THE END OF THE INSTRUCTIONS.
Paul Capel did not realise his position.“Is there some mistake, Mr Girtle?”
“Mistake?”
“There is nothing here!”
“Nothing there?”
“Nothing!See for yourself.”
The old man stepped in, searched,
and came out with drops of sweat upon his yellow forehead.
“Well?” exclaimed Capel,
excitedly, as the old man stared in a dazed way.
“It is gone!” said the
old lawyer, in a hoarse voice, and his hands trembling
violently.
“Well, Mr Girtle,” said
Capel, at last, in a voice that he vainly strove to
make firm; “what have you to say?”
“To say?” said the old lawyer, hastily.
“Oh, it is all a cock and bull
story,” cried Artis.“There never
was any treasure.”
“Silence, sir,” cried
the old lawyer recovering himself.“How
can you speak like that in the presence of the dead?”
“Bah!” cried Artis.“Presence of the dead, indeed!Presence
of a mummy.Would you have me pull a long face
as I went through the British Museum?”
“I would have you behave ”
“You look here,” cried
Artis, sharply.“You are executor, and
this treasure, if there was one, lay in your charge.It’s nothing to me.If it were, I should
call in the police.”
“Mr Capel,” cried the
old lawyer excitedly, “I swear to you, sir, that
the money and jewels were there a fortnight ago.I came down here with Ramo, and there lay the two
cases with their contents.”
“Well?” said Capel, “what then?”
“We carefully closed up the place.”
“Then somebody must have been down since, and
taken the treasure away.”
“Only two men could have done this, sir, Ramo
and myself.”
“That throws it on to you,” said Artis.
“And my reputation, sir, will bear me out when
I proclaim my innocence.”
“I don’t know,”
said Artis.“Sudden temptation; kleptomania
and that sort of thing.”
The old lawyer turned his back.
“Mr Gerard Artis, this is no
time for such remarks as these,” said Capel.“Mr Girtle, what have you to say?”
“At present, nothing, sir.I am astounded.You know we came down on that
dreadful morning, and found the chamber intact; besides
it could not have been forced.”
“There were the keys,” said Artis.
“But they have never left my
person.There were but the two sets of keys the
Colonel’s and mine.Those were the Colonel’s
set that we found upon Ramo.”
“Rather strange that the Colonel
should have given you a set,” said Artis.
“No more strange than that a
gentleman should trust a banker,” said Capel.
“What, going to side with the lawyer?”
Capel made no reply, only gazed searchingly at the
old executor.
“There may have been other keys, Mr Girtle.”
“Oh, no.The place was
made some years ago, for a sarcophagus, and the makers
never imagined that it would be used for a safe.”
There was a dead silence.
“Let us search again.The cases may have
slipped aside.”
“It is impossible,” said
the old lawyer; and as they two passed into the iron
chamber, Artis exchanged a glance with Katrine, while
the old butler stood looking dazed.
“You see,” said Mr Girtle,
holding down the light, “there is nowhere for
the cases to have slipped; all is of plain, solid steel,
without a corner or crack.”
“But underneath,” said Capel.
“Underneath?Look for
yourself,” said Mr Girtle; “where there
is not solid steel there is solid iron, and beneath
that, massive stone.The treasure seems to have
been spirited away.”
“That’s it,” said
Artis.“The old man was not satisfied,
and he got up out of his coffin and hid it somewhere
else.”
Capel caught Artis by the collar.
“I will not ”
he began; but mastering his indignant anger he let
fall his arm.
“There is nothing here,”
he said; “let us look about the outside.”
That was the work of a minute, for
on every hand there was the blank stone wall,
floor and roof, and the exterior of the iron safe or
tomb was perfectly rectangular and smooth.
“What was the size of the cases?”
“One was about twelve inches
by eight, and three or four deep, and the other rather
smaller,” replied the old lawyer; “both
too large for me to have juggled them into my pockets
when I opened the steel chest, Mr Artis.”
“You held the keys, and if you
meant to take the treasure, you had it before.”
“Enough of this,” cried
Capel.“It is plain that the bequest has
been taken away.Mr Girtle, we will finish at
once fulfil my uncle’s commands.Come.”
He went to the head of the oaken coffin,
and took one handle, when, influenced by his example,
the others helped to raise it a little from the floor,
and it was thrust in and onward, till it rested upon
the bottom of the steel chest, nearly filling the
space.
Capel stood on the right of the entrance,
and for fully five minutes there was perfect silence
in the solemn chamber.
“Go on, Mr Girtle,” Capel
said, at last, and the old man bent down, thrust the
key in the end, gave a half turn, and the two ponderous
sides slowly curved over till they were nearly together
leaving only a few inches of the shining brass breastplate
visible.Then there was a faint click, and the
left side fell heavily, setting free the right, which
descended with a loud clang, and closed tightly over
a rebate in the lower side, so closely, that it was
only by holding a candle near that the junction could
be seen.
“Go on;” and the old lawyer again inserted
a key.
There was no show of effort on his
part, as the old lawyer turned the key, when the end
of the iron chamber closed in tightly, and after once
more examining the blank stone chamber, they slowly
ascended the steps.Then the iron door was closed
and locked, and Mr Girtle handed Capel the keys.
An hour later, a couple of masons
were at work with the stones that were below in the
locked-up cellar, and the next day they had filled
in a wall of six feet thick, cemented over the face,
so that only a dark patch showed where the entrance
to the colonel’s tomb had been.