"Oh, yes, he shall go, Mr. Dodson, and all the world shall know that Captain Murpoint discharged his man Jem at the instigation of Mr. Leicester Dodson!"
After breakfast he caught Jem as he was slowly mounting the stairs.
"Go into my room," he whispered.
Jem obeyed, and the captain, following, closed the door.
"Jem," he said, "don't be surprised at anything that happens and remember that I have promised not to throw you over. I am going to discharge you this morning."
Jem started and turned pale.
"Not really, you stupid fellow! only in pretense. Leicester Dodson"—at that name Jem scowled—"Leicester Dodson has made formal complaint and I cannot do anything else but get rid of you. I shall blackguard you well and pack you off before all the servants. Of course you won't leave the village and equally of course I will continue you your salary to enable you to keep there. What you must do is to take a room at the inn—say you are going to enjoy yourself on the savings of your salary."
Half an hour afterward every soul in the village knew that Leicester Dodson had got Mr. Starling discharged from his situation.
It was rather a large party at Coombe Lodge.
There were the Wilsons, the Gileses and several of the county families.
Lord Lackland had been expected, but business kept him in town, and Lord Fitz was at the head of the table.
Next him was an old dowager, but within speaking distance sat Violet, and Lord Fitz's frank face was turned toward her all dinner time.
Ethel and Bertie were separated, as they had expected to be, but Bertie could see the pale, low forehead just above an epergne, and was fain to be content.
Leicester sat with Ethel, and for a while was grave and taciturn; but suddenly he saw Violet look over toward Fitz with a smile and a nod of significant meaning, and in an instant Leicester's jealousy arose, and he brightened up. The nod was only one of affirmation that the day was fine, and Violet, with such a sweet face, could not help looking enticing, but jealousy casts a green shade over everything great and small, and Leicester grew sibilant and fascinating too, murmuring:
"Let her flirt with her boy-lord. I could show the proud, vain girl that there are other women worthy attention beside herself."
And so Ethel was overwhelmed with his attention, his conversation and his wit.
Violet, glancing down the table, saw the pair laughing and talking in that strain, she, misunderstanding, resolved to join in the battle.
When Lord Fitz came with the other gentlemen to the dining-room, it was to find a seat reserved for him beside Violet and her smile of welcome to greet him.
Fitz and she sang together and laughed and talked together the whole evening, and when Mrs. Mildmay's carriage was announced Leicester noticed bitterly that it was Lord Fitz who escorted Violet, while the captain had charge of Mrs. Mildmay.
As usual the captain was in the best of spirits; the homeward journey was as enjoyable for Mrs. Mildmay as the evening which had preceded it.
Violet was asleep, or feigning it, in the corner, so that the captain had Mrs. Mildmay to himself.
"That is an old-fashioned locket," he said, motioning to one, which was suspended by a chain to Mrs. Mildmay's neck.
"Yes," she said, with a sigh; "my brother gave me that when I was a little girl. A very long time ago that, Captain Murpoint!"
"Not very, indeed!" said the captain, with subdued gallantry. "It contains his portrait, I suppose?"
"No, I am sorry to say that it does not. I have no miniature of poor John," she replied, with a sigh. "I would give anything for one painted while he was alive."
"Would you?" said the captain, with a curious earnestness. "Then I think—I hope you are nearer obtaining your desire than you imagine."
"Indeed!" said Mrs. Mildmay; "how so?—Violet, we have awakened you?"
"No, auntie," said Violet, whose eyes had opened and whose face was pale with earnestness and painful interest.
"Some years ago," said the captain, leaning forward and addressing both ladies, but keeping his eyes upon Violet's face, "my dear friend promised that he would have his portrait painted in water-colors so that I might wear it. At that time we were staying at Calcutta. In themarket-place there was a wonderful miniature painter—he may be there still, in all probability he is—and dear John commissioned him to paint his portrait. He sat for it two or three times, and the man finished it."
"Was it a good—a truthful portrait?" asked Mrs. Mildmay.
"A wonderful portrait," said the captain. "It was John Mildmay, living and breathing in a miniature, so to speak. He gave it to me on my birthday. I kept it, I wore it on my watch chain for years, until we started for our home voyage. Then he took it from me."
"Why did he do that?" asked Violet, in a faint voice.
"It was in a locket," said the captain, "in a double locket. The space opposite was empty, and my dear friend took the trinket from me, saying that there should be another portrait in it—one fitting to face his. Can you guess whose, my dear madam?"
Mrs. Mildmay glanced at Violet, who had sunk back into her seat.
"Yes," said the captain, expressing a deep tenderness with his voice, "it was hers—his dearly loved child's." And he drew out his pocket handkerchief and hid his eyes for a moment. "I gave him the locket reluctantly, I admit; for I was loth to part with it for so long a time as that required for his voyage home and back again. But I gave it to him, for I was anxious to possess the other portrait, that I might have the face my dear friend loved better than his life next his own."
He paused and sighed deeply.
"From the first moment of my parting with the locket I have regretted it."
"Regretted it—why?" asked Mrs. Mildmay, in a low voice.
"Because, my dear madam, I never saw it again."
Violet's hands clasped tightly, and he went on more quickly:
"No; I see what you dread, but I am not going to harrow your hearts by recalling that great sorrow. No; John returned to me at Madras, and before the first hour had passed I asked him for my treasure. With a look of dismay and a laugh of annoyance he told me that he had forgotten it."
"Forgotten it!" said Mrs. Mildmay, deeply interested.
