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wouldn’t keep it either. “You are going straight back to England,” he said. “Take it with you. When you get home you can hand it to one of the big-wigs at the India Office, and he’ll put it in a pigeon-hole, and some day an old charwoman cleaning the office will find it, and she’ll take it home to her grandchildren to play with and one of them’ll drop it on the fire, and there’ll be an end of it.”

“Yes,” replied Thresk slowly. “But if I do that, it won’t be useful at Calcutta, will it?”

“Oh,” said Ballantyne with a sneer. “You’ve got a conscience too, eh? Well, I’ll tell you. I don’t think that photograph will be needed at Calcutta.”

“Are you sure of that?”

“Yes. Salak’s friends don’t know it, but I do.”

Thresk sat still in doubt. Was Ballantyne speaking the truth or did he speak in fear? He was still standing by the bureau looking down upon Thresk and behind him, so that Thresk had not the expression of his face to help him to decide. But he did not turn in his chair to look. For as he sat there it dawned upon him that the photograph was the very thing which he himself needed. The scheme which had been growing in his mind all through this evening, which had begun to grow from the very moment when he had entered the tent, was now complete in every detail except one. He wanted an excuse, a good excuse which should explain why he missed his boat, and here it was on the table in front of him. Almost he had refused it! Now it seemed to him a Godsend.

“I’ll take it,” he cried, and Baram Singh silently appeared at the outer doorway of the tent.

“Huzoor,” he said. “Railgharri hai.”

Ballantyne turned to Thresk.

“Your train is signalled,” and as Thresk started up he reassured him. “There’s no hurry. I have sent word that it is not to start without you.” And while Baram Singh still stood waiting for orders in the doorway of the tent Ballantyne walked round the table, took up the portrait very deliberately and handed it to Thresk.

“Thank you,” he said. “Button it in your coat pocket.”

He waited while Thresk obeyed.

“Thus,” said Thresk with a laugh, “did the Rajah of Bakutu,” and Ballantyne replied with a grin.

“Thank you for mentioning that name.” He turned to Baram Singh. “The camel, quick!”

Baram Singh went out to the enclosure within the little village of tents and Thresk asked curiously:

“Do you distrust him?”

Ballantyne looked steadily at his visitor and said:

“I don’t answer such questions. But I’ll tell you something. If that man were dying he would ask for leave. And if he would ask for leave because he would not die with my scarlet livery on his back. Are you answered?”

“Yes,” said Thresk.

“Very well.” And with a brisk change of tone Ballantyne added: “I’ll see that your camel is ready.” He called aloud to his wife: “Stella! Stella! Mr. Thresk is going,” and he went out through the doorway into the moonlight.

CHAPTER VIII

AND THE RIFLE

Thresk, alone in the tent, looked impatiently towards the grass-screen. He wanted half-a-dozen words with Stella alone. Here was the opportunity, the unhoped-for opportunity, and it was slipping away. Through the open doorway of the tent he saw Ballantyne standing by a big fire and men moving quickly in obedience to his voice. Then he heard the rustle of a dress in the corridor, and she was in the room. He moved quickly towards her, but she held up her hand and stopped him.

“Oh, why did you come?” she said, and the pallor of her face reproached him no less than the regret in her voice.

“I heard of you in Bombay,” he replied. “I am glad that I did come.”

“And I am sorry.”

“Why?”

She looked about the tent as though he might find his answer there. Thresk did not move. He stood near to her, watching her face intently with his jaw rather set.

“Oh, I didn’t say that to wound you,” said Stella, and she sat down on one of the cushioned basket-chairs. “You mustn’t think I wasn’t glad to see you. I was–at the first moment I was very glad;” and she saw his face lighten as she spoke. “I couldn’t help it. All the years rolled away. I remembered the Sussex Downs and–and–days when we rode there high up above the weald. Do you remember?”

“Yes.”

“How long was that ago?”

“Eight years.”

Stella laughed wistfully.

“To me it seems a century.” She was silent for a moment, and though he spoke to her urgently she did not answer. She was carried back to the high broad hills of grass with the curious clumps of big beech-trees upon their crests.

“Do you remember Halnaker Gallop?” she asked with a laugh. “We found it when the chains weren’t up and had the whole two miles free. Was there ever such grass?”

She was looking straight at the bureau, but she was seeing that green lane of shaven turf in the haze of an August morning. She saw it rise and dip in the open between long brown grass. There was a tree on the left-hand side just where the ride dipped for the first time. Then it ran straight to the big beech-trees and passed between them, a wide glade of sunlight, and curved out at the upper end by the road and dipped down again to the two lodges.

“And the ridge at the back of Charlton forest, all the weald to Leith Hill in view?” She rose suddenly from her chair. “Oh, I am sorry that you came.”

“And I am glad,” repeated Thresk.

The stubbornness with which he repeated his words arrested her. She looked at him–was it with distrust, he asked himself? He could not be sure. But certainly there was a little hard note in her voice which had not been there before, when in her turn she asked:

“Why?”

“Because I shouldn’t have known,” he said in a quick whisper. “I should have gone back. I should have left you here. I shouldn’t have known.”

Stella recoiled.

“There is nothing to know,” she said sharply, and Thresk pointed at her throat.

“Nothing?”

Stella Ballantyne raised her hand to cover the blue marks.

“I–I fell and hurt myself,” she stammered.

“It was he–Ballantyne.”

“No,” she cried and she drew herself erect. But Thresk would not accept the denial.

“He ill-treats you,” he insisted. “He drinks and ill-treats you.”

Stella shook her head.

“You asked questions in Bombay where we are known. You were not told that,” she said confidently. There was only one person in Bombay who knew the truth and Jane Repton, she was very sure, would never have betrayed her.

“That’s true,” Thresk conceded. “But why? Because it’s only here in camp that he lets himself go. He told us as much to-night. You were here at the table. You heard. He let his secret slip: no one to carry tales, no one to spy. In the towns he sets a guard upon himself. Yes, but he looks forward to the months of camp when there are no next-door neighbours.”

“No, that’s not true,” she protested and cast about for explanations. “He–he has had a long day and to-night he was tired–and when you are tired–Oh, as a rule he’s different.” And to her relief she heard Ballantyne’s voice outside the tent.

“Thresk! Thresk!”

She came forward and held out her hand.

“There! Your camel’s ready,” she said. “You must go! Goodbye,” and as he took it the old friendliness transfigured her face. “You are a great man now. I read of you. You always meant to be, didn’t you? Hard work?”

“Very,” said Thresk. “Four o’clock in the morning till midnight;” and she suddenly caught him by the arm.

“But it’s worth it.” She let him go and clasped her hands together. “Oh, you have got everything!” she cried in envy.

“No,” he answered. But she would not listen.

“Everything you asked for,” she said and she added hurriedly, “Do you still collect miniatures? No time for that now I suppose.” Once more Ballantyne’s voice called to them from the camp-fire.

“You must go.”

Thresk looked through the opening of the tent. Ballantyne had turned and was coming back towards them.

“I’ll write to you from Bombay,” he said, and utter disbelief showed in her face and sounded in her laugh.

“That letter will never reach me,” she said lightly, and she went up to the door of the tent. Thresk had a moment whilst her back was turned and he used it. He took his pipe out of his pocket and placed it silently and quickly on the table. He wanted a word with her when Ballantyne was out of the way and she was not upon her guard to fence him off. The pipe might be his friend and give it him. He went up to Stella at the tent-door and Ballantyne, who was half-way between the camp-fire and the tent, stopped when he caught sight of him.

“That’s right,” he said. “You ought to be going;” and he turned again towards the camel. Thus for another moment they were alone together, but it was Stella who seized it.

“There go!” she said. “You must go,” and in the same breath she added:

“Married yet?”

“No,” answered Thresk.

“Still too busy getting on?”

“That’s not the reason”–and he lowered his voice to a whisper–“Stella.”

Again she laughed in frank and utter disbelief.

“Nor is Stella. That’s mere politeness and good manners. We must show the dear creatures the great part they play in our lives.” And upon that all her fortitude suddenly deserted her. She had played her part so far, she could play it no longer. An extraordinary change came over her face. The smiles, the laughter slipped from it like a loosened mask. Thresk saw such an agony of weariness and hopeless longing in her eyes as he had never seen even with his experience in the Courts of Law. She drew back into the shadow of the tent.

“In thirteen days you’ll be steaming up the Channel,” she whispered, and with a sob she covered her face with her hands. Thresk saw the tears trickle between her fingers.

Ballantyne at the fire was looking back towards the tent. Thresk hurried out to him. The camel was crouching close to the fire saddled and ready.

“You have time,” said Ballantyne. “The train’s not in yet,” and Thresk walked to the side of the camel, where a couple of steps had been placed for him to mount. He had a foot on the step when he suddenly clapped his hand to his pocket.

“I’ve left my pipe,” he cried, “and I’ve a night’s journey in front of me. I won’t be a second.”

He ran back with all his speed to the tent. The hangings at the door were closed. He tore them aside and rushed in.

“Stella!” he said in a whisper, and then he stopped in amazement. He had left her on the very extremity of distress. He found her, though to be sure the stains of her tears were still visible upon her face, busy with one of the evening preparations natural in a camp-life–quietly, energetically busy. She looked up once when he raised the hanging over the door, but she dropped her eyes the next instant to her work.

She was standing by the table with a small rook-rifle in her hands. The breech was open. She looked down the barrel, holding up the weapon so that the light might shine into the breech.

“Yes?” she said, and with so much indifference that she did not lift her eyes from her work. “I thought you had gone.”

