“I know nothing whatever of these matters,” I answered, “but from what I have seen of your father I should imagine that he is remarkably able to guard his own interests.”
Blenavon nodded.
“I suppose that is true,” he admitted. “But when he is already a rich man, with very simple tastes, I am rather surprised that he should care to meddle with such things.”
“Playing at commerce,” I remarked, “has become rather a hobby with men of leisure lately.”
“And women, too,” Blenavon assented. “Rather an ugly hobby, I call it.”
A servant entered and addressed Blenavon. “The carriage is at the door, your Lordship,” he announced.
Blenavon glanced at his watch and rose.
“I shall have to ask you to excuse me, Ducaine,” he said. “I was to have dined out to-night, and I must go and make my peace. Another glass of wine?”
I rose at once.
“Nothing more, thank you,” I said. “I will just say good-night to your sister.”
“She’s probably in the drawing-room,” he remarked. “If not, I will make your excuses when I see her.”
Blenavon hurried out. A few moments later I heard the wheels of his carriage pass the long front of the house and turn down the avenue. I lingered for a moment where I was. The small oak table at which we had dined seemed like an oasis of colour in the midst of an atmosphere of gloom. The room was large and lofty, and the lighting was altogether inadequate. From the walls there frowned through the shadows the warlike faces of generations of Rowchesters. At the farther end of the apartment four armed giants stood grim and ghostlike in the twilight, which seemed to supply their empty frames with the presentment of actual warriors. I looked down upon the table, all agleam with flowers, and fruit, and silver, over which shone the red glow of the shaded lamps. Exactly opposite to me, in that chair now pushed carelessly back, she had sat, so close that my hand could have touched hers at any moment, so close that I had been able to wonder more than ever before at the marvellous whiteness of her skin, the perfection of her small, finely-shaped features, the strange sphinxlike expression of her face, always suggestive of some great self-restraint, mysterious, and subtly stimulating. And as I stood there she seemed again to be occupying the chair, at first a faint shadowy presence, but gaining with every second shape and outline, until I could scarcely persuade myself that it was not she who sat there, she whose eyes more than once during dinner-time had looked into mine with that curious and instinctive demand for sympathy, even as regards the things of the moment, the passing jest, the most transitory of emotions. A few minutes ago I had felt that I knew her better than ever before in my life, and now the chair was empty. My heart was beating at the imaginary presence of the vainest of shadows. She was going to marry Colonel Mostyn Ray.
And then I stood as though suddenly turned to stone. Before me were the great front windows of the castle. Beyond, eastwards, stretched the salt marshes, the salt marshes riven with creeks. Once more my unwilling hands touched that huddled-up heap of extinct humanity. I saw the dead white face, which the sun could never warm again, and I felt the hands, cold, clammy, horrible. Ray was a soldier, and life and death had become phrases to him; but I—it was the first dead man I had ever seen, and the horror of it was cold in my blood. Ray had murdered him, fought with him, perhaps, but killed him. What would she say if she knew? Would his hands be clean to her, or would the horror rise up like a red wall between them?
“Will you take coffee, sir?”
I set my teeth and turned slowly round. I even took the cup from the tray without spilling it.
“What liqueur may I bring you, sir?” the man asked.
“Brandy,” I answered.
In a few minutes I was laughing at myself, not quite naturally, perhaps, but only I could know that. I was getting to be a morbid, nervous person. It was the solitude! I must get away from it all before long. Fate had been playing strange tricks with me. Life, which a few months ago had been a cold and barren thing, was suddenly pressed to my lips, a fantastic, intoxicating mixture. I had drawn enough poison into my veins. I would have no more. I swore it.
* * * * *
I tried to leave the castle unnoticed, but the place was alive with servants. One of them hurried up to me as I tried to reach my hat and coat.
“Her ladyship desired me to say that she was in the billiard-room, sir,” he announced.
“Will you tell Lady Angela—” and then I stopped. The door of the billiard-room was open, and Lady Angela stood there, the outline of her figure sharply de fined against a flood of light. She had a cue in her hand, and she looked across at me.
“You are a long time, Mr. Ducaine. I am waiting for you to give me a lesson at billiards.”
I crossed the hall to her side.
“I thought that as Lord Blenavon had gone out—”
She shrugged her shoulders.
“That you would evade your duty, which is clearly to stay and entertain your hostess.”
She closed the door and glanced at me curiously.
“What has happened to you?” she asked. “You look as though you had been with ghosts.”
“Is it so impossible?” I asked, moving a little nearer to the huge log fire. “What company is more terrifying than the company of our dead thoughts and dead hopes and dead memories?”
“Really, I am afraid that Blenavon must have been a very depressing companion!” she said, leaning her elbow upon the broad mantelpiece.
It was absurd! I tried to shake myself free from the miseries of the last hour.
“I am afraid it must have been the other way,” I said, “for your brother has gone out.”
“Yes,” she said quietly, “he has gone to that woman at Braster Grange. I wish I knew what brought her into this part of the country.”
I looked round at the billiard-table.
