The question remained so long unanswered that one was disposed to wonder if the girl had heard it; and this time Mr Frazer persisted in waiting for the reply which did not come. He showed no inclination to press her. Picking up his pouch from the turf, he began, leisurely, to refill his pipe; and, for the first time since he had begun his story, he withdrew his glance from Dorothy; using his eyes to observe the tobacco as he pressed it home. She sat motionless; her hands in front of her; her gaze fixed on the sugar, which the flies still harried; a slight slip of a girl, with black hair, drawn tightly back from her temples, and twisted in a knot behind. That was how they had taught her to do it when, in the convent, she had put it up; she knew no other way, and had no notion of the wonders which an artist in hairdressing could perform with her luxuriant tresses. Although her face was so white and thin that one doubted if she had had enough to eat, it was good to look at. When she raised the long lashes which veiled her eyes, one seemed to see right through the violet orbs which were beneath into her very soul. But the man on the other side of the tablecloth had known many varieties of women's eyes; he was aware how apt they are to look one thing and mean another; he had little faith in that imponderable essence, the feminine soul; he merely thought what curious eyes the girl had got; quite out of the common. And as, with practised fingers, he packed his pipe, he waited, patiently, for her to speak.
At last she did speak; and, when she did, her words were not an answer to his question.
"You know she's not an old lady."
The attribution of such knowledge seemed to surprise him; he seemed, for a moment, to be in doubt as to what, exactly, her words referred. Then when he understood he smiled.
"Is that so?"
He continued to fill his pipe; and she to look at the sugar. Then she asked:
"What are you going to do:"
"I am going to light a match."
He did so as he spoke, holding the flickering flame to the bowl of his pipe.
"You know that's not what I mean."
"Do I?" The tobacco was becoming ignited; he sent a puff of smoke into the air. "What do you mean?"
She looked round at him.
"I am Dorothy Gilbert."
"Of course you are."
Nothing could have been more matter-of-fact than the air with which he said it. She spoke with a catching of her breath; as if she resented his coolness.
"Did you--know it?"
"Of course I did."
"Did you--know it all along?"
"Certainly--that is, let me be exact; it's as well to be exact--now and then. When I heard that story at 'The Bolton Arms' I would have bet that you were; when you came out of my house, and I saw you standing on the ledge, I was sure that you were. They have your description so pat, over at Newcaster, that it was impossible not to recognise you."
"Then--then why did you give me my breakfast?"
"Why shouldn't I? You were my guest."
"When--when you knew that I was Dorothy Gilbert!"
"Well? What follows? Even so you were my guest."
"When--when you believed I'd done that thing?"
"I didn't say that I did believe it; you jump at conclusions."
"Do you believe it?"
"I am not sure that I do."
"You are not sure!" She twisted herself round towards him, heat in her voice, fire in her eyes. "You are not sure! How dare you--how dare you say----" She stopped; as if suddenly conscious that her warmth was uncalled for; continuing, with downcast eyes, in a different tone: "What do you mean, when you say, you are not sure?"
"I mean that I don't believe you did do it. Still, in order that we may have all things shipshape and aboveboard, I confess that I should like to have your assurance that you didn't." She was silent. "Won't you give it?"
"I'm not sure that I can."
"Can?--or will?"
"I--I'm not sure if I did do it, or if I didn't."
She put her hands up before her face; he could see her shivering. He eyed her with what seemed to be growing curiosity.
"What was George Emmett to you?"
"Nothing! Nothing! I hated him!"
"That would seem to suggest that he might have been something to you once; or--you would hardly hate him."
"I don't know what you mean; he never was anything to me--never--except my guardian; at least, he said he was my guardian; and I suppose he was; but from the first moment I saw him I hated him."
"Isn't that, under the circumstances, rather a dangerous admission to make?"
"Why?"
"Mayn't some people think that your feeling towards him may have furnished a motive for--what happened?"
"Do you mean that some people may think that because I hated him I killed him? I hadn't the courage; I shouldn't have dared, I'm such a coward; it's because I'm such a coward that I'm here--it's all my cowardice!"
She sat with clenched fists staring in front of her; there was something in her expression which suggested to her companion that she was not quite such a coward as she asserted. When he spoke again it was as if a note of sympathy had, unawares, crept into his voice.