“I left my pipe behind me,” said Thresk.

“There it is, on the table.”

“Thank you.”

He put it in his pocket. Of the two he was disconcerted and at a loss, she was entirely at her ease.

CHAPTER IX

AN EPISODE IN BALLANTYNE’S LIFE

The Reptons lived upon the Khamballa Hill and the bow-window of their drawing-room looked down upon the Arabian Sea and southwards along the coast towards Malabar Point. In this embrasure Mrs. Repton sat through a morning, denying herself to her friends. A book lay open on her lap but her eyes were upon the sea. A few minutes after the clock upon her mantelpiece had struck twelve she saw that for which she watched: the bowsprit and the black bows of a big ship pushing out from under the hill and the water boiling under its stem. The whole ship came into view with its awnings and its saffron funnels and headed to the north-west for Aden.

Jane Repton rose up from her chair and watched it go. In the sunlight its black hull was so sharply outlined on the sea, its lines and spars were so trim that it looked a miniature ship which she could reach out her hand and snatch. But her eyes grew dim as she watched, so that it became shapeless and blurred, and long before the liner was out of sight it was quite lost to her.

“I am foolish,” she said as she turned away, and she bit her handkerchief hard. This was midday of the Friday and ever since that dinner-party at the Carruthers’ on the Monday night she had been alternating between wild hopes and arguments of prudence. But until this moment of disappointment she had not realised how completely the hopes had gained the upper hand with her and how extravagantly she had built upon Thresk’s urgent questioning of her at the dinner-table.

“Very likely he never found the Ballantynes at all,” she argued. But he might have sent her word. All that morning she had been expecting a telephone message or a telegram or a note scribbled on board the steamer and sent up the Khamballa Hill by a messenger. But not a token had come from him and now of the boat which was carrying him to England there was nothing left but the stain of its smoke upon the sky.

Mrs. Repton put her handkerchief in her pocket and was going about the business of her house when the butler opened the door.

“I am not in–” Mrs. Repton began and cut short the sentence with a cry of welcome and surprise, for close upon the heels of the servant Thresk was standing.

“You!” she cried. “Oh!”

She felt her legs weakening under her and she sat down abruptly on a chair.

“Thank Heaven it was there,” she said. “I should have sat on the floor if it hadn’t been.” She dismissed the butler and held out her hand to Thresk. “Oh, my friend,” she said, “there’s your steamer on its way to Aden.”

Her voice rang with enthusiasm and admiration. Thresk only nodded his head gloomily.

“I have missed it,” he replied. “It’s very unfortunate. I have clients waiting for me in London.”

“You missed it on purpose,” she declared and Thresk’s face relaxed into a smile. He turned away from the window to her. He seemed suddenly to wear the look of a boy.

“I have the best of excuses,” he replied, “the perfect excuse.” But even he could not foresee how completely that excuse was to serve him.

“Sit down,” said Jane Repton, “and tell me. You went to Chitipur, I know. From your presence here I know too that you found–them–there.”

“No,” said Thresk, “I didn’t.” He sat down and looked straight into Jane Repton’s eyes. “I had a stroke of luck. I found them–in camp.”

Jane Repton understood all that the last two words implied.

“I should have wished that,” she answered, “if I had dared to think it possible. You talked with Stella?”

“Hardly a word alone. But I saw.”

“What did you see?”

“I am here to tell you.” And he told her the story of his night at the camp so far as it concerned Stella Ballantyne, and indeed not quite all of that. For instance he omitted altogether to relate how he had left his pipe behind in the tent and had returned for it. That seemed to him unimportant. Nor did he tell her of his conversation with Ballantyne about the photograph. “He was in a panic. He had delusions,” he said and left the matter there. Thresk had the lawyer’s mind or rather the mind of a lawyer in big practice. He had the instinct for the essential fact and the knowledge that it was most lucid when presented in a naked simplicity. He was at pains to set before Jane Repton what he had seen of the life which Stella lived with Stephen Ballantyne and nothing else.

“Now,” he said when he had finished, “you sent me to Chitipur. I must know why.”

And when she hesitated he overbore her.

“You can be guilty of no disloyalty to your friend,” he insisted, “by being frank with me. After all I have given guarantees. I went to Chitipur upon your word. I have missed my boat. You bade me go to Chitipur. That told me too little or too much. I say too little. I have got to know all now.” And he rose up and stood before her. “What do you know about Stephen Ballantyne?”

“I’ll tell you,” said Jane Repton. She looked at the clock. “You had better stay and lunch with us if you will. We shall be alone. I’ll tell you afterwards. Meanwhile–” and in her turn she stood up. The sense of responsibility was heavy upon her.

She had sent this man upon his errand of knowledge. He had done, in consequence of it, a stronger, a wilder thing than she had thought, than she had hoped for. She had a panicky feeling that she had set great forces at work.

“Meanwhile–” asked Thresk; and she drew a breath of relief. The steadiness of his eyes and voice comforted her. His quiet insistence gave her courage. None of her troubles and doubts had any place apparently in his mind. A nervous horse in the hands of a real horseman–thus she thought of herself in Thresk’s presence.

“Meanwhile I’ll give you one reason why I wanted you to go. My husband’s time in India is up. We are leaving for England altogether in a month’s time. We shall not come back at all. And when we have gone Stella will be left without one intimate friend in the whole country.”

“Yes,” said Thresk. “That wouldn’t do, would it?” and they went in to their luncheon.

All through that meal, before the servants, they talked what is written in the newspapers. And of the two she who had fears and hesitations was still the most impatient to get it done. She had her curiosity and it was beginning to consume her. What had Thresk known of Stella and she of him before she had come out to India and become Stella Ballantyne? Had they been in love? If not why had Thresk gone to Chitipur? Why had he missed his boat and left all his clients over there in England in the lurch? If so, why hadn’t they married–the idiots? Oh, how she wanted to know all the answers to all these questions! And what he proposed to do now! And she would know nothing unless she was frank herself. She had read his ultimatum in his face.

“We’ll have coffee in my sitting-room. You can smoke there,” she said and led the way to it. “A cheroot?”

Thresk smiled with amusement. But the amusement annoyed her for she did not understand it.

“I have got a Havana cigar here,” he said. “May I?”

“Of course.”

He lit it and listened. But it was not long before it went out and he did not stir to light it again. The incident of which Mrs. Repton had been the witness, and which she related now, invested Ballantyne with horror. Thresk had left the camp at Chitipur with an angry contempt for him. The contempt passed out of his feelings altogether as he sat in Mrs. Repton’s drawing-room.

“I am not telling you what Stella has confided to me,” said Mrs. Repton. “Stella’s loyal even when there’s no cause for loyalty; and if loyalty didn’t keep her mouth closed, self-respect would. I tell you what I saw. We were at Agra at the time. My husband was Collector there. There was a Durbar held there and the Rajah of Chitipur came to it with his elephants and his soldiers, and naturally Captain Ballantyne and his wife came too. They stayed with us. You are to understand that I knew nothing–absolutely nothing–up to that time. I hadn’t a suspicion–until the afternoon of the finals in the Polo Tournament. Stella and I went together alone and we came home about six. Stella went upstairs and I–I walked into the library.”

She had found Ballantyne sitting in a high arm-chair, his eyes glittering under his black thick eyebrows and his face livid. He looked at her as she entered, but he neither moved nor spoke, and she thought that he was ill. But the decanter of whisky stood empty on a little table at his side and she noticed it.

“We have some people coming to dinner to-night, Captain Ballantyne,” she said. “We shall dine at eight, so there’s an hour and a half still.”

She went over to a book-case and took out a book. When she turned back into the room a change had taken place in her visitor. Life had flickered into his face. His eyes were wary and cunning.

“And why do you tell me that?” he asked in a voice which was thick and formidable. She had a notion that he did not know who she was and then suddenly she became afraid. She had discovered a secret–his secret. For once in the towns he had let himself go. She had a hope now that he could not move and that he knew it; he sat as still as his arm-chair.

“I had forgotten to tell you,” she replied. “I thought you might like to know beforehand.”

“Why should I like to know beforehand?”

She had his secret, he plied her with questions to know if she had it. She must hide her knowledge. Every instinct warned her to hide it.

“The people who are coming are strangers to India,” she said, “but I have told them of you and they will come expectant.”

“You are very kind.”

She had spoken lightly and with a laugh. Ballantyne replied without irony or amusement and with his eyes fixed upon her face. Mrs. Repton could not account for the panic which seized hold upon her. She had dined in Captain Ballantyne’s company before often enough; he had now been for three days in her house; she had recognised his ability and had neither particularly liked nor disliked him. Her main impression had been that he was not good enough for Stella, and it was an impression purely feminine and instinctive. Now suddenly he had imposed himself upon her as a creature dangerous, beastlike. She wanted to get out of the room but she dared not, for she was sure that her careful steps would, despite herself, change into a run. She sat down, meaning to read for a few moments, compose herself and then go. But no sooner had she taken her seat than her terror increased tenfold, for Ballantyne rose swiftly from his chair and walking in a circle round the room with an extraordinarily light and noiseless step disappeared behind her. Then he sat down. Mrs. Repton heard the slight grating of the legs of a chair upon the floor. It was a chair at a writing-table close by the window and exactly at her back. He could see every movement which she made, and she could see nothing, not so much as the tip of one of his fingers. And of his fingers she was now afraid. He was watching her from his point of vantage; she seemed to feel his eyes burning upon the nape of her neck. And he said nothing; and he did not stir. It was broad daylight, she assured herself. She had but to cross the room to the bell beside the fireplace. Nay, she had only to scream–and she was very near to screaming–to bring the servants to her rescue. But she dared not do it. Before she was half-way to the bell, before the cry was out of her mouth she would feel his fingers close about her throat.