“Did you mean that you would like a game?” I asked. “I am rather out of practice, but I used to fancy myself a little.”
“I have no doubt,” she answered, sinking into a low chair, “that you are an excellent player, but I am willing to take it for granted. I do not wish to play billiards. Draw that chair up to the fire and talk to me.”
It was of all things what I wished to avoid that night. But there was no escape. I obeyed her.
“What your brother has told me is, I presume, no secret,” I said. “I am to wish you happiness, am I not?”
She looked up at me in quick surprise.
“Did Blenavon tell you—”
“That you had promised to marry Colonel Mostyn Ray. Yes.”
“That is very strange,” she said thoughtfully. “Blenavon is not as a rule needlessly communicative, and at present it is almost a secret.”
“Nevertheless,” I said, turning slowly towards her, “I presume that it is true.”
“It is perfectly true,” she answered.
There was silence between us for several minutes. One of the footmen came softly in to see whether we required a marker, and finding us talking, withdrew. I was determined that the onus of further speech should remain with her.
“You are surprised?” she asked at last.
“Very.”
“And why?”
“I scarcely know,” I answered, “except that I have never associated the thought of marriage with Colonel Ray, and he is very much older than you.”
“Yes, he is a great deal older,” she answered. “I think that his history has been rather a sad one. He was in love for many years with a woman who married—some one else. I have always felt sorry for him ever since I was a little girl.”
“Do you know who that woman was?”
“I have never heard her name,” she answered.
I found courage to lift my eyes and look at her.
“May I ask when you are going to be married?”
Her eyes fell. The question did not seem to please her.
“I do not know,” she said. “We have not s
poken of that yet. Everything is very vague.”
“Colonel Ray is coming down here, of course?” I remarked.
“Not to my knowledge,” she declared. “Not at any rate until the next meeting of the Council. I shall be back in town before then.”
“I begin to believe,” I said, with a grim smile, “that your brother was right.”
“My brother right?”
“He finds you enigmatic! You become engaged to a man one day, and you leave him the next—without apparent reason.”
She was obviously disturbed. A slight wave of trouble passed over her face. Her eyes failed to meet mine.
“That I cannot altogether explain to you,” she said. “There are reasons why I should come, but apart from them this place is very dear to me. I think that whenever anything has happened to me I have wanted to be here. You are a man, and you will not altogether understand this.”
“Why not?” I protested. “We, too, have our sentiment, the sentiment of places as well as of people. If I could choose where to die I think that it would be here, with my windows wide open and the roar of the incoming tide in my ears.”
“For a young man,” she remarked, looking across at me, “I should consider you rather a morbid person.”
“There are times,” I answered, “when I feel inclined to agree with you. To-night is one of them.”
“That,” she said coolly, “is unfortunate. You have been over-working.”
“I am worried by a problem,” I told her. “Tell me, are you a great believer in the sanctity of human life?”
“What a question!” she murmured. “My own life, at any rate, seems to me to be a terribly important thing.”
“Suppose you had a friend,” I said, “who was one night attacked in a quiet spot by a man who sought his life, say, for the purpose of robbery. Your friend was the stronger and easily defended himself. Then he saw that his antagonist was a man of ill repute, an evildoer, a man whose presence upon the earth did good to no one. So he took him by the throat and deliberately crushed the life out of him. Was your friend a murderer?”
She smiled at me—that quiet, introspective smile which I knew so well.
“Does the end justify the means? No, of course not. I should have been very sorry for my friend; but if indeed there is a Creator, it is He alone who has power to take back what He has given.”
“Your friend, then—”
“Don’t call him that!”
I rose up and moved towards the door. I think that she saw something in my face which checked any attempt she might have made to detain me.
“You must forgive me,” I said. “I cannot stay.”
She said nothing. I looked back at her from the door. Her eyes were fixed upon me, a little distended, full of mute questioning. I only shook my head. So I left her and passed out into the night.
XVII. MORE TREACHERY
Table of Contents
There followed for me a period of unremitting hard work, days during which I never left my desk save at such hours when I knew that the chances of meeting any one scarcely existed. Several times I saw Lady Angela from my window on the sands below, threading her way across the marshes to the sea. Once she passed my window very slowly, and with a quick backward glance as she turned to descend the cliff. But I sat still with clenched teeth. I had nailed down my resolutions, I had determined to hold fast to such threads of my common sense as remained. Only in the night-time, when sleep mocked me and all hope of escape was futile, was I forced to grapple with this new-born monster of folly. It drove me up across the Park to where the house, black and lightless, rose a dark incongruous mass above the trees, down to the sea, where the wind came booming across the bare country northwards, and the spray leaped white and phosphorescent into the night like flakes of wind-hurled snow. I stood as close to the sea as I dared, and I prayed. Once I saw morning lighten the mass of clouds eastwards, and the grey dawn break over the empty waters. I heard the winds die away, and I watched the sea grow calm. Far across on the horizon there was faint glimmer of cold sunlight. Then I went back to my broken rest. It was my solitude in those days which drove me to seek peace or some measure of it from these things.
