
-
- 'My blame, Sir,' I answered him. 'It's lucky that I did not add
- homicide to my follies. That's the end of my Scotch motor tour,
- but it might have been the end of my life.'
-
- He plucked out a watch and studied it. 'You're the right sort of
- fellow,' he said. 'I can spare a quarter of an hour, and my house is
- two minutes off. I'll see you clothed and fed and snug in bed.
- Where's your kit, by the way? Is it in the burn along with the car?'
-
- 'It's in my pocket,' I said, brandishing a toothbrush. 'I'm a
- Colonial and travel light.'
-
- 'A Colonial,' he cried. 'By Gad, you're the very man I've been
- praying for. Are you by any blessed chance a Free Trader?'
-
- 'I am,' said I, without the foggiest notion of what he meant.
-
- He patted my shoulder and hurried me into his car. Three minutes
- later we drew up before a comfortable-looking shooting box set
- among pine-trees, and he ushered me indoors. He took me first to a
- bedroom and flung half a dozen of his suits before me, for my own
- had been pretty well reduced to rags. I selected a loose blue serge,
- which differed most conspicuously from my former garments, and
- borrowed a linen collar. Then he haled me to the dining-room,
- where the remnants of a meal stood on the table, and announced
- that I had just five minutes to feed. 'You can take a snack in your
- pocket, and we'll have supper when we get back. I've got to be at
- the Masonic Hall at eight o'clock, or my agent will comb my hair.'
-
- I had a cup of coffee and some cold ham, while he yarned away
- on the hearth-rug.
-
- 'You find me in the deuce of a mess, Mr - by-the-by, you
- haven't told me your name. Twisdon? Any relation of old Tommy
- Twisdon of the Sixtieth? No? Well, you see I'm Liberal Candidate
- for this part of the world, and I had a meeting on tonight at
- Brattleburn - that's my chief town, and an infernal Tory stronghold.
- I had got the Colonial ex-Premier fellow, Crumpleton, coming to
- speak for me tonight, and had the thing tremendously billed and
- the whole place ground-baited. This afternoon I had a wire from
- the ruffian saying he had got influenza at Blackpool, and here am I
- left to do the whole thing myself. I had meant to speak for ten
- minutes and must now go on for forty, and, though I've been
- racking my brains for three hours to think of something, I simply
- cannot last the course. Now you've got to be a good chap and help
- me. You're a Free Trader and can tell our people what a wash-out
- Protection is in the Colonies. All you fellows have the gift of the
- gab - I wish to Heaven I had it. I'll be for evermore in your debt.'
-
- I had very few notions about Free Trade one way or the other,
- but I saw no other chance to get what I wanted. My young gentleman
- was far too absorbed in his own difficulties to think how odd
- it was to ask a stranger who had just missed death by an ace and
- had lost a 1,000-guinea car to address a meeting for him on the spur
- of the moment. But my necessities did not allow me to contemplate
- oddnesses or to pick and choose my supports.
-
- 'All right,' I said. 'I'm not much good as a speaker, but I'll tell
- them a bit about Australia.'
-
- At my words the cares of the ages slipped from his shoulders,
- and he was rapturous in his thanks. He lent me a big driving coat -
- and never troubled to ask why I had started on a motor tour
- without possessing an ulster - and, as we slipped down the dusty
- roads, poured into my ears the simple facts of his history. He was
- an orphan, and his uncle had brought him up - I've forgotten the
- uncle's name, but he was in the Cabinet, and you can read his
- speeches in the papers. He had gone round the world after leaving
- Cambridge, and then, being short of a job, his uncle had advised
- politics. I gathered that he had no preference in parties. 'Good
- chaps in both,' he said cheerfully, 'and plenty of blighters, too. I'm
- Liberal, because my family have always been Whigs.' But if he was
- lukewarm politically he had strong views on other things. He
- found out I knew a bit about horses, and jawed away about the
- Derby entries; and he was full of plans for improving his shooting.
- Altogether, a very clean, decent, callow young man.
-
- As we passed through a little town two policemen signalled us to
- stop, and flashed their lanterns on us.
-
- 'Beg pardon, Sir Harry,' said one. 'We've got instructions to
- look out for a car, and the description's no unlike yours.'
-
- 'Right-o,' said my host, while I thanked Providence for the
- devious ways I had been brought to safety. After that he spoke no
- more, for his mind began to labour heavily with his coming speech.
- His lips kept muttering, his eye wandered, and I began to prepare
- myself for a second catastrophe. I tried to think of something to say
- myself, but my mind was dry as a stone. The next thing I knew we
- had drawn up outside a door in a street, and were being welcomed
- by some noisy gentlemen with rosettes.
- The hall had about five hundred in it, women mostly, a lot of
- bald heads, and a dozen or two young men. The chairman, a
- weaselly minister with a reddish nose, lamented Crumpleton's absence,
- soliloquized on his influenza, and gave me a certificate as a
- 'trusted leader of Australian thought'. There were two policemen at
- the door, and I hoped they took note of that testimonial. Then Sir
- Harry started.
-
- I never heard anything like it. He didn't begin to know how to
- talk. He had about a bushel of notes from which he read, and when
- he let go of them he fell into one prolonged stutter. Every now and
- then he remembered a phrase he had learned by heart, straightened
- his back, and gave it off like Henry Irving, and the next moment he
- was bent double and crooning over his papers. It was the most
- appalling rot, too. He talked about the 'German menace', and said
- it was all a Tory invention to cheat the poor of their rights and
- keep back the great flood of social reform, but that 'organized
- labour' realized this and laughed the Tories to scorn. He was all for
- reducing our Navy as a proof of our good faith, and then sending
- Germany an ultimatum telling her to do the same or we would
- knock her into a cocked hat. He said that, but for the Tories,
- Germany and Britain would be fellow-workers in peace and reform.
- I thought of the little black book in my pocket! A giddy lot Scudder's
- friends cared for peace and reform.
-
- Yet in a queer way I liked the speech. You could see the niceness
- of the chap shining out behind the muck with which he had been
- spoon-fed. Also it took a load off my mind. I mightn't be much of
- an orator, but I was a thousand per cent better than Sir Harry.
-
- I didn't get on so badly when it came to my turn. I simply told
- them all I could remember about Australia, praying there should be
- no Australian there - all about its labour party and emigration and
- universal service. I doubt if I remembered to mention Free Trade,
- but I said there were no Tories in Australia, only Labour and
- Liberals. That fetched a cheer, and I woke them up a bit when I
- started in to tell them the kind of glorious business I thought could
- be made out of the Empire if we really put our backs into it.
-
- Altogether I fancy I was rather a success. The minister didn't like
- me, though, and when he proposed a vote of thanks, spoke of Sir
- Harry's speech as 'statesmanlike' and mine as having 'the eloquence
- of an emigration agent'.
-
- When we were in the car again my host was in wild spirits at
- having got his job over. 'A ripping speech, Twisdon,' he said.
- 'Now, you're coming home with me. I'm all alone, and if you'll
- stop a day or two I'll show you some very decent fishing.'
-
- We had a hot supper - and I wanted it pretty badly - and then
- drank grog in a big cheery smoking-room with a crackling wood
- fire. I thought the time had come for me to put my cards on the
- table. I saw by this man's eye that he was the kind you can trust.
-
- 'Listen, Sir Harry,' I said. 'I've something pretty important to
- say to you. You're a good fellow, and I'm going to be frank.
- Where on earth did you get that poisonous rubbish you talked tonight?'
-
- His face fell. 'Was it as bad as that?' he asked ruefully. 'It did
- sound rather thin. I got most of it out of the PROGRESSIVE MAGAZINE
- and pamphlets that agent chap of mine keeps sending me. But you
- surely don't think Germany would ever go to war with us?'
-
- 'Ask that question in six weeks and it won't need an answer,' I
- said. 'If you'll give me your attention for half an hour I am going
- to tell you a story.'
-
- I can see yet that bright room with the deers' heads and the old
- prints on the walls, Sir Harry standing restlessly on the stone curb
- of the hearth, and myself lying back in an armchair, speaking. I
- seemed to be another person, standing aside and listening to my
- own voice, and judging carefully the reliability of my tale. It was
- the first time I had ever told anyone the exact truth, so far as I
- understood it, and it did me no end of good, for it straightened out
- the thing in my own mind. I blinked no detail. He heard all about
- Scudder, and the milkman, and the note-book, and my doings in
- Galloway. Presently he got very excited and walked up and down
- the hearth-rug.
-
- 'So you see,' I concluded, 'you have got here in your house the
- man that is wanted for the Portland Place murder. Your duty is to
- send your car for the police and give me up. I don't think I'll get
- very far. There'll be an accident, and I'll have a knife in my ribs an
- hour or so after arrest. Nevertheless, it's your duty, as a law-abiding
- citizen. Perhaps in a month's time you'll be sorry, but you have no
- cause to think of that.'
-
- He was looking at me with bright steady eyes. 'What was your
- job in Rhodesia, Mr Hannay?' he asked.
-
- 'Mining engineer,' I said. 'I've made my pile cleanly and I've had
- a good time in the making of it.'
-
- 'Not a profession that weakens the nerves, is it?'
-
- I laughed. 'Oh, as to that, my nerves are good enough.' I took
- down a hunting-knife from a stand on the wall, and did the old
- Mashona trick of tossing it and catching it in my lips. That wants a
- pretty steady heart.
-
- He watched me with a smile. 'I don't want proof. I may be an ass
- on the platform, but I can size up a man. You're no murderer and
- you're no fool, and I believe you are speaking the truth. I'm going
- to back you up. Now, what can I do?'
-
- 'First, I want you to write a letter to your uncle. I've got to get
- in touch with the Government people sometime before the 15th of June.'
-
- He pulled his moustache. 'That won't help you. This is Foreign
- Office business, and my uncle would have nothing to do with it.
- Besides, you'd never convince him. No, I'll go one better. I'll write
- to the Permanent Secretary at the Foreign Office. He's my godfather,
- and one of the best going. What do you want?'
-
- He sat down at a table and wrote to my dictation. The gist of it
- was that if a man called Twisdon (I thought I had better stick to
- that name) turned up before June 15th he was to entreat him
- kindly. He said Twisdon would prove his bona fides by passing the
- word 'Black Stone' and whistling 'Annie Laurie'.
-
- 'Good,' said Sir Harry. 'That's the proper style. By the way,
- you'll find my godfather - his name's Sir Walter Bullivant - down
- at his country cottage for Whitsuntide. It's close to Artinswell on
- the Kenner. That's done. Now, what's the next thing?'
-
- 'You're about my height. Lend me the oldest tweed suit you've
- got. Anything will do, so long as the colour is the opposite of the
- clothes I destroyed this afternoon. Then show me a map of the
- neighbourhood and explain to me the lie of the land. Lastly, if
- the police come seeking me, just show them the car in the glen. If
- the other lot turn up, tell them I caught the south express after your
- meeting.'
-
- He did, or promised to do, all these things. I shaved off the
- remnants of my moustache, and got inside an ancient suit of what I
- believe is called heather mixture. The map gave me some notion of
- my whereabouts, and told me the two things I wanted to know -
- where the main railway to the south could be joined and what were
- the wildest districts near at hand.
- At two o'clock he wakened me from my slumbers in the
- smoking-room armchair, and led me blinking into the dark starry
- night. An old bicycle was found in a tool-shed and handed over to me.
-
- 'First turn to the right up by the long fir-wood,' he enjoined. 'By
- daybreak you'll be well into the hills. Then I should pitch the
- machine into a bog and take to the moors on foot. You can put in a
- week among the shepherds, and be as safe as if you were in New
- Guinea.'
-
- I pedalled diligently up steep roads of hill gravel till the skies
- grew pale with morning. As the mists cleared before the sun, I
- found myself in a wide green world with glens falling on every side
- and a far-away blue horizon. Here, at any rate, I could get early
- news of my enemies.
-
-
- CHAPTER FIVE
- The Adventure of the Spectacled Roadman
-
-
- I sat down on the very crest of the pass and took stock of my position.
-
- Behind me was the road climbing through a long cleft in the
- hills, which was the upper glen of some notable river. In front was
- a flat space of maybe a mile, all pitted with bog-holes and rough
- with tussocks, and then beyond it the road fell steeply down another
- glen to a plain whose blue dimness melted into the distance. To left
- and right were round-shouldered green hills as smooth as pancakes,
- but to the south - that is, the left hand - there was a glimpse of
- high heathery mountains, which I remembered from the map as the
- big knot of hill which I had chosen for my sanctuary. I was on the
- central boss of a huge upland country, and could see everything
- moving for miles. In the meadows below the road half a mile back
- a cottage smoked, but it was the only sign of human life. Otherwise
- there was only the calling of plovers and the tinkling of little streams.
-
- It was now about seven o'clock, and as I waited I heard once
- again that ominous beat in the air. Then I realized that my vantage-
- ground might be in reality a trap. There was no cover for a tomtit
- in those bald green places.
-
- I sat quite still and hopeless while the beat grew louder. Then I
- saw an aeroplane coming up from the east. It was flying high, but
- as I looked it dropped several hundred feet and began to circle
- round the knot of hill in narrowing circles, just as a hawk wheels
- before it pounces. Now it was flying very low, and now the observer
- on board caught sight of me. I could see one of the two occupants
- examining me through glasses.
-
- Suddenly it began to rise in swift whorls, and the next I knew
- it was speeding eastward again till it became a speck in the
- blue morning.
-
- That made me do some savage thinking. My enemies had located
- me, and the next thing would be a cordon round me. I didn't know
- what force they could command, but I was certain it would be
- sufficient. The aeroplane had seen my bicycle, and would conclude
- that I would try to escape by the road. In that case there might be a
- chance on the moors to the right or left. I wheeled the machine a
- hundred yards from the highway, and plunged it into a moss-hole,
- where it sank among pond-weed and water-buttercups. Then I
- climbed to a knoll which gave me a view of the two valleys.
- Nothing was stirring on the long white ribbon that threaded them.
-
- I have said there was not cover in the whole place to hide a rat.
- As the day advanced it was flooded with soft fresh light till it had
- the fragrant sunniness of the South African veld. At other times I
- would have liked the place, but now it seemed to suffocate me. The
- free moorlands were prison walls, and the keen hill air was the
- breath of a dungeon.
-
- I tossed a coin - heads right, tails left - and it fell heads, so I
- turned to the north. In a little I came to the brow of the ridge
- which was the containing wall of the pass. I saw the highroad for
- maybe ten miles, and far down it something that was moving, and
- that I took to be a motor-car. Beyond the ridge I looked on a
- rolling green moor, which fell away into wooded glens.
-
- Now my life on the veld has given me the eyes of a kite, and I
- can see things for which most men need a telescope ... Away
- down the slope, a couple of miles away, several men were advancing.
- like a row of beaters at a shoot ...
-
- I dropped out of sight behind the sky-line. That way was shut to
- me, and I must try the bigger hills to the south beyond the highway.
- The car I had noticed was getting nearer, but it was still a long way
- off with some very steep gradients before it. I ran hard, crouching
- low except in the hollows, and as I ran I kept scanning the brow of
- the hill before me. Was it imagination, or did I see figures - one,
- two, perhaps more - moving in a glen beyond the stream?
-
- If you are hemmed in on all sides in a patch of land there is only
- one chance of escape. You must stay in the patch, and let your
- enemies search it and not find you. That was good sense, but how
- on earth was I to escape notice in that table-cloth of a place? I
- would have buried myself to the neck in mud or lain below water
- or climbed the tallest tree. But there was not a stick of wood, the
- bog-holes were little puddles, the stream was a slender trickle. There
- was nothing but short heather, and bare hill bent, and the white highway.
-
- Then in a tiny bight of road, beside a heap of stones, I found
- the roadman.
-
- He had just arrived, and was wearily flinging down his hammer.
- He looked at me with a fishy eye and yawned.
-
- 'Confoond the day I ever left the herdin'!' he said, as if to the
- world at large. 'There I was my ain maister. Now I'm a slave to the
- Goavernment, tethered to the roadside, wi' sair een, and a back like
- a suckle.'
-
- He took up the hammer, struck a stone, dropped the implement
- with an oath, and put both hands to his ears. 'Mercy on me! My
- heid's burstin'!' he cried.