* * * * *

Mrs. Repton had begun to tell her story with reluctance, dreading lest Thresk should attribute it to a woman’s nerves and laugh. But he did not. He listened gravely, seriously; and, as she continued, that nightmare of an evening so lived again in her recollections that she could not but make it vivid in her words.

“I had more than a mere sense of danger,” she said. “I felt besides a sort of hideous discomfort, almost physical discomfort, which made me believe that there was something evil in that room beyond the power of language to describe.”

She felt her self-control leaving her. If she stayed she must betray her alarm. Even now she had swallowed again and again, and she wondered that he had not detected the working of her throat. She summoned what was left of her courage and tossing her book aside rose slowly and deliberately.

“I think I shall copy Stella’s example and lie down for an hour,” she said without turning her head towards Ballantyne, and even while she spoke she knew that she had made a mistake in mentioning Stella. He would follow her to discover whether she went to Stella’s room and told what she had seen to her. But he did not move. She reached the door, turned the handle, went out and closed the door behind her.

For a moment then her strength failed her; she leaned against the wall by the side of the door, her heart racing. But the fear that he would follow urged her on. She crossed the hall and stopped deliberately before a cabinet of china at the foot of the stairs, which stood against the wall in which the library door was placed. While she stood there she saw the door open very slowly and Ballantyne’s livid face appear at the opening. She turned towards the stairs and mounted them without looking back. Halfway up a turn hid the hall from her, and the moment after she had passed the turn she heard him crossing the hall after her, again with a lightness of step which seemed to be uncanny and inhuman in so heavy and gross a creature.

“I was appalled,” she said to Thresk frankly. “He had the step of an animal. I felt that some great baboon was tracking me stealthily.”

Mrs. Repton came to Stella Ballantyne’s door and was careful not to stop. She reached her own room, and once in shot the bolt; and in a moment or two she heard him breathing just outside the panels.

“And to think that Stella is alone with him in the jungle months at a time!” she cried, actually wringing her hands. “That thought was in my mind all the time–a horror of a thought. Oh, I could understand now the loss of her spirits, her colour, her youth.”

Pictures of lonely camps and empty rest-houses, far removed from any habitation in the silence of Indian nights, rose before her eyes. She imagined Stella propped up on her elbow in bed, wide-eyed with terror, listening and listening to the light footsteps of the drunken brute beyond the partition-wall, shivering when they approached, dropping back with the dew of her sweat upon her forehead when they retired; and these pictures she translated in words for Thresk in her house on the Khamballa Hill.

Thresk was moved and showed that he was moved. He rose and walked to the window, turning his back to her.

“Why did she marry him?” he exclaimed. “She was poor, but she had a little money. Why did she marry him?” and he turned back to Mrs. Repton for an answer.

She gave him one quick look and said:

“That is one of the things she has never told me and I didn’t meet her until after she had married him.”

“And why doesn’t she leave him?”

Mrs. Repton held up her hands.

“Oh, the easy questions, Mr. Thresk! How many women endure the thing that is because it is? Even to leave your husband you want a trifle of spirit. And what if your spirit’s broken? What if you are cowed? What if you live in terror day and night?”

“Yes. I am a fool,” said Thresk, and he sat down again. “There are two more questions I want to ask. Did you ever talk to Stella”–the Christian name slipped naturally from him and only Jane Repton of the two remarked that he had used it–“of that incident in the library at Agra?”

“Yes.”

“And did she in consequence of what you told her give you any account of her life with her husband?”

Mrs. Repton hesitated not because she was any longer in doubt as to whether she would speak the whole truth or not–she had committed herself already too far–but because the form of the question nettled her. It was a little too forensic for her taste. She was anxious to know the man; she could dispense with the barrister altogether.

“Yes, she did,” she replied, “and don’t cross-examine me, please.”

“I beg your pardon,” said Thresk with a laugh which made him human on the instant.

“Well, it’s true,” said Jane Repton in a rush. “She told me the truth–what you know and more. He stripped when he was drunk, stripped to the skin. Think of it! Stella told me that and broke down. Oh, if you had seen her! For Stella to give way–that alone must alarm her friends. Oh, but the look of her! She sat by my side on the sofa, wringing her hands, with the tears pouring down her face …” Thresk rose quickly from his chair.

“Thank you,” he said, cutting her short. He wanted to hear no more. He held out his hand to her with a certain abruptness.

Mrs. Repton rose too.

“What are you going to do?” she asked breathlessly. “I must know I have a right to, I think. I have told you so much. I was in great doubt whether I should tell you anything. But–” Her voice broke and she ended her plea lamely enough: “I am very fond of Stella.”

“I know that,” said Thresk, and his voice was grateful and his face most friendly.

“Well, what are you going to do?”

“I am going to write to her to ask her to join me in Bombay,” he replied.

CHAPTER X

NEWS FROM CHITIPUR

A long silence followed upon his words. Jane Repton turned to the mantelshelf and moved an ornament here and another one there. She had contemplated this very consequence of Thresk’s journey to Chitipur. She had actually worked for it herself. She was frank enough to acknowledge that. None the less his announcement, quietly as he had made it, was a shock to her. She did not, however, go back upon her work; and when she spoke it was rather to make sure that he was not going to act upon an unconsidered impulse.

“It will damage your career,” she said. “Of course you have thought of that.”

“It will alter it,” he answered, “if she comes to me. I shall go out of Parliament, of course.”

“And your practice?”

“That will suffer too for a while no doubt. But even if I lost it altogether I should not be a poor man.”

“You have saved money?”

“No. There has not been much time for that, but for a good many years now I have collected silver and miniatures. I know something about them and the collection is of value.”

“I see.”

Mrs. Repton looked at him now. Oh, yes, he had thought his proposal out during the night journey to Bombay–not a doubt of it.

“Stella, too, will suffer,” she said.

“Worse than she does now?” asked Thresk.

“No. But her position will be difficult for awhile at least,” and she came towards Thresk and pleaded.

“You will be thoughtful of her, for her? Oh, if you should play her false–how I should hate you!” and her eyes flashed fire at him.

“I don’t think that you need fear that.”

But he was too calm for her, too quiet. She was in the mood to want heroics. She clamoured for protestations as a drug for her uneasy mind. And Thresk stood before her without one. She searched his face with doubtful eyes. Oh, there seemed to her no tenderness in it.

“She will need–love,” said Mrs. Repton. “There–that’s the word. Can you give it her?”

“If she comes to me–yes. I have wanted her for eight years,” and then suddenly she got, not heroics, but a glimpse of a real passion. A spasm of pain convulsed his face. He sat down and beat with his fist upon the table. “It was horrible to me to ride away from that camp and leave her there–miles away from any friend. I would have torn her from him by force if there had been a single hope that way. But his levies would have barred the road. No, this was the only chance: to come away to Bombay, to write to her that the first day, the first night she is able to slip out and travel here she will find me waiting.”

Mrs. Repton was satisfied. But while he had been speaking a new fear had entered into her.

“There’s something I should have thought of,” she exclaimed.

“Yes?”

“Captain Ballantyne is not generous. He is just the sort of man not to divorce his wife.”

Thresk raised his head. Clearly that possibility had no more occurred to him than it had to Jane Repton. He thought it over now.

“Just the sort of man,” he agreed. “But we must take that risk–if she comes.”

“The letter’s not yet written,” Mrs. Repton suggested.

“But it will be,” he replied, and then he stood and confronted her. “Do you wish me not to write it?”

She avoided his eyes, she looked upon the floor, she began more than one sentence of evasion; but in the end she took both his hands in hers and said stoutly:

“No, I don’t! Write! Write!”

“Thank you!”

He went to the door, and when he had reached it she called to him in a low voice.

“Mr. Thresk, what did you mean when you repeated and repeated if she comes?”

Thresk came slowly back into the room.

“I meant that eight years ago I gave her a very good reason why she should put no faith in me.”

He told her that quite frankly and simply, but he told her no more than that, and she let him go. He went back to the great hotel on the Apollo Bund and sent off a number of cablegrams to London saying that he had missed his steamer and that the work waiting for him must go to other hands. The letter to Stella Ballantyne he kept to the last. It could not reach her immediately in any case since she was in camp. For all he knew it might be weeks before she read it; and he had need to go warily in the writing of it. Certain words she had used to him were an encouragement; but there were others which made him doubt whether she would have any faith in him. Every now and then there had been a savour of bitterness. Once she had been shamed because of him, on Bignor Hill where Stane Street runs to Chichester, and a second time in front of him in the tent at Chitipur. No, it was not an easy letter which he had to write, and he took the night and the greater part of the next day to decide upon its wording. It could not in any case go until the night-mail. He had finished it and directed it by six o’clock in the evening and he went down with the letter in his hand into the big lounge to post it in the box there. But it never was posted.

Close to the foot of the staircase stood a tape machine, and as Thresk descended he heard the clicking of the instrument and saw the usual small group of visitors about it. They were mostly Americans, and they were reading out to one another the latest prices of the stock-markets. Some of the chatter reached to Thresk’s inattentive ears, and when he was only two steps from the floor one carelessly-spoken phrase interjected between the values of two securities brought him to a stop. The speaker was a young man with a squarish face and thick hair parted accurately in the middle. He was dressed in a thin grey suit and he was passing the tape between his fingers as it ran out. The picture of him was impressed during that instant upon Thresk’s mind, so that he could never afterwards forget it.