"Yes, that he had left it at home, at Mildmay Park. I asked him to write for it; but he laughingly assured me that no one could find it."
"Did he not remember where he had put it?" asked Mrs. Mildmay. "For I do hope we shall find it."
"No, he had not forgotten where he had put it, but he assured me that he had placed it where no hand but his could find it."
"And where was that?" asked Mrs. Mildmay.
"In the secret drawer of his writing bureau," replied the captain, in a low voice.
There was a long pause of deep silence.
"He had placed it there," continued the captain, sinking back and looking at Violet with half-closed eyes, "he had placed it there on the day of his arrival in England, and was so taken up with one thing and the other that he had forgotten it. He promised me that he would, on his next visit to England, have the portrait of Violet painted, and bring the locket out to me. But man proposes and Providence disposes. Heaven willed it that he should never see England again."
Violet's hands clasped, and her face grew deadly white.
Oh! how she longed for that miniature.
Captain Murpoint had never hit upon a more brilliant device for gaining his end than that which he determined upon as the lever by which his plot should be raised.
"He never reached England, and I never saw him or the locket again," he resumed, in a low voice. "He, my best—ay, dearest friend, lies at the bottom of the sea, and his portrait is buried in the secret drawer of the old bureau."
"Hush!" said Mrs. Mildmay, as a low, suppressed cry of agony came from Violet's corner.
"You say it is—it is like my father?" she said, "and that he placed it there?"
The captain inclined his head.
"Then—then," she breathed, painfully, "the room must be opened. I—I said," she added, with a shudder, "that it never should be! But if the portrait—his portrait—is there, it must be, for I must have it! I must have it!"
"It is an old bureau," said the captain. "For he assuredme that his own hands placed it there. But wait until you are stronger."
"No," said Violet, "I am strong enough. I must have it at once—to-morrow!"
Jem Starling had been commanded to refrain from strong drink and to remain sober, and he had kept sober up to the day upon which the captain, with a slight lapse from his usual foresight, discharged him.
On that day he had aired his grievance among the fishermen, who sympathized with him, and, of course, had aired it in the public house.
There were plenty to stand treat, and Jem had drunk heavily.
At ten o'clock he emerged from the "Blue Lion", leaning upon Willie Sanderson's arm—or rather, supported by it—in that state which might be described as desperately intoxicated.
A small crowd of fishermen were round him, and they were all more or less hilarious or excited.
"Hold up!" said Willie to Jem, who was staggering about upon the big young fisherman's arm. "Hold up!"
"Here," said one of the others, the carrier, old Nat, coming forward, "I'll give you a hand with him. We'll take him down to my cottage and let him sleep there to-night. He's had a rare skinful."
Then he turned to the others and said:
"Willie and me 'ull take care of this chap. You get home quickly. There's work to do to-morrow, you know," he added, significantly.
The boys returned a hearty "Ay, ay," and, after an exchange of mutual and noisy adieus, turned down to their cottages by the beach.
Nat and Willie went straight on down the village street, at the end of which, and a little retired from the road, Nat's cottage lay.
As they passed down the street, with Jem rolling and shouting and singing between them, he saw a gentleman in the starlight, coming along the slope toward them.
It was Leicester, who, disgusted and dissatisfied, had turned out for a walk. He saw the group of three, andwas about to pass on without recognizing them, but Willie's figure, stalwart and huge, was too well known to pass unrecognized, and Leicester, with his usual kindness, said, gravely:
"Late to-night, Willie! Good-night."
This was just what the two men dreaded. At the sound of the voice which he hated above all, the drunken man started and threw up his head.
"Who's that?" he snarled, hoarsely, staring before him with thick and bloodshot eyes. "Who's that? That's his voice, I'll swear."
"Come on," said Nat, giving him an angry jerk, "come on, and don't make a fool of yourself, Starling."
"I shan't," said Jem, with an oath. "I will stop and look at him. I'm a dog, I am, but a dog can look at a king—ah, and bite, too. D'ye hear that?" he shouted out to Leicester, who had walked on with the greatest indifference. That same indifference seemed to madden the miserable Jem, and, by a sudden jerk, whose very unexpectedness gave it greater force, he wrenched himself away from his keepers and sprang down the path after Leicester.
Leicester heard him coming, and turned round ready to receive him.
With a snarl Jem sprang at him.
Leicester raised his hand and knocked him down.
The next instant Willie and Nat were down upon him and holding him down where he lay struggling and blaspheming, shouting out oaths and threats.
"You ain't hurt, Mr. Leicester?" asked Willie.
"No," said Leicester. "He has not touched me. There is no harm done, if he has received none."
"Not he," growled Willie, "the fool's drunk."
"So I see," said Leicester. "I am not likely to resent the conduct of a drunken man, but I must and I will defend myself against any attack he may make or any annoyances he may give when he is sober."
"Ay, ay," said Willie. "That is right enough."
"Perhaps you will give him to understand that when he is capable of understanding anything," said Leicester.
"Ay, ay, I will," said Willie.
"Good-night," said Leicester.
"Good-night, Maester Leicester," said the two men, or rather shouted it, for they had to make themselves heard above the mad ravings of their companion.
Leicester, calm and unconcerned, gravely walked on.
The two men exchanged glances as they looked at the dark mark of the last blow upon the drunken man's face and grinned appreciatingly.
Nat, the carrier's cottage was but a little distance from the spot, and they succeeded in getting Jem to bed without farther disturbance of her majesty's peace.
In the morning it was soon over the village that there had been another scene between Mr. Leicester and Jem Starling, and when the man appeared at the "Blue Lion" about noon they expected to hear a second edition of the dreadful threats which had broken the stillness of the preceding night.