-
- He was a wild figure, about my own size but much bent, with a
- week's beard on his chin, and a pair of big horn spectacles.
-
- 'I canna dae't,' he cried again. 'The Surveyor maun just report
- me. I'm for my bed.'
-
- I asked him what was the trouble, though indeed that was
- clear enough.
-
- 'The trouble is that I'm no sober. Last nicht my dochter Merran
- was waddit, and they danced till fower in the byre. Me and some
- ither chiels sat down to the drinkin', and here I am. Peety that I
- ever lookit on the wine when it was red!'
-
- I agreed with him about bed.
- 'It's easy speakin',' he moaned. 'But I got a postcard yestreen
- sayin' that the new Road Surveyor would be round the day. He'll
- come and he'll no find me, or else he'll find me fou, and either way
- I'm a done man. I'll awa' back to my bed and say I'm no weel, but
- I doot that'll no help me, for they ken my kind o' no-weel-ness.'
-
- Then I had an inspiration. 'Does the new Surveyor know you?'
- I asked.
-
- 'No him. He's just been a week at the job. He rins about in a wee
- motor-cawr, and wad speir the inside oot o' a whelk.'
-
- 'Where's your house?' I asked, and was directed by a wavering
- finger to the cottage by the stream.
-
- 'Well, back to your bed,' I said, 'and sleep in peace. I'll take on
- your job for a bit and see the Surveyor.'
-
- He stared at me blankly; then, as the notion dawned on his
- fuddled brain, his face broke into the vacant drunkard's smile.
-
- 'You're the billy,' he cried. 'It'll be easy eneuch managed. I've
- finished that bing o' stanes, so you needna chap ony mair this
- forenoon. just take the barry, and wheel eneuch metal frae yon
- quarry doon the road to mak anither bing the morn. My name's
- Alexander Turnbull, and I've been seeven year at the trade, and
- twenty afore that herdin' on Leithen Water. My freens ca' me Ecky,
- and whiles Specky, for I wear glesses, being waik i' the sicht. just
- you speak the Surveyor fair, and ca' him Sir, and he'll be fell
- pleased. I'll be back or mid-day.'
- I borrowed his spectacles and filthy old hat; stripped off coat,
- waistcoat, and collar, and gave him them to carry home; borrowed,
- too, the foul stump of a clay pipe as an extra property. He indicated
- my simple tasks, and without more ado set off at an amble bedwards.
- Bed may have been his chief object, but I think there was
- also something left in the foot of a bottle. I prayed that he might be
- safe under cover before my friends arrived on the scene.
-
- Then I set to work to dress for the part. I opened the collar of
- my shirt - it was a vulgar blue-and-white check such as ploughmen
- wear - and revealed a neck as brown as any tinker's. I rolled up my
- sleeves, and there was a forearm which might have been a blacksmith's,
- sunburnt and rough with old scars. I got my boots and
- trouser-legs all white from the dust of the road, and hitched up my
- trousers, tying them with string below the knee. Then I set to work
- on my face. With a handful of dust I made a water-mark round my
- neck, the place where Mr Turnbull's Sunday ablutions might be
- expected to stop. I rubbed a good deal of dirt also into the sunburn
- of my cheeks. A roadman's eyes would no doubt be a little inflamed,
- so I contrived to get some dust in both of mine, and by dint of
- vigorous rubbing produced a bleary effect.
-
- The sandwiches Sir Harry had given me had gone off with my
- coat, but the roadman's lunch, tied up in a red handkerchief, was at
- my disposal. I ate with great relish several of the thick slabs of
- scone and cheese and drank a little of the cold tea. In the handkerchief
- was a local paper tied with string and addressed to Mr Turnbull -
- obviously meant to solace his mid-day leisure. I did up the
- bundle again, and put the paper conspicuously beside it.
-
- My boots did not satisfy me, but by dint of kicking among the
- stones I reduced them to the granite-like surface which marks a
- roadman's foot-gear. Then I bit and scraped my finger-nails till the
- edges were all cracked and uneven. The men I was matched against
- would miss no detail. I broke one of the bootlaces and retied it in a
- clumsy knot, and loosed the other so that my thick grey socks
- bulged over the uppers. Still no sign of anything on the road. The
- motor I had observed half an hour ago must have gone home.
-
- My toilet complete, I took up the barrow and began my journeys
- to and from the quarry a hundred yards off.
-
- I remember an old scout in Rhodesia, who had done many queer
- things in his day, once telling me that the secret of playing a part
- was to think yourself into it. You could never keep it up, he said,
- unless you could manage to convince yourself that you were it. So I
- shut off all other thoughts and switched them on to the road-
- mending. I thought of the little white cottage as my home, I
- recalled the years I had spent herding on Leithen Water, I made my
- mind dwell lovingly on sleep in a box-bed and a bottle of cheap
- whisky. Still nothing appeared on that long white road.
-
- Now and then a sheep wandered off the heather to stare at me. A
- heron flopped down to a pool in the stream and started to fish,
- taking no more notice of me than if I had been a milestone. On I
- went, trundling my loads of stone, with the heavy step of the
- professional. Soon I grew warm, and the dust on my face changed
- into solid and abiding grit. I was already counting the hours till
- evening should put a limit to Mr Turnbull's monotonous toil.
- Suddenly a crisp voice spoke from the road, and looking up I
- saw a little Ford two-seater, and a round-faced young man in a
- bowler hat.
-
- 'Are you Alexander Turnbull?' he asked. 'I am the new County
- Road Surveyor. You live at Blackhopefoot, and have charge of the
- section from Laidlawbyres to the Riggs? Good! A fair bit of road,
- Turnbull, and not badly engineered. A little soft about a mile off,
- and the edges want cleaning. See you look after that. Good morning.
- You'll know me the next time you see me.'
-
- Clearly my get-up was good enough for the dreaded Surveyor. I
- went on with my work, and as the morning grew towards noon I
- was cheered by a little traffic. A baker's van breasted the hill, and
- sold me a bag of ginger biscuits which I stowed in my trouser-
- pockets against emergencies. Then a herd passed with sheep, and
- disturbed me somewhat by asking loudly, 'What had become o' Specky?'
-
- 'In bed wi' the colic,' I replied, and the herd passed on ...
- just about mid-day a big car stole down the hill, glided past and
- drew up a hundred yards beyond. Its three occupants descended as
- if to stretch their legs, and sauntered towards me.
-
- Two of the men I had seen before from the window of the
- Galloway inn - one lean, sharp, and dark, the other comfortable
- and smiling. The third had the look of a countryman - a vet,
- perhaps, or a small farmer. He was dressed in ill-cut knickerbockers,
- and the eye in his head was as bright and wary as a hen's.
-
- "Morning,' said the last. 'That's a fine easy job o' yours.'
-
- I had not looked up on their approach, and now, when accosted,
- I slowly and painfully straightened my back, after the manner of
- roadmen; spat vigorously, after the manner of the low Scot; and
- regarded them steadily before replying. I confronted three pairs of
- eyes that missed nothing.
-
- 'There's waur jobs and there's better,' I said sententiously. 'I wad
- rather hae yours, sittin' a' day on your hinderlands on thae cushions.
- It's you and your muckle cawrs that wreck my roads! If we a' had
- oor richts, ye sud be made to mend what ye break.'
-
- The bright-eyed man was looking at the newspaper lying beside
- Turnbull's bundle.
-
- 'I see you get your papers in good time,' he said.
-
- I glanced at it casually. 'Aye, in gude time. Seein' that that paper
- cam' out last Setterday I'm just Sax days late.'
-
- He picked it up, glanced at the superscription, and laid it down
- again. One of the others had been looking at my boots, and a word
- in German called the speaker's attention to them.
- 'You've a fine taste in boots,' he said. 'These were never made
- by a country shoemaker.'
-
- 'They were not,' I said readily. 'They were made in London. I
- got them frae the gentleman that was here last year for the shootin'.
- What was his name now?' And I scratched a forgetful head.
- Again the sleek one spoke in German. 'Let us get on,' he said.
- 'This fellow is all right.'
-
- They asked one last question.
-
- 'Did you see anyone pass early this morning? He might be on a
- bicycle or he might be on foot.'
-
- I very nearly fell into the trap and told a story of a bicyclist
- hurrying past in the grey dawn. But I had the sense to see my
- danger. I pretended to consider very deeply.
-
- 'I wasna up very early,' I said. 'Ye see, my dochter was merrit
- last nicht, and we keepit it up late. I opened the house door about
- seeven and there was naebody on the road then. Since I cam' up
- here there has just been the baker and the Ruchill herd, besides you
- gentlemen.'
-
- One of them gave me a cigar, which I smelt gingerly and stuck
- in Turnbull's bundle. They got into their car and were out of sight
- in three minutes.
-
- My heart leaped with an enormous relief, but I went on wheeling
- my stones. It was as well, for ten minutes later the car returned, one
- of the occupants waving a hand to me. Those gentry left nothing
- to chance.
-
- I finished Turnbull's bread and cheese, and pretty soon I had
- finished the stones. The next step was what puzzled me. I could not
- keep up this roadmaking business for long. A merciful Providence
- had kept Mr Turnbull indoors, but if he appeared on the scene
- there would be trouble. I had a notion that the cordon was still
- tight round the glen, and that if I walked in any direction I should
- meet with questioners. But get out I must. No man's nerve could
- stand more than a day of being spied on.
-
- I stayed at my post till five o'clock. By that time I had resolved
- to go down to Turnbull's cottage at nightfall and take my chance
- of getting over the hills in the darkness. But suddenly a new car
- came up the road, and slowed down a yard or two from me. A
- fresh wind had risen, and the occupant wanted to light a cigarette.
- It was a touring car, with the tonneau full of an assortment of
- baggage. One man sat in it, and by an amazing chance I knew him.
- His name was Marmaduke jopley, and he was an offence to creation.
- He was a sort of blood stockbroker, who did his business by
- toadying eldest sons and rich young peers and foolish old ladies.
- 'Marmie' was a familiar figure, I understood, at balls and polo-
- weeks and country houses. He was an adroit scandal-monger, and
- would crawl a mile on his belly to anything that had a title or a
- million. I had a business introduction to his firm when I came to
- London, and he was good enough to ask me to dinner at his club.
- There he showed off at a great rate, and pattered about his duchesses
- till the snobbery of the creature turned me sick. I asked a man
- afterwards why nobody kicked him, and was told that Englishmen
- reverenced the weaker sex.
-
- Anyhow there he was now, nattily dressed, in a fine new car,
- obviously on his way to visit some of his smart friends. A sudden
- daftness took me, and in a second I had jumped into the tonneau
- and had him by the shoulder.
-
- 'Hullo, jopley,' I sang out. 'Well met, my lad!' He got a horrid
- fright. His chin dropped as he stared at me. 'Who the devil are
- YOU?' he gasped.
-
- 'My name's Hannay,' I said. 'From Rhodesia, you remember.'
-
- 'Good God, the murderer!' he choked.
- 'Just so. And there'll be a second murder, my dear, if you don't
- do as I tell you. Give me that coat of yours. That cap, too.'
-
- He did as bid, for he was blind with terror. Over my dirty
- trousers and vulgar shirt I put on his smart driving-coat, which
- buttoned high at the top and thereby hid the deficiencies of my
- collar. I stuck the cap on my head, and added his gloves to my get-
- up. The dusty roadman in a minute was transformed into one of
- the neatest motorists in Scotland. On Mr jopley's head I clapped
- Turnbull's unspeakable hat, and told him to keep it there.
-
- Then with some difficulty I turned the car. My plan was to go
- back the road he had come, for the watchers, having seen it before,
- would probably let it pass unremarked, and Marmie's figure was in
- no way like mine.
-
- 'Now, my child,' I said, 'sit quite still and be a good boy. I mean
- you no harm. I'm only borrowing your car for an hour or two. But
- if you play me any tricks, and above all if you open your mouth, as
- sure as there's a God above me I'll wring your neck. SAVEZ?'
-
- I enjoyed that evening's ride. We ran eight miles down the
- valley, through a village or two, and I could not help noticing
- several strange-looking folk lounging by the roadside. These were
- the watchers who would have had much to say to me if I had come
- in other garb or company. As it was, they looked incuriously on.
- One touched his cap in salute, and I responded graciously.
-
- As the dark fell I turned up a side glen which, as I remember
- from the map, led into an unfrequented corner of the hills. Soon
- the villages were left behind, then the farms, and then even the
- wayside cottage. Presently we came to a lonely moor where the
- night was blackening the sunset gleam in the bog pools. Here we
- stopped, and I obligingly reversed the car and restored to Mr
- jopley his belongings.
-
- 'A thousand thanks,' I said. 'There's more use in you than I
- thought. Now be off and find the police.'
-
- As I sat on the hillside, watching the tail-light dwindle, I reflected
- on the various kinds of crime I had now sampled. Contrary to
- general belief, I was not a murderer, but I had become an unholy
- liar, a shameless impostor, and a highwayman with a marked taste
- for expensive motor-cars.
-
-
- CHAPTER SIX
- The Adventure of the Bald Archaeologist
-
-
- I spent the night on a shelf of the hillside, in the lee of a boulder
- where the heather grew long and soft. It was a cold business, for I
- had neither coat nor waistcoat. These were in Mr Turnbull's keeping,
- as was Scudder's little book, my watch and - worst of all - my
- pipe and tobacco pouch. Only my money accompanied me in my
- belt, and about half a pound of ginger biscuits in my trousers pocket.
-
- I supped off half those biscuits, and by worming myself deep
- into the heather got some kind of warmth. My spirits had risen,
- and I was beginning to enjoy this crazy game of hide-and-seek. So
- far I had been miraculously lucky. The milkman, the literary
- innkeeper, Sir Harry, the roadman, and the idiotic Marmie, were all
- pieces of undeserved good fortune. Somehow the first success gave
- me a feeling that I was going to pull the thing through.
-
- My chief trouble was that I was desperately hungry. When a Jew
- shoots himself in the City and there is an inquest, the newspapers
- usually report that the deceased was 'well-nourished'. I remember
- thinking that they would not call me well-nourished if I broke my
- neck in a bog-hole. I lay and tortured myself - for the ginger
- biscuits merely emphasized the aching void - with the memory of
- all the good food I had thought so little of in London. There were
- Paddock's crisp sausages and fragrant shavings of bacon, and
- shapely poached eggs - how often I had turned up my nose at
- them! There were the cutlets they did at the club, and a particular
- ham that stood on the cold table, for which my soul lusted. My
- thoughts hovered over all varieties of mortal edible, and finally
- settled on a porterhouse steak and a quart of bitter with a welsh
- rabbit to follow. In longing hopelessly for these dainties I
- fell asleep.
- I woke very cold and stiff about an hour after dawn. It took me
- a little while to remember where I was, for I had been very weary
- and had slept heavily. I saw first the pale blue sky through a net of
- heather, then a big shoulder of hill, and then my own boots placed
- neatly in a blaeberry bush. I raised myself on my arms and looked
- down into the valley, and that one look set me lacing up my boots
- in mad haste.
- For there were men below, not more than a quarter of a mile off,
- spaced out on the hillside like a fan, and beating the heather.
- Marmie had not been slow in looking for his revenge.
-
- I crawled out of my shelf into the cover of a boulder, and from it
- gained a shallow trench which slanted up the mountain face. This led
- me presently into the narrow gully of a burn, by way of which I
- scrambled to the top of the ridge. From there I looked back, and
- saw that I was still undiscovered. My pursuers were patiently quartering
- the hillside and moving upwards.
-
- Keeping behind the skyline I ran for maybe half a mile, till I
- judged I was above the uppermost end of the glen. Then I showed
- myself, and was instantly noted by one of the flankers, who passed
- the word to the others. I heard cries coming up from below, and
- saw that the line of search had changed its direction. I pretended to
- retreat over the skyline, but instead went back the way I had come,
- and in twenty minutes was behind the ridge overlooking my sleeping
- place. From that viewpoint I had the satisfaction of seeing the
- pursuit streaming up the hill at the top of the glen on a hopelessly
- false scent.
- I had before me a choice of routes, and I chose a ridge which
- made an angle with the one I was on, and so would soon put a
- deep glen between me and my enemies. The exercise had warmed
- my blood, and I was beginning to enjoy myself amazingly. As I
- went I breakfasted on the dusty remnants of the ginger biscuits.