“Copper’s up one point,” he was saying, “that’s fine. Who’s Captain Ballantyne, I wonder? United Steel has dropped seven-eighths. Well, that doesn’t affect me,” and so he ran on.

Thresk heard no more of what he said. He stood wondering what news could have come up on the tape of Captain Ballantyne who was out in camp in the state of Chitipur, or if there was another Captain Ballantyne. He joined the little group in front of the machine, and picking up the ribbon from the floor ran his eyes backwards along it until he came to “United Steel.” The sentence in front of that ran as follows:

“Captain Ballantyne was found dead early yesterday morning outside his tent close to Jarwhal Junction.”

Thresk read the sentence twice and then walked away. The news might be false, of course, but if it were true here was a revolution in his life. There was no need for this letter which he held in his hand. The way was smoothed out for Stella, for him. Not for a moment could he pretend to do anything but welcome the news, to wish with all his heart that it was true. And it seemed probable news. There was the matter of that photograph. Thresk had carried it out to the Governor’s house on Malabar Point on the very morning of his arrival in Bombay. He had driven on to Mrs. Repton’s house after he had left it there. But he had taken it away from Chitipur at too late a day to save Ballantyne. Ballantyne had, after all, had good cause to be afraid while he possessed it, and the news had not yet got to Salak’s friends that it had left his possession. Thus he made out the history of Captain Ballantyne’s death.

The tape machine, however, might have ticked out a mere rumour with no truth in it at all. He went to the office and obtained a copy of _The Advocate of India_,–the evening newspaper of the city. He looked at the stop-press telegrams. There was no mention of Ballantyne’s death. Nor on glancing down the columns could he find in any paragraph a statement that any mishap had befallen him. But on the other hand he read that he himself, Henry Thresk, having brought his case to a successful conclusion, had left India yesterday by the mail-steamer Madras, bound for Marseilles. He threw down the paper and went to the telephone-box. If the news were true the one person likely to know of it was Mrs. Repton. Thresk rang up the house on the Khamballa Hill and asked to speak to her. An answer was returned to him at once that Mrs. Repton had given orders that she was not to be disturbed. Thresk however insisted:

“Will you please give my name to her–Henry Thresk,” and he waited with his ear to the receiver for a century. At last a voice spoke to him, but it was again the voice of the servant.

“The Memsahib very sorry, sir, but cannot speak to any one just now;” and he heard the jar of the instrument as the receiver at the other end was sharply hung up and the connection broken.

Thresk came out from the telephone-box with a face puzzled and very grave. Mrs. Repton refused to speak to him!

It was a fact, an inexplicable fact, and it alarmed him. It was impossible to believe that mere reflection during the last twenty-four hours had brought about so complete a revolution in her feelings. He to whom she had passionately cried “Write! Write!” only yesterday could hardly be barred out from mere speech with her to-day for any fault of his. He had done nothing, had seen no one. Thresk was certain now that the news upon the tape was true. But it could not be all the truth. There was something behind it–something rather grim and terrible.

Thresk walked to the door of the hotel and called up a motor-car. “Tell him to drive to the Khamballa Hill,” he said to the porter. “I’ll let him know when to stop.”

The porter translated the order and Thresk stopped him at Mrs. Repton’s door.

“The Memsahib does not receive any one to-day,” said the butler.

“I know,” replied Thresk. He scribbled on a card and sent it in. There was a long delay. Thresk stood in the hall looking out through the open door. Night had come. There were lights upon the roadway, lights a long way below at the water’s edge on Breach Candy, and there was a light twinkling far out on the Arabian Sea. But in the house behind him all was dark. He had come to an abode of desolation and mourning; and his heart sank and he was attacked with forebodings. At last in the passage behind him there was a shuffling of feet and a gleam of white. The Memsahib would receive him.

Thresk was shown into the drawing-room. That room too was unlit. But the blinds had not been lowered and light from a street lamp outside turned the darkness into twilight. No one came forward to greet him, but the room was not empty. He saw Repton and his wife huddled close together on a sofa in a recess by the fireplace.

“I thought that I had better come up from Bombay,” said Thresk, as he stood in the middle of the room. No answer was returned to him for a few moments and then it was Repton himself who spoke.

“Yes, yes,” he said, and he got up from the sofa. “I think we had better have some light,” he added in a strange indifferent voice. He turned the light on in the central chandelier, leaving the corners of the room in shadow, like–the parallel forced its way into Thresk’s mind–like the tent in Chitipur. Then very methodically he pulled down the blinds. He did not look at Thresk and Jane Repton on the couch never stirred. Thresk’s forebodings became a dreadful certainty. Some evil thing had happened. He might have been in a house of death. He knew that he was not wanted there, that husband and wife wished to be alone and silently resented his presence. But he could not go without more knowledge than he had.

“A message came up on the tape half an hour ago,” he said in a low voice. “It reported that Ballantyne was dead.”

“Yes,” replied Repton. He was leaning forward over a table and looking up to the chandelier as if he fancied that its light burnt more dimly than was usual.

“That’s true,” and he spoke in the same strange mechanical voice he had used before.

“That he was found dead outside his tent,” Thresk added.

“It’s quite true,” Repton agreed. “We are very sorry.”

“Sorry!”

The exclamation burst from Thresk’s lips.

“Yes.”

Repton moved away from the chandelier. He had not looked at Thresk once since he had entered the room; nor did he look towards his wife. His face was very pale and he was busy now setting a chair in place, moving a photograph, doing any one of the little unnecessary things people restlessly do when there is an importunate visitor in the room who will not go.

“You see, there’s terribly bad news,” he added.

“What news?”

“He was shot, you know. That wasn’t in the telegram on the tape, of course. Yes, he was shot–on the same night you dined there–after you had gone.”

“Shot!”

Thresk’s voice dropped to a whisper.

“Yes,” and the dull quiet voice went on, speaking apparently of some trivial affair in which none of them could have any interest. “He was shot by a bullet from a little rook-rifle which belonged to Stella, and which she was in the habit of using.”

Thresk’s heart stood still. A picture flashed before his eyes. He saw the inside of that dimly lit tent with its red lining and Stella standing by the table. He could hear her voice: “This is my little rook-rifle. I was seeing that it was clean for to-morrow.” She had spoken so carelessly, so indifferently that it wasn’t conceivable that what was in all their minds could be true. Yet she had spoken, after all, no more indifferently than Repton was speaking now; and he was in a great stress of grief. Then Thresk’s mind leaped to the weak point in all this chain of presumption.

“But Ballantyne was found outside the tent,” he cried with a little note of triumph. But it had no echo in Repton’s reply.

“I know. That makes everything so much worse.”

“What do you mean?”

“Ballantyne was found in the morning outside the tent stone-cold. But no one had heard the shot, and there were sentries on the edge of the encampment. He had been dragged outside after he was dead or when he was dying.”

A low cry broke from Thresk. The weak point became of a sudden the most deadly, the most terrible element in the whole case. He could hear the prosecuting counsel making play with it. He stood for a moment lost in horror. Repton had no further word to say to him. Mrs. Repton had never once spoken. They wanted him away, out of the room, out of the house. Some insight let him into the meaning of her silence. In the presence of this tragedy remorse had gripped her. She was looking upon herself as one who had plotted harm for Stella. She would never forgive Thresk for his share in the plot.

Thresk went out of the room without a word more to either Repton or his wife. Whatever he did now he must do by himself. He would not be admitted into that house again. He closed the door of the room behind him, and hardly had he closed it when he heard the snap of a switch and the line of light under the door vanished. Once more there was darkness in the drawing-room. Repton no doubt had returned to his wife’s side and they were huddled again side by side on the sofa. Thresk walked down the hill with a horrible feeling of isolation and loneliness. But he shook it off as he neared the lights of Bombay.

CHAPTER XI

THRESK INTERVENES

Thresk reached his hotel with some words ringing in his head which Jane Repton had spoken to him at Mrs. Carruthers’ dinner-party:

“You can get any single thing in life you want if you want it enough, but you cannot control the price you will have to pay for it. That you will only learn afterwards and gradually.”

He had got what he had wanted–the career of distinction, and he wondered whether he was to begin now to learn its price.

He mounted to his sitting-room on the second floor, avoiding the lounge and the lift and using a small side staircase instead of the great central one. He had passed no one on the way. In his room he looked upon the mantelshelf and on the table. No visitor had called on him that day; no letter awaited him. For the first time since he had landed in India a day had passed without some resident leaving on him a card or a note of invitation. The newspapers gave him the reason. He was supposed to have left on the _Madras_ for England. To make sure he rang for his waiter; no message of any kind had come.

“Shall I ask at the office?” the waiter asked.

“By no means,” answered Thresk, and he added: “I will have dinner served up here to-night.”

There was just a possibility, he thought, that he might after all escape this particular payment. He took from his pocket his unposted letter to Stella Ballantyne. There was no longer any use for it and even its existence was now dangerous to Stella. For let it be discovered, however she might plead that she knew nothing of its contents, a motive for the death of Ballantyne might be inferred from it. It would be a false motive, but just the sort of motive which the man in the street would immediately accept. Thresk burnt the letter carefully in a plate and pounded up each black flake of paper until nothing was left but ashes. Then for the moment his work was done. He had only to wait and he did not wait long. On the very next morning his newspaper informed him that Inspector Coulson of the Bombay Police had left for Chitipur.

The Inspector was a young man devoted to his work, but he travelled now upon a duty which he would gladly have handed to any other of his colleagues. He had met Stella Ballantyne in Bombay upon one of her rare visits to Jane Repton. He had sat at the same dinner-table with her, and he did not find it pleasant to reflect on the tragic destiny which she must now fulfil. For the facts were fatal.