But Jem came in silently, with the dark bruise upon his face, and sullenly kept that silence.
And so the day passed, and the little incident had before night sunk into insignificance.
But it was doomed to bear bitter fruit, and that before many weeks should pass.
"I have been thinking," said the captain, as he entered the breakfast-room on the same morning, "that this is the very day for a ride. It is not so hot and there is a delicious little breeze."
Violet looked up with an indifferent smile.
"A very good idea," said Mrs. Mildmay. "Violet, you look quite pale again this morning. I think a ride would do you good."
"I did not sleep very well last night," said Violet, flushing for a moment as she thought how many hours she had heard the clock strike, and how full those waking hours were of one individual. "And I think it would be the wisest thing this morning."
The horses were brought round, and Violet, having donned her habit, was mounted.
"Shall we try the downs?" said the captain, and, Violet acquiescing, the steeds were turned thitherward.
Violet felt trite, as she looked, and the captain endeavored to rouse her.
In consequence of those endeavors and the fresh breezeconjointly the color returned to the beautiful girl's face and the wonted light to her eye.
And it was looking thus joyous and happy that Leicester, grim and unhappy, mounted upon his black horse, met her.
"An unexpected meeting. I did not think to have the pleasure of an encounter with you this morning, Miss Mildmay," he said.
"There need be no battle though you have," she retorted, with a smile, carefully misunderstanding his words.
"We'll proclaim a truce, then," he said. "May I turn my horse's head?"
"Oh, certainly," said Violet, and he turned the Knight and shook hands with the captain, who eyed the pair keenly behind his pleasant, frank smile.
"Beautiful day," said Leicester. "Quite a relief this breeze. Are you going far?"
"Only for a gallop," said Violet, whose heart was beating fast and rapidly melting under the grave and almost reproachful gaze of his dark eyes.
After all, might there not be some mistake about him and Ethel Boisdale? Oh, at that moment how she longed that there might be!
"I was going over to Tenby," said Leicester.
"A pretty town," said the captain, smiling to himself as he recalled his visit and his purchases. "I passed through it a short time since, and I thought of going again soon. I want to find a solicitor."
"A solicitor," said Leicester. "I am going to see mine this morning. Can I recommend him?"
"Why will not dear old Mr. Thaxton do?" said Violet. "He is our solicitor."
"He lives in London, does he not?" asked the captain, who did not want any solicitor, and who had been merely fishing to ascertain who the Mildmay solicitor was and where he resided.
"Yes," said Violet. "But of course he can come down at an hour's notice. He does come down sometimes. I do not know what for, but to see to things, I suppose. A lawyer is a necessary evil."
"Rather hard upon the legal profession," said Leicester,with a smile. "I thought of being a lawyer myself once," he added.
"And why were you not?" said Violet, trying to speak with coquettish indifference.
"Too lazy," he said. "My new trade will suit me best, I think."
"Your new trade!" said Violet, leaning forward and stroking her horse, "and may I inquire what that may be?"
"Oh, yes," said Leicester. "There is no patent connected with it. I am going to turn traveler—not commercial traveler, for that, I am afraid, I have not head enough—but traveler and explorer. I am suddenly filled with a vast longing to see what Central Africa is like."
"You might do worse," said the captain. "But you can certainly do better; don't you think so, Miss Violet?"
Now, if he had let her alone, Violet would have broken down.
Tears had already formed in her sweet, truthful eyes.
But his question was, what he had intended it should be, an appeal to her pride, and, summoning all her presence of mind, she choked back the tears and said bravely, with a little smile:
"Mr. Leicester is the best judge of that. I think there is a great charm in novelty, and even Africa is not too far off to go in search of it."
She longed to pour out her whole mind, to accuse him of his inconsistency, but his next remark awoke a fresh thrill of feeling within her.
"May I ask a favor, Miss Mildmay?" he said. "I would not have spoken of my trip but for that."
"A favor?" she said. "What is it?"
The reply sounded cruelly ungracious, but she could not trust herself to many words.
"My mother will feel lonely when I have started—though only for a time, perhaps—would you, in the kindness of your heart, and out of that womanly charity which is the glory of your sex, take in the Cedars sometimes in your walks and drives?"
Violet's face paled.
"I will, gladly, and for my own sake," she said. "If you go," she added.
He did not notice the addition.
"I am very grateful," he said, "very; and of her gratitude I need not assure you. Penruddie is a dull place, and dullness is bad for more than the 'weed on Lethe's wharf.'"
"Not so dull as the Lacklands are at the Lodge," said the captain, with a pleasant smile.
Violet flushed, simply because Leicester's grave, dark eyes were suddenly turned upon her face with an earnest gaze.
"No," she stammered, confused by her own meaningless flush.
But he did not think it meaningless.
He pulled up the Knight with an iron hand, and in a grim, hard voice said:
"I am afraid I must deny myself the pleasure of a longer chat; I am expected at home. Good-morning."
Violet gave him her hand.
He was too excited and mad to feel that it trembled.
He turned the horse, dug the spurs into it almost savagely and tore on.
"It's too true," he muttered, between his teeth, "that blush told all. Lord Fitz has won, and I have lost. Well, so be it. Africa at least will be constant, if only in death."
For some little time the captain and Violet rode on in silence.
As for him, he could have burst into a fit of wild and triumphant laughter, for he had won the day once more, and turned what would have been a glorious, joyous triumph for Leicester into a complete defeat.