-
- I knew very little about the country, and I hadn't a notion what I
- was going to do. I trusted to the strength of my legs, but I was
- well aware that those behind me would be familiar with the lie of
- the land, and that my ignorance would be a heavy handicap. I saw
- in front of me a sea of hills, rising very high towards the south, but
- northwards breaking down into broad ridges which separated wide
- and shallow dales. The ridge I had chosen seemed to sink after a
- mile or two to a moor which lay like a pocket in the uplands. That
- seemed as good a direction to take as any other.
-
- My stratagem had given me a fair start - call it twenty minutes -
- and I had the width of a glen behind me before I saw the first heads
- of the pursuers. The police had evidently called in local talent to
- their aid, and the men I could see had the appearance of herds or
- gamekeepers. They hallooed at the sight of me, and I waved my
- hand. Two dived into the glen and began to climb my ridge, while
- the others kept their own side of the hill. I felt as if I were taking
- part in a schoolboy game of hare and hounds.
- But very soon it began to seem less of a game. Those fellows
- behind were hefty men on their native heath. Looking back I saw
- that only three were following direct, and I guessed that the others
- had fetched a circuit to cut me off. My lack of local knowledge
- might very well be my undoing, and I resolved to get out of this
- tangle of glens to the pocket of moor I had seen from the tops. I
- must so increase my distance as to get clear away from them, and I
- believed I could do this if I could find the right ground for it. If
- there had been cover I would have tried a bit of stalking, but on
- these bare slopes you could see a fly a mile off. My hope must be in
- the length of my legs and the soundness of my wind, but I needed
- easier ground for that, for I was not bred a mountaineer. How I
- longed for a good Afrikander pony!
-
- I put on a great spurt and got off my ridge and down into the
- moor before any figures appeared on the skyline behind me. I
- crossed a burn, and came out on a highroad which made a pass
- between two glens. All in front of me was a big field of heather
- sloping up to a crest which was crowned with an odd feather of
- trees. In the dyke by the roadside was a gate, from which a grass-
- grown track led over the first wave of the moor.
-
- I jumped the dyke and followed it, and after a few hundred yards
- - as soon as it was out of sight of the highway - the grass stopped
- and it became a very respectable road, which was evidently kept
- with some care. Clearly it ran to a house, and I began to think of
- doing the same. Hitherto my luck had held, and it might be that my
- best chance would be found in this remote dwelling. Anyhow there
- were trees there, and that meant cover.
-
- I did not follow the road, but the burnside which flanked it on
- the right, where the bracken grew deep and the high banks made a
- tolerable screen. It was well I did so, for no sooner had I gained the
- hollow than, looking back, I saw the pursuit topping the ridge
- from which I had descended.
-
- After that I did not look back; I had no time. I ran up the
- burnside, crawling over the open places, and for a large part wading
- in the shallow stream. I found a deserted cottage with a row of
- phantom peat-stacks and an overgrown garden. Then I was among
- young hay, and very soon had come to the edge of a plantation of
- wind-blown firs. From there I saw the chimneys of the house smoking
- a few hundred yards to my left. I forsook the burnside, crossed
- another dyke, and almost before I knew was on a rough lawn. A
- glance back told me that I was well out of sight of the pursuit,
- which had not yet passed the first lift of the moor.
-
- The lawn was a very rough place, cut with a scythe instead of a
- mower, and planted with beds of scrubby rhododendrons. A brace
- of black-game, which are not usually garden birds, rose at my
- approach. The house before me was the ordinary moorland farm,
- with a more pretentious whitewashed wing added. Attached to this
- wing was a glass veranda, and through the glass I saw the face of
- an elderly gentleman meekly watching me.
- I stalked over the border of coarse hill gravel and entered the
- open veranda door. Within was a pleasant room, glass on one side,
- and on the other a mass of books. More books showed in an inner
- room. On the floor, instead of tables, stood cases such as you see in
- a museum, filled with coins and queer stone implements.
-
- There was a knee-hole desk in the middle, and seated at it, with
- some papers and open volumes before him, was the benevolent old
- gentleman. His face was round and shiny, like Mr Pickwick's, big
- glasses were stuck on the end of his nose, and the top of his head
- was as bright and bare as a glass bottle. He never moved when I
- entered, but raised his placid eyebrows and waited on me to speak.
-
- It was not an easy job, with about five minutes to spare, to tell a
- stranger who I was and what I wanted, and to win his aid. I did not
- attempt it. There was something about the eye of the man before
- me, something so keen and knowledgeable, that I could not find a
- word. I simply stared at him and stuttered.
-
- 'You seem in a hurry, my friend,'he said slowly.
-
- I nodded towards the window. It gave a prospect across the
- moor through a gap in the plantation, and revealed certain figures
- half a mile off straggling through the heather.
-
- 'Ah, I see,' he said, and took up a pair of field-glasses through
- which he patiently scrutinized the figures.
-
- 'A fugitive from justice, eh? Well, we'll go into the matter at our
- leisure. Meantime I object to my privacy being broken in upon by
- the clumsy rural policeman. Go into my study, and you will see
- two doors facing you. Take the one on the left and close it behind
- you. You will be perfectly safe.'
-
- And this extraordinary man took up his pen again.
-
- I did as I was bid, and found myself in a little dark chamber
- which smelt of chemicals, and was lit only by a tiny window high
- up in the wall. The door had swung behind me with a click like the
- door of a safe. Once again I had found an unexpected sanctuary.
-
- All the same I was not comfortable. There was something about
- the old gentleman which puzzled and rather terrified me. He had
- been too easy and ready, almost as if he had expected me. And his
- eyes had been horribly intelligent.
-
- No sound came to me in that dark place. For all I knew the
- police might be searching the house, and if they did they would
- want to know what was behind this door. I tried to possess my soul
- in patience, and to forget how hungry I was.
-
- Then I took a more cheerful view. The old gentleman could scarcely
- refuse me a meal, and I fell to reconstructing my breakfast. Bacon
- and eggs would content me, but I wanted the better part of a flitch
- of bacon and half a hundred eggs. And then, while my mouth was
- watering in anticipation, there was a click and the door stood open.
-
- I emerged into the sunlight to find the master of the house
- sitting in a deep armchair in the room he called his study, and
- regarding me with curious eyes.
-
- 'Have they gone?' I asked.
- 'They have gone. I convinced them that you had crossed the hill.
- I do not choose that the police should come between me and one
- whom I am delighted to honour. This is a lucky morning for you,
- Mr Richard Hannay.'
-
- As he spoke his eyelids seemed to tremble and to fall a little over
- his keen grey eyes. In a flash the phrase of Scudder's came back to
- me, when he had described the man he most dreaded in the world.
- He had said that he 'could hood his eyes like a hawk'. Then I saw
- that I had walked straight into the enemy's headquarters.
-
- My first impulse was to throttle the old ruffian and make for the
- open air. He seemed to anticipate my intention, for he smiled
- gently, and nodded to the door behind me.
-
- I turned, and saw two men-servants who had me covered with pistols.
-
- He knew my name, but he had never seen me before. And as the
- reflection darted across my mind I saw a slender chance.
-
- 'I don't know what you mean,' I said roughly. 'And who are you
- calling Richard Hannay? My name's Ainslie.'
- 'So?' he said, still smiling. 'But of course you have others. We
- won't quarrel about a name.'
-
- I was pulling myself together now, and I reflected that my garb,
- lacking coat and waistcoat and collar, would at any rate not betray
- me. I put on my surliest face and shrugged my shoulders.
-
- 'I suppose you're going to give me up after all, and I call it a
- damned dirty trick. My God, I wish I had never seen that cursed
- motor-car! Here's the money and be damned to you,' and I flung four
- sovereigns on the table.
-
- He opened his eyes a little. 'Oh no, I shall not give you up. My
- friends and I will have a little private settlement with you, that is
- all. You know a little too much, Mr Hannay. You are a clever
- actor, but not quite clever enough.'
-
- He spoke with assurance, but I could see the dawning of a doubt
- in his mind.
-
- 'Oh, for God's sake stop jawing,' I cried. 'Everything's against
- me. I haven't had a bit of luck since I came on shore at Leith.
- What's the harm in a poor devil with an empty stomach picking up
- some money he finds in a bust-up motor-car? That's all I done, and
- for that I've been chivvied for two days by those blasted bobbies
- over those blasted hills. I tell you I'm fair sick of it. You can do
- what you like, old boy! Ned Ainslie's got no fight left in him.'
-
- I could see that the doubt was gaining.
-
- 'Will you oblige me with the story of your recent doings?'he asked.
- 'I can't, guv'nor,' I said in a real beggar's whine. 'I've not had a
- bite to eat for two days. Give me a mouthful of food, and then
- you'll hear God's truth.'
-
- I must have showed my hunger in my face, for he signalled to
- one of the men in the doorway. A bit of cold pie was brought and a
- glass of beer, and I wolfed them down like a pig - or rather, like
- Ned Ainslie, for I was keeping up my character. In the middle of
- my meal he spoke suddenly to me in German, but I turned on him
- a face as blank as a stone wall.
-
- Then I told him my story - how I had come off an Archangel
- ship at Leith a week ago, and was making my way overland to my
- brother at Wigtown. I had run short of cash - I hinted vaguely at a
- spree - and I was pretty well on my uppers when I had come on a
- hole in a hedge, and, looking through, had seen a big motor-car
- lying in the burn. I had poked about to see what had happened, and
- had found three sovereigns lying on the seat and one on the floor.
- There was nobody there or any sign of an owner, so I had pocketed
- the cash. But somehow the law had got after me. When I had tried
- to change a sovereign in a baker's shop, the woman had cried on
- the police, and a little later, when I was washing my face in a burn,
- I had been nearly gripped, and had only got away by leaving my
- coat and waistcoat behind me.
-
- 'They can have the money back,' I cried, 'for a fat lot of good
- it's done me. Those perishers are all down on a poor man. Now, if
- it had been you, guv'nor, that had found the quids, nobody would
- have troubled you.'
-
- 'You're a good liar, Hannay,' he said.
-
- I flew into a rage. 'Stop fooling, damn you! I tell you my name's
- Ainslie, and I never heard of anyone called Hannay in my born
- days. I'd sooner have the police than you with your Hannays and
- your monkey-faced pistol tricks ... No, guv'nor, I beg pardon, I
- don't mean that. I'm much obliged to you for the grub, and I'll
- thank you to let me go now the coast's clear.'
-
- It was obvious that he was badly puzzled. You see he had never
- seen me, and my appearance must have altered considerably from
- my photographs, if he had got one of them. I was pretty smart and
- well dressed in London, and now I was a regular tramp.
-
- 'I do not propose to let you go. If you are what you say you are,
- you will soon have a chance of clearing yourself. If you are what I
- believe you are, I do not think you will see the light much longer.'
-
- He rang a bell, and a third servant appeared from the veranda.
-
- 'I want the Lanchester in five minutes,' he said. 'There will be
- three to luncheon.'
-
- Then he looked steadily at me, and that was the hardest ordeal
- of all.
-
- There was something weird and devilish in those eyes, cold,
- malignant, unearthly, and most hellishly clever. They fascinated me
- like the bright eyes of a snake. I had a strong impulse to throw
- myself on his mercy and offer to join his side, and if you consider
- the way I felt about the whole thing you will see that that impulse
- must have been purely physical, the weakness of a brain mesmerized
- and mastered by a stronger spirit. But I managed to stick it out and
- even to grin.
-
- 'You'll know me next time, guv'nor,' I said.
-
- 'Karl,' he spoke in German to one of the men in the doorway,
- 'you will put this fellow in the storeroom till I return, and you will
- be answerable to me for his keeping.'
-
- I was marched out of the room with a pistol at each ear.
-
- The storeroom was a damp chamber in what had been the old
- farmhouse. There was no carpet on the uneven floor, and nothing
- to sit down on but a school form. It was black as pitch, for the
- windows were heavily shuttered. I made out by groping that the
- walls were lined with boxes and barrels and sacks of some heavy
- stuff. The whole place smelt of mould and disuse. My gaolers
- turned the key in the door, and I could hear them shifting their feet
- as they stood on guard outside.
-
- I sat down in that chilly darkness in a very miserable frame of
- mind. The old boy had gone off in a motor to collect the two
- ruffians who had interviewed me yesterday. Now, they had seen me
- as the roadman, and they would remember me, for I was in the
- same rig. What was a roadman doing twenty miles from his beat,
- pursued by the police? A question or two would put them on the
- track. Probably they had seen Mr Turnbull, probably Marmie too;
- most likely they could link me up with Sir Harry, and then the
- whole thing would be crystal clear. What chance had I in this
- moorland house with three desperadoes and their armed servants?
-
- I began to think wistfully of the police, now plodding over the
- hills after my wraith. They at any rate were fellow-countrymen and
- honest men, and their tender mercies would be kinder than these
- ghoulish aliens. But they wouldn't have listened to me. That old
- devil with the eyelids had not taken long to get rid of them. I
- thought he probably had some kind of graft with the constabulary.
- Most likely he had letters from Cabinet Ministers saying he was to
- be given every facility for plotting against Britain. That's the sort
- of owlish way we run our politics in the Old Country.
-
- The three would be back for lunch, so I hadn't more than a
- couple of hours to wait. It was simply waiting on destruction, for I
- could see no way out of this mess. I wished that I had Scudder's
- courage, for I am free to confess I didn't feel any great fortitude.
- The only thing that kept me going was that I was pretty furious. It
- made me boil with rage to think of those three spies getting the
- pull on me like this. I hoped that at any rate I might be able to
- twist one of their necks before they downed me.
-
- The more I thought of it the angrier I grew, and I had to get up
- and move about the room. I tried the shutters, but they were the
- kind that lock with a key, and I couldn't move them. From the
- outside came the faint clucking of hens in the warm sun. Then I
- groped among the sacks and boxes. I couldn't open the latter, and
- the sacks seemed to be full of things like dog-biscuits that smelt of
- cinnamon. But, as I circumnavigated the room, I found a handle in
- the wall which seemed worth investigating.
-
- It was the door of a wall cupboard - what they call a 'press' in
- Scotland - and it was locked. I shook it, and it seemed rather
- flimsy. For want of something better to do I put out my strength
- on that door, getting some purchase on the handle by looping my
- braces round it. Presently the thing gave with a crash which I
- thought would bring in my warders to inquire. I waited for a bit,
- and then started to explore the cupboard shelves.
-
- There was a multitude of queer things there. I found an odd
- vesta or two in my trouser pockets and struck a light. It was out in
- a second, but it showed me one thing. There was a little stock of
- electric torches on one shelf. I picked up one, and found it was in
- working order.
-
- With the torch to help me I investigated further. There were
- bottles and cases of queer-smelling stuffs, chemicals no doubt for
- experiments, and there were coils of fine copper wire and yanks and
- yanks of thin oiled silk. There was a box of detonators, and a lot of
- cord for fuses. Then away at the back of the shelf I found a stout
- brown cardboard box, and inside it a wooden case. I managed to
- wrench it open, and within lay half a dozen little grey bricks, each a
- couple of inches square.
-
- I took up one, and found that it crumbled easily in my hand. Then I
- smelt it and put my tongue to it. After that I sat down to think. I hadn't
- been a mining engineer for nothing, and I knew lentonite when I saw it.
-
- With one of these bricks I could blow the house to smithereens.
- I had used the stuff in Rhodesia and knew its power. But the
- trouble was that my knowledge wasn't exact. I had forgotten the
- proper charge and the right way of preparing it, and I wasn't sure
- about the timing. I had only a vague notion, too, as to its power,
- for though I had used it I had not handled it with my own fingers.
-
- But it was a chance, the only possible chance. It was a mighty
- risk, but against it was an absolute black certainty. If I used it the
- odds were, as I reckoned, about five to one in favour of my
- blowing myself into the tree-tops; but if I didn't I should very
- likely be occupying a six-foot hole in the garden by the evening.
- That was the way I had to look at it. The prospect was pretty dark
- either way, but anyhow there was a chance, both for myself and for
- my country.
-
- The remembrance of little Scudder decided me. It was about the
- beastliest moment of my life, for I'm no good at these cold-blooded
- resolutions. Still I managed to rake up the pluck to set my teeth
- and choke back the horrid doubts that flooded in on me. I simply
- shut off my mind and pretended I was doing an experiment as
- simple as Guy Fawkes fireworks.