"You observed, Miss Gilbert, that George Emmett was your guardian, which seems to point to your having lost at least one of your parents. Is it your mother?"
"I never knew my mother--never; so far as I know, I never even saw her. I suppose I must have had a mother, but I don't know who she was, or anything at all about her."
"And your father?"
"I believe I was three years old when I saw him last, and now Mr Emmett says he is dead."
"Mr Emmett says? I presume you have some proof of the fact beyond Mr Emmett's bare word."
"I daresay the Sisters have."
"What Sisters?"
"At the convent."
"At the convent? Were you in a convent?"
"Of course; I was at the Convent of the Sacré Cœur at Vannes--Vannes is in Brittany, if you know where that is."
"I do happen to know where that is; indeed, I happen to have some knowledge of Vannes. Were there any other girls there besides you?"
"Lots and lots, at different times."
"Could you give me the names of any of them?"
"Why, if I were to think, I could give you a list as long as that." She stretched out her arms. "I was there for more than fourteen years."
"I don't think I'll trouble you for quite so long a list as that, but could you give me the name of, say, one, who's been there within the last twelve months?"
"Rather!--for one thing, there was my special friend, Frances Vernon."
"Did you know Frances Vernon?"
"I should think I did, and---- Do you know Frances Vernon?"
"It's odd, but I do chance to know something about Miss Frances Vernon."
"She was there when Mr Emmett took me away."
"Was she? Then, in that case, I rather fancy she's left since."
"I shouldn't be surprised. She said she shouldn't stop a moment longer after I had gone than she could help."
"I fancy she has a knack of getting her own way--at times."
"Isn't she lovely?"
"That's scarcely the word I should have applied to her. I should have said she was a handful."
"If that's all you can say then you don't know much about her. I say she's lovely, because I know all about her, and I know she's lovely. But--what did you say your name was?"
"Frazer; Eric Frazer." Presently she shook her head. "What," he inquired, "are you doing that for?"
"I don't remember it; nor one in the least like, and I should have done if she had mentioned it."
"If who had mentioned what?"
"You see, Frances and I were tremendous friends; we had no secrets from each other. She used to tell me about everyone she knew; hes and shes; their names, you know, and all about them. And she used to make a list of their names, on a sheet of paper; so that she might be able to check them, and find out if anyone had been left out; and I don't believe she ever so much as even breathed your name, Eric Frazer; or I feel sure I should remember."
"Such an omission on Miss Vernon's part was unkind; it shows how little I was in her thoughts. I gather from what you say, Miss Gilbert, that you have a large number of friends."
"I!" The girl's eyes were suddenly opened wide. "Why, I haven't a friend in the whole world, except Frances, whom I may never see again; and, perhaps, Sister Celestine; who, I daresay, never wants to see me again--at the convent they found it so hard to get money from father. I don't believe they'd have let Mr Emmett take me away if it hadn't been that he paid all that father owed. Whatever made you think I'd lots of friends?"
"Then, if you haven't, you might give me a trial. It seems to me that, at this particular moment, a friend's an article you're rather in want of."
"I am; but--when you think what you do--I couldn't!"
"Miss Gilbert, if you could see my thoughts, I doubt if you'd object to them; only, I'm older than you are, and I just feel that, if you're not careful, you're likely to be in a tighter place than you have any notion of; and, being so much older, if you were to tell me just what happened last night at 'The Bolton Arms,' I might be of some slight use in getting you out of it. That's all there is at the back of my mind, as regards you. So, if you can bring yourself to make of me a confidant, I'll respect your confidence, and whatever kind of trouble it is you're in I'll be all the service to you I can."
She looked at him, carefully; as if considering what kind of person he really was; and then she told him, everything there was to tell. She did not seem to find it easy to start; but, when she once had started, she poured out all that was in her heart, as a child might have done. As he listened, strange though her story was, he knew she was telling the truth. The pathos of it, of which she herself seemed to be so oddly unconscious, touched him more than he would have cared to own. And, manlike, because that was so, his outward manner put on an additional shade of gruffness. Suddenly she startled him by putting a leading question.
"Now do you think that I killed him, or that I didn't?"
He tried to fence.