That question and that wily remark had done the deed, and once more he had widened the gulf of jealousy and misunderstanding which yawned between John Mildmay's daughter and Leicester Dodson.
As they neared home, and after a little rambling conversation, he remarked, casually:
"I have been thinking, and I have concluded to wait until Mr. Thaxton comes down before I go into my little business matter. It is only a small, trivial affair about some money which I think ought to be due to me, and it can easily wait."
"Yes," said Violet, absently.
She was thinking of other than the captain's words, and his voice—smooth, silky and musical—fell on her ears like the plash, plash of a distant waterfall to a weary, heartsick traveler.
But his next words aroused her.
"And it has occurred to me," continued, in a graver tone, "that if you intend opening the deserted study, it would be as well to have the lawyer with us."
Violet paled, and the agitation which always came over her when her father's death or the study was alluded to showed itself.
"Why?" she said.
"Well," said the captain, softly, "only because it is usual. There may be valuables—or papers."
"I see," she breathed. "It shall be so. I will write——"
"Or allow me," said the captain, "we will fix a day; and Mr. Thaxton shall come down."
"Yes," said Violet, "soon. I meant to have the room opened to-day, but I will wait if you think it better."
"Oh, yes, I think it better to have the lawyer with us," said the captain, "and I will write to him."
So the captain wrote that evening to Mr. Thaxton, requesting him to be kind enough to come down to Mildmay Park as soon as he could conveniently do so, as Miss Mildmay wished to see him on a matter of business.
All the evening he was as good-tempered and as amusing as usual, and there was not a shadow upon his face when he wished the unsuspecting women good-night, though already in anticipation he was tasting the horror of an ordeal which he had determined to go through.
As usual, he waited until all was quiet, then he lit his cigar and with an outwardly calm bearing smoked it and enjoyed it.
When it was finished and after another term of listening, he took a cloak and muffled himself up.
It was an old-fashioned riding-cloak, and he could pull it over his head and face and still leave a greater part of his legs covered.
In the pocket he slipped the dark lantern.
Then from his bureau he took his revolver and a short,deadly life-preserver, the thong of which he tied round his wrist.
Thus armed, he smiled with a serene feeling of security, and, as an additional fillip to his courage, he tossed off a glass of brandy.
It was his intention to leave the house, and here a question arose for him which was the better means of egress.
He decided upon that which he had used formerly, and with practiced dexterity he fastened his rope, leaped on the sill and rapidly descended.
Cautiously, and looking round him with vigilant eyes, he entered the dark cloisters; and, feeling his way, crept on tiptoe to the trunk on which Leicester had surprised him three mornings since.
In a few moments he was groping on again, and at last reached what seemed to be his destination, a doorway protected from observation by a pillar, up which had grown a thick mass of ivy.
From that point he commanded a view of the whole of the chapel and of the window of the deserted room.
With a slight sigh of satisfaction he seated himself upon a stone and, revolver in hand, waited and watched.
How long he could have withstood the influence of that dreadful place and time it is impossible to say, but as the clock chimed the quarter to one his nerves, strung to their farthest, received a shock which dispelled all memories of the past, all hopes and guilty ambitions for the future.
Before him in the darkness and up in the deserted room was the blue light, dimly burning.
A shudder crept through his frame.
His hand grasped the revolver, his gaze was chained to that window.
The light grew more intense, slowly was transformed as he had seen it before, and there, plain and distinct, at the window stood the horrible, fearful White Nun!
For a while the figure remained motionless at the window, then it turned and he knew instinctively that it was coming in the direction of the oriel window.
If so it would in a few minutes be above him. He waited, and his eyes turned to the window.
For a moment he lost consciousness, the next, by a strong effort, he regained something of his old dare-devilcourage, and he bit his lip to keep himself awake as the horrible figure approached with floating motion toward him.
Its face was turned from him as it came, but a bird flew out of the ivy with a wild shriek of terror, and the skull face and gleaming eyes followed the bird's flight.
More horrible still, it welcomed it with a dry, hollow laugh, which chilled the watcher to the immortal soul.
Slowly it neared where he stood.
It was opposite.
Then it turned its head, and at that moment, calling up all the courage which he possessed, the captain sprang, with a hoarse, gutteral shriek in his dry, hot throat, upon the figure.
Instantly the light disappeared.
He felt to his astonishment, even in his terror, his hands grasp something firm, and then he knew that the ghost's boney hands were round his neck.
But the reckless courage born from very despair filled him, and he exerted his tremendous strength as if he was using it against a human being.
He clasped the figure in his muscular arms and threw his whole weight upon it, forcing it gradually but surely.
Inch by inch, the figure gave way; the floor was reached, the captain with a cry of mad excitement forced it backward upon the stone, then raised his life-preserver and aimed a deadly blow at the skull face.
Then there arose a shout of warning and an oath from the white, skinless lips, and a man's voice came through them hoarsely and panting:
"Hold hard, I give in!"
The captain staggered back with petrifying astonishment.
The next moment he had hurled the figure to the ground, had planted his knees upon its chest, and, leveling his revolver at its head, hissed out:
"Move an inch, speak a word, and I will shoot you like a dog."
Then with the other hand he tore off the skull mask, flung it aside and glared down with a smile of triumph and malice upon the weather-beaten face of Willie Sanderson!
The captain drew a long breath, shifted his knee a little on the chest of the prostrate man and smiled.
That smile was a study of malignant triumph and conscious power.
"Soh!" he said, between his teeth, and weighing the revolver in his hand with its barrel still pointed to the prostrate man, "soh, you are the ghost, my fine fellow? You are the White Nun who terrifies honest people out of their wits?"