-
- I got a detonator, and fixed it to a couple of feet of fuse. Then I
- took a quarter of a lentonite brick, and buried it near the door
- below one of the sacks in a crack of the floor, fixing the detonator
- in it. For all I knew half those boxes might be dynamite. If the
- cupboard held such deadly explosives, why not the boxes? In that
- case there would be a glorious skyward journey for me and the
- German servants and about an acre of surrounding country. There
- was also the risk that the detonation might set off the other bricks
- in the cupboard, for I had forgotten most that I knew about
- lentonite. But it didn't do to begin thinking about the possibilities.
- The odds were horrible, but I had to take them.
-
- I ensconced myself just below the sill of the window, and lit the
- fuse. Then I waited for a moment or two. There was dead silence -
- only a shuffle of heavy boots in the passage, and the peaceful cluck
- of hens from the warm out-of-doors. I commended my soul to my
- Maker, and wondered where I would be in five seconds ...
-
- A great wave of heat seemed to surge upwards from the floor,
- and hang for a blistering instant in the air. Then the wall opposite
- me flashed into a golden yellow and dissolved with a rending
- thunder that hammered my brain into a pulp. Something dropped
- on me, catching the point of my left shoulder.
-
- And then I think I became unconscious.
-
- My stupor can scarcely have lasted beyond a few seconds. I felt
- myself being choked by thick yellow fumes, and struggled out of
- the debris to my feet. Somewhere behind me I felt fresh air. The
- jambs of the window had fallen, and through the ragged rent the
- smoke was pouring out to the summer noon. I stepped over the
- broken lintel, and found myself standing in a yard in a dense and
- acrid fog. I felt very sick and ill, but I could move my limbs, and I
- staggered blindly forward away from the house.
-
- A small mill-lade ran in a wooden aqueduct at the other side of
- the yard, and into this I fell. The cool water revived me, and I had
- just enough wits left to think of escape. I squirmed up the lade
- among the slippery green slime till I reached the mill-wheel. Then I
- wriggled through the axle hole into the old mill and tumbled on to
- a bed of chaff. A nail caught the seat of my trousers, and I left a
- wisp of heather-mixture behind me.
-
- The mill had been long out of use. The ladders were rotten with
- age, and in the loft the rats had gnawed great holes in the floor.
- Nausea shook me, and a wheel in my head kept turning, while my
- left shoulder and arm seemed to be stricken with the palsy. I looked
- out of the window and saw a fog still hanging over the house and
- smoke escaping from an upper window. Please God I had set the
- place on fire, for I could hear confused cries coming from the
- other side.
-
- But I had no time to linger, since this mill was obviously a bad
- hiding-place. Anyone looking for me would naturally follow the
- lade, and I made certain the search would begin as soon as they
- found that my body was not in the storeroom. From another
- window I saw that on the far side of the mill stood an old stone
- dovecot. If I could get there without leaving tracks I might find a
- hiding-place, for I argued that my enemies, if they thought I could
- move, would conclude I had made for open country, and would go
- seeking me on the moor.
-
- I crawled down the broken ladder, scattering chaff behind me to
- cover my footsteps. I did the same on the mill floor, and on the
- threshold where the door hung on broken hinges. Peeping out, I
- saw that between me and the dovecot was a piece of bare cobbled
- ground, where no footmarks would show. Also it was mercifully
- hid by the mill buildings from any view from the house. I slipped
- across the space, got to the back of the dovecot and prospected a
- way of ascent.
-
- That was one of the hardest jobs I ever took on. My shoulder
- and arm ached like hell, and I was so sick and giddy that I was
- always on the verge of falling. But I managed it somehow. By the
- use of out-jutting stones and gaps in the masonry and a tough ivy
- root I got to the top in the end. There was a little parapet behind
- which I found space to lie down. Then I proceeded to go off into
- an old-fashioned swoon.
-
- I woke with a burning head and the sun glaring in my face. For a
- long time I lay motionless, for those horrible fumes seemed to have
- loosened my joints and dulled my brain. Sounds came to me from
- the house - men speaking throatily and the throbbing of a stationary
- car. There was a little gap in the parapet to which I wriggled, and
- from which I had some sort of prospect of the yard. I saw figures
- come out - a servant with his head bound up, and then a younger
- man in knickerbockers. They were looking for something, and
- moved towards the mill. Then one of them caught sight of the wisp
- of cloth on the nail, and cried out to the other. They both went
- back to the house, and brought two more to look at it. I saw the
- rotund figure of my late captor, and I thought I made out the man
- with the lisp. I noticed that all had pistols.
-
- For half an hour they ransacked the mill. I could hear them
- kicking over the barrels and pulling up the rotten planking. Then
- they came outside, and stood just below the dovecot arguing
- fiercely. The servant with the bandage was being soundly rated. I
- heard them fiddling with the door of the dovecote and for one
- horrid moment I fancied they were coming up. Then they thought
- better of it, and went back to the house.
-
- All that long blistering afternoon I lay baking on the rooftop.
- Thirst was my chief torment. My tongue was like a stick, and to
- make it worse I could hear the cool drip of water from the mill-
- lade. I watched the course of the little stream as it came in from the
- moor, and my fancy followed it to the top of the glen, where it
- must issue from an icy fountain fringed with cool ferns and mosses.
- I would have given a thousand pounds to plunge my face into that.
-
- I had a fine prospect of the whole ring of moorland. I saw the
- car speed away with two occupants, and a man on a hill pony
- riding east. I judged they were looking for me, and I wished them
- joy of their quest.
-
- But I saw something else more interesting. The house stood
- almost on the summit of a swell of moorland which crowned a sort
- of plateau, and there was no higher point nearer than the big hills
- six miles off. The actual summit, as I have mentioned, was a
- biggish clump of trees - firs mostly, with a few ashes and beeches.
- On the dovecot I was almost on a level with the tree-tops, and
- could see what lay beyond. The wood was not solid, but only a
- ring, and inside was an oval of green turf, for all the world like a
- big cricket-field.
-
- I didn't take long to guess what it was. It was an aerodrome, and
- a secret one. The place had been most cunningly chosen. For
- suppose anyone were watching an aeroplane descending here, he
- would think it had gone over the hill beyond the trees. As the place
- was on the top of a rise in the midst of a big amphitheatre, any
- observer from any direction would conclude it had passed out of
- view behind the hill. Only a man very close at hand would realize
- that the aeroplane had not gone over but had descended in the
- midst of the wood. An observer with a telescope on one of the
- higher hills might have discovered the truth, but only herds went
- there, and herds do not carry spy-glasses. When I looked from the
- dovecot I could see far away a blue line which I knew was the sea,
- and I grew furious to think that our enemies had this secret
- conning-tower to rake our waterways.
-
- Then I reflected that if that aeroplane came back the chances
- were ten to one that I would be discovered. So through the afternoon
- I lay and prayed for the coming of darkness, and glad I was
- when the sun went down over the big western hills and the twilight
- haze crept over the moor. The aeroplane was late. The gloaming
- was far advanced when I heard the beat of wings and saw it volplaning
- downward to its home in the wood. Lights twinkled for a
- bit and there was much coming and going from the house. Then
- the dark fell, and silence.
-
- Thank God it was a black night. The moon was well on its last
- quarter and would not rise till late. My thirst was too great to allow
- me to tarry, so about nine o'clock, so far as I could judge, I started
- to descend. It wasn't easy, and half-way down I heard the back door
- of the house open, and saw the gleam of a lantern against the mill
- wall. For some agonizing minutes I hung by the ivy and prayed
- that whoever it was would not come round by the dovecot. Then
- the light disappeared, and I dropped as softly as I could on to the
- hard soil of the yard.
-
- I crawled on my belly in the lee of a stone dyke till I reached the
- fringe of trees which surrounded the house. If I had known how to
- do it I would have tried to put that aeroplane out of action, but I
- realized that any attempt would probably be futile. I was pretty
- certain that there would be some kind of defence round the house,
- so I went through the wood on hands and knees, feeling carefully
- every inch before me. It was as well, for presently I came on a wire
- about two feet from the ground. If I had tripped over that, it
- would doubtless have rung some bell in the house and I would
- have been captured.
-
- A hundred yards farther on I found another wire cunningly
- placed on the edge of a small stream. Beyond that lay the moor, and
- in five minutes I was deep in bracken and heather. Soon I was
- round the shoulder of the rise, in the little glen from which the
- mill-lade flowed. Ten minutes later my face was in the spring, and I
- was soaking down pints of the blessed water.
- But I did not stop till I had put half a dozen miles between me
- and that accursed dwelling.
-
-
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- The Dry-Fly Fisherman
-
-
- I sat down on a hill-top and took stock of my position. I wasn't
- feeling very happy, for my natural thankfulness at my escape was
- clouded by my severe bodily discomfort. Those lentonite fumes had
- fairly poisoned me, and the baking hours on the dovecot hadn't
- helped matters. I had a crushing headache, and felt as sick as a cat.
- Also my shoulder was in a bad way. At first I thought it was only a
- bruise, but it seemed to be swelling, and I had no use of my left arm.
-
- My plan was to seek Mr Turnbull's cottage, recover my garments,
- and especially Scudder's note-book, and then make for the main
- line and get back to the south. It seemed to me that the sooner I
- got in touch with the Foreign Office man, Sir Walter Bullivant, the
- better. I didn't see how I could get more proof than I had got
- already. He must just take or leave my story, and anyway, with him
- I would be in better hands than those devilish Germans. I had
- begun to feel quite kindly towards the British police.
-
- It was a wonderful starry night, and I had not much difficulty
- about the road. Sir Harry's map had given me the lie of the land,
- and all I had to do was to steer a point or two west of south-west
- to come to the stream where I had met the roadman. In all these
- travels I never knew the names of the places, but I believe this
- stream was no less than the upper waters of the river Tweed. I
- calculated I must be about eighteen miles distant, and that meant I
- could not get there before morning. So I must lie up a day somewhere,
- for I was too outrageous a figure to be seen in the sunlight.
- I had neither coat, waistcoat, collar, nor hat, my trousers were
- badly torn, and my face and hands were black with the explosion. I
- daresay I had other beauties, for my eyes felt as if they were
- furiously bloodshot. Altogether I was no spectacle for God-fearing
- citizens to see on a highroad.
-
- Very soon after daybreak I made an attempt to clean myself in a
- hill burn, and then approached a herd's cottage, for I was feeling
- the need of food. The herd was away from home, and his wife was
- alone, with no neighbour for five miles. She was a decent old body,
- and a plucky one, for though she got a fright when she saw me, she
- had an axe handy, and would have used it on any evil-doer. I told
- her that I had had a fall - I didn't say how - and she saw by my
- looks that I was pretty sick. Like a true Samaritan she asked no
- questions, but gave me a bowl of milk with a dash of whisky in it,
- and let me sit for a little by her kitchen fire. She would have bathed
- my shoulder, but it ached so badly that I would not let her touch it.
-
- I don't know what she took me for - a repentant burglar,
- perhaps; for when I wanted to pay her for the milk and tendered a
- sovereign which was the smallest coin I had, she shook her head
- and said something about 'giving it to them that had a right to it'.
- At this I protested so strongly that I think she believed me honest,
- for she took the money and gave me a warm new plaid for it, and
- an old hat of her man's. She showed me how to wrap the plaid
- around my shoulders, and when I left that cottage I was the living
- image of the kind of Scotsman you see in the illustrations to
- Burns's poems. But at any rate I was more or less clad.
-
- It was as well, for the weather changed before midday to a thick
- drizzle of rain. I found shelter below an overhanging rock in the
- crook of a burn, where a drift of dead brackens made a tolerable
- bed. There I managed to sleep till nightfall, waking very cramped
- and wretched, with my shoulder gnawing like a toothache. I ate the
- oatcake and cheese the old wife had given me and set out again just
- before the darkening.
-
- I pass over the miseries of that night among the wet hills. There
- were no stars to steer by, and I had to do the best I could from my
- memory of the map. Twice I lost my way, and I had some nasty
- falls into peat-bogs. I had only about ten miles to go as the crow
- flies, but my mistakes made it nearer twenty. The last bit was
- completed with set teeth and a very light and dizzy head. But I
- managed it, and in the early dawn I was knocking at Mr Turnbull's
- door. The mist lay close and thick, and from the cottage I could
- not see the highroad.
-
- Mr Turnbull himself opened to me - sober and something more
- than sober. He was primly dressed in an ancient but well-tended
- suit of black; he had been shaved not later than the night before; he
- wore a linen collar; and in his left hand he carried a pocket Bible.
- At first he did not recognize me.
-
- 'Whae are ye that comes stravaigin' here on the Sabbath mornin'?'
- he asked.
-
- I had lost all count of the days. So the Sabbath was the reason
- for this strange decorum.
-
- My head was swimming so wildly that I could not frame a
- coherent answer. But he recognized me, and he saw that I was ill.
-
- 'Hae ye got my specs?' he asked.
-
- I fetched them out of my trouser pocket and gave him them.
-
- 'Ye'll hae come for your jaicket and westcoat,' he said. 'Come in-
- bye. Losh, man, ye're terrible dune i' the legs. Haud up till I get ye
- to a chair.'
-
- I perceived I was in for a bout of malaria. I had a good deal of
- fever in my bones, and the wet night had brought it out, while my
- shoulder and the effects of the fumes combined to make me feel
- pretty bad. Before I knew, Mr Turnbull was helping me off with
- my clothes, and putting me to bed in one of the two cupboards that
- lined the kitchen walls.
-
- He was a true friend in need, that old roadman. His wife was
- dead years ago, and since his daughter's marriage he lived alone.
-
- For the better part of ten days he did all the rough nursing I
- needed. I simply wanted to be left in peace while the fever took its
- course, and when my skin was cool again I found that the bout had
- more or less cured my shoulder. But it was a baddish go, and
- though I was out of bed in five days, it took me some time to get
- my legs again.
-
- He went out each morning, leaving me milk for the day, and
- locking the door behind him; and came in in the evening to sit
- silent in the chimney corner. Not a soul came near the place. When
- I was getting better, he never bothered me with a question. Several
- times he fetched me a two days' old SCOTSMAN, and I noticed that the
- interest in the Portland Place murder seemed to have died down.
- There was no mention of it, and I could find very little about
- anything except a thing called the General Assembly - some
- ecclesiastical spree, I gathered.
-
- One day he produced my belt from a lockfast drawer. 'There's a
- terrible heap o' siller in't,' he said. 'Ye'd better coont it to see
- it's a' there.'
-
- He never even sought my name. I asked him if anybody had
- been around making inquiries subsequent to my spell at the road-making.
-
- 'Ay, there was a man in a motor-cawr. He speired whae had ta'en
- my place that day, and I let on I thocht him daft. But he keepit on
- at me, and syne I said he maun be thinkin' o' my gude-brither frae
- the Cleuch that whiles lent me a haun'. He was a wersh-lookin'
- sowl, and I couldna understand the half o' his English tongue.'
-
- I was getting restless those last days, and as soon as I felt myself
- fit I decided to be off. That was not till the twelfth day of June,
- and as luck would have it a drover went past that morning taking
- some cattle to Moffat. He was a man named Hislop, a friend of
- Turnbull's, and he came in to his breakfast with us and offered to
- take me with him.
-
- I made Turnbull accept five pounds for my lodging, and a hard
- job I had of it. There never was a more independent being. He
- grew positively rude when I pressed him, and shy and red, and
- took the money at last without a thank you. When I told him how
- much I owed him, he grunted something about 'ae guid turn
- deservin' anither'. You would have thought from our leave-taking
- that we had parted in disgust.
-
- Hislop was a cheery soul, who chattered all the way over the pass
- and down the sunny vale of Annan. I talked of Galloway markets
- and sheep prices, and he made up his mind I was a 'pack-shepherd'
- from those parts - whatever that may be. My plaid and my old hat,
- as I have said, gave me a fine theatrical Scots look. But driving
- cattle is a mortally slow job, and we took the better part of the day
- to cover a dozen miles.
-
- If I had not had such an anxious heart I would have enjoyed that
- time. It was shining blue weather, with a constantly changing
- prospect of brown hills and far green meadows, and a continual
- sound of larks and curlews and falling streams. But I had no mind
- for the summer, and little for Hislop's conversation, for as the
- fateful fifteenth of June drew near I was overweighed with the
- hopeless difficulties of my enterprise.