"That's not altogether an easy question to answer."
"Oh yes, it is; it's perfectly simple and perfectly easy; either I did or I didn't: there can only be one answer."
"Pardon me, but, from what I can gather, it's a point on which you yourself seem to have some doubts."
"I know I have. Of course I know I never actually touched him; but--perhaps I might have prevented him being touched; and--when he began to make those noises I might have got him help; and so--I don't quite know how it is. What I want to know is what you think; if you have the slightest atom of a doubt you had better take me over to Newcaster, and hand me over to a policeman."
"In any case I certainly sha'n't do that."
"Then I'll give myself up. I--I daresay that I--I sha'n't be so very much afraid when I--I've quite made up my mind I ought to."
"You'll do nothing of the kind, if I can help it."
"If you can help it?--why, would you try to stop me?"
"I shouldn't only try. Let me disabuse your mind on one point; putting casuistry on one side, you're no more to blame for what took place than I am."
"Are you sure?"
"Perfectly sure."
"It's very sudden."
"What's sudden?"
"Your being so sure. You weren't sure just now; you were anything but sure. I wonder if, for some cause, you want me to believe that I am better than you believe I am."
"Nothing of the kind. However, I don't want to discuss the matter with you. I am going immediately to tell you what I do propose to do. But, before I get to that, there is one question which I should like to put to you, in order that we may know exactly where we are. You saw the man who made use of that champagne bottle? You had a distinct view of him?"
"I saw him as distinctly as I see you."
"You would know him again?"
"Anywhere; always."
"Did you ever see him before?"
"Never."
"Of that you are certain?"
"Quite."
"Did he remind you of anyone you had seen before? Think!"
"I am thinking; but--I can think of no one. Why are you asking me these questions? Do you--do you know him? And--are you thinking of giving him up to the police? If you are--if you are, nothing will make me say that I ever saw him before--nothing!--nothing! He sha'n't come to harm because of me!"
"My dear child----"
"I'm not a child--and anyhow I'm not yours!--nor am I dear! Are you--are you daring to think of playing the traitor?--of taking advantage of what I've told you to--to get him punished? Are you?"
"I am doing nothing of the kind--how you do jump to conclusions! I don't know the man from Adam. Why do you credit me with such sinister intentions?"
"Why did you ask me those questions--like that?"
"I've half a mind to tell you; then perhaps we shall begin to understand each other."
"Perhaps it is just as well that we shouldn't understand each other; but you will please to tell me."
"Miss Gilbert, you're a young lady with a temper."
"If you wish to speak to me like that----"
She half rose from the ground; he checked her.
"I don't--pray stay where you are! What times you and Frances Vernon must have had together!"
"What do you mean by that?"
"Nothing--I suppose you must have had a good time with her in the convent, if she was such a friend of yours."
"Are you going to tell me why you asked those questions?"
"I am; then I think you will be sorry you have taken up such a tone towards me. I asked those questions because the person whom you saw strike George Emmett informed the waiter that his name was Gilbert."
"Gilbert!--Mr Frazer! But--I heard the waiter tell Mr Emmett that the gentleman wouldn't give his name."
"What seems to have occurred is this. Someone came to one of the coffee-room waiters and told him that he wished to see Mr George Emmett. The waiter asked him his name; he said 'Gilbert'; then immediately added: 'Never mind my name; you need mention no name; give him this.' He scribbled a line or two on a sheet of paper, in pencil; put the sheet into an envelope, which he fastened, and gave to the waiter. So it came about that the waiter who delivered the note supposed the stranger to have given no name; while the original waiter is prepared to swear that, in the first instance, he said his name was Gilbert--which is why I asked if you had seen him, or anyone at all like him, before."
"But I haven't--ever! Who can he be? I haven't any relatives."
"Your acquaintance with your family history seems to be so nebulous that I scarcely see how you can say that of your own knowledge. Do you remember what your father looked like?"
"Only very dimly."
"Try your hand at a description."
"I seem to remember him as very tall, and dark, and----" She stopped; the fashion of her countenance was changed, as if by a sudden access of fear; then, as if because she realised how closely he was watching her, she broke into what seemed to be a fit of pettish temper. "But what does it matter what he looked like? What does it matter? My father is dead."
