Everything was very quiet in the house
where Mallalieu lay wide-awake and watchful.
It seemed to him that he had never known it so quiet
before. It was quiet at all times, both day and
night, for Miss Pett had a habit of going about like
a cat, and Christopher was decidedly of the soft-footed
order, and stepped from one room to another as if he
were perpetually afraid of waking somebody or trusting
his own weight on his own toes. But on this particular
night the silence seemed to be unusual and
it was all the deeper because no sound, not even the
faint sighing of the wind in the firs and pines outside
came to break it. And Mallalieu’s nerves,
which had gradually become sharpened and irritated
by his recent adventures and his close confinement,
became still more irritable, still more set on edge,
and it was with difficulty that he forced himself
to lie still and to listen. Moreover, he was feeling
the want of the stuff which had soothed him into such
sound slumber every night since he had been taken
in charge by Miss Pett, and he knew very well that
though he had flung it away his whole system was crying
out for the lack of it.
What were those two devils after,
he wondered as he lay there in the darkness?
No good that was certain. Now that
he came to reflect upon it their conduct during the
afternoon and evening had not been of a reassuring
sort. Christopher had kept entirely away from
him; he had not seen Christopher at all since the
discussion of the afternoon, which Miss Pett had terminated
so abruptly. He had seen Miss Pett twice or thrice Miss
Pett’s attitude on each occasion had been that
of injured innocence. She had brought him his
tea in silence, his supper with no more than a word.
It was a nice supper she set it before him
with an expression which seemed to say that however
badly she herself was treated, she would do her duty
by others. And Mallalieu, seeing that expression,
had not been able to refrain from one of his sneering
remarks.
“Think yourself very badly done
to, don’t you, missis!” he had exclaimed
with a laugh. “Think I’m a mean ’un,
what?”
“I express no opinion, Mr. Mallalieu,”
replied Miss Pett, frigidly and patiently. “I
think it better for people to reflect. A night’s
reflection,” she continued as she made for the
door, “oft brings wisdom, even to them as doesn’t
usually cultivate it.”
Mallalieu had no objection to the
cultivation of wisdom for his own benefit,
and he was striving to produce something from the process
as he lay there, waiting. But he said to himself
that it was easy enough to be wise after the event and
for him the event had happened. He was in the
power of these two, whom he had long since recognized
as an unscrupulous woman and a shifty man. They
had nothing to do but hand him over to the police
if they liked: for anything he knew, Chris Pett
might already have played false and told the police
of affairs at the cottage. And yet on deeper
reflection, he did not think that possible for
it was evident that aunt and nephew were after all
they could get, and they would get nothing from the
police authorities, while they might get a good deal
from him. But what did they expect
to get from him? He had been a little perplexed
by their attitude when he asked them if they expected
him to carry a lot of money on him a fugitive.
Was it possible the thought came to him
like a thunderclap in the darkness that
they knew, or had some idea, of what he really had
on him? That Miss Pett had drugged him every
night he now felt sure well, then, in that
case how did he know that she hadn’t entered
his room and searched his belongings, and especially
the precious waistcoat?
Mallalieu had deposited that waistcoat
in the same place every night on a chair
which stood at the head of his bed. He had laid
it folded on the chair, had deposited his other garments
in layers upon it, had set his candlestick and a box
of matches on top of all. And everything had
always been there, just as he had placed things, every
morning when he opened his eyes. But he
had come to know Miss Pett’s stealthiness by
that time, and ...
He put out a hand now and fingered
the pile of garments which lay, neatly folded, within
a few inches of his head. It was all right, then,
of course, and his hand drew back to the
revolver, separated from his cheek by no more than
the thickness of the pillow. The touch of that
revolver made him begin speculating afresh. If
Miss Pett or Christopher had meddled with the waistcoat,
the revolver, too, might have been meddled with.
Since he had entered the cottage, he had never examined
either waistcoat or revolver. Supposing the charges
had been drawn? supposing he was defenceless,
if a pinch came? He began to sweat with fear
at the mere thought, and in the darkness he fumbled
with the revolver in an effort to discover whether
it was still loaded. And just then came a sound and
Mallalieu grew chill with suspense.
It was a very small sound so
small that it might have been no more than that caused
by the scratch of the tiniest mouse in the wainscot.
But in that intense silence it was easily heard and
with it came the faint glimmering of a light.
The light widened there was a little further
sound and Mallalieu, peeping at things through
his eyelashes became aware that the door was open,
that a tall, spare figure was outlined between the
bed and the light without. And in that light,
outside the door, well behind the thin form of Miss
Pett, he saw Christopher Pett’s sharp face and
the glint of his beady eyes.
Mallalieu was sharp enough of thought,
and big man though he was, he had always been quick
of action. He knew what Miss Pett’s objective
was, and he let her advance half-way across the room
on her stealthy path to the waistcoat. But silently
as she came on with that cat-like tread, Mallalieu
had just as silently drawn the revolver from beneath
his pillow and turned its small muzzle on her.
It had a highly polished barrel, that revolver, and
Miss Pett suddenly caught a tiny scintillation of
light on it and she screamed. And as
she screamed Mallalieu fired, and the scream died
down to a queer choking sound ... and he fired again
... and where Christopher Pett’s face had shown
itself a second before there was nothing save
another choking sound and a fall in the entry where
Christopher had stood and watched.
After that followed a silence so deep
that Mallalieu felt the drums of his ears aching intensely
in the effort to catch any sound, however small.
But he heard nothing not even a sigh.
It was as if all the awful silences that had ever
been in the cavernous places of the world had been
crystallized into one terrible silence and put into
that room.
He reached out at last and found his
candle and the matches, and he got more light and
leaned forward in the bed, looking.
“Can’t ha’ got ’em both!”
he muttered. “Both? But ”
He slowly lifted himself out of bed,
huddled on some of the garments that lay carefully
folded on the chair, and then, holding the candle to
the floor, went forward to where the woman lay.
She had collapsed between the foot of the bed and
the wall; her shoulders were propped against the wall
and the grotesque turban hung loosely down on one
shoulder. And Mallalieu knew in that quick glance
that she was dead, and he crept onward to the door
and looked at the other still figure, lying just as
supinely in the passage that led to the living-room.
He looked longer at that ... and suddenly he turned
back into his parlour-bedchamber, and carefully avoiding
the dead woman put on his boots and began to dress
with feverish haste.
And while he hurried on his clothes
Mallalieu thought. He was not sure that he had
meant to kill these two. He would have delighted
in killing them certainly, hating them as he did,
but he had an idea that when he fired he only meant
to frighten them. But that was neither here nor
there now. They were dead, but he was alive and
he must get out of that, and at once. The moors the
hills anywhere....
A sudden heavy knocking at the door
at the back of the cottage set Mallalieu shaking.
He started for the front to hear knocking
there, too. Then came voices demanding admittance,
and loudly crying the dead woman’s name.
He crept to a front window at that, and carefully drew
a corner of the blind and looked out, and saw many
men in the garden. One of them had a lantern,
and as its glare glanced about Mallalieu set eyes
on Cotherstone.