-
- I got some dinner in a humble Moffat public-house, and walked
- the two miles to the junction on the main line. The night express
- for the south was not due till near midnight, and to fill up the time
- I went up on the hillside and fell asleep, for the walk had tired me.
- I all but slept too long, and had to run to the station and catch the
- train with two minutes to spare. The feel of the hard third-class
- cushions and the smell of stale tobacco cheered me up wonderfully.
- At any rate, I felt now that I was getting to grips with my job.
-
- I was decanted at Crewe in the small hours and had to wait till six to
- get a train for Birmingham. In the afternoon I got to Reading, and
- changed into a local train which journeyed into the deeps of Berkshire.
- Presently I was in a land of lush water-meadows and slow
- reedy streams. About eight o'clock in the evening, a weary and
- travel-stained being - a cross between a farm-labourer and a vet -
- with a checked black-and-white plaid over his arm (for I did not
- dare to wear it south of the Border), descended at the little station
- of Artinswell. There were several people on the platform, and I
- thought I had better wait to ask my way till I was clear of the place.
-
- The road led through a wood of great beeches and then into a
- shallow valley, with the green backs of downs peeping over the
- distant trees. After Scotland the air smelt heavy and flat, but
- infinitely sweet, for the limes and chestnuts and lilac bushes were domes
- of blossom. Presently I came to a bridge, below which a clear slow
- stream flowed between snowy beds of water-buttercups. A little
- above it was a mill; and the lasher made a pleasant cool sound in
- the scented dusk. Somehow the place soothed me and put me at my
- ease. I fell to whistling as I looked into the green depths, and the
- tune which came to my lips was 'Annie Laurie'.
-
- A fisherman came up from the waterside, and as he neared me he
- too began to whistle. The tune was infectious, for he followed my
- suit. He was a huge man in untidy old flannels and a wide-brimmed
- hat, with a canvas bag slung on his shoulder. He nodded to me,
- and I thought I had never seen a shrewder or better-tempered face.
- He leaned his delicate ten-foot split-cane rod against the bridge,
- and looked with me at the water.
-
- 'Clear, isn't it?' he said pleasantly. 'I back our Kenner any day
- against the Test. Look at that big fellow. Four pounds if he's an
- ounce. But the evening rise is over and you can't tempt 'em.'
-
- 'I don't see him,' said I.
-
- 'Look! There! A yard from the reeds just above that stickle.'
-
- 'I've got him now. You might swear he was a black stone.'
-
- 'So,' he said, and whistled another bar of 'Annie Laurie'.
-
- 'Twisdon's the name, isn't it?' he said over his shoulder, his eyes
- still fixed on the stream.
-
- 'No,' I said. 'I mean to say, Yes.' I had forgotten all about
- my alias.
-
- 'It's a wise conspirator that knows his own name,' he observed,
- grinning broadly at a moor-hen that emerged from the bridge's shadow.
-
- I stood up and looked at him, at the square, cleft jaw and broad,
- lined brow and the firm folds of cheek, and began to think that
- here at last was an ally worth having. His whimsical blue eyes
- seemed to go very deep.
-
- Suddenly he frowned. 'I call it disgraceful,' he said, raising his
- voice. 'Disgraceful that an able-bodied man like you should dare to
- beg. You can get a meal from my kitchen, but you'll get no money
- from me.'
-
- A dog-cart was passing, driven by a young man who raised his
- whip to salute the fisherman. When he had gone, he picked up his rod.
-
- 'That's my house,' he said, pointing to a white gate a hundred
- yards on. 'Wait five minutes and then go round to the back door.'
- And with that he left me.
-
- I did as I was bidden. I found a pretty cottage with a lawn
- running down to the stream, and a perfect jungle of guelder-rose
- and lilac flanking the path. The back door stood open, and a grave
- butler was awaiting me.
-
- 'Come this way, Sir,' he said, and he led me along a passage and
- up a back staircase to a pleasant bedroom looking towards the
- river. There I found a complete outfit laid out for me - dress
- clothes with all the fixings, a brown flannel suit, shirts, collars, ties,
- shaving things and hair-brushes, even a pair of patent shoes. 'Sir
- Walter thought as how Mr Reggie's things would fit you, Sir,' said
- the butler. 'He keeps some clothes 'ere, for he comes regular on the
- week-ends. There's a bathroom next door, and I've prepared a 'ot
- bath. Dinner in 'alf an hour, Sir. You'll 'ear the gong.'
-
- The grave being withdrew, and I sat down in a chintz-covered
- easy-chair and gaped. It was like a pantomime, to come suddenly out
- of beggardom into this orderly comfort. Obviously Sir Walter
- believed in me, though why he did I could not guess. I looked at
- myself in the mirror and saw a wild, haggard brown fellow, with a
- fortnight's ragged beard, and dust in ears and eyes, collarless,
- vulgarly shirted, with shapeless old tweed clothes and boots that
- had not been cleaned for the better part of a month. I made a fine
- tramp and a fair drover; and here I was ushered by a prim butler
- into this temple of gracious ease. And the best of it was that they
- did not even know my name.
-
- I resolved not to puzzle my head but to take the gifts the gods
- had provided. I shaved and bathed luxuriously, and got into the
- dress clothes and clean crackling shirt, which fitted me not so
- badly. By the time I had finished the looking-glass showed a not
- unpersonable young man.
-
- Sir Walter awaited me in a dusky dining-room where a little
- round table was lit with silver candles. The sight of him - so
- respectable and established and secure, the embodiment of law and
- government and all the conventions - took me aback and made me
- feel an interloper. He couldn't know the truth about me, or he
- wouldn't treat me like this. I simply could not accept his hospitality
- on false pretences.
-
- 'I'm more obliged to you than I can say, but I'm bound to make
- things clear,' I said. 'I'm an innocent man, but I'm wanted by the
- police. I've got to tell you this, and I won't be surprised if you kick
- me out.'
-
- He smiled. 'That's all right. Don't let that interfere with your
- appetite. We can talk about these things after dinner.'
- I never ate a meal with greater relish, for I had had nothing all
- day but railway sandwiches. Sir Walter did me proud, for we drank
- a good champagne and had some uncommon fine port afterwards.
- it made me almost hysterical to be sitting there, waited on by a
- footman and a sleek butler, and remember that I had been living
- for three weeks like a brigand, with every man's hand against me. I
- told Sir Walter about tiger-fish in the Zambesi that bite off your
- fingers if you give them a chance, and we discussed sport up and
- down the globe, for he had hunted a bit in his day.
-
- We went to his study for coffee, a jolly room full of books and
- trophies and untidiness and comfort. I made up my mind that if
- ever I got rid of this business and had a house of my own, I would
- create just such a room. Then when the coffee-cups were cleared
- away, and we had got our cigars alight, my host swung his long
- legs over the side of his chair and bade me get started with my yarn.
-
- 'I've obeyed Harry's instructions,' he said, 'and the bribe he
- offered me was that you would tell me something to wake me up.
- I'm ready, Mr Hannay.'
-
- I noticed with a start that he called me by my proper name.
-
- I began at the very beginning. I told of my boredom in London,
- and the night I had come back to find Scudder gibbering on my
- doorstep. I told him all Scudder had told me about Karolides and
- the Foreign Office conference, and that made him purse his lips and grin.
-
- Then I got to the murder, and he grew solemn again. He heard
- all about the milkman and my time in Galloway, and my deciphering
- Scudder's notes at the inn.
-
- 'You've got them here?' he asked sharply, and drew a long
- breath when I whipped the little book from my pocket.
-
- I said nothing of the contents. Then I described my meeting
- with Sir Harry, and the speeches at the hall. At that he laughed
- uproariously.
-
- 'Harry talked dashed nonsense, did he? I quite believe it. He's as
- good a chap as ever breathed, but his idiot of an uncle has stuffed
- his head with maggots. Go on, Mr Hannay.'
-
- My day as roadman excited him a bit. He made me describe the
- two fellows in the car very closely, and seemed to be raking back in
- his memory. He grew merry again when he heard of the fate of that
- ass jopley.
-
- But the old man in the moorland house solemnized him. Again I
- had to describe every detail of his appearance.
-
- 'Bland and bald-headed and hooded his eyes like a bird ... He
- sounds a sinister wild-fowl! And you dynamited his hermitage,
- after he had saved you from the police. Spirited piece of work, that!'
- Presently I reached the end of my wanderings. He got up slowly,
- and looked down at me from the hearth-rug.
-
- 'You may dismiss the police from your mind,' he said. 'You're in
- no danger from the law of this land.'
-
- 'Great Scot!' I cried. 'Have they got the murderer?'
-
- 'No. But for the last fortnight they have dropped you from the
- list of possibles.'
-
- 'Why?' I asked in amazement.
-
- 'Principally because I received a letter from Scudder. I knew
- something of the man, and he did several jobs for me. He was half
- crank, half genius, but he was wholly honest. The trouble about
- him was his partiality for playing a lone hand. That made him
- pretty well useless in any Secret Service - a pity, for he had uncommon
- gifts. I think he was the bravest man in the world, for he was
- always shivering with fright, and yet nothing would choke him off.
- I had a letter from him on the 31st of May.'
-
- 'But he had been dead a week by then.'
-
- 'The letter was written and posted on the 23rd. He evidently did
- not anticipate an immediate decease. His communications usually
- took a week to reach me, for they were sent under cover to Spain
- and then to Newcastle. He had a mania, you know, for concealing
- his tracks.'
-
- 'What did he say?' I stammered.
-
- 'Nothing. Merely that he was in danger, but had found shelter
- with a good friend, and that I would hear from him before the 15th
- of June. He gave me no address, but said he was living near
- Portland Place. I think his object was to clear you if anything
- happened. When I got it I went to Scotland Yard, went over the
- details of the inquest, and concluded that you were the friend. We
- made inquiries about you, Mr Hannay, and found you were respectable.
- I thought I knew the motives for your disappearance - not
- only the police, the other one too - and when I got Harry's scrawl I
- guessed at the rest. I have been expecting you any time this past week.'
- You can imagine what a load this took off my mind. I felt a free
- man once more, for I was now up against my country's enemies
- only, and not my country's law.
-
- 'Now let us have the little note-book,' said Sir Walter.
-
- It took us a good hour to work through it. I explained the
- cypher, and he was jolly quick at picking it up. He emended my
- reading of it on several points, but I had been fairly correct, on the
- whole. His face was very grave before he had finished, and he sat
- silent for a while.
-
- 'I don't know what to make of it,' he said at last. 'He is right
- about one thing - what is going to happen the day after tomorrow.
- How the devil can it have got known? That is ugly enough in itself.
- But all this about war and the Black Stone - it reads like some wild
- melodrama. If only I had more confidence in Scudder's judgement.
- The trouble about him was that he was too romantic. He had the
- artistic temperament, and wanted a story to be better than God
- meant it to be. He had a lot of odd biases, too. Jews, for example,
- made him see red. Jews and the high finance.
-
- 'The Black Stone,' he repeated. 'DER SCHWARZE STEIN. It's like a
- penny novelette. And all this stuff about Karolides. That is the
- weak part of the tale, for I happen to know that the virtuous
- Karolides is likely to outlast us both. There is no State in Europe
- that wants him gone. Besides, he has just been playing up to Berlin
- and Vienna and giving my Chief some uneasy moments. No! Scudder has
- gone off the track there. Frankly, Hannay, I don't believe that part of
- his story. There's some nasty business afoot, and he found out too much
- and lost his life over it. But I am ready to take my oath that it is
- ordinary spy work. A certain great European Power makes a hobby of her
- spy system, and her methods are not too particular. Since she pays by
- piecework her blackguards are not likely to stick at a murder or two.
- They want our naval dispositions for their collection at the Marineamt;
- but they will be pigeon-holed - nothing more.'
- just then the butler entered the room.
-
- 'There's a trunk-call from London, Sir Walter. It's Mr 'Eath, and
- he wants to speak to you personally.'
-
- My host went off to the telephone.
-
- He returned in five minutes with a whitish face. 'I apologize to
- the shade of Scudder,' he said. 'Karolides was shot dead this evening
- at a few minutes after seven.'
-
-
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- The Coming of the Black Stone
-
-
- I came down to breakfast next morning, after eight hours of blessed
- dreamless sleep, to find Sir Walter decoding a telegram in the midst
- of muffins and marmalade. His fresh rosiness of yesterday seemed a
- thought tarnished.
-
- 'I had a busy hour on the telephone after you went to bed,' he
- said. 'I got my Chief to speak to the First Lord and the Secretary
- for War, and they are bringing Royer over a day sooner. This wire
- clinches it. He will be in London at five. Odd that the code word
- for a SOUS-CHEF D/ETAT MAJOR-GENERAL should be "Porker".'
-
- He directed me to the hot dishes and went on.
-
- 'Not that I think it will do much good. If your friends were
- clever enough to find out the first arrangement they are clever
- enough to discover the change. I would give my head to know
- where the leak is. We believed there were only five men in England
- who knew about Royer's visit, and you may be certain there were
- fewer in France, for they manage these things better there.'
-
- While I ate he continued to talk, making me to my surprise a
- present of his full confidence.
-
- 'Can the dispositions not be changed?' I asked.
-
- 'They could,' he said. 'But we want to avoid that if possible.
- They are the result of immense thought, and no alteration would be
- as good. Besides, on one or two points change is simply impossible.
- Still, something could be done, I suppose, if it were absolutely
- necessary. But you see the difficulty, Hannay. Our enemies are not
- going to be such fools as to pick Royer's pocket or any childish
- game like that. They know that would mean a row and put us on
- our guard. Their aim is to get the details without any one of us
- knowing, so that Royer will go back to Paris in the belief that the
- whole business is still deadly secret. If they can't do that they fail,
- for, once we suspect, they know that the whole thing must be altered.'
-
- 'Then we must stick by the Frenchman's side till he is home
- again,' I said. 'If they thought they could get the information in
- Paris they would try there. It means that they have some deep
- scheme on foot in London which they reckon is going to win out.'
-
- 'Royer dines with my Chief, and then comes to my house where
- four people will see him - Whittaker from the Admiralty, myself,
- Sir Arthur Drew, and General Winstanley. The First Lord is ill,
- and has gone to Sheringham. At my house he will get a certain
- document from Whittaker, and after that he will be motored to
- Portsmouth where a destroyer will take him to Havre. His journey
- is too important for the ordinary boat-train. He will never be left
- unattended for a moment till he is safe on French soil. The same
- with Whittaker till he meets Royer. That is the best we can do, and
- it's hard to see how there can be any miscarriage. But I don't mind
- admitting that I'm horribly nervous. This murder of Karolides will
- play the deuce in the chancelleries of Europe.'
-
- After breakfast he asked me if I could drive a car.
- 'Well, you'll be my chauffeur today and wear Hudson's rig.
- You're about his size. You have a hand in this business and we are
- taking no risks. There are desperate men against us, who will not
- respect the country retreat of an overworked official.'
-
- When I first came to London I had bought a car and amused
- myself with running about the south of England, so I knew something
- of the geography. I took Sir Walter to town by the Bath
- Road and made good going. It was a soft breathless June morning,
- with a promise of sultriness later, but it was delicious enough
- swinging through the little towns with their freshly watered streets,
- and past the summer gardens of the Thames valley. I landed Sir
- Walter at his house in Queen Anne's Gate punctually by half-past
- eleven. The butler was coming up by train with the luggage.
-
- The first thing he did was to take me round to Scotland Yard.
- There we saw a prim gentleman, with a clean-shaven, lawyer's face.
-
- 'I've brought you the Portland Place murderer,' was Sir Walter's
- introduction.
-
- The reply was a wry smile. 'It would have been a welcome
- present, Bullivant. This, I presume, is Mr Richard Hannay, who for
- some days greatly interested my department.'
-
- 'Mr Hannay will interest it again. He has much to tell you, but
- not today. For certain grave reasons his tale must wait for
- four hours. Then, I can promise you, you will be entertained and
- possibly edified. I want you to assure Mr Hannay that he will suffer
- no further inconvenience.'
-
- This assurance was promptly given. 'You can take up your life
- where you left off,' I was told. 'Your flat, which probably you no
- longer wish to occupy, is waiting for you, and your man is still
- there. As you were never publicly accused, we considered that there
- was no need of a public exculpation. But on that, of course, you
- must please yourself.'