At daybreak on the morning of the Friday a sentry on the outer edge of the camp at Jarwhal Junction had noticed something black lying upon the ground in the open just outside the door of the Agent’s big marquee. He ran across the ground and discovered Captain Ballantyne sprawling, face downwards, in the smoking-suit which he had worn at dinner the night before. The sentry shook him gently by the shoulder, but the limpness of the body frightened him. Then he noticed that there was blood upon the ground, and calling loudly for help he ran to the guard-room tent. He returned with others of the native levies and they lifted Ballantyne up. He was dead and the body was cold. The levies carried him into the tent and opened his shirt. He had been shot through the heart. They then roused Mrs. Ballantyne’s ayah and bade her wake her mistress. The ayah went into Mrs. Ballantyne’s room and found her mistress sound asleep. She waked her up and told her what had happened. Stella Ballantyne said not a word. She got out of bed, and flinging on some clothes went into the outer tent, where the servants were standing about the body. Stella Ballantyne went quite close to it and looked down upon the dead man’s face for a long time. She was pale, but there was no shrinking in her attitude–no apprehension in her eyes.

“He has been killed,” she said at length; “telegrams must be sent at once: to Ajmere for a doctor, to Bombay, and to His Highness the Maharajah.”

Baram Singh salaamed.

“It is as your Excellency wills,” he said.

“I will write them,” said Stella quietly. And she sat down at her own writing-table there and then.

The doctor from Ajmere arrived during the day, made an examination and telegraphed a report to the Chief Commissioner at Ajmere. That report contained the three significant points which Repton had enumerated to Thresk, but with some still more significant details. The bullet which pierced Captain Ballantyne’s heart had been fired from Mrs. Ballantyne’s small rook-rifle, and the exploded cartridge was still in the breech. The rifle was standing up against Mrs. Ballantyne’s writing-table in a corner of the tent, when the doctor from Ajmere discovered it. In the second place, although Ballantyne was found in the open, there was a patch of blood upon the carpet within the tent and a trail of blood from that spot to the door. There could be no doubt that Ballantyne was killed inside. There was the third point to establish that theory. Neither the sentry on guard nor any one of the servants sleeping in the adjacent tents had heard the crack of the rifle. It would not be loud in any case, but if the weapon had been fired in the open it would have been sufficiently sharp and clear to attract the attention of the men on guard. The heavy double lining of the tent however was thick enough so to muffle and deaden the sound that it would pass unnoticed.

The report was considered at Ajmere and forwarded. It now brought Inspector Coluson of the Police up the railway from Bombay. He found Mrs. Ballantyne waiting for him at the Residency of Chitipur.

“I must tell you who I am,” he said awkwardly.

“There is no need to,” she answered, “I know.”

He then cautioned her in the usual way, and producing his pocket-book asked her whether she wished to throw any light upon her husband’s death.

“No,” she said. “I have nothing to say. I was asleep and in bed when my ayah came into my room with the news of his death.”

“Yes,” said the Inspector uncomfortably. That detail, next to the dragging of the body out of the tent, seemed to him the grimmest part of the whole tragedy.

He shut up his book.

“I am afraid it is all very unsatisfactory,” he said. “I think we must go back to Bombay.”

“It is as your Excellency wills,” said Stella in Hindustani, and the Inspector was startled by the bad taste of the joke. He had not the knowledge of her life with Ballantyne, which alone would have given him the key to understand her. But he was not a fool, and a second glance at her showed to him that she was not speaking in joke at all. He had an impression that she was so tired that she did not at the moment care what happened to her at all. The fatigue would wear off, no doubt, when she realised that she must fight for her life, but now she stood in front of him indifferent and docile–much as one of the native levies was wont to stand before her husband. The words which the levies used and the language in which they spoke them rose naturally to her lips, as the only words and language suitable to the occasion.

“You see, Mrs. Ballantyne,” he said gently, “there is no reason to suspect a single one of your servants or of your escort.”

“And there is reason to suspect me,” she added, looking at him quietly and steadily.

The Inspector for his part looked away. He was a young man–no more than a year or two older than Stella Ballantyne herself. They both came from the same kind of stock. Her people and his people might have been friends in some pleasant country village in one of the English counties. She was pretty, too, disconcertingly pretty, in spite of the dark circles under her eyes and the pallor of her face. There was a delicacy in her looks and in her dress which appealed to him for tenderness. The appeal was all the stronger because it was only in that way and unconsciously that she appealed. In her voice, in her bearing, in her eyes there was no request, no prayer.

“I have been to the Palace,” he said, “I have had an audience with the Maharajah.”

“Of course,” she answered. “I shall put no difficulties in your way.”

He was standing in her own drawing-room, noticing with what skill comfort had been combined with daintiness, and how she had followed the usual instinct of her kind in trying to create here in this room a piece of England. Through the window he looked out upon a lawn which was being watered by a garden-sprinkler, and where a gardener was at work attending to a bed of bright flowers. There, too, she had been making the usual pathetic attempt to convert a half-acre of this country of yellow desert into a green garden of England. Coulson had not a shadow of doubt in his mind Stella Ballantyne would exchange this room with its restful colours and its outlook on a green lawn for–at the best–many years of solitary imprisonment in Poona Gaol. He shut up his book with a snap.

“Will you be ready to go in an hour?” he asked roughly.

“Yes,” said she.

“If I leave you unwatched during that hour you will promise to me that you will be ready to go in an hour?”

Stella Ballantyne nodded her head.

“I shall not kill myself now,” she said, and he looked at her quickly, but she did not trouble to explain her words. She merely added: “I may take some clothes, I suppose?”

“Whatever you need,” said the Inspector. And he took her down to Bombay.

She was formally charged next morning before the stipendiary for the murder of her husband and remanded for a week.

She was remanded at eleven o’clock in the morning, and five minutes later the news was ticked off on the tape at the Taj Mahal Hotel. Within another five minutes the news was brought upstairs to Thresk. He had been fortunate. He was in a huge hotel, where people flit through its rooms for a day and are gone the next, and no one is concerned with the doings of his neighbour, a place of arrival and departure like the platform of a great railway station. There was no place in all Bombay where Thresk could so easily pass unnoticed. And he had passed unnoticed. A single inquiry at the office, it is true, would have revealed his presence, but no one had inquired, since by this time he should be nearing Aden. He had kept to his rooms during the day and had only taken the air after it was dark. This was in the early stages of wireless telegraphy, and the _Madras_ had no installation. It might be that inquiries would be made for him at Aden. He could only wait with Jane Repton’s words ringing in his ears: “You cannot control the price you will have to pay.”

Stella Ballantyne was brought up again in a week’s time and the case then proceeded from day to day. The character of Ballantyne was revealed, his brutalities, his cunning. Detail by detail he was built up into a gross sinister figure secret and violent which lived again in that crowded court and turned the eyes of the spectators with a shiver of discomfort upon the young and quiet woman in the dock. And in that character the prosecution found the motive of the crime. Sympathy at times ran high for Stella Ballantyne, but there were always the two grim details to keep it in check: she had been found asleep by her ayah, quietly restfully asleep within a few hours of Ballantyne’s death; and she had, according to the theory of the Crown, found in some violence of passion the strength to drag the dying man from the tent and to leave him to gasp out his life under the stars.

Thresk watched the case from his rooms at the Taj Mahal Hotel. Every fact which was calculated to arouse sympathy for her was also helping to condemn her. No one doubted that she had shot Stephen Ballantyne. He deserved shooting–very well. But that did not give her the right to be his executioner. What was her defence to be? A sudden intolerable provocation? How would that square with the dragging of his body across the carpet to the door? There was the fatal insuperable act.

Thresk read again and again the reports of the proceedings for a hint as to the line of the defence. He got it the day when Repton appeared in the witness-box on a subpoena from the Crown to bear testimony to the violence of Stephen Ballantyne. He had seen Stella with her wrist bruised so that in public she could not remove her gloves.

“What kind of bruises?” asked the counsel.

“Such bruises as might be made by some one twisting her arms,” he answered, and then Mr. Travers, a young barrister who was enjoying his first leap into the public eye, rose to cross-examine.

Thresk read through that cross-examination and rose to his feet. “You cannot control the price you will have to pay,” he said to himself. That day, when Mrs. Ballantyne’s solicitor returned to his office after the rising of the Court, he found Thresk waiting for him.

“I wish to give evidence for Mrs. Ballantyne,” said Thresk–“evidence which will acquit her.”

He spoke with so much certainty that the solicitor was fairly startled.

“And with evidence so positive in your possession it is only this afternoon that you come here with it! Why?”

Thresk was prepared for the question.

“I have a great deal of work waiting for me in London,” he returned. “I hoped that it might not be necessary for me to appear at all. Now I see that it is.”

The solicitor looked straight at Thresk.

“I knew from Mrs. Repton that you dined with the Ballantynes that night, but she was sure that you knew nothing of the affair. You had left the tent before it happened.”

“That is true,” answered Thresk.

“Yet you have evidence which will acquit Mrs. Ballantyne?”

“I think so.”

“How is it, then,” the lawyer asked, “that we have heard nothing of this evidence at all from Mrs. Ballantyne herself?”

“Because she knows nothing of it,” replied Thresk.

The lawyer pointed to a chair. The two men sat down together in the office and it was long before they parted.

Within an hour of Thresk’s return from the solicitor’s office an Inspector of Police waited on him at his hotel and was instantly shown up.