"According to George Emmett."
Something in his tone caused her to look swiftly round at him.
"What do you mean by 'according to George Emmett'? Don't you believe that my father is dead?"
"I merely mean that I had sufficient acquaintance with Mr George Emmett to be disinclined to accept any statement of fact on his mereipse dixit. It is possible--if you like, it is probable--that he gave the Sisters at the convent proof of his assertion; but I rather fancy that their ideas of proof would be their own. You certainly seem to have had nothing in the shape of proof. The fact that he paid money on your account makes his tale--well, we'll say, peculiar; that he should have done this if, as he told you, your father died owing him money, makes it--well, very nearly incredible. It doesn't sound at all like what is generally known of George Emmett's character. If he had come and dunned you, or done worse, because your father died in his debt, there I should have recognised the man; but that, having lost money by your father, he should be willing also to lose money by you--George Emmett must have had very odd reasons of his own for doing that. You can't remember what the stranger said to Emmett?--what they were disputing about?"
"I can't; I may do later, but I can't now. My brain was so stupefied, I was in such a state of cowardice, that I heard--without hearing; certainly without understanding."
"You can't recall even a single phrase?"
"No, I can't; I tell you I can't! Why will you persist in asking?"
"Please don't suppose, Miss Gilbert, that I wish to worry you; to cause you pain; nothing can be farther from my wish; but I do want you to appreciate the situation; to put you on your guard. If by any diabolical mischance this stranger who gave your name should turn out to be some more or less distant relative of your own it's as well that you should be prepared for such an eventuality. Circumstanced as you are, and may be, the one thing you don't want is to be taken unawares." Twisting himself round, he drew towards himself a large brown paper parcel which had been reposing on the turf at his back. "Now to business. You have no money?" She shook her head. "Not any?"
"I haven't a penny."
"And--forgive me if I seem intrusive; but, if you will bear with me, you will see that mine is not a merely impertinent intention--your wardrobe is limited?"
"I have no other clothes except those I have on.
"And--forgive me again--those are not fresh from the dressmaker?"
"Indeed they are not. I have had this dress---- At the convent I had one dress a year; this is my last year's frock."
"What has become of your hat? Don't you generally wear one?"
"Oh yes, I wear one, but I left the one hat I had behind at the hotel."
"I told you that I went into Newcaster to do some shopping; and among other things I bought the contents of this parcel. If you'll take it to the room in which you spent the night I think it possible that you'll find it contains some articles which may be of use to you. While you're trying them on to see if they're any sort of a fit I'll be putting things to rights; and harnessing that horse of mine, who's very much mistaken if he thinks that he's in for a whole day's holiday."
She stared at him in amaze.
"Why should you buy things for me?"
"Why shouldn't I? You are Frances Vernon's friend; and she's a young lady whom I happen to know rather a deal about."
"But that's no reason why you should buy things for me!--you know it's no reason!--you know it's not!"
"Pray don't imagine that I'm offering to give you these things; I've expressed myself ill if I've conveyed that impression. An exact account of their cost will be rendered to you, for which I shall receive payment in due course."
"From whom will you receive payment?--from me? How can you imagine that I shall be able to pay you; when, as I tell you, I haven't a penny; and don't suppose I ever shall have one."
"As a man, Miss Gilbert, you must allow me to understand commercial matters better than you do--as a business man I know I shall be paid, in full; so please make your mind easy on that score. When you have changed your clothes--and I think that, considering all things, the sooner you do change them the better--and I have stuck my steed between the shafts, I will drive you, at the rate of about four miles an hour, to a railway station; then, with your permission, acting as your personal conductor, I will take you, with the help of a train, to Mrs Vernon's house. Mrs Vernon is Frances Vernon's mother; and is by way of being some sort of a kind of a relation of my own. She will be delighted to give you house room, until inquiries have been made into the truth of Mr Emmett's statements, as to your father being dead and his having left no money--I feel sure he did leave money, or Emmett would never have paid that bill at the convent; to say nothing of his having expressed a wish to marry you--and in short, till your affairs are placed upon a regular footing."
"Which may be never. Why should Mrs Vernon give me what you call house room?"
"You are full of whys. I tell you that she will be delighted--for your sake; for her own sake; for Frances' sake; and, perhaps, a little for mine."