-
- 'We may want your assistance later on, MacGillivray,' Sir Walter
- said as we left.
-
- Then he turned me loose.
-
- 'Come and see me tomorrow, Hannay. I needn't tell you to keep
- deadly quiet. If I were you I would go to bed, for you must have
- considerable arrears of sleep to overtake. You had better lie low,
- for if one of your Black Stone friends saw you there might be trouble.'
-
- I felt curiously at a loose end. At first it was very pleasant to be a
- free man, able to go where I wanted without fearing anything. I
- had only been a month under the ban of the law, and it was quite
- enough for me. I went to the Savoy and ordered very carefully a
- very good luncheon, and then smoked the best cigar the house
- could provide. But I was still feeling nervous. When I saw anybody
- look at me in the lounge, I grew shy, and wondered if they were
- thinking about the murder.
-
- After that I took a taxi and drove miles away up into North
- London. I walked back through fields and lines of villas and terraces
- and then slums and mean streets, and it took me pretty nearly two
- hours. All the while my restlessness was growing worse. I felt that
- great things, tremendous things, were happening or about to
- happen, and I, who was the cog-wheel of the whole business, was
- out of it. Royer would be landing at Dover, Sir Walter would be
- making plans with the few people in England who were in the
- secret, and somewhere in the darkness the Black Stone would be
- working. I felt the sense of danger and impending calamity, and I
- had the curious feeling, too, that I alone could avert it, alone could
- grapple with it. But I was out of the game now. How could it be
- otherwise? It was not likely that Cabinet Ministers and Admiralty
- Lords and Generals would admit me to their councils.
-
- I actually began to wish that I could run up against one of my
- three enemies. That would lead to developments. I felt that I
- wanted enormously to have a vulgar scrap with those gentry, where
- I could hit out and flatten something. I was rapidly getting into a
- very bad temper.
-
- I didn't feel like going back to my flat. That had to be faced
- some time, but as I still had sufficient money I thought I would put
- it off till next morning, and go to a hotel for the night.
-
- My irritation lasted through dinner, which I had at a restaurant
- in Jermyn Street. I was no longer hungry, and let several courses
- pass untasted. I drank the best part of a bottle of Burgundy, but it
- did nothing to cheer me. An abominable restlessness had taken
- possession of me. Here was I, a very ordinary fellow, with no
- particular brains, and yet I was convinced that somehow I was
- needed to help this business through - that without me it would all
- go to blazes. I told myself it was sheer silly conceit, that four or
- five of the cleverest people living, with all the might of the British
- Empire at their back, had the job in hand. Yet I couldn't be
- convinced. It seemed as if a voice kept speaking in my ear, telling
- me to be up and doing, or I would never sleep again.
-
- The upshot was that about half-past nine I made up my mind to
- go to Queen Anne's Gate. Very likely I would not be admitted, but
- it would ease my conscience to try.
-
- I walked down Jermyn Street, and at the corner of Duke Street
- passed a group of young men. They were in evening dress, had
- been dining somewhere, and were going on to a music-hall. One of
- them was Mr Marmaduke jopley.
-
- He saw me and stopped short.
-
- 'By God, the murderer!' he cried. 'Here, you fellows, hold him!
- That's Hannay, the man who did the Portland Place murder!' He
- gripped me by the arm, and the others crowded round.
- I wasn't looking for any trouble, but my ill-temper made me play
- the fool. A policeman came up, and I should have told him the
- truth, and, if he didn't believe it, demanded to be taken to Scotland
- Yard, or for that matter to the nearest police station. But a delay at
- that moment seemed to me unendurable, and the sight of Marmie's
- imbecile face was more than I could bear. I let out with my left,
- and had the satisfaction of seeing him measure his length in the
- gutter.
-
- Then began an unholy row. They were all on me at once, and
- the policeman took me in the rear. I got in one or two good blows,
- for I think, with fair play, I could have licked the lot of them, but
- the policeman pinned me behind, and one of them got his fingers
- on my throat.
-
- Through a black cloud of rage I heard the officer of the law
- asking what was the matter, and Marmie, between his broken teeth,
- declaring that I was Hannay the murderer.
-
- 'Oh, damn it all,' I cried, 'make the fellow shut up. I advise you
- to leave me alone, constable. Scotland Yard knows all about me,
- and you'll get a proper wigging if you interfere with me.'
-
- 'You've got to come along of me, young man,' said the policeman.
- 'I saw you strike that gentleman crool 'ard. You began it too,
- for he wasn't doing nothing. I seen you. Best go quietly or I'll have
- to fix you up.'
-
- Exasperation and an overwhelming sense that at no cost must I
- delay gave me the strength of a bull elephant. I fairly wrenched the
- constable off his feet, floored the man who was gripping my collar,
- and set off at my best pace down Duke Street. I heard a whistle
- being blown, and the rush of men behind me.
-
- I have a very fair turn of speed, and that night I had wings. In a
- jiffy I was in Pall Mall and had turned down towards St James's
- Park. I dodged the policeman at the Palace gates, dived through a
- press of carriages at the entrance to the Mall, and was making for
- the bridge before my pursuers had crossed the roadway. In the
- open ways of the Park I put on a spurt. Happily there were few
- people about and no one tried to stop me. I was staking all on
- getting to Queen Anne's Gate.
-
- When I entered that quiet thoroughfare it seemed deserted. Sir
- Walter's house was in the narrow part, and outside it three or four
- motor-cars were drawn up. I slackened speed some yards off and
- walked briskly up to the door. If the butler refused me admission,
- or if he even delayed to open the door, I was done.
-
- He didn't delay. I had scarcely rung before the door opened.
-
- 'I must see Sir Walter,' I panted. 'My business is desperately
- important.'
-
- That butler was a great man. Without moving a muscle he held
- the door open, and then shut it behind me. 'Sir Walter is engaged,
- Sir, and I have orders to admit no one. Perhaps you will wait.'
-
- The house was of the old-fashioned kind, with a wide hall and
- rooms on both sides of it. At the far end was an alcove with a
- telephone and a couple of chairs, and there the butler offered me a seat.
-
- 'See here,' I whispered. 'There's trouble about and I'm in it. But
- Sir Walter knows, and I'm working for him. If anyone comes and
- asks if I am here, tell him a lie.'
-
- He nodded, and presently there was a noise of voices in the
- street, and a furious ringing at the bell. I never admired a man
- more than that butler. He opened the door, and with a face like a
- graven image waited to be questioned. Then he gave them it. He
- told them whose house it was, and what his orders were, and
- simply froze them off the doorstep. I could see it all from my
- alcove, and it was better than any play.
-
- I hadn't waited long till there came another ring at the bell. The
- butler made no bones about admitting this new visitor.
-
- While he was taking off his coat I saw who it was. You couldn't
- open a newspaper or a magazine without seeing that face - the grey
- beard cut like a spade, the firm fighting mouth, the blunt square
- nose, and the keen blue eyes. I recognized the First Sea Lord, the
- man, they say, that made the new British Navy.
-
- He passed my alcove and was ushered into a room at the back of
- the hall. As the door opened I could hear the sound of low voices.
- It shut, and I was left alone again.
-
- For twenty minutes I sat there, wondering what I was to do
- next. I was still perfectly convinced that I was wanted, but when or
- how I had no notion. I kept looking at my watch, and as the time
- crept on to half-past ten I began to think that the conference must
- soon end. In a quarter of an hour Royer should be speeding along
- the road to Portsmouth ...
-
- Then I heard a bell ring, and the butler appeared. The door of
- the back room opened, and the First Sea Lord came out. He walked
- past me, and in passing he glanced in my direction, and for a
- second we looked each other in the face.
-
- Only for a second, but it was enough to make my heart jump. I
- had never seen the great man before, and he had never seen me.
- But in that fraction of time something sprang into his eyes, and that
- something was recognition. You can't mistake it. It is a flicker, a
- spark of light, a minute shade of difference which means one thing
- and one thing only. It came involuntarily, for in a moment it died,
- and he passed on. In a maze of wild fancies I heard the street door
- close behind him.
-
- I picked up the telephone book and looked up the number of his
- house. We were connected at once, and I heard a servant's voice.
-
- 'Is his Lordship at home?' I asked.
-
- 'His Lordship returned half an hour ago,' said the voice, 'and has
- gone to bed. He is not very well tonight. Will you leave a
- message, Sir?'
-
- I rang off and almost tumbled into a chair. My part in this
- business was not yet ended. It had been a close shave, but I had
- been in time.
-
- Not a moment could be lost, so I marched boldly to the door of
- that back room and entered without knocking.
-
- Five surprised faces looked up from a round table. There was
- Sir Walter, and Drew the War Minister, whom I knew from his
- photographs. There was a slim elderly man, who was probably
- Whittaker, the Admiralty official, and there was General WinStanley,
- conspicuous from the long scar on his forehead. Lastly,
- there was a short stout man with an iron-grey moustache and
- bushy eyebrows, who had been arrested in the middle of a sentence.
-
- Sir Walter's face showed surprise and annoyance.
-
- 'This is Mr Hannay, of whom I have spoken to you,' he said
- apologetically to the company. 'I'm afraid, Hannay, this visit
- is ill-timed.'
-
- I was getting back my coolness. 'That remains to be seen, Sir,' I
- said; 'but I think it may be in the nick of time. For God's sake,
- gentlemen, tell me who went out a minute ago?'
-
- 'Lord Alloa,' Sir Walter said, reddening with anger.
- 'It was not,' I cried; 'it was his living image, but it was not Lord
- Alloa. It was someone who recognized me, someone I have seen in
- the last month. He had scarcely left the doorstep when I rang up
- Lord Alloa's house and was told he had come in half an hour
- before and had gone to bed.'
-
- 'Who - who -' someone stammered.
-
- 'The Black Stone,' I cried, and I sat down in the chair so recently
- vacated and looked round at five badly scared gentlemen.
-
-
- CHAPTER NINE
- The Thirty-Nine Steps
-
-
- 'Nonsense!' said the official from the Admiralty.
-
- Sir Walter got up and left the room while we looked blankly at
- the table. He came back in ten minutes with a long face. 'I have
- spoken to Alloa,' he said. 'Had him out of bed - very grumpy. He
- went straight home after Mulross's dinner.'
-
- 'But it's madness,' broke in General Winstanley. 'Do you mean
- to tell me that that man came here and sat beside me for the best
- part of half an hour and that I didn't detect the imposture? Alloa
-
- must be out of his mind.'
- 'Don't you see the cleverness of it?' I said. 'You were too
- interested in other things to have any eyes. You took Lord Alloa for
- granted. If it had been anybody else you might have looked more
- closely, but it was natural for him to be here, and that put you all
- to sleep.'
-
- Then the Frenchman spoke, very slowly and in good English.
-
- 'The young man is right. His psychology is good. Our enemies
- have not been foolish!'
-
- He bent his wise brows on the assembly.
-
- 'I will tell you a tale,' he said. 'It happened many years ago in
- Senegal. I was quartered in a remote station, and to pass the time
- used to go fishing for big barbel in the river. A little Arab mare
- used to carry my luncheon basket - one of the salted dun breed you
- got at Timbuctoo in the old days. Well, one morning I had good
- sport, and the mare was unaccountably restless. I could hear her
- whinnying and squealing and stamping her feet, and I kept soothing
- her with my voice while my mind was intent on fish. I could see
- her all the time, as I thought, out of a corner of my eye, tethered
- to a tree twenty yards away. After a couple of hours I began to
- think of food. I collected my fish in a tarpaulin bag, and moved
- down the stream towards the mare, trolling my line. When I got up
- to her I flung the tarpaulin on her back -'
- He paused and looked round.
-
- 'It was the smell that gave me warning. I turned my head and
- found myself looking at a lion three feet off ... An old man-eater,
- that was the terror of the village ... What was left of the mare, a
- mass of blood and bones and hide, was behind him.'
-
- 'What happened?' I asked. I was enough of a hunter to know a
- true yarn when I heard it.
-
- 'I stuffed my fishing-rod into his jaws, and I had a pistol. Also
- my servants came presently with rifles. But he left his mark on me.'
- He held up a hand which lacked three fingers.
-
- 'Consider,' he said. 'The mare had been dead more than an hour,
- and the brute had been patiently watching me ever since. I never
- saw the kill, for I was accustomed to the mare's fretting, and I
- never marked her absence, for my consciousness of her was only of
- something tawny, and the lion filled that part. If I could blunder
- thus, gentlemen, in a land where men's senses are keen, why should
- we busy preoccupied urban folk not err also?'
-
- Sir Walter nodded. No one was ready to gainsay him.
-
- 'But I don't see,' went on Winstanley. 'Their object was to get
- these dispositions without our knowing it. Now it only required
- one of us to mention to Alloa our meeting tonight for the whole
- fraud to be exposed.'
-
- Sir Walter laughed dryly. 'The selection of Alloa shows their
- acumen. Which of us was likely to speak to him about tonight? Or
- was he likely to open the subject?'
-
- I remembered the First Sea Lord's reputation for taciturnity and
- shortness of temper.
-
- 'The one thing that puzzles me,' said the General, 'is what good
- his visit here would do that spy fellow? He could not carry away
- several pages of figures and strange names in his head.'
-
- 'That is not difficult,' the Frenchman replied. 'A good spy is
- trained to have a photographic memory. Like your own Macaulay.
- You noticed he said nothing, but went through these papers again
- and again. I think we may assume that he has every detail stamped
- on his mind. When I was younger I could do the same trick.'
-
- 'Well, I suppose there is nothing for it but to change the plans,'
- said Sir Walter ruefully.
-
- Whittaker was looking very glum. 'Did you tell Lord Alloa what
- has happened?' he asked. 'No? Well, I can't speak with absolute
- assurance, but I'm nearly certain we can't make any serious change
- unless we alter the geography of England.'
-
- 'Another thing must be said,' it was Royer who spoke. 'I talked
- freely when that man was here. I told something of the military
- plans of my Government. I was permitted to say so much. But that
- information would be worth many millions to our enemies. No, my
- friends, I see no other way. The man who came here and his
- confederates must be taken, and taken at once.'
-
- 'Good God,' I cried, 'and we have not a rag of a clue.'
-
- 'Besides,' said Whittaker, 'there is the post. By this time the news
- will be on its way.'
-
- 'No,' said the Frenchman. 'You do not understand the habits
- of the spy. He receives personally his reward, and he delivers
- personally his intelligence. We in France know something of the
- breed. There is still a chance, MES AMIS. These men must cross
- the sea, and there are ships to be searched and ports to be
- watched. Believe me, the need is desperate for both France and Britain.'
-
- Royer's grave good sense seemed to pull us together. He was the
- man of action among fumblers. But I saw no hope in any face, and
- I felt none. Where among the fifty millions of these islands and
- within a dozen hours were we to lay hands on the three cleverest
- rogues in Europe?
-
- Then suddenly I had an inspiration.
-
- 'Where is Scudder's book?' I cried to Sir Walter. 'Quick, man, I
- remember something in it.'
-
- He unlocked the door of a bureau and gave it to me.
-
- I found the place. THIRTY-NINE STEPS, I read, and again, THIRTY-NINE
- STEPS - I COUNTED THEM - HIGH TIDE 10.17 P.M.
-
- The Admiralty man was looking at me as if he thought I had
- gone mad.
-
- 'Don't you see it's a clue,' I shouted. 'Scudder knew where these
- fellows laired - he knew where they were going to leave the
- country, though he kept the name to himself. Tomorrow was the
- day, and it was some place where high tide was at 10.17.'
-
- 'They may have gone tonight,' someone said.
-
- 'Not they. They have their own snug secret way, and they won't
- be hurried. I know Germans, and they are mad about working to a
- plan. Where the devil can I get a book of Tide Tables?'
-
- Whittaker brightened up. 'It's a chance,' he said. 'Let's go over
- to the Admiralty.'
-
- We got into two of the waiting motor-cars - all but Sir Walter,
- who went off to Scotland Yard - to 'mobilize MacGillivray', so he said.
- We marched through empty corridors and big bare chambers
- where the charwomen were busy, till we reached a little room lined
- with books and maps. A resident clerk was unearthed, who
- presently fetched from the library the Admiralty Tide Tables. I sat
- at the desk and the others stood round, for somehow or other I had
- got charge of this expedition.