Willie struggled for breath and grinned with daring audacity.
"I give in, captain. Give me a little more breathing room," and he groaned.
The captain smiled, released his prisoner, and, seating himself complacently, with the revolver still conveniently leveled, watched keenly the huge Willie rise, shake himself and draw a long breath of relief.
"Whew!" he breathed, "that's better! You are uncommon strong, captain," he remarked, coolly eying the lithe figure of his conqueror with looks of admiration.
"I am," said the captain. "Stand there. No," he added, quickly, as Willie was about to slip off the white robe and paraphernalia which constituted his disguise. "No, don't take anything off. I may want to shoot you yet, and your costume would explain everything. Stand there—on second thoughts, you may sit down."
Willie Sanderson, with a shrug of his shoulders, threw himself down beside the captain and eyed the ground sullenly and expectantly.
"Now," said the captain, "I must know the whole truth and nothing but the truth. Answer my question straightforwardly and without prevarication, or I——" and he finished up the sentence by glancing at the revolver.
"Stop," said Willie, driven to desperation by the captain's consummate coolness. "I'll tell ye; I suppose I must."
The captain nodded.
"I saw you the other night," he said; "I was walking in the garden and saw your light. My man and I climbed to the window and were looking for you. We should have caught you then, but were afraid of raising the house."
Willie Sanderson grinned.
"Beggin' your pardon, captain, you didn't see me."
The captain scrutinized him.
"No," he said, "you are right; it was a smaller-made man."
Willie nodded.
"What was he—what were you doing in that room?" said the captain. "Were you on the same errand?"
Willie nodded.
"We was, captain. But we didn't want anything in that room, and more by token we wouldn't touch so much as a candle in it, for the sake o' him as is dead. Maester Mildmay was a good friend to all o' us boys, captain, and we'd guard anything o' 'is rather nor interfere wi' it. The room and all as is in it will be all right for us."
"I understand," said the captain. "You pass through the room to some other part of the house."
"Wrong again, captain," returned Willie, laughing grimly. "The house and all in it be sacred for us. We don't touch aught as belongs to the Mildmays; we'd go many a mile for the pretty miss."
"Then," said the captain, "there's a secret passage from that old room. Where does it lead?"
"To the cliffs," answered Willie, reluctantly.
A light broke upon the captain.
"To the cliffs," he returned, quietly, though his heart beat fast. "To the cliffs, and from the cliffs to the beach? What do you want there?"
Willie made a gesture of annoyance.
"What should we want there?" he asked, sulkily.
"I see," said the captain, composedly and slowly. "I see. You are a party of smugglers, my fine friend, and you run your cargo from the cliffs under Mildmay House. Soh! soh!"
Willie nodded sullenly.
"And now, you've got it, captain, what be you going to do?"
"That depends," said the captain. "I must know more. Turn so that I may see you in the light. What is that on your arms and hands?"
Willie grinned.
"That's canvas," he said. "Job be clever at painting, so he rigged up a skeleton suit. Painted it all black, ye see, and marked out the bones in white paint. Clever, ain't it?"
"Very!" said the captain, sarcastically. "And how do you manage the ghostly light?"
"So," said Willie, pointing to a small lamp. "That be filled with some spirit as Job knows on, and when that be set light to, it sets a flame all round."
"I see," said the captain, smiling against his will, as he thought how easily the deception was worked.
"There be sulphur round my eyes and on my arms, and my feet wrapped in list," said Willie, holding up one huge foot so inclosed.
The captain started suddenly.
"But," he said, "how do you manage with the footmarks on the floor in the room? Do you leave them?"
Willie shook his head.
"No," he said; "not we. That wouldn't be safe, captain. We shake some dust down from a saucepan wi' holes in the bottom."
"There are clever people as well as myself," thought the captain. "One thing more," he added, rubbing his finger along the barrel of the revolver to remind his captive that he was still on guard. "I watched you come out of the ivy in the chapel, and descend from the roof. How did you manage that?"
"That's the easiest part, captain," he said. "I can walk along the ledge, as ain't very broad, 'tis true, but do look from down here narrower than it be——"
"I see," said the captain. "But the descent—how is that arranged?"
"By a wire and a spring," said Willie. "There's a big spring hid up in that ivy, and when I swings off that ledge the spring lets the wire down; when I lets go, up goes the wire—not up to the roof, you know, but justenough to keep it out of sight. Wire's a difficult thing to distinguish in the light of this place, and it ain't thick, like rope."
"I have it all," said the captain. "Clever, very clever. There are other heads behind yours, my friend," he muttered.
"And now what be you going to do, captain?" asked Willie, anxiously. "I've behaved honorable and answered up true and straight, like an honest man. What be you going to do?"
"I will think," said the captain.
"I should think you'd never be so hard as to interfere with an honest man's living, captain?" pleaded Willie, gruffly. "It don't make no odds to you if we do give the customs a slip now and then and run a small cargo."
"A small cargo," said the captain, significantly. "You have been rather busy lately, if I mistake not, my friend!"
"Well, we have so," admitted Willie, candidly, "we have so, and," he added, desperately, "there be a cargo waiting for us now, captain."
"Now?" asked the captain.
"Ay, this very minute," assented Willie. "I've been down to see if it be all clear, and was going down to fetch the boys when you caught me—may the devil take ye!—and if it's there long we'll lose it and get the ship owners into trouble most like."
"Give the signal," said the captain. "I have a proposal to make."
