The Col of the Swallows
He pointed to the slip on the table.
‘You have seen the orders?’
I nodded.
’The long day’s work is
over. You must rejoice, for your part has been
the hardest, I think. Some day you will tell me
about it?’
The man’s face was honest and
kindly, rather like that of the engineer Gaudian,
whom two years before I had met in Germany. But
his eyes fascinated me, for they were the eyes of
the dreamer and fanatic, who would not desist from
his quest while life lasted. I thought that Ivery
had chosen well in his colleague.
‘My task is not done yet,’ I said.
‘I came here to see Chelius.’
‘He will be back tomorrow evening.’
’Too late. I must see him
at once. He has gone to Italy, and I must overtake
him.’
‘You know your duty best,’ he said gravely.
’But you must help me.
I must catch him at Santa Chiara, for it is a business
of life and death. Is there a car to be had?’
‘There is mine. But there is no chauffeur.
Chelius took him.’
’I can drive myself and I know
the road. But I have no pass to cross the frontier.’
‘That is easily supplied,’ he said, smiling.
In one bookcase there was a shelf
of dummy books. He unlocked this and revealed
a small cupboard, whence he took a tin dispatch-box.
From some papers he selected one, which seemed to
be already signed.
‘Name?’ he asked.
‘Call me Hans Gruber of Brieg,’
I said. ’I travel to pick up my master,
who is in the timber trade.’
‘And your return?’
‘I will come back by my old
road,’ I said mysteriously; and if he knew what
I meant it was more than I did myself.
He completed the paper and handed
it to me. ’This will take you through the
frontier posts. And now for the car. The
servants will be in bed, for they have been preparing
for a long journey, but I will myself show it you.
There is enough petrol on board to take you to Rome.’
He led me through the hall, unlocked
the front door, and we crossed the snowy lawn to the
garage. The place was empty but for a great car,
which bore the marks of having come from the muddy
lowlands. To my joy I saw that it was a Daimler,
a type with which I was familiar. I lit the lamps,
started the engine, and ran it out on to the road.
‘You will want an overcoat,’ he said.
‘I never wear them.’
‘Food?’
‘I have some chocolate. I will breakfast
at Santa Chiara.’
‘Well, God go with you!’
A minute later I was tearing along
the lake-side towards St Anton village.
I stopped at the cottage on the hill.
Peter was not yet in bed. I found him sitting
by the fire, trying to read, but I saw by his face
that he had been waiting anxiously on my coming.
‘We’re in the soup, old
man,’ I said as I shut the door. In a dozen
sentences I told him of the night’s doings, of
Ivery’s plan and my desperate errand.
‘You wanted a share,’
I cried. ’Well, everything depends on you
now. I’m off after Ivery, and God knows
what will happen. Meantime, you have got to get
on to Blenkiron, and tell him what I’ve told
you. He must get the news through to G.H.Q. somehow.
He must trap the Wild Birds before they go. I
don’t know how, but he must. Tell him it’s
all up to him and you, for I’m out of it.
I must save Mary, and if God’s willing I’ll
settle with Ivery. But the big job is for Blenkiron and
you. Somehow he has made a bad break, and the
enemy has got ahead of him. He must sweat blood
to make up. My God, Peter, it’s the solemnest
moment of our lives. I don’t see any light,
but we mustn’t miss any chances. I’m
leaving it all to you.’
I spoke like a man in a fever, for
after what I had been through I wasn’t quite
sane. My coolness in the Pink Chalet had given
place to a crazy restlessness. I can see Peter
yet, standing in the ring of lamplight, supporting
himself by a chair back, wrinkling his brows and,
as he always did in moments of excitement, scratching
gently the tip of his left ear. His face was
happy.
‘Never fear, Dick,’ he
said. ’It will all come right. Ons sal
’n plan maak.’
And then, still possessed with a demon
of disquiet, I was on the road again, heading for
the pass that led to Italy.
The mist had gone from the sky, and
the stars were shining brightly. The moon, now
at the end of its first quarter, was setting in a gap
of the mountains, as I climbed the low col from the
St Anton valley to the greater Staubthal. There
was frost and the hard snow crackled under my wheels,
but there was also that feel in the air which preludes
storm. I wondered if I should run into snow in
the high hills. The whole land was deep in peace.