"For your sake!--it's perfectly ridiculous to suppose that you can care either one way or the other."
"Quite so; it's very good of you to say so."
"Mr Frazer, are you deceiving me? Are you sure that you know Frances Vernon--and her mother?"
"Extraordinary though it may seem, facts are facts; and I not only know Frances Vernon and her mother, but also her father and her brother."
"That's Jim."
"Yes, that's Jim; I perceive that you are acquainted with the young scoundrel's name."
"He's not a young scoundrel. Frances told me he was a darling. She showed me his photograph; I could see for myself that he's very good-looking."
"You said Frances was lovely; I am therefore not surprised to hear that you think her brother's good-looking. My word! However, on a question of taste there is no disputing." He stood up; the brown paper parcel in his hands. "Shall I place this inside that private apartment of yours? And will you be so good as to make your toilet with all possible expedition? I should like to start from here well inside thirty minutes--if you could manage to be ready?"
"I'm very sorry to intrude; or to interfere with what seems to be a very nice little arrangement; but it isn't only a question of what the young lady can manage--what price me?"
This question came from a figure which all at once rose from a clump of furze which was at the back of Mr Frazer.
Swinging round in the direction from which the voice came, Mr Frazer stood still to stare. The girl, rising to her feet, stared also; with her pale cheeks a little paler, and her eyes wide open.
The speaker was one of those shambling, half-grown youths who are generally found attached to gipsy caravans, as hangers-on. That he had gipsy blood in his veins, his hair and eyes and skin suggested; but that he was as much Cockney as gipsy his tongue betrayed. With a ragged cloth cap on the back of his head; the remains of a black-and-white checked woollen scarf about his sinewy neck; a faded old red flannel shirt plainly visible under an unbuttoned sleeved waistcoat; his fingers thrust into the band of his trousers: he grinned first at the man, and then at the woman, in evident enjoyment of their something more than surprise. He showed no inclination to break the silence which followed his wholly unexpected, and undesired, appearance on the scene; from his point of view the joke was apparently too good a one to spoil. It was Mr Frazer who spoke next.
"Who are you?--and what business have you to be here?"
The stranger's grin grew more pronounced, so that he showed a set of perfect white teeth; which again suggested the gipsy.
"I'm General Lord Kitchener, that's who I am--don't you know me from the photographs? And as to what business I have to be here, I always thought that Newcaster Heath was common grazing ground, and that people could go about all over it just exactly as they please."
"What have you been doing behind those bushes?"
"What have I been doing?--that's it, what have I?"
"Have you been listening?"
The stranger looked his questioner straight in the face, with a grin in his eyes and on his lips; then he winked. The action was more significant than any words could have been; it moved the man to sudden anger.
"You young hound!"
"Steady on! I'm no more a hound than you. No names; if it comes to that perhaps I'm as good at chucking names about as you are--Mr Frazer."
"You know my name?"
"I heard you tell her what it was; and very nice it was of you to tell her."
There was an insinuation in the grin with which the words were accompanied which stung the man again.
"My lad, I've a mind to break your neck."
"Have you? Then you take my tip, and keep your mind to yourself. I've some friends not far from here, and if you try to come any of your games with me I'll give them a call, and they'll be here in double quick time; then you'll find that breaking necks is a game that more than one can play at."
Mr Frazer regarded the speaker as if he were considering whether or not to take him at his word, and let him give his friends a call. Then he turned to the girl, his tone as easy and courteous as ever:
"I think I'll put this parcel inside there, and then, while you're changing, I can have a talk with this young gentleman."
The girl seemed uncomfortable, undecided.
"What does he want?"
It was the younger man who replied:
"That's it, miss--what does he want? I wouldn't mind having what he thinks he's going to get; you can take that from me."
Mr Frazer ignored the other's words. Going to the caravan with the parcel in his hand he placed it just inside the door. Then he turned to the girl again, beckoning to her with his hand.
"If you please! You remember what I said about half-an-hour? I shall be so glad if you can make it convenient to be ready."
She hesitated; looking sideways at the stranger. Then she moved to Mr Frazer, who was by the steps which led into the caravan.
"Why won't you tell me what he wants?"