“We did not know until to-day,” he said, “that you were still in Bombay, Mr. Thresk. We believed you to be on the Madras, which reached Marseilles early this morning.”

“I missed it,” replied Thresk. “Had you wanted me you could have inquired at Port Said five days ago.”

“Five days ago we had no information.”

The native servants of Ballantyne had from the first shrouded themselves in ignorance. They would answer what questions were put to them; they would not go one inch beyond. The crime was an affair of the Sahibs and the less they had to do with it the better, until at all events they were sure which way the wind was setting from Government House. Of their own initiative they knew nothing. It was thus only by the discovery of Thresk’s letter to Captain Ballantyne, which was found crumpled up in a waste-paper basket, that his presence that night in the tent was suspected.

“It is strange,” the Inspector grumbled, “that you did not come to us of your own accord when you had missed your boat and tell us what you knew.”

“I don’t think it is strange at all,” answered Thresk, “for I am a witness for the defence. I shall give my evidence when the case for the defence opens.”

The Inspector was disconcerted and went away. Thresk’s policy had so far succeeded. But he had taken a great risk and now that it was past he realised with an intense relief how serious the risk had been. If the Inspector had called upon him before he had made known his presence to Mrs. Ballantyne’s solicitor and offered his evidence, his position would have been difficult. He would have had to discover some other good reason why he had lain quietly at his hotel during these last days. But fortune had favoured him. He had to thank, above all, the secrecy of the native servants.

CHAPTER XII

THRESK GIVES EVIDENCE

Thresk’s fears were justified. Sympathy for Stella Ballantyne had already begun to wane. The fact that Ballantyne had been found outside the door of the tent was already assuming a sinister importance. Mrs. Ballantyne’s counsel slid discreetly over that awkward incident. Very fortunately, as it was now to prove, he did not cross-examine the doctor from Ajmere at all. But there are always the few who oppose the general opinion–the men and women who are in the minority because it is the minority; those whom the hysterical glorification made of Stella Ballantyne had offended; the austere, the pedantic, the just, the jealous, all were quick to seize upon this disconcerting fact: Stella Ballantyne had dragged her dying husband from the tent. It was either sheer callousness or blind fury–you might take your choice. In either case it dulled the glow of martyrdom which for a week or two had been so radiant upon Stella Ballantyne’s forehead; and the few who argued thus attracted adherents daily. And with the sympathy for Stella Ballantyne interest in the case began to wane too.

The magisterial inquiry threatened to become tedious. The pictures of the witnesses and the principals occupied less and less space in the newspapers. In another week the case would be coldly left with a shrug of the shoulders to the Law Courts. But unexpectedly curiosity was stirred again, for the day after Thresk had called upon the lawyer, when the case for the Crown was at an end, Mrs. Ballantyne’s counsel, Mr. Travers, asked permission to recall Baram Singh. Permission was granted, and Baram Singh once more took his place in the witness-box.

Mr. Travers leant against the desk behind him and put his questions with the most significant slowness.

“I wish to ask you, Baram Singh,” he said, “about the dinner-table on the Thursday night. You laid it?”

“Yes,” replied Baram Singh.

“For how many?”

“For three.”

There was a movement through the whole court.

“Yes,” said Mr. Travers, “Captain Ballantyne had a visitor that night.”

Baram Singh agreed.

“Look round the court and tell the magistrate if you can see here the man who dined with Captain Ballantyne and his wife that night.”

For a moment the court was filled with the noise of murmuring. The usher cried “Silence!” and the murmuring ceased. A hush of expectation filled that crowded room as Baram Singh’s eyes travelled slowly round the walls. He dropped them to the well of the court, and even his unexpressive face flashed with a look of recognition.

“There,” he cried, “there!” and he pointed to a man who was sitting just underneath the counsel’s bench.

Mr. Travers leant forward and in a quiet but particularly clear voice said:

“Will you kindly stand up, Mr. Thresk?”

Thresk stood up. To many of those present–the idlers, the people of fashion, the seekers after a thrill of excitement who fill the public galleries and law-courts–his long conduct of the great Carruthers trial had made him a familiar figure. To the others his name, at all events, was known, and as he stood up on the floor of the court a swift and regular movement like a ripple of water passed through the throng. They leant forward to get a clearer view of him and for a moment there was a hiss of excited whispering.

“That is the man who dined with Captain and Mrs. Ballantyne on the night when Captain Ballantyne was killed?” said Mr. Travers.

“Yes,” replied Baram Singh.

No one understood what was coming. People began to ask themselves whether Thresk was concerned in the murder. Word had been published that he had already left for England. How was it he was here now? Mr. Travers, for his part, was enjoying to the full the suspense which his question had aroused. Not by any intonation did he allow a hint to escape him whether he looked upon Thresk as an enemy or friend.

“You may sit down, sir, now,” he said, and Thresk resumed his seat.

“Will you tell us what you know of Mr. Thresk’s visit to the Captain?” Travers resumed, and Baram Singh told how a camel had been sent to the dak-house by the station of Jarwhal Junction.

“Yes,” said Mr. Travers, “and he dined in the tent. How long did he stay?”

“He left the camp at eleven o’clock on the camel to catch the night train to Bombay. The Captain-sahib saw him off from the edge of the camp.”

“Ah,” said Mr. Travers, “Captain Ballantyne saw him off?”

“Yes–from the edge of the camp.”

“And then went back to the tent?”

“Yes.”

“Now I want to take you to another point. You waited at dinner?”

“Yes.”

“And towards the close of dinner Mrs. Ballantyne left the room?”

“Yes.”

“She did not come back again?”

“No.”

“No. The two men were then left alone?”

“Yes.”

“After dinner was the table cleared?”

“Yes,” said Baram Singh, “the Captain-sahib called to me to clear the table quickly.”

“Yes,” said Travers. “Now, will you tell me what the Captain-sahib was doing while you were clearing the table?”

Baram Singh reflected.

“First of all the Captain-sahib offered a box of cheroots to his visitor, and his visitor refused and took a pipe from his pocket. The Captain-sahib then lit a cheroot for himself and replaced the box on the top of the bureau.”

“And after that?” asked Travers.

“After that,” said Baram Singh, “he stooped down, unlocked the bottom drawer of his bureau and then turned sharply to me and told me to hurry and get out.”

“And that order you obeyed?”

“Yes.”

“Now, Baram Singh, did you enter the room again?”

Baram Singh explained that after he had gone out with the table-cloth he returned in a few moments with an ash-tray, which he placed beside the visitor-sahib.

“Yes,” said Travers. “Had Captain Ballantyne altered his position?”

Baram Singh then related that Captain Ballantyne was still sitting in his chair by the bureau, but that the drawer of the bureau was now open, and that on the ground close to Captain Ballantyne’s feet there was a red despatch-box.

“The Captain-sahib,” he continued, “turned to me with great anger, and drove me again out of the room.”

“Thank you,” said Mr. Travers, and he sat down.

The prosecuting counsel rose at once.

“Now, Baram Singh,” he said with severity, “why did you not mention when you were first put in the witness-box that this gentleman was present in the camp that night?”

“I was not asked.”

“No, that is quite true,” he continued, “you were not asked specifically, but you were asked to tell all that you knew.”

“I did not interfere,” replied Baram Singh. “I answered what questions were asked. Besides, when the sahib left the camp the Captain-sahib was alive.”

At this moment Mr. Travers leaned across to the prosecuting counsel and said: “It will all be made clear when Mr. Thresk goes into the box.”

And once more, as Mr. Travers spoke these words, a rustle of expectancy ran round the court.

Travers opened the case for the defence on the following morning. He had been originally instructed, he declared, to reserve the defence for the actual trial before the jury, but upon his own urgent advice that plan was not to be followed. The case which he had to put before the stipendiary must so infallibly prove that Mrs. Ballantyne was free from all complicity in this crime that he felt he would not be doing his duty to her unless he made it public at the first opportunity. That unhappy lady had already, as every one who had paid even the most careless attention to the facts that had been presented by the prosecution must know, suffered so much distress and sorrow in the course of her married life that he felt it would not be fair to add to it the strain and suspense which even the most innocent must suffer when sent for trial upon such a serious charge. He at once proposed to call Mr. Thresk, and Thresk rose and went into the witness-box.

Thresk told the story of that dinner-party word for word as it had occurred, laying some emphasis on the terror which from time to time had taken possession of Stephen Ballantyne, down to the moment when Baram Singh had brought the ash-tray and left the two men together, Thresk sitting by the table in the middle of the room and Ballantyne at his bureau with the despatch-box on the floor at his feet.

“Then I noticed an extraordinary look of fear disfigure his face,” he continued, “and following the direction of his eyes I saw a lean brown arm with a thin hand as delicate as a woman’s wriggle forward from beneath the wall of the tent towards the despatch-box.”

“You saw that quite clearly?” asked Mr. Travers.

“The tent was not very brightly lit,” Thresk explained. “At the first glance I saw something moving. I was inclined to believe it a snake and to account in that way for Captain Ballantyne’s fear and the sudden rigidity of his attitude. But I looked again and I was then quite sure that it was an arm and hand.”

The evidence roused those present to such a tension of excitement and to so loud a burst of murmuring that it was quite a minute before order was restored and Thresk took up his tale again. He described Ballantyne’s search for the thief.

“And what were you doing,” Mr. Travers asked, “whilst the search was being made?”

“I stood by the table holding the despatch-box firmly in my hands as Ballantyne had urgently asked me to do.”