There was not a light in the hamlets I passed through,
not a soul on the highway.
In the Staubthal I joined the main
road and swung to the left up the narrowing bed of
the valley. The road was in noble condition, and
the car was running finely, as I mounted through forests
of snowy Pines to a land where the mountains crept
close together, and the highway coiled round the angles
of great crags or skirted perilously some profound
gorge, with only a line of wooden posts to defend it
from the void. In places the snow stood in walls
on either side, where the road was kept open by man’s
labour. In other parts it lay thin, and in the
dim light one might have fancied that one was running
through open meadowlands.
Slowly my head was getting clearer,
and I was able to look round my problem. I banished
from my mind the situation I had left behind me.
Blenkiron must cope with that as best he could.
It lay with him to deal with the Wild Birds, my job
was with Ivery alone. Sometime in the early morning
he would reach Santa Chiara, and there he would find
Mary. Beyond that my imagination could forecast
nothing. She would be alone I could
trust his cleverness for that; he would try to force
her to come with him, or he might persuade her with
some lying story. Well, please God, I should
come in for the tail end of the interview, and at
the thought I cursed the steep gradients I was climbing,
and longed for some magic to lift the Daimler beyond
the summit and set it racing down the slope towards
Italy.
I think it was about half-past three
when I saw the lights of the frontier post. The
air seemed milder than in the valleys, and there was
a soft scurry of snow on my right cheek. A couple
of sleepy Swiss sentries with their rifles in their
hands stumbled out as I drew up.
They took my pass into the hut and
gave me an anxious quarter of an hour while they examined
it. The performance was repeated fifty yards
on at the Italian post, where to my alarm the sentries
were inclined to conversation. I played the part
of the sulky servant, answering in monosyllables and
pretending to immense stupidity.
‘You are only just in time,
friend,’ said one in German. ’The
weather grows bad and soon the pass will close.
Ugh, it is as cold as last winter on the Tonale.
You remember, Giuseppe?’
But in the end they let me move on.
For a little I felt my way gingerly, for on the summit
the road had many twists and the snow was confusing
to the eyes. Presently came a sharp drop and I
let the Daimler go. It grew colder, and I shivered
a little; the snow became a wet white fog around the
glowing arc of the headlights; and always the road
fell, now in long curves, now in steep short dips,
till I was aware of a glen opening towards the south.
From long living in the wilds I have a kind of sense
for landscape without the testimony of the eyes, and
I knew where the ravine narrowed or widened though
it was black darkness.
In spite of my restlessness I had
to go slowly, for after the first rush downhill I
realized that, unless I was careful, I might wreck
the car and spoil everything. The surface of
the road on the southern slope of the mountains was
a thousand per cent worse than that on the other.
I skidded and side-slipped, and once grazed the edge
of the gorge. It was far more maddening than
the climb up, for then it had been a straight-forward
grind with the Daimler doing its utmost, whereas now
I had to hold her back because of my own lack of skill.
I reckon that time crawling down from the summit of
the Staub as some of the weariest hours I ever spent.
Quite suddenly I ran out of the ill
weather into a different climate. The sky was
clear above me, and I saw that dawn was very near.
The first pinewoods were beginning, and at last came
a straight slope where I could let the car out.
I began to recover my spirits, which had been very
dashed, and to reckon the distance I had still to travel
... And then, without warning, a new world sprang
up around me. Out of the blue dusk white shapes
rose like ghosts, peaks and needles and domes of ice,
their bases fading mistily into shadow, but the tops
kindling till they glowed like jewels. I had
never seen such a sight, and the wonder of it for
a moment drove anxiety from my heart. More, it
gave me an earnest of victory. I was in clear
air once more, and surely in this diamond ether the
foul things which loved the dark must be worsted ...
And then I saw, a mile ahead, the
little square red-roofed building which I knew to
be the inn of Santa Chiara.
It was here that misfortune met me.