-
- It was no good. There were hundreds of entries, and so far as I
- could see 10.17 might cover fifty places. We had to find some way
- of narrowing the possibilities.
-
- I took my head in my hands and thought. There must be some
- way of reading this riddle. What did Scudder mean by steps? I
- thought of dock steps, but if he had meant that I didn't think he
- would have mentioned the number. It must be some place where
- there were several staircases, and one marked out from the others
- by having thirty-nine steps.
-
- Then I had a sudden thought, and hunted up all the steamer
- sailings. There was no boat which left for the Continent at 10.17 p.m.
-
- Why was high tide so important? If it was a harbour it must be
- some little place where the tide mattered, or else it was a heavy-
- draught boat. But there was no regular steamer sailing at that hour,
- and somehow I didn't think they would travel by a big boat from a
- regular harbour. So it must be some little harbour where the tide
- was important, or perhaps no harbour at all.
-
- But if it was a little port I couldn't see what the steps signified.
- There were no sets of staircases on any harbour that I had ever
- seen. It must be some place which a particular staircase identified,
- and where the tide was full at 10.17. On the whole it seemed to me
- that the place must be a bit of open coast. But the staircases kept
- puzzling me.
-
- Then I went back to wider considerations. Whereabouts would a
- man be likely to leave for Germany, a man in a hurry, who wanted
- a speedy and a secret passage? Not from any of the big harbours.
- And not from the Channel or the West Coast or Scotland, for,
- remember, he was starting from London. I measured the distance
- on the map, and tried to put myself in the enemy's shoes. I
- should try for Ostend or Antwerp or Rotterdam, and I should
- sail from somewhere on the East Coast between Cromer and Dover.
-
- All this was very loose guessing, and I don't pretend it was
- ingenious or scientific. I wasn't any kind of Sherlock Holmes. But I
- have always fancied I had a kind of instinct about questions like
- this. I don't know if I can explain myself, but I used to use my
- brains as far as they went, and after they came to a blank wall I
- guessed, and I usually found my guesses pretty right.
-
- So I set out all my conclusions on a bit of Admiralty paper. They
- ran like this:
-
- FAIRLY CERTAIN
-
- (1) Place where there are several sets of stairs; one that
- matters distinguished by having thirty-nine steps.
-
- (2) Full tide at 10.17 p.m. Leaving shore only possible at full
- tide.
-
- (3) Steps not dock steps, and so place probably not harbour.
-
- (4) No regular night steamer at 10.17. Means of transport must
- be tramp (unlikely), yacht, or fishing-boat.
-
- There my reasoning stopped. I made another list, which I headed
- 'Guessed', but I was just as sure of the one as the other.
-
- GUESSED
-
- (1) Place not harbour but open coast.
-
- (2) Boat small - trawler, yacht, or launch.
- (3) Place somewhere on East Coast between Cromer and Dover.
-
- it struck me as odd that I should be sitting at that desk with a
- Cabinet Minister, a Field-Marshal, two high Government officials,
- and a French General watching me, while from the scribble of a
- dead man I was trying to drag a secret which meant life or death
- for us.
-
- Sir Walter had joined us, and presently MacGillivray arrived. He
- had sent out instructions to watch the ports and railway stations for
- the three men whom I had described to Sir Walter. Not that he or
- anybody else thought that that would do much good.
-
- 'Here's the most I can make of it,' I said. 'We have got to find a
- place where there are several staircases down to the beach, one of
- which has thirty-nine steps. I think it's a piece of open coast with
- biggish cliffs, somewhere between the Wash and the Channel. Also
- it's a place where full tide is at 10.17 tomorrow night.'
-
- Then an idea struck me. 'Is there no Inspector of Coastguards or
- some fellow like that who knows the East Coast?'
-
- Whittaker said there was, and that he lived in Clapham. He went
- off in a car to fetch him, and the rest of us sat about the little room
- and talked of anything that came into our heads. I lit a pipe and
- went over the whole thing again till my brain grew weary.
-
- About one in the morning the coastguard man arrived. He was a
- fine old fellow, with the look of a naval officer, and was desperately
- respectful to the company. I left the War Minister to cross-examine
- him, for I felt he would think it cheek in me to talk.
-
- 'We want you to tell us the places you know on the East Coast
- where there are cliffs, and where several sets of steps run down to
- the beach.'
-
- He thought for a bit. 'What kind of steps do you mean, Sir?
- There are plenty of places with roads cut down through the cliffs,
- and most roads have a step or two in them. Or do you mean
- regular staircases - all steps, so to speak?'
-
- Sir Arthur looked towards me. 'We mean regular staircases,' I said.
-
- He reflected a minute or two. 'I don't know that I can think of
- any. Wait a second. There's a place in Norfolk - Brattlesham -
- beside a golf-course, where there are a couple of staircases, to let the
- gentlemen get a lost ball.'
-
- 'That's not it,' I said.
-
- 'Then there are plenty of Marine Parades, if that's what you
- mean. Every seaside resort has them.'
-
- I shook my head.
- 'It's got to be more retired than that,' I said.
-
- 'Well, gentlemen, I can't think of anywhere else. Of course,
- there's the Ruff -'
-
- 'What's that?' I asked.
-
- 'The big chalk headland in Kent, close to Bradgate. It's got a lot
- of villas on the top, and some of the houses have staircases down to
- a private beach. It's a very high-toned sort of place, and the residents
- there like to keep by themselves.'
-
- I tore open the Tide Tables and found Bradgate. High tide there
- was at 10.17 P.m. on the 15th of June.
-
- 'We're on the scent at last,' I cried excitedly. 'How can I find out
- what is the tide at the Ruff?'
-
- 'I can tell you that, Sir,' said the coastguard man. 'I once was lent
- a house there in this very month, and I used to go out at night to
- the deep-sea fishing. The tide's ten minutes before Bradgate.'
-
- I closed the book and looked round at the company.
-
- 'If one of those staircases has thirty-nine steps we have solved
- the mystery, gentlemen,' I said. 'I want the loan of your car, Sir
- Walter, and a map of the roads. If Mr MacGillivray will spare me
- ten minutes, I think we can prepare something for tomorrow.'
-
- It was ridiculous in me to take charge of the business like this,
- but they didn't seem to mind, and after all I had been in the show
- from the start. Besides, I was used to rough jobs, and these eminent
- gentlemen were too clever not to see it. It was General Royer who
- gave me my commission. 'I for one,' he said, 'am content to leave
- the matter in Mr Hannay's hands.'
-
- By half-past three I was tearing past the moonlit hedgerows of
- Kent, with MacGillivray's best man on the seat beside me.
-
-
- CHAPTER TEN
- Various Parties Converging on the Sea
-
-
- A pink and blue June morning found me at Bradgate looking from
- the Griffin Hotel over a smooth sea to the lightship on the Cock
- sands which seemed the size of a bell-buoy. A couple of miles
- farther south and much nearer the shore a small destroyer was
- anchored. Scaife, MacGillivray's man, who had been in the Navy,
- knew the boat, and told me her name and her commander's, so I
- sent off a wire to Sir Walter.
-
- After breakfast Scaife got from a house-agent a key for the gates
- of the staircases on the Ruff. I walked with him along the sands,
- and sat down in a nook of the cliffs while he investigated the half-
- dozen of them. I didn't want to be seen, but the place at this hour
- was quite deserted, and all the time I was on that beach I saw
- nothing but the sea-gulls.
-
- It took him more than an hour to do the job, and when I saw
- him coming towards me, conning a bit of paper, I can tell you my
- heart was in my mouth. Everything depended, you see, on my
- guess proving right.
-
- He read aloud the number of steps in the different stairs. 'Thirty-
- four, thirty-five, thirty-nine, forty-two, forty-seven,' and 'twenty-
- one' where the cliffs grew lower. I almost got up and shouted.
-
- We hurried back to the town and sent a wire to MacGillivray. I
- wanted half a dozen men, and I directed them to divide themselves
- among different specified hotels. Then Scaife set out to prospect
- the house at the head of the thirty-nine steps.
-
- He came back with news that both puzzled and reassured me.
- The house was called Trafalgar Lodge, and belonged to an old
- gentleman called Appleton - a retired stockbroker, the house-agent
- said. Mr Appleton was there a good deal in the summer time, and
- was in residence now - had been for the better part of a week.
- Scaife could pick up very little information about him, except that
- he was a decent old fellow, who paid his bills regularly, and was
- always good for a fiver for a local charity. Then Scaife seemed to
- have penetrated to the back door of the house, pretending he was
- an agent for sewing-machines. Only three servants were kept, a
- cook, a parlour-maid, and a housemaid, and they were just the sort
- that you would find in a respectable middle-class household. The
- cook was not the gossiping kind, and had pretty soon shut the door
- in his face, but Scaife said he was positive she knew nothing. Next
- door there was a new house building which would give good cover
- for observation, and the villa on the other side was to let, and its
- garden was rough and shrubby.
-
- I borrowed Scaife's telescope, and before lunch went for a walk
- along the Ruff. I kept well behind the rows of villas, and found a
- good observation point on the edge of the golf-course. There I had
- a view of the line of turf along the cliff top, with seats placed at
- intervals, and the little square plots, railed in and planted with
- bushes, whence the staircases descended to the beach. I saw Trafalgar
- Lodge very plainly, a red-brick villa with a veranda, a tennis
- lawn behind, and in front the ordinary seaside flower-garden full of
- marguerites and scraggy geraniums. There was a flagstaff from
- which an enormous Union Jack hung limply in the still air.
-
- Presently I observed someone leave the house and saunter along
- the cliff. When I got my glasses on him I saw it was an old man,
- wearing white flannel trousers, a blue serge jacket, and a straw hat.
- He carried field-glasses and a newspaper, and sat down on one of
- the iron seats and began to read. Sometimes he would lay down the
- paper and turn his glasses on the sea. He looked for a long time at
- the destroyer. I watched him for half an hour, till he got up and
- went back to the house for his luncheon, when I returned to the
- hotel for mine.
-
- I wasn't feeling very confident. This decent common-place dwelling
- was not what I had expected. The man might be the bald
- archaeologist of that horrible moorland farm, or he might not. He
- was exactly the kind of satisfied old bird you will find in every
- suburb and every holiday place. If you wanted a type of the perfectly
- harmless person you would probably pitch on that.
-
- But after lunch, as I sat in the hotel porch, I perked up, for I saw
- the thing I had hoped for and had dreaded to miss. A yacht came
- up from the south and dropped anchor pretty well opposite the
- Ruff. She seemed about a hundred and fifty tons, and I saw she
- belonged to the Squadron from the white ensign. So Scaife and I
- went down to the harbour and hired a boatman for an afternoon's fishing.
-
- I spent a warm and peaceful afternoon. We caught between us
- about twenty pounds of cod and lythe, and out in that dancing blue
- sea I took a cheerier view of things. Above the white cliffs of the
- Ruff I saw the green and red of the villas, and especially the great
- flagstaff of Trafalgar Lodge. About four o'clock, when we had
- fished enough, I made the boatman row us round the yacht, which
- lay like a delicate white bird, ready at a moment to flee. Scaife said
- she must be a fast boat for her build, and that she was pretty
- heavily engined.
-
- Her name was the ARIADNE, as I discovered from the cap of one of
- the men who was polishing brasswork. I spoke to him, and got an
- answer in the soft dialect of Essex. Another hand that came along
- passed me the time of day in an unmistakable English tongue. Our
- boatman had an argument with one of them about the weather, and
- for a few minutes we lay on our oars close to the starboard bow.
-
- Then the men suddenly disregarded us and bent their heads to
- their work as an officer came along the deck. He was a pleasant,
- clean-looking young fellow, and he put a question to us about our
- fishing in very good English. But there could be no doubt about
- him. His close-cropped head and the cut of his collar and tie never
- came out of England.
-
- That did something to reassure me, but as we rowed back to
- Bradgate my obstinate doubts would not be dismissed. The thing that
- worried me was the reflection that my enemies knew that I had got my
- knowledge from Scudder, and it was Scudder who had given me the
- clue to this place. If they knew that Scudder had this clue, would they
- not be certain to change their plans? Too much depended on their
- success for them to take any risks. The whole question was how much
- they understood about Scudder's knowledge. I had talked confidently
- last night about Germans always sticking to a scheme, but if they had
- any suspicions that I was on their track they would be fools not to
- cover it. I wondered if the man last night had seen that I recognized
- him. Somehow I did not think he had, and to that I had clung. But the
- whole business had never seemed so difficult as that afternoon when
- by all calculations I should have been rejoicing in assured success.
-
- In the hotel I met the commander of the destroyer, to whom
- Scaife introduced me, and with whom I had a few words. Then I
- thought I would put in an hour or two watching Trafalgar Lodge.
-
- I found a place farther up the hill, in the garden of an empty
- house. From there I had a full view of the court, on which two
- figures were having a game of tennis. One was the old man, whom
- I had already seen; the other was a younger fellow, wearing some
- club colours in the scarf round his middle. They played with tremendous
- zest, like two city gents who wanted hard exercise to open
- their pores. You couldn't conceive a more innocent spectacle. They
- shouted and laughed and stopped for drinks, when a maid brought
- out two tankards on a salver. I rubbed my eyes and asked myself if
- I was not the most immortal fool on earth. Mystery and darkness
- had hung about the men who hunted me over the Scotch moor in
- aeroplane and motor-car, and notably about that infernal antiquarian.
- It was easy enough to connect those folk with the knife
- that pinned Scudder to the floor, and with fell designs on the
- world's peace. But here were two guileless citizens taking their
- innocuous exercise, and soon about to go indoors to a humdrum
- dinner, where they would talk of market prices and the last cricket
- scores and the gossip of their native Surbiton. I had been making a
- net to catch vultures and falcons, and lo and behold! two plump
- thrushes had blundered into it.
-
- Presently a third figure arrived, a young man on a bicycle, with a
- bag of golf-clubs slung on his back. He strolled round to the tennis
- lawn and was welcomed riotously by the players. Evidently they
- were chaffing him, and their chaff sounded horribly English. Then
- the plump man, mopping his brow with a silk handkerchief, announced
- that he must have a tub. I heard his very words - 'I've got into
- a proper lather,' he said. 'This will bring down my weight and
- my handicap, Bob. I'll take you on tomorrow and give you a stroke a
- hole.' You couldn't find anything much more English than that.
-
- They all went into the house, and left me feeling a precious idiot.
- I had been barking up the wrong tree this time. These men might
- be acting; but if they were, where was their audience? They didn't
- know I was sitting thirty yards off in a rhododendron. It was simply
- impossible to believe that these three hearty fellows were anything
- but what they seemed - three ordinary, game-playing, suburban
- Englishmen, wearisome, if you like, but sordidly innocent.
-
- And yet there were three of them; and one was old, and one was
- plump, and one was lean and dark; and their house chimed in with
- Scudder's notes; and half a mile off was lying a steam yacht with at
- least one German officer. I thought of Karolides lying dead and all
- Europe trembling on the edge of earthquake, and the men I had
- left behind me in London who were waiting anxiously for the
- events of the next hours. There was no doubt that hell was afoot
- somewhere. The Black Stone had won, and if it survived this June
- night would bank its winnings.
-
- There seemed only one thing to do - go forward as if I had no
- doubts, and if I was going to make a fool of myself to do it
- handsomely. Never in my life have I faced a job with greater
- disinclination. I would rather in my then mind have walked into a
- den of anarchists, each with his Browning handy, or faced a charging
- lion with a popgun, than enter that happy home of three
- cheerful Englishmen and tell them that their game was up. How
- they would laugh at me!
-
- But suddenly I remembered a thing I once heard in Rhodesia
- from old Peter Pienaar. I have quoted Peter already in this narrative.
- He was the best scout I ever knew, and before he had turned
- respectable he had been pretty often on the windy side of the law,
- when he had been wanted badly by the authorities. Peter once
- discussed with me the question of disguises, and he had a theory
- which struck me at the time. He said, barring absolute certainties
- like fingerprints, mere physical traits were very little use for
- identification if the fugitive really knew his business. He laughed at
- things like dyed hair and false beards and such childish follies. The
- only thing that mattered was what Peter called 'atmosphere'.