At last a break came, a summons to London to a meeting of the Council. I was just able to catch my train and reach the War Office at the appointed time. There were two hours of important work, and I noticed a general air of gravity on the faces of every one present. After it was over Ray came to my side.
“Ducaine,” he said, “Lord Chelsford wishes to speak’ to you for a few moments. Come this way.”
He led me into a small, barely-furnished room, with high windows and only one door. It was empty when we entered it. Ray looked at me as he closed the door, and I fancied that for him his expression was not unfriendly.
“Ducaine,” he said, “there has been some more of this damned leakage. Chelsford will ask you questions. Answer him simply, but tell him everything—everything, you understand.”
“I should not dream of any concealment,” I answered.
“Of course not! But it is possible—Ah!”
He broke off and remained listening. There was the sound of a quick footstep in the hall.
“Now you will understand what I mean,” he whispered. “Remember!”
It was not Chelsford, but the Duke, who entered and greeted me cordially. With a farewell nod to me Ray disappeared. The Duke looked round and watched him close the door. Then he turned to me.
“Ducaine,” he said, “a copy of our proposed camp at Winchester, and the fortifications on Bedler’s Hill, has reached Paris.”
“Your Grace,” I answered, “it was I who pointed out to you that our papers dealing with those matters had been tampered with. I am waiting now to be cross-questioned by Lord Cheisford. I have done all that is humanly possible. It goes without saying that my resignation is yours whenever you choose to ask for it.”
The Duke sat down and looked at me thoughtfully.
“Ducaine,” he said, “I believe in you.”
I drew a little breath of relief. The Duke was a hard man and a man of few words. I felt that in making that speech he had departed a great deal from his usual course of action, and I knew that he meant it.
“I am very much obliged to your Grace,” I answered.
“I think,” he continued, “that Lord Cheisford and in fact all the others are inclined to accept you on my estimate. We all of us feel that we are the victims of some unique and very marvellous piece of roguery on the part of some one or other. I believe myself that we are on the eve of a discovery.”
“Thank Heaven!” I murmured.
“We shall only succeed in unravelling this mystery,” the Duke continued deliberately, “by very cautious and delicate manoeuvring. I have an idea which I propose to carry out. But its success depends largely upon you.”
“Upon me?” I repeated, amazed.
“Exactly! Upon your common sense and judgment.” The Duke paused to listen for a moment. Then he continued, speaking very slowly, and leaning over towards me—
“Lord Chelsford proposes for his own satisfaction to cross-examine you. It occurs to me that you will probably tell him of your fancied disturbance of those papers in the safe, and of your little adventure with the Prince of Malors.” I looked at him in surprise. “Have they not all been told of this?” I asked. “No.”
There was a moment’s dead silence. I was a little staggered. The Duke remained imperturbable.
“They have not been told,” he repeated. “No one has been told. The matter was one for my discretion, and I exercised it.”
There seemed to be no remark which I could make, so I kept silence.
“We have discussed this matter before,” the Duke said, “and my firm conviction is that you were mistaken. That safe could only have been opened by yourself, Ray, or myself. I think I am justified in saying that neither of us did open it.”
“Nevertheless that safe was opened,” I objected. “Those were
the very papers, copies of which have found their way to Paris.”
“Exactly,” the Duke answered. “Only you must remember that every member of the Board was sufficiently acquainted with their contents to have sent those particulars to Paris, without opening the safe for a further investigation of them. Any statement of your suspicion would only result in attention being diverted from the proper quarters to members of my household. I believe that even if you are right, even if those papers were disturbed, it was done simply to throw dust in your eyes. Do you follow me?”
“Yes, your Grace,” I answered.
“Lord Chelsford, if you were able to convince him, would most certainly be misled in this direction. That is why I have kept your report to myself. That is why my advice to you now is to say nothing about your imagined displacement of those papers. That is my advice. You understand?”
“Yes, your Grace,” I repeated.
“With regard to the Prince of Malors,” the Duke continued, “my firm conviction is that you were mistaken. Malors is not a politician. He has nothing whatever to gain or lose in this matter. He is a member of one of the most ancient houses of Europe, a house which for generations has been closely connected with my own. I absolutely decline to believe that whilst under my roof a Malors could lower himself to the level of a common spy. Such an accusation brought against him would be regarded as a blot upon my hospitality. Further, it would mean the breaking off of my ancient ties of friendship. I am very anxious, therefore, that you should bring yourself to accept my view as to this episode also.”
“Your Grace,” I answered, “you ask me very hard things.”
He looked at me with his clear cold eyes.
“Surely not too hard, Mr. Ducaine,” he said. “I ask you to accept my judgment. Consider for a moment. You are a young man, little more than a boy. I for forty years have been a servant of my country, both in the field and as a lawmaker. I am a Cabinet Minister. I have a life-long experience of men and their ways. My judgment in this matter is that you were mistaken, and much mischief is likely to ensue if the Prince of Malors should find himself an object of suspicion amongst us.”
21 Greatest Spy Thrillers in One Premium Edition (Mystery & Espionage Series) Page 428