I had grown careless now, and looked rather at the
house than the road. At one point the hillside
had slipped down it must have been recent,
for the road was well kept and I did not
notice the landslide till I was on it. I slewed
to the right, took too wide a curve, and before I
knew the car was over the far edge. I slapped
on the brakes, but to avoid turning turtle I had to
leave the road altogether. I slithered down a
steep bank into a meadow, where for my sins I ran
into a fallen tree trunk with a jar that shook me out
of my seat and nearly broke my arm. Before I
examined the car I knew what had happened. The
front axle was bent, and the off front wheel badly
buckled.
I had not time to curse my stupidity.
I clambered back to the road and set off running down
it at my best speed. I was mortally stiff, for
Ivery’s rack was not good for the joints, but
I realized it only as a drag on my pace, not as an
affliction in itself. My whole mind was set on
the house before me and what might be happening there.
There was a man at the door of the
inn, who, when he caught sight of my figure, began
to move to meet me. I saw that it was Launcelot
Wake, and the sight gave me hope.
But his face frightened me. It
was drawn and haggard like one who never sleeps, and
his eyes were hot coals.
‘Hannay,’ he cried, ‘for God’s
sake what does it mean?’
‘Where is Mary?’ I gasped,
and I remember I clutched at a lapel of his coat.
He pulled me to the low stone wall by the roadside.
‘I don’t know,’
he said hoarsely. ’We got your orders to
come here this morning. We were at Chiavagno,
where Blenkiron told us to wait. But last night
Mary disappeared ... I found she had hired a carriage
and come on ahead. I followed at once, and reached
here an hour ago to find her gone ... The woman
who keeps the place is away and there are only two
old servants left. They tell me that Mary came
here late, and that very early in the morning a closed
car came over the Staub with a man in it. They
say he asked to see the young lady, and that they talked
together for some time, and that then she went off
with him in the car down the valley ... I must
have passed it on my way up ... There’s
been some black devilment that I can’t follow.
Who was the man? Who was the man?’
He looked as if he wanted to throttle me.
‘I can tell you that,’ I said. ‘It
was Ivery.’
He stared for a second as if he didn’t
understand. Then he leaped to his feet and cursed
like a trooper. ’You’ve botched it,
as I knew you would. I knew no good would come
of your infernal subtleties.’ And he consigned
me and Blenkiron and the British army and Ivery and
everybody else to the devil.
I was past being angry. ‘Sit
down, man,’ I said, ‘and listen to me.’
I told him of what had happened at the Pink Chalet.
He heard me out with his head in his hands. The
thing was too bad for cursing.
‘The Underground Railway!’
he groaned. ’The thought of it drives me
mad. Why are you so calm, Hannay? She’s
in the hands of the cleverest devil in the world,
and you take it quietly. You should be a raving
lunatic.’
’I would be if it were any use,
but I did all my raving last night in that den of
Ivery’s. We’ve got to pull ourselves
together, Wake. First of all, I trust Mary to
the other side of eternity. She went with him
of her own free will. I don’t know why,
but she must have had a reason, and be sure it was
a good one, for she’s far cleverer than you or
me ... We’ve got to follow her somehow.
Ivery’s bound for Germany, but his route is
by the Pink Chalet, for he hopes to pick me up there.
He went down the valley; therefore he is going to
Switzerland by the Marjolana. That is a long
circuit and will take him most of the day. Why
he chose that way I don’t know, but there it
is. We’ve got to get back by the Staub.’
‘How did you come?’ he asked.
’That’s our damnable luck.
I came in a first-class six-cylinder Daimler, which
is now lying a wreck in a meadow a mile up the road.
We’ve got to foot it.’
’We can’t do it.
It would take too long. Besides, there’s
the frontier to pass.’
I remembered ruefully that I might
have got a return passport from the Portuguese Jew,
if I had thought of anything at the time beyond getting
to Santa Chiara.
’Then we must make a circuit
by the hillside and dodge the guards. It’s
no use making difficulties, Wake. We’re
fairly up against it, but we’ve got to go on
trying till we drop. Otherwise I’ll take
your advice and go mad.’
’And supposing you get back
to St Anton, you’ll find the house shut up and
the travellers gone hours before by the Underground
Railway.’
’Very likely. But, man,
there’s always the glimmering of a chance.