-
- If a man could get into perfectly different surroundings from
- those in which he had been first observed, and - this is the important
- part - really play up to these surroundings and behave as if
- he had never been out of them, he would puzzle the cleverest
- detectives on earth. And he used to tell a story of how he once
- borrowed a black coat and went to church and shared the same
- hymn-book with the man that was looking for him. If that man had
- seen him in decent company before he would have recognized him;
- but he had only seen him snuffing the lights in a public-house with
- a revolver.
- The recollection of Peter's talk gave me the first real comfort
- that I had had that day. Peter had been a wise old bird, and these
- fellows I was after were about the pick of the aviary. What if they
- were playing Peter's game? A fool tries to look different: a clever
- man looks the same and is different.
-
- Again, there was that other maxim of Peter's which had helped
- me when I had been a roadman. 'If you are playing a part, you
- will never keep it up unless you convince yourself that you are
- it.' That would explain the game of tennis. Those chaps didn't
- need to act, they just turned a handle and passed into another
- life, which came as naturally to them as the first. It sounds a
- platitude, but Peter used to say that it was the big secret of all
- the famous criminals.
-
- It was now getting on for eight o'clock, and I went back and
- saw Scaife to give him his instructions. I arranged with him how to
- place his men, and then I went for a walk, for I didn't feel up to
- any dinner. I went round the deserted golf-course, and then to a
- point on the cliffs farther north beyond the line of the villas.
-
- On the little trim newly-made roads I met people in flannels
- coming back from tennis and the beach, and a coastguard from the
- wireless station, and donkeys and pierrots padding homewards.
- Out at sea in the blue dusk I saw lights appear on the ARIADNE and
- on the destroyer away to the south, and beyond the Cock sands the
- bigger lights of steamers making for the Thames. The whole scene
- was so peaceful and ordinary that I got more dashed in spirits every
- second. It took all my resolution to stroll towards Trafalgar Lodge
- about half-past nine.
-
- On the way I got a piece of solid comfort from the sight of a
- greyhound that was swinging along at a nursemaid's heels. He
- reminded me of a dog I used to have in Rhodesia, and of the time
- when I took him hunting with me in the Pali hills. We were after
- rhebok, the dun kind, and I recollected how we had followed one
- beast, and both he and I had clean lost it. A greyhound works by
- sight, and my eyes are good enough, but that buck simply leaked
- out of the landscape. Afterwards I found out how it managed it.
- Against the grey rock of the kopjes it showed no more than a crow
- against a thundercloud. It didn't need to run away; all it had to do
- was to stand still and melt into the background.
-
- Suddenly as these memories chased across my brain I thought of
- my present case and applied the moral. The Black Stone didn't need
- to bolt. They were quietly absorbed into the landscape. I was on
- the right track, and I jammed that down in my mind and vowed
- never to forget it. The last word was with Peter Pienaar.
-
- Scaife's men would be posted now, but there was no sign of a
- soul. The house stood as open as a market-place for anybody to
- observe. A three-foot railing separated it from the cliff road; the
- windows on the ground-floor were all open, and shaded lights and
- the low sound of voices revealed where the occupants were finishing
- dinner. Everything was as public and above-board as a charity
- bazaar. Feeling the greatest fool on earth, I opened the gate and
- rang the bell.
-
- A man of my sort, who has travelled about the world in rough
- places, gets on perfectly well with two classes, what you may call
- the upper and the lower. He understands them and they understand
- him. I was at home with herds and tramps and roadmen, and I was
- sufficiently at my ease with people like Sir Walter and the men I
- had met the night before. I can't explain why, but it is a fact. But
- what fellows like me don't understand is the great comfortable,
- satisfied middle-class world, the folk that live in villas and suburbs.
- He doesn't know how they look at things, he doesn't understand
- their conventions, and he is as shy of them as of a black mamba.
- When a trim parlour-maid opened the door, I could hardly find my voice.
-
- I asked for Mr Appleton, and was ushered in. My plan had been
- to walk straight into the dining-room, and by a sudden appearance
- wake in the men that start of recognition which would confirm my
- theory. But when I found myself in that neat hall the place mastered
- me. There were the golf-clubs and tennis-rackets, the straw hats
- and caps, the rows of gloves, the sheaf of walking-sticks, which
- you will find in ten thousand British homes. A stack of neatly
- folded coats and waterproofs covered the top of an old oak chest;
- there was a grandfather clock ticking; and some polished brass
- warming-pans on the walls, and a barometer, and a print of Chiltern
- winning the St Leger. The place was as orthodox as an Anglican
- church. When the maid asked me for my name I gave it automatically,
- and was shown into the smoking-room, on the right side
- of the hall.
-
- That room was even worse. I hadn't time to examine it, but I
- could see some framed group photographs above the mantelpiece,
- and I could have sworn they were English public school or college.
- I had only one glance, for I managed to pull myself together and go
- after the maid. But I was too late. She had already entered the
- dining-room and given my name to her master, and I had missed the
- chance of seeing how the three took it.
-
- When I walked into the room the old man at the head of the
- table had risen and turned round to meet me. He was in evening
- dress - a short coat and black tie, as was the other, whom I called
- in my own mind the plump one. The third, the dark fellow, wore a
- blue serge suit and a soft white collar, and the colours of some club
- or school.
-
- The old man's manner was perfect. 'Mr Hannay?' he said
- hesitatingly. 'Did you wish to see me? One moment, you fellows, and I'll
- rejoin you. We had better go to the smoking-room.'
-
- Though I hadn't an ounce of confidence in me, I forced myself
- to play the game. I pulled up a chair and sat down on it.
-
- 'I think we have met before,' I said, 'and I guess you know
- my business.'
-
- The light in the room was dim, but so far as I could see their
- faces, they played the part of mystification very well.
-
- 'Maybe, maybe,' said the old man. 'I haven't a very good memory,
- but I'm afraid you must tell me your errand, Sir, for I really don't
- know it.'
-
- 'Well, then,' I said, and all the time I seemed to myself to be
- talking pure foolishness - 'I have come to tell you that the game's
- up. I have a warrant for the arrest of you three gentlemen.'
-
- 'Arrest,' said the old man, and he looked really shocked. 'Arrest!
- Good God, what for?'
-
- 'For the murder of Franklin Scudder in London on the 23rd day
- of last month.'
-
- 'I never heard the name before,' said the old man in a dazed voice.
-
- One of the others spoke up. 'That was the Portland Place murder.
- I read about it. Good heavens, you must be mad, Sir! Where do you
- come from?'
-
- 'Scotland Yard,' I said.
-
- After that for a minute there was utter silence. The old man was
- staring at his plate and fumbling with a nut, the very model of
- innocent bewilderment.
-
- Then the plump one spoke up. He stammered a little, like a man
- picking his words.
-
- 'Don't get flustered, uncle,' he said. 'It is all a ridiculous mistake;
- but these things happen sometimes, and we can easily set it right. It
- won't be hard to prove our innocence. I can show that I was out of
- the country on the 23rd of May, and Bob was in a nursing home.
- You were in London, but you can explain what you were doing.'
-
- 'Right, Percy! Of course that's easy enough. The 23rd! That was
- the day after Agatha's wedding. Let me see. What was I doing? I
- came up in the morning from Woking, and lunched at the club with
- Charlie Symons. Then - oh yes, I dined with the Fishmongers. I
- remember, for the punch didn't agree with me, and I was seedy next
- morning. Hang it all, there's the cigar-box I brought back from the
- dinner.' He pointed to an object on the table, and laughed nervously.
-
- 'I think, Sir,' said the young man, addressing me respectfully,
- 'you will see you are mistaken. We want to assist the law like all
- Englishmen, and we don't want Scotland Yard to be making fools
- of themselves. That's so, uncle?'
-
- 'Certainly, Bob.' The old fellow seemed to be recovering his
- voice. 'Certainly, we'll do anything in our power to assist the
- authorities. But - but this is a bit too much. I can't get over it.'
-
- 'How Nellie will chuckle,' said the plump man. 'She always said
- that you would die of boredom because nothing ever happened to
- you. And now you've got it thick and strong,' and he began to
- laugh very pleasantly.
-
- 'By Jove, yes. just think of it! What a story to tell at the club.
- Really, Mr Hannay, I suppose I should be angry, to show my
- innocence, but it's too funny! I almost forgive you the fright you
- gave me! You looked so glum, I thought I might have been walking
- in my sleep and killing people.'
-
- It couldn't be acting, it was too confoundedly genuine. My heart
- went into my boots, and my first impulse was to apologize and
- clear out. But I told myself I must see it through, even though I
- was to be the laughing-stock of Britain. The light from the dinner-
- table candlesticks was not very good, and to cover my confusion I
- got up, walked to the door and switched on the electric light. The
- sudden glare made them blink, and I stood scanning the three faces.
-
- Well, I made nothing of it. One was old and bald, one was stout,
- one was dark and thin. There was nothing in their appearance to
- prevent them being the three who had hunted me in Scotland, but
- there was nothing to identify them. 1 simply can't explain why I
- who, as a roadman, had looked into two pairs of eyes, and as Ned
- Ainslie into another pair, why I, who have a good memory and
- reasonable powers of observation, could find no satisfaction. They
- seemed exactly what they professed to be, and I could not have
- sworn to one of them.
-
- There in that pleasant dining-room, with etchings on the walls,
- and a picture of an old lady in a bib above the mantelpiece, I could
- see nothing to connect them with the moorland desperadoes. There
- was a silver cigarette-box beside me, and I saw that it had been won
- by Percival Appleton, Esq., of the St Bede's Club, in a golf tournament.
- I had to keep a firm hold of Peter Pienaar to prevent myself
- bolting out of that house.
-
- 'Well,' said the old man politely, 'are you reassured by your
- scrutiny, Sir?'
-
- I couldn't find a word.
-
- 'I hope you'll find it consistent with your duty to drop this
- ridiculous business. I make no complaint, but you'll see how annoying
- it must be to respectable people.'
-
- I shook my head.
-
- 'O Lord,' said the young man. 'This is a bit too thick!'
-
- 'Do you propose to march us off to the police station?' asked the
- plump one. 'That might be the best way out of it, but I suppose
- you won't be content with the local branch. I have the right to ask
- to see your warrant, but I don't wish to cast any aspersions upon
- you. You are only doing your duty. But you'll admit it's horribly
- awkward. What do you propose to do?'
-
- There was nothing to do except to call in my men and have them
- arrested, or to confess my blunder and clear out. I felt mesmerized by
- the whole place, by the air of obvious innocence - not innocence
- merely, but frank honest bewilderment and concern in the three faces.
-
- 'Oh, Peter Pienaar,' I groaned inwardly, and for a moment I was
- very near damning myself for a fool and asking their pardon.
-
- 'Meantime I vote we have a game of bridge,' said the plump one.
- 'It will give Mr Hannay time to think over things, and you know
- we have been wanting a fourth player. Do you play, Sir?'
-
- I accepted as if it had been an ordinary invitation at the club.
- The whole business had mesmerized me. We went into the
- smoking-room where a card-table was set out, and I was offered
- things to smoke and drink. I took my place at the table in a kind of
- dream. The window was open and the moon was flooding the cliffs
- and sea with a great tide of yellow light. There was moonshine,
- too, in my head. The three had recovered their composure, and
- were talking easily - just the kind of slangy talk you will hear in
- any golf club-house. I must have cut a rum figure, sitting there
- knitting my brows with my eyes wandering.
-
- My partner was the young dark one. I play a fair hand at bridge,
- but I must have been rank bad that night. They saw that they had
- got me puzzled, and that put them more than ever at their ease. I
- kept looking at their faces, but they conveyed nothing to me. It
- was not that they looked different; they were different. I clung
- desperately to the words of Peter Pienaar.
-
- Then something awoke me.
-
- The old man laid down his hand to light a cigar. He didn't pick
- it up at once, but sat back for a moment in his chair, with his
- fingers tapping on his knees.
-
- It was the movement I remembered when I had stood before him
- in the moorland farm, with the pistols of his servants behind me.
-
- A little thing, lasting only a second, and the odds were a thousand
- to one that I might have had my eyes on my cards at the time and
- missed it. But I didn't, and, in a flash, the air seemed to clear. Some
- shadow lifted from my brain, and I was looking at the three men
- with full and absolute recognition.
-
- The clock on the mantelpiece struck ten o'clock.
-
- The three faces seemed to change before my eyes and reveal their
- secrets. The young one was the murderer. Now I saw cruelty and
- ruthlessness, where before I had only seen good-humour. His knife,
- I made certain, had skewered Scudder to the floor. His kind had
- put the bullet in Karolides.
-
- The plump man's features seemed to dislimn, and form again, as
- I looked at them. He hadn't a face, only a hundred masks that he
- could assume when he pleased. That chap must have been a superb
- actor. Perhaps he had been Lord Alloa of the night before; perhaps
- not; it didn't matter. I wondered if he was the fellow who had first
- tracked Scudder, and left his card on him. Scudder had said he
- lisped, and I could imagine how the adoption of a lisp might add terror.
-
- But the old man was the pick of the lot. He was sheer brain, icy,
- cool, calculating, as ruthless as a steam hammer. Now that my eyes
- were opened I wondered where I had seen the benevolence. His
- jaw was like chilled steel, and his eyes had the inhuman luminosity
- of a bird's. I went on playing, and every second a greater hate
- welled up in my heart. It almost choked me, and I couldn't answer
- when my partner spoke. Only a little longer could I endure
- their company.
-
- 'Whew! Bob! Look at the time,' said the old man. 'You'd better
- think about catching your train. Bob's got to go to town tonight,'
- he added, turning to me. The voice rang now as false as hell.
- I looked at the clock, and it was nearly half-past ten.
-
- 'I am afraid he must put off his journey,' I said.
-
- 'Oh, damn,' said the young man. 'I thought you had dropped
- that rot. I've simply got to go. You can have my address, and I'll
- give any security you like.'
-
- 'No,' I said, 'you must stay.'
-
- At that I think they must have realized that the game was desperate.
- Their only chance had been to convince me that I was playing
- the fool, and that had failed. But the old man spoke again.
-
- 'I'll go bail for my nephew. That ought to content you, Mr
- Hannay.' Was it fancy, or did I detect some halt in the smoothness
- of that voice?
-
- There must have been, for as I glanced at him, his eyelids fell in
- that hawk-like hood which fear had stamped on my memory.
-
- I blew my whistle.
-
- In an instant the lights were out. A pair of strong arms gripped
- me round the waist, covering the pockets in which a man might be
- expected to carry a pistol.
-
- 'SCHNELL, FRANZ,' cried a voice, 'DAS BOOT, DAS BOOT!' As it spoke I
- saw two of my fellows emerge on the moonlit lawn.
- The young dark man leapt for the window, was through it, and
- over the low fence before a hand could touch him. I grappled the
- old chap, and the room seemed to fill with figures. I saw the plump
- one collared, but my eyes were all for the out-of-doors, where
- Franz sped on over the road towards the railed entrance to the
- beach stairs. One man followed him, but he had no chance. The
- gate of the stairs locked behind the fugitive, and I stood staring,
- with my hands on the old boy's throat, for such a time as a man
- might take to descend those steps to the sea.
-
- Suddenly my prisoner broke from me and flung himself on the
- wall. There was a click as if a lever had been pulled. Then came a
- low rumbling far, far below the ground, and through the window I
- saw a cloud of chalky dust pouring out of the shaft of the stairway.
-
- Someone switched on the light.
-
- The old man was looking at me with blazing eyes.
-
- 'He is safe,' he cried. 'You cannot follow in time ... He is
- gone ... He has triumphed ... DER SCHWARZE STEIN IST IN DER
- SIEGESKRONE.'
-
- There was more in those eyes than any common triumph. They
- had been hooded like a bird of prey, and now they flamed with a
- hawk's pride. A white fanatic heat burned in them, and I realized
- for the first time the terrible thing I had been up against. This man
- was more than a spy; in his foul way he had been a patriot.
-
- As the handcuffs clinked on his wrists I said my last word to him.
-
- 'I hope Franz will bear his triumph well. I ought to tell you that
- the ARIADNE for the last hour has been in our hands.'
-
-
- Three weeks later, as all the world knows, we went to war. I joined
- the New Army the first week, and owing to my Matabele experience
- got a captain's commission straight off. But I had done my best
- service, I think, before I put on khaki.
-
-
-
- THE END
-