“Quite so,” said Mr. Travers; and the attention of the court was now directed to that despatch-box and the portrait of Bahadur Salak which it contained. The history of the photograph, its importance at this moment when Salak’s trial impended, and Ballantyne’s conviction of the extreme danger which its possessor ran–a conviction established by the bold attempt to steal it made under their very eyes–was laid before the stipendiary. He sent the case to trial as he was bound to do, but the verdict in most people’s eyes was a foregone conclusion. Thresk had supplied a story which accounted for the crime, and cross-examination could not shake him. It was easy to believe that at the very moment when Thresk was saying goodbye to Captain Ballantyne by the fire on the edge of the camp the thief slipped into the marquee, and when discovered by Ballantyne either on his return or later shot him with Mrs. Ballantyne’s rifle. It was clear that no conviction could be obtained while this story held the field and in due course Mrs. Ballantyne was acquitted. Of Thresk’s return to the tent just before leaving the camp nothing was said. Thresk himself did not mention it and the counsel for the Crown had no hint which could help him to elicit it.

Thus the case ended. The popular heroine of a criminal trial loses, as all observers will have noticed, her crown of romance the moment she is set free; and that good fortune awaited Stella Ballantyne. Thresk called the next day upon Jane Repton and was coldly told that Stella had already gone from Bombay. He betook himself to her solicitor, who was cordial but uncommunicative. The Reptons, it appeared, were responsible to him for the conduct of the case. He had not any knowledge of Stella Ballantyne’s destination, and he pointed to a stack of telegrams and letters as confirmation of his words.

“They will all go up to Khamballa Hill,” he said. “I have no other address.”

The next day, however, a little note of gratitude came to Thresk through the post. It was unsigned and without any address. But it was in Stella Ballantyne’s handwriting and the post-mark was Kurrachee. That she did not wish to see him he could quite understand; Kurrachee was a port from which ships sailed to many destinations; he could hardly set out in a blind search for her across the world. So here, it seemed, was that chapter closed. He took the next steamer westwards from Bombay, landed at Brindisi and went back to his work in the Law Courts and in Parliament.

CHAPTER XIII

LITTLE BEEDING AGAIN

But though she disappeared Stella Ballantyne was not in flight from men and women. She avoided them because they did not for the moment count in her thoughts, except as possible hindrances. She was not so much running away as running to the place of her desires. She yielded to an impulse with which they had nothing whatever to do, an impulse so overmastering that even to the Reptons her precipitancy wore a look of ingratitude. She drove home with Jane Repton as soon as she was released, to the house on Khamballa Hill, and while she was still in the carriage she said:

“I must go away to-morrow morning.”

She was sitting forward with a tense and eager look upon her face and her hands clenched tightly in her lap.

“There is no need for that. Make your home with us, Stella, for a little while and hold your head high.”

Jane Repton had talked over this proposal with her husband. Both of them recognised that the acceptance of it would entail on them some little sacrifice. Prejudice would be difficult. But they had thrust these considerations aside in the loyalty of their friendship and Jane Repton was a little hurt that Stella waved away their invitation without ceremony.

“I can’t. I can’t,” she said irritably. “Don’t try to stop me.”

Her nerves were quite on edge and she spoke with a greater violence than she knew. Jane Repton tried to persuade her.

“Wouldn’t it be wiser for you to face things here, even though it means some effort and pain?”

“I don’t know,” answered Stella, still in the quick peremptory tone of one who will not be argued with. “I don’t care either. I have nothing to do with wisdom just now. I don’t want people at all. I want–oh, how I want–” She stopped and then she added vaguely: “Something else,” and her voice trailed away into silence. She sat without a word, all tingling impatience, during the rest of that drive and continued so to sit after the carriage had stopped. When Jane Repton descended, and she woke up with a start and looked at the house, it was as though she brought her eyes down from heaven to earth. Once within the house she went straight up to Repton. He had left his wife behind with Stella at the Law Courts and had come home in advance of them. He had not spoken a word to Stella that day, and he had not the time now, for she began immediately in an eager voice and a look of fever in her eyes:

“You won’t try to stop me, will you? I must go away to-morrow.”

Repton used more tact now than his wife had done. He took the troubled and excited woman’s hand and answered her very gently:

“Of course, Stella. You shall go when you like.”

“Oh, thank you,” she cried, and was freed to remember the debt which she owed to these good friends of hers. “You must think me a brute, Jane! I haven’t said a word to you about all your kindness. But–oh, you’ll think me ridiculous, when you know”–and she began to laugh and to sob in one breath. Stella Ballantyne had remained so sunk in apathy through all that long trial that her friends were relieved at her outburst of tears. Jane Repton led her upstairs and put her to bed just as if she had been a child.

“There! You can get up for dinner if you like, Stella, or stay where you are. And if you’ll tell us what you want to do we’ll make the arrangements for you and not ask you a question.”

Jane Repton kissed her and left her alone; and it was while Stella was sleeping upstairs that Henry Thresk called at the house and was told that there was no news for him.

“No doubt she will write to you, Mr. Thresk, if she wishes you to know what she is doing. But I should not count upon it if I were you,” said Jane Repton, in a sweet voice and with eyes like pebbles. “She did not mention you, I am sorry to say, when the trial was over.”

She could not forgive him because of her own share in what she now called his “treachery” towards Stella. She had no more of the logician in her composition than Thresk had of the hero. He had committed under a great stress of emotion and sympathy what the whole experience and method of his life told him was one of the worst of crimes. And now that its object was achieved, and Stella Ballantyne free, he was in the mood to see only the harm which he had done to the majesty of the law; he was uneasy; he was not troubled by the thought that discovery would absolutely ruin him. That indeed did not enter into his thoughts. But he could not but make a picture of himself in the robe of a King’s Counsel, claiming sternly the anger of the Law against some other man who should have done just what he had done, no more and no less. And so when Mrs. Repton’s door was finally closed upon him, and no message was given to him from the woman he had saved, he was at once human and unheroic enough to visit a little of his resentment upon her. He had not spoken to her at all since the night at Chitipur; he had no knowledge of the stupor and the prostration into which, after her years of misery, she had fallen; he had no insight into the one compelling passion which now had her, body and soul, in its grip. He turned away from the door and went back to the Taj Mahal. A steamer would be starting for Port Said in two days and by that steamer he would travel. That Stella was in the house on the Khamballa Hill he did not doubt, but since she had no word or thought to spare for him he could not but turn his back and go.

Stella herself got up to dinner, and after it was over she told her friends of the longing which filled her soul.

“All through the trial,” she said shyly, with the shrinking of those who reveal a very secret fancy and are afraid that it will be ridiculed, “in the heat of the court, in the close captivity of my cell, I was conscious of just one real unconquerable passion–to feel the wind blowing against my face upon the Sussex Downs. Can you understand that? Just to see the broad green hills with the white chalk hollows in their sides and the forests marching down to the valleys like the Roman soldiers from Chichester–oh! I was mad for the look and the smell and the sounds of them! It was all that I thought about. I used to close my eyes in the dock and I was away in a second riding through Charlton Forest or over Farm Hill, or looking down to Slindon from Gumber Corner, and over its woods to the sea. And now that I am free”–she clasped her hands and her face grew radiant–“oh, I don’t want to see people.” She reached out a hand to each of her friends. “I don’t call you people, you know. But even you–you’ll understand and forgive and not be hurt–I don’t want to see for a little while.”

The beaten look of her took the sting of ingratitude out of her words. She stood between them, her delicate face worn thin, her eyes unnaturally big; she had the strange transparent beauty of people who have been lying for months in a mortal sickness. Jane Repton’s eyes filled with tears and her hand sought for her handkerchief.

“Let’s see what can be done,” said Repton. “There’s a mail-steamer of course, but you won’t want to travel by that.”

“No.”

Repton worked out the sailings from Bombay and the other ports on the western coast of India while Stella leaned over his shoulder.

“Look!” he said. “This is the best way. There’s a steamer going to Kurrachee to-morrow, and when you reach Kurrachee you’ll just have time to catch a German Lloyd boat which calls at Southampton. You won’t be home in thirteen days to be sure, but on the other hand you won’t be pestered by curious people.”

“Yes, yes,” cried Stella eagerly. “I can go to-morrow.”

“Very well.”

Repton looked at the clock. It was still no more than half-past ten. He saw with what a fever of impatience Stella was consumed.

“I believe I could lay my hand on the local manager of the line to-night and fix your journey up for you.”

“You could?” cried Stella. He might have been offering her a crown, so brightly her thanks shone in her eyes.

“I think so.”

He got up from the table and stood looking at her, and then away from her with his lips pursed in doubt.

“Yes?” said she.

“I was thinking. Will you travel under another name? I don’t suggest it really, only it might save you–annoyance.”

Repton’s hesitation was misplaced, for Stella Ballantyne’s pride was quite beaten to the ground.

“Yes,” she said at once. “I should wish to do that”; and both he and his wife understood from that ready answer more completely than they ever had before how near Stella had come to the big blank wall at the end of life. For seven years she had held her head high, never so much as whispering a reproach against her husband, keeping with a perpetual guard the secret of her misery. Pride had been her mainspring; now even that was broken. Repton went out of the house and returned at midnight.

“It’s all settled,” he said. “You will have a cabin on deck in both steamers. I gave your name in confidence to the manager here and he will take care that everything possible is done for you. There will be very few passengers on the German boat. The season is too early for either the tourists or the people on leave.”