It’s no good chucking in your hand till the
game’s out.’
‘Drop your proverbial philosophy,
Mr Martin Tupper, and look up there.’
He had one foot on the wall and was
staring at a cleft in the snow-line across the valley.
The shoulder of a high peak dropped sharply to a kind
of nick and rose again in a long graceful curve of
snow. All below the nick was still in deep shadow,
but from the configuration of the slopes I judged
that a tributary glacier ran from it to the main glacier
at the river head.
‘That’s the Colle delle
Rondini,’ he said, ’the Col of the Swallows.
It leads straight to the Staubthal near Grunewald.
On a good day I have done it in seven hours, but it’s
not a pass for winter-time. It has been done
of course, but not often.... Yet, if the weather
held, it might go even now, and that would bring us
to St Anton by the evening. I wonder’ and
he looked me over with an appraising eye ’I
wonder if you’re up to it.’
My stiffness had gone and I burned
to set my restlessness to physical toil.
‘If you can do it, I can,’ I said.
’No. There you’re
wrong. You’re a hefty fellow, but you’re
no mountaineer, and the ice of the Colle delle Rondini
needs knowledge. It would be insane to risk it
with a novice, if there were any other way. But
I’m damned if I see any, and I’m going
to chance it. We can get a rope and axes in the
inn. Are you game?’
‘Right you are. Seven hours,
you say. We’ve got to do it in six.’
‘You will be humbler when you
get on the ice,’ he said grimly. ’We’d
better breakfast, for the Lord knows when we shall
see food again.’
We left the inn at five minutes to
nine, with the sky cloudless and a stiff wind from
the north-west, which we felt even in the deep-cut
valley. Wake walked with a long, slow stride that
tried my patience. I wanted to hustle, but he
bade me keep in step. ’You take your orders
from me, for I’ve been at this job before.
Discipline in the ranks, remember.’
We crossed the river gorge by a plank
bridge, and worked our way up the right bank, past
the moraine, to the snout of the glacier. It was
bad going, for the snow concealed the boulders, and
I often floundered in holes. Wake never relaxed
his stride, but now and then he stopped to sniff the
air.
I observed that the weather looked
good, and he differed. ’It’s too
clear. There’ll be a full-blown gale on
the Col and most likely snow in the afternoon.’
He pointed to a fat yellow cloud that was beginning
to bulge over the nearest peak. After that I
thought he lengthened his stride.
‘Lucky I had these boots resoled
and nailed at Chiavagno,’ was the only other
remark he made till we had passed the séracs of
the main glacier and turned up the lesser ice-stream
from the Colle delle Rondini.
By half-past ten we were near its
head, and I could see clearly the ribbon of pure ice
between black crags too steep for snow to lie on,
which was the means of ascent to the Col. The
sky had clouded over, and ugly streamers floated on
the high slopes. We tied on the rope at the foot
of the bergschrund, which was easy to pass because
of the winter’s snow. Wake led, of course,
and presently we came on to the icefall.
In my time I had done a lot of scrambling
on rocks and used to promise myself a season in the
Alps to test myself on the big peaks. If I ever
go it will be to climb the honest rock towers around
Chamonix, for I won’t have anything to do with
snow mountains. That day on the Colle delle Rondini
fairly sickened me of ice. I daresay I might have
liked it if I had done it in a holiday mood, at leisure
and in good spirits. But to crawl up that couloir
with a sick heart and a desperate impulse to hurry
was the worst sort of nightmare. The place was
as steep as a wall of smooth black ice that seemed
hard as granite. Wake did the step-cutting, and
I admired him enormously. He did not seem to use
much force, but every step was hewn cleanly the right
size, and they were spaced the right distance.
In this job he was the true professional. I was
thankful Blenkiron was not with us, for the thing would
have given a squirrel vertigo. The chips of ice
slithered between my legs and I could watch them till
they brought up just above the bergschrund.