"Stand behind that pillar, then," said Willie. "If the boys was to come up suddenly and see us like this they might think as I played them false, and drop us both without so much as a 'did' or 'didn't ye'!"
The captain concealed himself behind the pillar and Willie gave forth that screech which Jem and the captain had mistaken for the owls.
In three minutes dusky shadows came thronging from all parts of the chapel, and in five minutes about a score of strong, stalwart men were pressing round Willie, eagerly asking questions.
The captain knew that Willie was communicating his recent startling experiences, and smiled to himself as herealized what consternation the intelligence of their secret having been discovered would produce.
Presently Willie came up to where he was hidden and said:
"Come out, captain; but, I warn you, speak them fair, for they're mighty desperate and ready for anything."
"I am not afraid," said the captain, but, nevertheless, as he stepped forward he held his revolver tightly, and was quite prepared to act manfully if his reception was too warm.
There was a buzz and murmur, threatening and emphatic, as his well-known figure came within the gleam of light from the lantern.
But some one from their midst stopped the noise from growing more distinct by a warning "Hush!"
Then this same one came forward and the captain recognized the dapper figure of Job.
"Well, captain," he said, speaking in a low, clear tone, and without a particle of fear, "you've spotted our little game, it seems, and for us at a most orkard moment. What be you going to do?"
The captain looked hard at the man.
"I have seen you before," he said.
"Most like," said Job, calmly.
"I saw you the other night," said the captain, "and in this disguise."
"You did," said Job, "and I saw you."
It was an anxious moment for the captain.
How much had the man seen?
There was a queer twinkle in his light gray eyes. Had they seen the whole of that secret drawer business?
The captain endeavored to discover by a question.
"If I had been a moment sooner I should have caught you," he said. "As it was, you took me by surprise. However, I have you to-night, all of you. Ay, you need not look so fierce, my boys; I have you all, and you know it. I can name you one by one, from Job there to Tommy Lawn. Keep back. There are six barrels here, and all loaded. If you think to frighten me, you are much mistaken. You are also self-deceived if you imagine that I shall consent to be catechised as to my intentions."
"Come, come," said Job, "don't be unreasonable, captain.We're twenty and more to one. What's to prevent us from giving you an inch of lead and sending you across the main in the ship that's at anchor yonder? Many a man has been put away quietly and none the wiser."
"I'll tell you," he said; "because you all know the difference between murder and smuggling, and because there's no necessity to kill a man who means you no harm."
"No harm," said Job, coolly. "They're fine words, captain, but what do they mean? Give us your word as a gentleman that you won't split."
"I will do more," said the captain, slowly and with quiet deliberation. "I will join you."
The men looked at each other half incredulously.
Job alone remained, with his hand on his hip, calm and unmoved.
"You will join us?" he said. "On you honor?"
"As a gentleman," said Captain Howard Murpoint, with fine irony. "If you want to feel secure, show me how I can be a gainer by the enterprise, and you may feel perfectly certain that I shall remain faithful. If you mean to test me, you can do so at once."
"How?" asked Job.
"You say," returned the captain, "that a cargo waits running home. I'll help you to clear it. I shall have become an accomplice, a participator in the offense, and what peril you run I shall share in."
"True," said Job. "You're right, captain. You've got brains."
Job, instantly changing his manner from a calm to a half-excited eagerness, said:
"Get down, boys, to the beach; the boats and nets are ready. Captain, you come with me. Willie, take charge of the boats."
The men were lost in the darkness almost instantaneously, Willie, as he went, tossing the ghostly disguise to Job as he ran off.
"Where to?" asked the captain, quietly.
"By the secret way," said Job, "if you've pluck enough."
The captain smiled.
"Question that when you see cause, my man," he said."Until then give me credit for some courage, remembering that I have made my own terms with you, twenty to one."
"Right," said Job. "I didn't mean to offend. Put one o' those white cloaks on, and rub the sulphur over your face. There'll be two White Nuns to-night in Mildmay Park!"
Job made his way, with the captain at his side, to the center of the chapel, the sulphur on both their faces gleaming ghastly and horrible in the darkness.
In the center stood a tomb with the half-moldered effigy of a knight lying full length.
Job sprang upon that and motioned the captain to imitate his example.
"Now," said Job, in a whisper, "stand on tiptoe till you feel the wire."
The captain did so.
"Got it? Pull it down and climb."
The captain, without hesitation, did as he was commanded, and as his feet left the tomb felt the wire drawn up.
Slowly and carefully, for it was a perilous undertaking, he ascended, helped thereto by the knots and projections which had been made in the slender rope.
When he had reached what seemed to him a terrific height, he heard Job's voice below.
"Hold tight, and when your feet touch, give way."
Then the rope, moved by some agency over which Job had control below, commenced to swing to and fro, and the captain, with one leg extended, felt his feet touch the narrow ledge.
Presently he heard Job beside him, and the man's cool, audacious grin in his ears.
"It bean't a lady's staircase, be it?" he said; "but it answers the purpose, and cuts off the communication. Now follow me, steady, and remember that a false step is death."
At last, by the glimmer of the lantern which Job had now unmasked, the captain saw among the ivy a small door.
"Here we go in," said Job. "Stand back a bit; it opens outward."
"But," said the captain, now driven to desperation, "it is impossible. A step back is death."
"Cling to the ivy, then, and don't look down," retorted Job, coolly.
The captain took the advice, and Job opened the door.
With a spring, the captain landed beyond the threshold beside Job, and wiped the cold sweat from his brow.
Job grinned.