Thus Stella Ballantyne crept away from Bombay and in five weeks’ time she landed at Southampton. There she resumed her name. She travelled into Sussex and stayed for a few nights at the inn whither Henry Thresk had come years before on his momentous holiday. She had a little money–the trifling income which her parents had left to her upon their death–and she began to look about for a house. By a piece of good fortune she discovered that the cottage in which she had lived at Little Beeding would be empty in a few months. She took it and before the summer was out she was once more established there. It was on an afternoon of August when Stella made her home in it again. She passed along the yellow lane driven deep between high banks of earth where the roots of great elm-trees cropped out. Every step was familiar to her. The lane with many twists under overarching branches ran down a steep hill and came out into the open by the big house with its pillared portico and its light grey stone and its wonderful garden of lawn and flowers and cedars. A tiny church with a narrow graveyard and strange carefully-trimmed square bushes of yew stood next to the house, and beyond the church the lane dipped to the river and the cottage.

Stella went from room to room. She had furnished the cottage simply and daintily; the walls were bright, her servant-girl had gathered flowers and set them about. Outside the window the sunlight shone on a green garden. She was alone. It was the home-coming she had wished for.

For three or four months she was left alone; and then one afternoon as she came into the cottage after a walk she found a little white card upon the table. It bore the name of Mr. Hazlewood.

CHAPTER XIV

THE HAZLEWOODS

In the quiet country town obvious changes had taken place during the eight years of Stella’s absence. They were not changes of importance, however, and one sentence can symbolize them all–there was now tarmac upon its roads. But in the cluster of houses a mile away at the end of the deep lane the case was different. Mr. Harold Hazlewood had come to Little Beeding. He now lived in the big house to which the village owed its name and indeed its existence. He lived–and spread consternation amongst the gentry for miles round.

“Lord, how I wish poor Arthur hadn’t died!” old John Chubble used to cry. He had hunted the West Sussex hounds for thirty years and the very name of Little Beeding turned his red face purple. “There was a man. But this fellow! And to think he’s got that beautiful house! Do you know there’s hardly a pheasant on the place. And I’ve hashed them down out of the sky in the old days there by the dozen. Well, he’s got a son in the Coldstream, Dick Hazlewood, who’s not so bad. But Harold! Oh, pass me the port!”

Harold indeed had inherited Little Beeding by an accident during the first summer after Stella had gone out to India. Arthur Hazlewood, the owner and Harold’s nephew, had been lost with his yacht in a gale of wind off the coast of Portugal. Arthur was a bachelor and thus Harold Hazlewood came quite unexpectedly into the position of a country squire when he was already well on in middle age. He was a widower and a man of a noticeable aspect. At the first glance you knew that he was not as other men; at the second you suspected that he took a pride in his dissimilarity. He was long, rather shambling in his gait, with a mild blue eye and fair thin hair now growing grey. But length was the chief impression left by his physical appearance. His legs, his arms, his face, even his hair, unless his son in the Coldstream happened to be at home at the time, were long.

“Is your father mad?” Mr. Chubble once asked of Dick Hazlewood. The two men had met in the broad street of Great Beeding at midday, and the elder one, bubbling with indignation, had planted himself in front of Dick.

“Mad?” Dick repeated reflectively. “No, I shouldn’t go as far as that. Oh no! What has he done now?”

“He has paid out of his own pocket the fines of all the people in Great Beeding who have just been convicted for not having their babies vaccinated.”

Dick Hazlewood stared in surprise at his companion’s indignant face.

“But of course he’d do that, Mr. Chubble,” he answered cheerfully. “He’s anti-everything–everything, I mean, which experience has established or prudence could suggest.”

“In addition he wants to sell the navy for old iron and abolish the army.”

“Yes,” said Dick, nodding his head amicably. “He’s like that. He thinks that without an army and a navy we should be less aggressive. I can’t deny it.”

“I should think not indeed,” cried Mr. Chubble. “Are you walking home?”

“Yes.”

“Let us walk together.” Mr. Chubble took Dick Hazlewood by the arm and as they went filled the lane with his plaints.

“I should think you can’t deny it. Why, he has actually written a pamphlet to enforce his views upon the subject.”

“You should bless your stars, Mr. Chubble, that there is only one. He suffers from pamphlets. He writes ’em and prints ’em and every member of Parliament gets one of ’em for nothing. Pamphlets do for him what the gout does for other old gentlemen–they carry off from his system a great number of disquieting ailments. He’s at prison reform now,” said Dick with a smile of thorough enjoyment. “Have you heard him on it?”

“No, and I don’t want to,” Mr. Chubble exploded.

He struck viciously at an overhanging bough, as though it was the head of Harold Hazlewood, and went on with the catalogue of crimes. “He made a speech last week in the town-hall,” and he jerked his thumb backwards towards the town they had left. “Intolerable I call it. He actually denounced his own countrymen as a race of oppressors.”

“He would,” answered Dick calmly. “What did I say to you a minute ago? He’s advanced, you know.”

“Advanced!” sneered Mr. Chubble, and then Dick Hazlewood stopped and contemplated his companion with a thoughtful eye.

“I really don’t think you understand my father, Mr. Chubble,” said Dick with a gentle remonstrance in his voice which Mr. Chubble was at a loss whether to take seriously or no.

“Can you give me the key to him?” he cried.

“I can.”

“Then out with it, my lad.”

Mr. Chubble disposed himself to listen but with so bristling an expression that it was clear no explanation could satisfy him. Dick, however, took no heed of that. He spoke slowly as one lecturing to an obtuse class of scholars.

“My father was born predestined to believe that all the people whom he knows are invariably wrong, and all the people he doesn’t know are invariably right. And when I feel inclined to deplore his abuse of his own country I console myself with the reflection that he would be the staunchest friend of England that England ever had–if only he had been born in Germany.”

Mr. Chubble grunted and turned the speech suspiciously over in his mind. Was Dick poking fun at him or at his father?

“That’s bookish,” he said.

“I am afraid it is,” Dick Hazlewood agreed humbly. “The fact is I am now an Instructor at the Staff College and much is expected of me.”

They had reached the gate of Little Beeding House. It was summer time. A yellow drive of gravel ran straight between long broad flower-beds to the door.

“Won’t you come in and see my father?” Dick asked innocently. “He’s at home.”

“No, my lad, no.” Mr. Chubble hastened to add: “I haven’t the time. But I am very glad to have met you. You are here for long?”

“No. Only just for luncheon,” said Dick, and he walked along the drive into the house. He was met in the hall by Hubbard the butler, an old colourless man of genteel movements which seemed slow and were astonishingly quick. He spoke in gentle purring tones and was the very butler for Mr. Harold Hazlewood.

“Your father has been asking for you, sir,” said Hubbard. “He seems a little anxious. He is in the big room.”

“Very well,” said Dick, and he crossed the hall and the drawing-room, wondering what new plan for the regeneration of the world was being hatched in his father’s sedulous brains. He had received a telegram at Camberley the day before urgently calling upon him to arrive at Little Beeding in time for luncheon. He went into the library as it was called, but in reality it was the room used by everybody except upon ceremonial occasions. It was a big room; half of it held a billiard table, the other half had writing-tables, lounges, comfortable chairs and a table for bridge. The carpet was laid over a parquet floor so that young people, when they stayed there, rolled it up and danced. There were windows upon two sides of the room. Here a row of them looked down the slope of the lawn to the cedar-trees and the river, the other, a great bay which opened to the ground, gave a view of a corner of the high churchyard wall and of a meadow and a thatched cottage beyond. In this bay Mr. Hazlewood was standing when Dick entered the room.

“I got your telegram, father, and here I am.”

Mr. Hazlewood turned back from the window with a smile upon his face.

“It is good of you, Richard. I wanted you to-day.”

A very genuine affection existed between these two, dissimilar as they were in physique and mind. Dick Hazlewood was at this time thirty-four years old, an officer of hard work and distinction, one of the younger men to whom the generals look to provide the brains in the next great war. He had the religion of his type. To keep physically fit for the hardest campaigning and mentally fit for the highest problems of modern strategy and to boast about neither the one qualification nor the other–these were the articles of his creed. In appearance he was a little younger than his years, lithe, long in the leg, with a thin brown face and grey eyes which twinkled with humour. Harold Hazlewood was intensely proud of him, though he professed to detest his profession. And no doubt he found at times that the mere healthful, well-groomed look of his son was irritatingly conventional. What was quite wholesome could never be quite right in the older man’s philosophy. To Dick, on the other hand, his father was an intense enjoyment. Here was a lovable innocent with the most delightful illusion that he understood the world. Dick would draw out his father by the hour, but, as he put it, he wouldn’t let the old boy down. He stopped his chaff before it could begin to hurt.

“Well, I am here,” he said. “What scrape have you got into now?”

“I am in no scrape, Richard. I don’t get into scrapes,” replied his father. He shifted from one foot to the other uneasily. “I was wondering, Richard–you have been away all this last year, haven’t you?–I was wondering whether you could give me any of your summer.”

Dick looked at his father. What in the world was the old boy up to now? he asked himself.

“Of course I can. I shall get my leave in a day or two. I thought of playing some polo here and there. There are a few matches arranged. Then no doubt–” He broke off. “But look here, sir! You didn’t send me an urgent telegram merely to ask me that.”

“No, Richard, no.” Everybody else called his son Dick, but Harold Hazlewood never. He was Richard. From Richard you might expect much, the awakening of a higher nature, a devotion to the regeneration of the world, humanitarianism, even the cult of all the “antis.” From Dick you could expect nothing but health and cleanliness and robustious conventionality. Therefore Richard Captain Hazlewood of the Coldstream and the Staff Corps remained. “No, there was something else.”

Mr. Hazlewood took his son by the arm and led him into the bay window. He pointed across the field to the thatched cottage.