"Because I don't know--but I soon shall; and all the sooner if you'll leave us alone together."
The young man called out from among the gorse:
"He thinks he's going to bounce me as soon as your back's turned, miss--oh, he's a deep 'un!"
Mr Frazer, still ignoring him, said to the girl:
"Please will you try to be ready inside those thirty minutes?"
"Will you be ready?"
"I think I shall--I don't think you'll find I'll keep you waiting." She looked into his blue eyes, as if she were trying to decipher what was in them; then, glancing half affrightedly over her shoulder, she went up the steps into the caravan. She paused on the ledge to give a flying look at Mr Frazer, and another at the lad among the bushes, then passed inside, drawing the door to behind her. Mr Frazer said: "I think that, if I were you, I should bolt the door, and close the window."
The lad called out:
"That won't keep the cops out, miss, don't you think it!" Mr Frazer waited, as if to ascertain that his hint had been acted on. Then he crossed the little hollow, towards the bushes on the slope among which the lad was standing. "Don't you come too close," observed the lad.
"I don't intend to; I only wish to come close enough to enable you to hear what I have to say without making it necessary for me to raise my voice."
He ascended the slope until he was within a few feet of the other.
"That's near enough; none of your games."
"There's a bush between us; that is something. Now, sir, what is it you want?"
"What do I want? Why, I want five and twenty pounds, that's what I want."
"What for?"
"You know what for."
"Since, from your appearance, you never had so much money in your life, I suppose, in a general way, I do know what for. But do you expect me to give you five and twenty pounds?"
"That's for you to say. If you don't I can get it from someone else--that all."
"From whom?"
"From the police over at Newcaster."
"Indeed; why should they give you five and twenty pounds?"
"Oh, come off of it!--what do you think you're playing at? You know very well why they'll give me five and twenty pound, and if you don't I'll tell you--I'm not afraid."
"Why?"
"Why!--for putting them on to Miss Dorothy Gilbert, what's wanted for that little job last night at 'The Bolton Arms.' Now do you understand?"
"I hope I don't."
"Then you needn't hope; because you do. I speak plainly enough, Mr Frazer."
"From your post of vantage, behind these bushes, did you hear all that was said?"
"I did; every blessed word; and I'm not going to forget one either, so don't you make any blooming error."
"Then, in that case, you are aware that this lady is guiltless."
"If she didn't, her father did, or one of her lot--you told her yourself his name was Gilbert--so what's the odds? She can explain all about that to them when they've got her, and I hope she'll like the job. Anyhow, it's no business of mine, all that; it's the pieces I'm after. I lay they offer more than twenty-five, and I'm going to have it. All the same, I'll take twenty-five from you, if I lose by it. You give me five and twenty pounds, where I'm standing now, and I'll keep my mouth shut--I don't wish no harm to no one; I can't say nothing fairer."
"Till when will you keep it shut?"
"Why, till----"
The youth seemed to hesitate; Mr Frazer finished his sentence for him.
"Till the money's spent: or till you get within hail of a policeman."
"Now, governor, you didn't ought to talk to me like that; you really oughtn't--I'm not that kind at all--I give you my word I'm not. When I say I'll do a thing, I do it; I'm not like some of them. You can trust me--straight, you can." Apparently he was endeavouring to train his countenance to wear an expression which would inspire confidence. All at once he seemed to see something in the steadfast gaze with which the other was regarding him which filled him with uncomfortable qualms. "Now then, stow it--I'll call!"
Shaping his lips to whistle, he moved back. But before he could utter a sound, or get out of reach, or make an effort to defend himself, Mr Frazer had sprung at him over the intervening bush. With one hand he gripped his throat, with the other his arm; with a sudden, curious twisting movement he spun him round, and flung him face downwards, with a force which seemed amazing. Where the lad fell he lay, motionless. Mr Frazer looked down at him.