"A hard bit, bean't it? But it's nothing when you are used to it. I've done it, off and on, three times a week, for the last three years. Now see: In front of ye is the master's study. This old door, by a whim of his, was left behind the bookcase; the bookcase opens out to it, and it was through that, ye see, we came t'other night. Look'ee here."
He touched a spring as he spoke, and passed through the opening bookcase into the study.
The change of scene from the dark horror of the narrow ledge and its abyss below to the dust-covered room with its modern furniture was striking and extraordinary.
"Now step carefully," said Job.
The captain, who had practiced that maneuver, obeyed, and the two men cleared as narrow a strip of dust as possible.
"That will be all right when we come back," said Job.
As he spoke he diverted the captain's attention for a moment, and in that moment touched the spring of the opposite bookcase.
The bookcase drew back, and a gust of air, damp and chilly, rose from the aperture.
It was that chilly, moist atmosphere which the captain had noticed when the ghost disappeared.
"Subterranean," he said.
"Ay," said Job.
He threw the light down the dark deep hole.
"A rope ladder," said the captain.
"Ay," said Job. "Get down."
Job closed the door carefully, and stepped on to the ladder, following close upon the captain.
"Careful!" he warned. "Some of the steps be gone."
The warning was not unneeded, for as he spoke thecaptain's feet slipped through one of the missing links, and the ladder swayed to and fro.
After a silent descent for some moments he felt his feet touch the ground once more. He waited until Job came with the light, and then saw that he was standing in a small apartment cut out of the solid rock, and with only two means of egress apparent—the one by the ladder down which he had descended, and the other by a round hole just large enough to admit the body of a full-grown man.
"We are now just under the house, captain," said Job, turning the lantern. "Up above us they be comfortably asleep in their beds—rum, bean't it?"
With the lantern suspended to his neck, he commenced crawling through the hole, and the captain, whose courage was pretty severely tested, followed.
Dark and dank, the way seemed interminable.
At last the roof gradually widened.
The men raised their heads and so eased their rigid necks, and presently Job stood upright and threw the light upon a large cavern.
Their way lay now over the natural bed of a series of caverns, and as they proceeded the boom of the sea came plainly to their ears.
At last a gust of exquisite fresh, briny air blew upon them, and Job, as he masked the lantern, said:
"We're close upon the open sea. Give us your hand, captain."
So guided, the captain passed over the slippery rocks, and presently heard Job's feet plash into the water.
He was himself the next moment in the sea up to his knees; but though the shock was so sudden that it took away his breath it was grateful and refreshing.
"Not a word! Don't move," said Job.
They walked in silence, and as they walked there came before the captain's eye another scene.
Another high, dreary cliff, with two men hand-in-hand looking out upon the mighty ocean and waiting!
Presently Job bent down his ear.
"Crouch," he said. "I can see the coast guard's lantern. It's old Bolt. He's getting on in years and doeshis beat with a light. Ha! ha! There's an advantage, captain. When he's passed, we've got a clear half hour."
"He's gone," he added, "and now for the signal."
Instantly, and for scarcely more than an instant, he turned out upon the sea that tiny beam of light. It was only for an instant, but eager, anxious eyes had been watching for that signal, and eager hands acted upon it.
Then the captain fancied that he heard some sound, but before he could distinguish it there glided a dark object close by his side.
It was a boat.
The next instant there was another, followed by another.
Then in the darkness and deep and impressive silence, lusty figures sprang into the water.
Round objects were handed from those in the boat to those wading to the cavern.
One was handed, or, rather, flung into the captain's arms, and with an excitement born of the scene, he fell to work with the others, William, Job and twenty messmates, the work of unloading was soon done.
The men went back in their boats, and Job, the captain and Willie remained behind.
With muffled oars the boats glided off.
In the secure silence the two men groped their way to a smaller cavern farther from the sea, and out of sight of the cliffs.
Then Job turned on the light and glanced with flushed, sweat-beaded face from Willie to the captain, who had thrown himself upon a rock and stood watching keenly.
"Well," said Willie, with a grim smile upon his grimed and sunburned face, "how do you like it, captain?"
"Very well," said the captain, "if it pays."
"Pays," chuckled the huge fisherman, drawing a small parcel from his breast. "Look at that!" and he unfastened the bundle and displayed a lightly-compressed heap of exquisite lace.
The captain's eyes glistened.
"Ah!" he said.
"Ah!" echoed Willie, while Job smiled with deep satisfaction. "Look at that," he continued, pointing to the barrels ranged along the side of the cavern.
"What is it?" asked the captain.
"Spirit," said Job, curtly. "Come, Will, no time for talking. Bear a hand here, captain."
The captain arose with alacrity, and, with quiet admiration at their sagacity, watched the two men scrape the sand away from the crevice of a rock, which, from its weed-grown and sand-filled chinks, looked as if it had stood unmoved or shaken since the time of its creation.
But Job and Willie applied their shoulders and rolled it away, discovering the mouth of a small cavern.
Into that, the captain counting, the barrels were rolled.
When they were all concealed the stone was replaced.
Then Job, glancing at the tide, said:
"In half an hour the sea will fill this place. You wouldn't like to wait, captain? Come along, then. Give me that bundle, Will."
And with the precious bundle in his breast Job led the return journey.
The three men, Job, Willie and the captain, traversed the subterranean passage as far as the cave.
Here Job paused and said:
"I'll let you into another secret, captain. From here there is another outlet, and a more comfortable one. We can't use it, not we rough men, because it's too near the house; but you can, because if you're found near the entrance, why, there'll be no questions asked."
