The tightening of that sinewy grip
on Mallalieu’s wrist so startled him that it
was only by a great effort that he restrained himself
from crying out and from breaking into one of his
fits of trembling. This sudden arrest was all
the more disturbing to his mental composure because,
for the moment, he could not see to whom the hand belonged.
But as he twisted round he became aware of a tall,
thin shape at his elbow; the next instant a whisper
stole to his ear.
“H’sh! Be careful! there’s
men down there on the path! they’re
very like after you,” said the voice. “Wait
here a minute!”
“Who are you?” demanded
Mallalieu hoarsely. He was endeavouring to free
his wrist, but the steel-like fingers clung. “Let
go my hand!” he said. “D’ye
hear? let it go!”
“Wait!” said the voice.
“It’s for your own good. It’s
me Miss Pett. I saw you against
that patch of light between the trees there I
knew your big figure. You’ve got away,
of course. Well, you’ll not get much further
if you don’t trust to me. Wait till we hear
which way them fellows go.”
Mallalieu resigned himself. As
his eyes grew more accustomed to the gloom of the
wood, he made out that Miss Pett was standing just
within an opening in the trees; presently, as the
voices beneath them became fainter, she drew him into
it.
“This way!” she whispered.
“Come close behind me the house is
close by.”
“No!” protested Mallalieu
angrily. “None of your houses! Here,
I want to be on the moors. What do you want to
keep your tongue still?”
Miss Pett paused and edged her thin
figure close to Mallalieu’s bulky one.
“It’ll not be a question
of my tongue if you once go out o’ this wood,”
she said. “They’ll search those moors
first thing. Don’t be a fool! it’ll
be known all over the town by now! Come with me
and I’ll put you where all the police in the
county can’t find you. But of course, do
as you like only, I’m warning you.
You haven’t a cat’s chance if you set
foot on that moor. Lord bless you, man! don’t
they know that there’s only two places you could
make for Norcaster and Hexendale?
Is there any way to either of ’em except across
the moors? Come on, now be sensible.”
“Go on, then!” growled
Mallalieu. Wholly suspicious by nature, he was
wondering why this she-dragon, as he had so often called
her, should be at all desirous of sheltering him.
Already he suspected her of some design, some trick and
in the darkness he clapped his hand on the hip-pocket
in which he had placed his revolver. That was
safe enough and again he thanked his stars
that the police had not searched him. But however
well he might be armed, he was for the time being in
Miss Pett’s power he knew very well
that if he tried to slip away Miss Pett had only to
utter one shrill cry to attract attention. And
so, much as he desired the freedom of the moors, he
allowed himself to be taken captive by this gaoler
who promised eventual liberty.
Miss Pett waited in the thickness
of the trees until the voices at the foot of the Shawl
became faint and far off; she herself knew well enough
that they were not the voices of men who were searching
for Mallalieu, but of country folk who had been into
the town and were now returning home by the lower
path in the wood. But it suited her purposes to
create a spirit of impending danger in the Mayor,
and so she kept him there, her hand still on his arm,
until the last sound died away. And while she
thus held him, Mallalieu, who had often observed Miss
Pett in her peregrinations through the Market Place,
and had been accustomed to speaking of her as a thread-paper,
or as Mother Skin-and-Bones, because of her phenomenal
thinness, wondered how it was that a woman of such
extraordinary attenuation should possess such powerful
fingers her grip on his wrist was like
that of a vice. And somehow, in a fashion for
which he could not account, especially in the disturbed
and anxious state of his mind, he became aware that
here in this strange woman was some mental force which
was superior to and was already dominating his own,
and for a moment he was tempted to shake the steel-like
fingers off and make a dash for the moorlands.
But Miss Pett presently moved forward,
holding Mallalieu as a nurse might hold an unwilling
child. She led him cautiously through the trees,
which there became thicker, she piloted him carefully
down a path, and into a shrubbery she drew
him through a gap in a hedgerow, and Mallalieu knew
then that they were in the kitchen garden at the rear
of old Kitely’s cottage. Quietly and stealthily,
moving herself as if her feet were shod with velvet,
Miss Pett made her way with her captive to the door;
Mallalieu heard the rasping of a key in a lock, the
lifting of a latch; then he was gently but firmly
pushed into darkness. Behind him the door closed a
bolt was shot home.
“This way!” whispered
Miss Pett. She drew him after her along what he
felt to be a passage, twisted him to the left through
another doorway, and then, for the first time since
she had assumed charge of him, released his wrist.