The ice was in shadow and it was bitterly
cold. As we crawled up I had not the exercise
of using the axe to warm me, and I got very numb standing
on one leg waiting for the next step. Worse still,
my legs began to cramp. I was in good condition,
but that time under Ivery’s rack had played
the mischief with my limbs. Muscles got out of
place in my calves and stood in aching lumps, till
I almost squealed with the pain of it. I was
mortally afraid I should slip, and every time I moved
I called out to Wake to warn him. He saw what
was happening and got the pick of his axe fixed in
the ice before I was allowed to stir. He spoke
often to cheer me up, and his voice had none of its
harshness. He was like some ill-tempered generals
I have known, very gentle in a battle.
At the end the snow began to fall,
a soft powder like the overspill of a storm raging
beyond the crest. It was just after that that
Wake cried out that in five minutes we would be at
the summit. He consulted his wrist-watch.
’Jolly good time, too. Only twenty-five
minutes behind my best. It’s not one o’clock.’
The next I knew I was lying flat on
a pad of snow easing my cramped legs, while Wake shouted
in my ear that we were in for something bad. I
was aware of a driving blizzard, but I had no thought
of anything but the blessed relief from pain.
I lay for some minutes on my back with my legs stiff
in the air and the toes turned inwards, while my muscles
fell into their proper place.
It was certainly no spot to linger
in. We looked down into a trough of driving mist,
which sometimes swirled aside and showed a knuckle
of black rock far below. We ate some chocolate,
while Wake shouted in my ear that now we had less
step-cutting. He did his best to cheer me, but
he could not hide his anxiety. Our faces were
frosted over like a wedding-cake and the sting of
the wind was like a whiplash on our eyelids.
The first part was easy, down a slope
of firm snow where steps were not needed. Then
came ice again, and we had to cut into it below the
fresh surface snow. This was so laborious that
Wake took to the rocks on the right side of the couloir,
where there was some shelter from the main force of
the blast. I found it easier, for I knew something
about rocks, but it was difficult enough with every
handhold and foothold glazed. Presently we were
driven back again to the ice, and painfully cut our
way through a throat of the ravine where the sides
narrowed. There the wind was terrible, for the
narrows made a kind of funnel, and we descended, plastered
against the wall, and scarcely able to breathe, while
the tornado plucked at our bodies as if it would whisk
us like wisps of grass into the abyss.
After that the gorge widened and we
had an easier slope, till suddenly we found ourselves
perched on a great tongue of rock round which the
snow blew like the froth in a whirlpool. As we
stopped for breath, Wake shouted in my ear that this
was the Black Stone.
‘The what?’ I yelled.
’The Schwarzstein. The
Swiss call the pass the Schwarzsteinthor. You
can see it from Grunewald.’
I suppose every man has a tinge of
superstition in him. To hear that name in that
ferocious place gave me a sudden access of confidence.
I seemed to see all my doings as part of a great predestined
plan. Surely it was not for nothing that the
word which had been the key of my first adventure
in the long tussle should appear in this last phase.
I felt new strength in my legs and more vigour in
my lungs. ‘A good omen,’ I shouted.
‘Wake, old man, we’re going to win out.’
‘The worst is still to come,’ he said.
He was right. To get down that
tongue of rock to the lower snows of the couloir was
a job that fairly brought us to the end of our tether.
I can feel yet the sour, bleak smell of wet rock and
ice and the hard nerve pain that racked my forehead.
The Kaffirs used to say that there were devils in
the high berg, and this place was assuredly given over
to the powers of the air who had no thought of human
life. I seemed to be in the world which had endured
from the eternity before man was dreamed of.
There was no mercy in it, and the elements were pitting
their immortal strength against two pigmies who had
profaned their sanctuary. I yearned for warmth,
for the glow of a fire, for a tree or blade of grass
or anything which meant the sheltered homeliness of
mortality. I knew then what the Greeks meant by
panic, for I was scared by the apathy of nature.
But the terror gave me a kind of comfort, too.
Ivery and his doings seemed less formidable. Let
me but get out of this cold hell and I could meet
him with a new confidence.
Wake led, for he knew the road and
the road wanted knowing. Otherwise he should
have been last on the rope, for that is the place of
the better man in a descent. I had some horrible
moments following on when the rope grew taut, for
I had no help from it. We zigzagged down the
rock, sometimes driven to the ice of the adjacent couloirs,
sometimes on the outer ridge of the Black Stone, sometimes
wriggling down little cracks and over evil boiler-plates.