"I see," said the captain. "I can say that I am taking a midnight stroll and a cigar."
"Will you have one?" asked Job, taking a bundle of cigars from a hole in the cave. "They're choice, they are; you can't buy 'em under five pounds a pound," and he paused.
"My share of the booty at present," said the captain. "I will light it when we get outside."
Job went to a corner and scraped some chalk from a small hole. He then inserted his hand in the hole and pulled out an iron rod like a bellpull.
This opened a small door a few feet farther along the chalk road, and Job nodded to it.
"Here you are, captain. It's a better road than the other; not so back-breaking: You'll want a light," and he held out the lantern.
"Thanks," said the captain.
He took the lantern, trimmed it, and passed into the passage.
"Good-night," he said; "you may shut the door."
The door slammed to swiftly, cutting off the sound of the men's voices, and the captain proceeded on his weird and ghostly way.
The passage was wider and higher, and the road not so painfully uncomfortable as that by which they had reached the cliffs.
He hurried on, and found himself more quickly than he had expected at the end of the long passage, which was terminated by a small door.
A bar of iron extending crossways protected it outside, and the long pin projecting inside fastened it.
The captain thrust the pin through and the door opened.
To his surprise, a gush of warm but pure air greeted him, and with a feeling of extreme satisfaction he knew that he was once more above ground.
Before the door was a large round bush, which effectually concealed it from observation.
Pushing the bush aside with some difficulty the captain looked out and saw that he was in a portion of the disused garden nearest the house.
With a thrill of delight he extinguished the flickering flame in the lantern and pushed his way through the bush, taking care to replace the disturbed branches.
Then he lit his cigar, and with his hands in his pockets, sauntered on, preoccupied, and was somewhat startled by a footstep and a sudden sensation of some one's hands at his throat.
Before he could realize the situation he was on his back.
With an exclamation deep and low, he threw up his arms and struggled with his assailant.
In a moment he had regained his feet and there the advantage was lost again, for the assailant pinned him to the wall of the house, and, in a stern voice, inquired:
"Who are you, fellow?"
"What!" exclaimed the captain, as the familiar tones smote his ear, "what! Leicester Dodson!"
"Captain Howard Murpoint!" exclaimed Leicester, forit was he, dropping his grasp from the captain's arm and staring in the dim light.
The captain shook himself and glared with an evil hatred at the stalwart figure.
"You are late, Mr. Dodson, and pugilistic."
"You are late," said Leicester, utterly ignoring the latter part of the speech, and speaking in a stern and suspicious tone. "You are out late, and if there is any excuse for my attack, that and the fact of a man's figure prowling round the house at such an unwonted hour must supply it."
"Prowling!" said the captain. "Prowling is a strong term to apply to the stroll a gentleman may take at any hour in the grounds of the house at which he is a guest. It is not so strange or unwarrantable a term to apply to the uninvited and unwelcome presence of a comparative stranger."
There was reason in the retort, but Leicester disregarded it or willfully misunderstood it.
"I saw you come from behind that bush," he said, pointing to the bush which concealed the door and in vain striving to get a clear idea of the expression on the captain's face.
"Not that, but another," said the captain, readily. "I had been to light a cigar, the wind preventing it here in the open. I cannot recognize your right to put these questions, and I cannot understand your ground for doing so. May I ask, and I ask as the friend of Mrs. Mildmay, and as John Mildmay's friend, what business brought you here so late; here in the private grounds of the Park, and so close to the house?"
Leicester remained silent for a moment.
"It is a fair question," he said, at last, "and I will answer it. You cannot be ignorant that an interest attaches to these premises," and he glanced at the ruins. "There is something there to excite the curious. I may have come to see the ghost."
The captain smiled grimly.
"Have you seen it?" he asked.
"I have," said Leicester.
The captain was almost guilty of a start.
"You are more fortunate than I," he said. "I have notseen it. It is true that I have been walking on the wrong side of the house. I am particularly the unfortunate party, for if I am not mistaken, your fingers have left their marks on my arms and chest."
"I am very sorry," said Leicester. "I beg you will impute all you have suffered to my excess of zeal for the protection of Mrs. Mildmay's property. To be candid, I took you for a burglar——"
"Burglars do not go about their work with a cigar," said the captain, quietly.
"Or worse," said Leicester. "Either a burglar or one of the villains who for some purpose of their own are playing the ghost trick."
The captain smiled and eyed Leicester keenly.
"You think, then," he said, "that the ghost is a trick of some of the village boys?"
"Or villains," said Leicester. "I am sure there is some trickery at the bottom of it, and I cannot conceive a man playing it for so long without an end in view. However, this is not the time for a ventilation of the subject. I am sorry I made the mistake, and I apologize."
The captain bowed.
"I am not very much hurt," he said. "Another time, perhaps, when you take your stroll of investigation round the Park you will please to give me warning, and I will keep to my room."
Leicester bowed, as if the words were meant seriously and had no covert sneer.
"By the way," he said, "are you aware that your window is wide open, and that there is a light burning in the room?"
"Perfectly," said the captain, who had quite forgotten the fact, "perfectly. I set it open to air the room, and the light was left to frighten the ghost."
"I will find some more effectual way of doing that," said Leicester, decisively. "Good-night."
"Good-night," said the captain, and Leicester, no nearer the truth as regarded the true character of the man he suspected, strode away.
The captain waited until his firm footstep had died out on the hard road, and then went softly to the back of the house.
With great care and circumspection, he drew his rope from the ivy and climbed to his room.