“Wait!” she said. “We’ll
have a light presently.”
Mallalieu stood where she had placed
him, impatient of everything, but feeling powerless
to move. He heard Miss Pett move about; he heard
the drawing to and barring of shutters, the swish
of curtains being pulled together; then the spurt
and glare of a match in its feeble flame
he saw Miss Pett’s queer countenance, framed
in an odd-shaped, old-fashioned poke bonnet, bending
towards a lamp. In the gradually increasing light
of that lamp Mallalieu looked anxiously around him.
He was in a little room which was
half-parlour, half bed-room. There was a camp
bed in one corner; there was an ancient knee-hole writing
desk under the window across which the big curtains
had been drawn; there were a couple of easy-chairs
on either side of the hearth. There were books
and papers on a shelf; there were pictures and cartoons
on the walls. Mallalieu took a hasty glance at
those unusual ornaments and hated them: they
were pictures of famous judges in their robes, and
of great criminal counsel in their wigs and
over the chimney-piece, framed in black wood, was
an old broad-sheet, printed in big, queer-shaped letters:
Mallalieu’s hasty glance caught the staring headline Dying
Speech and Confession of the Famous Murderer....
“This was Kitely’s snug,”
remarked Miss Pett calmly, as she turned up the lamp
to the full. “He slept in that bed, studied
at that desk, and smoked his pipe in that chair.
He called it his sanctum-something-or-other I
don’t know no Latin. But it’s a nice
room, and it’s comfortable, or will be when
I put a fire in that grate, and it’ll do very
well for you until you can move. Sit you down would
you like a drop of good whisky, now?”
Mallalieu sat down and stared his
hardest at Miss Pett. He felt himself becoming
more confused and puzzled than ever.
“Look here, missis!” he
said suddenly. “Let’s get a clear
idea about things. You say you can keep me safe
here until I can get away. How do you know I
shall be safe?”
“Because I’ll take good
care that you are,” answered Miss Pett.
“There’s nobody can get into this house
without my permission, and before I let anybody in,
no matter with what warrants or such-like they carried,
I’d see that you were out of it before they
crossed the threshold. I’m no fool, I can
tell you, Mr. Mallalieu, and if you trust me ”
“I’ve no choice, so it
seems,” remarked Mallalieu, grimly. “You’ve
got me! And now, how much are you reckoning to
get out of me what?”
“No performance, no pay!”
said Miss Pett. “Wait till I’ve managed
things for you. I know how to get you safely
away from here leave it to me, and I’ll
have you put down in any part of Norcaster you like,
without anybody knowing. And if you like to make
me a little present then ”
“You’re certain?”
demanded Mallalieu, still suspicious, but glad to
welcome even a ray of hope. “You know what
you’re talking about?”
“I never talk idle stuff,”
retorted Miss Pett. “I’m telling you
what I know.”
“All right, then,” said
Mallalieu. “You do your part, and I’ll
do mine when it comes to it you’ll
not find me ungenerous, missis. And I will have
that drop of whisky you talked about.”
Miss Pett went away, leaving Mallalieu
to stare about him and to meditate on this curious
change in his fortunes. Well, after all, it was
better to be safe and snug under this queer old woman’s
charge than to be locked up in Norcaster Gaol, or
to be hunted about on the bleak moors and possibly
to go without food or drink. And his thoughts
began to assume a more cheerful complexion when Miss
Pett presently brought him a stiff glass of undeniably
good liquor, and proceeded to light a fire in his
prison: he even melted so much as to offer her
some thanks.
“I’m sure I’m much
obliged to you, missis,” he said, with an attempt
at graciousness. “I’ll not forget
you when it comes to settling up. But I should
feel a good deal easier in my mind if I knew two things.
First of all you know, of course, I’ve
got away from yon lot down yonder, else I shouldn’t
ha’ been where you found me. But they’ll
raise the hue-and-cry, missis! Now supposing
they come here?”
Miss Pett lifted her queer face from
the hearth, where she had been blowing the sticks
into a blaze.
“There’s such a thing
as chance,” she observed. “To start
with, how much chance is there that they’d ever
think of coming here? Next to none! They’d
never suspect me of harbouring you. There is a
chance that when they look through these woods as
they will they’ll ask if I’ve
seen aught of you well, you can leave the
answer to me.”
“They might want to search,” suggested
Mallalieu.