The snow did not lie on it, but the rock crackled
with thin ice or oozed ice water. Often it was
only by the grace of God that I did not fall headlong,
and pull Wake out of his hold to the bergschrund far
below. I slipped more than once, but always by
a miracle recovered myself. To make things worse,
Wake was tiring. I could feel him drag on the
rope, and his movements had not the precision they
had had in the morning. He was the mountaineer,
and I the novice. If he gave out, we should never
reach the valley.
The fellow was clear grit all through.
When we reached the foot of the tooth and sat huddled
up with our faces away from the wind, I saw that he
was on the edge of fainting. What that effort
Must have cost him in the way of resolution you may
guess, but he did not fail till the worst was past.
His lips were colourless, and he was choking with the
nausea of fatigue. I found a flask of brandy
in his pocket, and a mouthful revived him.
‘I’m all out,’ he
said. ’The road’s easier now, and
I can direct YOU about the rest ... You’d
better leave me. I’ll only be a drag.
I’ll come on when I feel better.’
’No, you don’t, you old
fool. You’ve got me over that infernal iceberg,
and I’m going to see you home.’
I rubbed his arms and legs and made
him swallow some chocolate. But when he got on
his feet he was as doddery as an old man. Happily
we had an easy course down a snow gradient, which
we glissaded in very unorthodox style. The swift
motion freshened him up a little, and he was able
to put on the brake with his axe to prevent us cascading
into the bergschrund. We crossed it by a snow
bridge, and started out on the séracs of the
Schwarzstein glacier.
I am no mountaineer not
of the snow and ice kind, anyway but I have
a big share of physical strength and I wanted it all
now. For those séracs were an invention
of the devil. To traverse that labyrinth in a
blinding snowstorm, with a fainting companion who was
too weak to jump the narrowest crevasse, and who hung
on the rope like lead when there was occasion to use
it, was more than I could manage. Besides, every
step that brought us nearer to the valley now increased
my eagerness to hurry, and wandering in that maze
of clotted ice was like the nightmare when you stand
on the rails with the express coming and are too weak
to climb on the platform. As soon as possible
I left the glacier for the hillside, and though that
was laborious enough in all conscience, yet it enabled
me to steer a straight course. Wake never spoke
a word. When I looked at him his face was ashen
under a gale which should have made his cheeks glow,
and he kept his eyes half closed. He was staggering
on at the very limits of his endurance ...
By and by we were on the moraine,
and after splashing through a dozen little glacier
streams came on a track which led up the hillside.
Wake nodded feebly when I asked if this was right.
Then to my joy I saw a gnarled pine.
I untied the rope and Wake dropped
like a log on the ground. ’Leave me,’
he groaned. ‘I’m fairly done.
I’ll come on later.’ And he shut his
eyes.
My watch told me that it was after five o’clock.
‘Get on my back,’ I said.
’I won’t part from you till I’ve
found a cottage. You’re a hero. You’ve
brought me over those damned mountains in a blizzard,
and that’s what no other man in England would
have done. Get up.’
He obeyed, for he was too far gone
to argue. I tied his wrists together with a handkerchief
below my chin, for I wanted my arms to hold up his
legs. The rope and axes I left in a cache beneath
the pine-tree. Then I started trotting down the
track for the nearest dwelling.
My strength felt inexhaustible and
the quicksilver in my bones drove me forward.
The snow was still falling, but the wind was dying
down, and after the inferno of the pass it was like
summer. The road wound over the shale of the
hillside and then into what in spring must have been
upland meadows. Then it ran among trees, and far
below me on the right I could hear the glacier river
churning in its gorge’ Soon little empty huts
appeared, and rough enclosed paddocks, and presently
I came out on a shelf above the stream and smelt the
wood-smoke of a human habitation.
I found a middle-aged peasant in the
cottage, a guide by profession in summer and a woodcutter
in winter.
‘I have brought my Herr from
Santa Chiara,’ I said, ’over the Schwarzsteinthor.
He is very weary and must sleep.’
I decanted Wake into a chair, and
his head nodded on his chest. But his colour
was better.