"One doesn't always spend money in acquiring the art of ju-jitsu for nothing, after all. I always had a feeling that that fall might come in useful one day; and it has. For the present, you young blackguard, I can trust you; but the point is, for how long. I sent him down with a little more vigour than was perhaps absolutely necessary; there wasn't time to be particular; so it'll probably be a good twenty minutes before he comes back to consciousness; but I'm afraid that's not quite long enough. Better make sure." He took the woollen scarf off the young man's neck. "There's not very much strength about it; but I think it'll serve." He drew the young man's arms behind his back, and with his own scarf he tied his hands together, being careful about the sort of knot he used. Taking off the belt with which the lad held up his trousers, placing his ankles close together, he passed it round, then drew it as tight as he could, with the buckle behind. Turning him over on to his back, tearing off a handful of grass, he crammed it between the young man's jaws. Then he regarded the result of his labour with what seemed to be a smile of satisfaction. "When he does come to I don't think he'll be able to make much noise; he certainly won't be able to make enough to attract the attention of those friends of whom he spoke; and I doubt if he'll be able to move much either. By the time a friend does come and find him we ought to have reached a port of comparative safety; and if it's some time before a friend does come, it'll serve him right--and that'll pay him anyhow; it's more money than he ever had in his life." He took a piece of crinkly paper out of his own hip pocket which he placed in the inside pocket of the young man's jacket. "Still, lest a friend should come too soon, we'll place him a little more under the shade of the bushes; which will also serve to protect him from the heat of the sun." Lifting the unconscious lad, he placed him right among the gorse, in such a position that, as he put it, not only was he sheltered from the glow and glare of the sun, but also from the observation of any stray passer-by; indeed, so long as he kept still it would be necessary for such a one to look for him in exactly the proper place before he would become aware that he was there. "He remains quiet; with luck he may continue quiet for quite a considerable number of minutes. When he finds out what has happened to him, and where he is, he'll find it difficult to make much noise, for a time. He'll have to chew, and swallow, a good deal of that green stuff before he'll be able to make much use of his lungs. Before then we ought to be--some distance from this." Leaving the lad under the gorse, moving to where they had had their morning meal, gathering together the breakfast things, Mr Frazer deposited them, together with the bundle which contained what had served him as a bed, on one side of the broad ledge which was outside the caravan door. In a few more minutes he had the horse harnessed between the shafts, and was ready to start. He rapped at the door.
"Are you all right in there? Don't worry if you've not quite finished; only look out for yourself, because we're starting."
A question came from within:
"What's become of that man?"
"Man!--boy, you mean. I soon disposed of him. Are those things a decent fit?"
The girl's voice seemed tremulous:
"They're--they're not at all a bad fit, thank you. What did that boy want?"
"What I gave him."
"What did you give him?"
"Just enough to keep him quiet. Don't you bother about that boy. How's that hat do?"
Again the tremor in the voice.
"I--I haven't put it on yet; but it's a very nice one; it must have cost a great deal of money; I don't know how I shall ever pay you back again."
"I'll see that I'm paid; you'll be surprised when you know how little it did cost--I'm an expert in the art of shopping. You'll notice there's a window at the end inside there, which looks out over the horse's head. When you've quite finished, if you open it you'll find me sitting on the shelf immediately beneath, ready to be entertained by any remark which you may deign to address to me--for making the miles seem less there's nothing like a little intellectual conversation."
He had taken his place on the shelf to which he had referred, and had gathered the reins in his hand, when he was hailed by a woman who appeared on the crest of the slope behind him.
"I say, mister!--one moment, if you please!"
He looked round.
"Two, madam, if you desire it."
"Have you seen a young chap anywhere about here?"
"I believe I did see one, some time ago."
"Did you notice what he looked like?"
"I fancy he had on a red shirt."
"That him--he's my husband, he is--I thought he came this way, he said he wouldn't be gone more than five minutes, but he's been gone a good deal more than an hour--I can't make out what he's up to, because he knows we're in a hurry. Did you notice which way he was going?"
"I rather think he was going over there."
He motioned with his whip towards the horizon on his right.
"Was he? That's very nice of him, I don't think, as he knows very well I'm over here. I should like to know what he's thinking of. If you come across him, mister, I wish you'd ask him if he's Ben Hitchings; and if he says he is you tell him that I've had about enough of waiting, and that I've gone on to the course, and if he wants me he'd better come and look for me there--see?"
"Yes, madam, I think I see; and if I do come across Mr Hitchings I'll make a point of giving him your message."
Mr Frazer gave a jerk to the reins; the horse moved; the caravan was off.