“Not likely!” answered
Miss Pett, with a shake of the poke bonnet. “But
even if they did, I’d take good care they didn’t
find you!”
“Well and what about
getting me away?” asked Mallalieu. “How’s
that to be done?”
“I’ll tell you that tomorrow,”
replied Miss Pett. “You make yourself easy I’ll
see you’re all right. And now I’ll
go and cook you a nice chop, for no doubt you’ll
do with something after all the stuff you had to hear
in the court.”
“You were there, then?”
asked Mallalieu. “Lot o’ stuff and
nonsense! A sensible woman like you ”
“A sensible woman like me only
believes what she can prove,” answered Miss
Pett.
She went away and shut the door, and
Mallalieu, left to himself, took another heartening
pull at his glass and proceeded to re-inspect his
quarters. The fire was blazing up: the room
was warm and comfortable; certainly he was fortunate.
But he assured himself that the window was properly
shuttered, barred, and fully covered by the thick curtain,
and he stood by it for a moment listening intently
for any sound of movement without. No sound came,
not even the wail of a somewhat strong wind which
he knew to be sweeping through the pine trees, and
he came to the conclusion that the old stone walls
were almost sound-proof and that if he and Miss Pett
conversed in ordinary tones no eavesdroppers outside
the cottage could hear them. And presently he
caught a sound within the cottage the sound
of the sizzling of chops on a gridiron, and with it
came the pleasant and grateful smell of cooking meat,
and Mallalieu decided that he was hungry.
To a man fixed as Mallalieu was at
that time the evening which followed was by no means
unpleasant. Miss Pett served him as nice a little
supper as his own housekeeper would have given him;
later on she favoured him with her company. They
talked of anything but the events of the day, and
Mallalieu began to think that the queer-looking woman
was a remarkably shrewd and intelligent person.
There was but one drawback to his captivity Miss
Pett would not let him smoke. Cigars, she said,
might be smelt outside the cottage, and nobody would
credit her with the consumption of such gentleman-like
luxuries.
“And if I were you,” she
said, at the end of an interesting conversation which
had covered a variety of subjects, “I should
try to get a good night’s rest. I’ll
mix you a good glass of toddy such as the late Kitely
always let me mix for his nightcap, and then I’ll
leave you. The bed’s aired, there’s
plenty of clothing on it, all’s safe, and you
can sleep as if you were a baby in a cradle, for I
always sleep like a dog, with one ear and an eye open,
and I’ll take good care naught disturbs you,
so there!”
Mallalieu drank the steaming glass
of spirits and water which Miss Pett presently brought
him, and took her advice about going to bed. Without
ever knowing anything about it he fell into such a
slumber as he had never known in his life before.
It was indeed so sound that he never heard Miss Pett
steal into his room, was not aware that she carefully
withdrew the precious waistcoat which, through a convenient
hole in the wall, she had watched him deposit under
the rest of his garments on the chair at his side,
never knew that she carried it away into the living-room
on the other side of the cottage. For the strong
flavour of the lemon and the sweetness of the sugar
which Miss Pett had put into the hot toddy had utterly
obscured the very slight taste of something else which
she had put in something which was much
stronger than the generous dose of whisky, and was
calculated to plunge Mallalieu into a stupor from
which not even an earthquake could have roused him.
Miss Pett examined the waistcoat at
her leisure. Her thin fingers went through every
pocket and every paper, through the bank-notes, the
scrip, the shares, the securities. She put everything
back in its place, after a careful reckoning and estimation
of the whole. And Mallalieu was as deeply plunged
in his slumbers as ever when she went back into his
room with her shaded light and her catlike tread,
and she replaced the garment exactly where she found
it, and went out and shut the door as lightly as a
butterfly folds its wings.
It was then eleven o’clock at
night, and Miss Pett, instead of retiring to her bed,
sat down by the living-room fire and waited. The
poke bonnet had been replaced by the gay turban, and
under its gold and scarlet her strange, skeleton-like
face gleamed like old ivory as she sat there with
the firelight playing on it. And so immobile was
she, sitting with her sinewy skin-and-bone arms lying
folded over her silk apron, that she might have been
taken for an image rather than for a living woman.
But as the hands of the clock on the
mantelpiece neared midnight, Miss Pett suddenly moved.
Her sharp ears caught a scratching sound on the shutter
outside the window. And noiselessly she moved
down the passage, and noiselessly unbarred the front
door, and just as noiselessly closed it again behind
the man who slipped in Christopher, her
nephew.