‘You and your Herr are fools,’
said the man gruffly, but not unkindly. ’He
must sleep or he will have a fever. The Schwarzsteinthor
in this devil’s weather! Is he English?’
‘Yes,’ I said, ’like
all madmen. But he’s a good Herr, and a
brave mountaineer.’
We stripped Wake of his Red Cross
uniform, now a collection of sopping rags, and got
him between blankets with a huge earthenware bottle
of hot water at his feet. The woodcutter’s
wife boiled milk, and this, with a little brandy added,
we made him drink. I was quite easy in my mind
about him, for I had seen this condition before.
In the morning he would be as stiff as a poker, but
recovered.
‘Now I’m off for St Anton,’
I said. ‘I must get there tonight.’
‘You are the hardy one,’
the man laughed. ’I will show you the quick
road to Grunewald, where is the railway. With
good fortune you may get the last train.’
I gave him fifty francs on my Herr’s
behalf, learned his directions for the road, and set
off after a draught of goat’s milk, munching
my last slab of chocolate. I was still strung
up to a mechanical activity, and I ran every inch
of the three miles to the Staubthal without consciousness
of fatigue. I was twenty minutes too soon for
the train, and, as I sat on a bench on the platform,
my energy suddenly ebbed away. That is what happens
after a great exertion. I longed to sleep, and
when the train arrived I crawled into a carriage like
a man with a stroke. There seemed to be no force
left in my limbs. I realized that I was leg-weary,
which is a thing you see sometimes with horses, but
not often with men.
All the journey I lay like a log in
a kind of coma, and it was with difficulty that I
recognized my destination, and stumbled out of the
train. But I had no sooner emerged from the station
of St Anton than I got my second wind. Much snow
had fallen since yesterday, but it had stopped now,
the sky was clear, and the moon was riding. The
sight of the familiar place brought back all my anxieties.
The day on the Col of the Swallows was wiped out of
my memory, and I saw only the inn at Santa Chiara,
and heard Wake’s hoarse voice speaking of Mary.
The lights were twinkling from the village below,
and on the right I saw the clump of trees which held
the Pink Chalet.
I took a short cut across the fields,
avoiding the little town. I ran hard, stumbling
often, for though I had got my mental energy back my
legs were still precarious. The station clock
had told me that it was nearly half-past nine.
Soon I was on the high-road, and then
at the Chalet gates. I heard as in a dream what
seemed to be three shrill blasts on a whistle.
Then a big car passed me, making for St Anton.
For a second I would have hailed it, but it was past
me and away. But I had a conviction that my business
lay in the house, for I thought Ivery was there, and
Ivery was what mattered.
I marched up the drive with no sort
of plan in my head, only a blind rushing on fate.
I remembered dimly that I had still three cartridges
in my revolver.
The front door stood open and I entered
and tiptoed down the passage to the room where I had
found the Portuguese Jew. No one hindered me,
but it was not for lack of servants. I had the
impression that there were people near me in the darkness,
and I thought I heard German softly spoken. There
was someone ahead of me, perhaps the speaker, for I
could hear careful footsteps. It was very dark,
but a ray of light came from below the door of the
room. Then behind me I heard the hall door clang,
and the noise of a key turned in its lock. I had
walked straight into a trap and all retreat was cut
off.
My mind was beginning to work more
clearly, though my purpose was still vague. I
wanted to get at Ivery and I believed that he was somewhere
in front of me. And then I thought of the door
which led from the chamber where I had been imprisoned.
If I could enter that way I would have the advantage
of surprise.
I groped on the right-hand side of
the passage and found a handle. It opened upon
what seemed to be a dining-room, for there was a faint
smell of food. Again I had the impression of people
near, who for some unknown reason did not molest me.
At the far end I found another door, which led to
a second room, which I guessed to be adjacent to the
library. Beyond it again must lie the passage
from the chamber with the rack. The whole place
was as quiet as a shell.
I had guessed right. I was standing
in the passage where I had stood the night before.
In front of me was the library, and there was the
same chink of light showing. Very softly I turned
the handle and opened it a crack ...
The first thing that caught my eye
was the profile of Ivery. He was looking towards
the writing-table, where someone was sitting.