Cleek was conscious of a sense of
keen disappointment at this piece of intelligence,
it so completely upset all his calculation. Hitherto,
the bits of the puzzle had fitted nicely and bade
fair to make a smooth and flawless whole.
“Are you sure?” he whispered,
laying a tense hand upon Dollops’s arm.
“Don’t jump to a conclusion without positive
evidence. Are you sure?”
“Rath-er! Of course
it’s too dark to see her face, gov’ner;
but when she come to the gate the first time she’s
been several, sir it was a deal lighter
on account of the moon not bein’ hid so much
with them blessed clouds, sir; and I could see then
that she was wot you might call a high-stepper summink
classy and up in the nines, gov’ner, and had
a way with her that you don’t pick up if you
aren’t born to it. She couldn’t have
been putting it on for effect, ’cause she didn’t
know there was anybody there to see. Gone she
is now, sir; slipped off over the Common, and I lost
sight of her among all them furze bushes, but she’ll
come back, never fear. She’s went away like
that two or three times before, but always come back
and tried the door, and jist struck her hands together
and rocked back and forwards like she was half beside
herself when she found it locked and nobody there to
meet her.”
“And you didn’t succeed in seeing her
face at all?”
“No, sir. It never was
light enough for me to do that. But even if it
had been, it wouldn’t ‘a’ been no
use, sir. She had summick that looked like a
white lace scarf wrapped all round her head and over
her face. But I was near enough to make out as
she smelt summink beautiful of voylits, and had on
one of them shiny, silky-lookin’ kind of mackintoshes
and a dress of pink silk.”
A black mackintosh and a dress of
pink silk! Not a black cloak lined with ermine!
Not a dress of pink gauze! Of course Dollops was
right in his statement that it was not Margot; that
fact alone proved it. So there was a second woman
who prowled about Wuthering Grange and endeavoured
to see somebody in secret, was there? Whom?
Harry Raynor or Lord St. Ulmer?
Clearly the one in the pink gauze Margot
beyond all possible question came to see
Raynor, for Hamer had identified her as the woman
he had seen in that young man’s company that
day at Kingston. Who, then, was this other woman
in pink? And whom did she come to see?
What was her mission, her place in this elusive
puzzle?
Come to think of it, he had been a
fool to imagine when Dollops first spoke of her that
it could possibly be Margot. The pink dress itself
ought to have told him that. For although young
Raynor had said that the lady he knew as Mademoiselle
Mignon de Varville nearly always dressed in pink,
Margot was no such fool as to prowl round this place
to-night in the identical frock she had worn at the
time of the tragedy, and from which that tiny scrap
had been torn by the nail head in the floor of Gleer
Cottage.
True, nobody but Narkom and Ailsa
and he himself knew, as yet, of the finding of that
betraying scrap, but Ah, well,
you couldn’t catch Margot napping! She
might not know when, how, nor where that scrap
had been torn off, but her shrewd eyes would
detect the missing bit in the skirt: she would
be on to it like a cat on a mouse. He knew her
methods, knew her miscroscopic carefulness and attention
to detail. What, then, was this other woman’s
place in the puzzle? What was she after?
Whom had she come to see? He’d make it
his business to find that out, and in short order,
too.
These things had travelled through
Cleek’s thoughts rapidly. It was scarcely
more than a moment after Dollops had last spoken when
he addressed the boy again.
“I’ve got something important
on hand for you, as I told you, my lad,” he
said in a cautious whisper. “But, first,
tell me: where is this other door in the wall
of which you speak, the one where the Pink Woman goes?”
“Jist about thirty feet farther
up, gov’ner; there where them mulberry trees
is so blessed thick. You don’t notice the
place till you come smack on to it, on account of
furze bushes and ivy along the foot of the wall.
You can creep up till you’re almost on it, though,
without a body seein’ of you, ’specially
if you go before the party comes back.”
“Right you are,” said
Cleek in reply. “I’ll act on that
tip, my lad. Now, then, listen here. There’s
a ruin in the grounds of this place, and that ruin
I particularly wish to have closely watched to-night.
For one thing, the man who murdered the Common keeper
made his way to that place and buried his victim’s
clothing there; and for another oh, well,
never mind. That will keep for later. Miss
Lorne” he turned to Ailsa, who all
along had remained silent and closely huddled back
in the shadow of the wall-angle and the trees “Miss
Lorne, we shall have to defer our stroll on the Common
until later, I’m afraid. I shall have to
look into the matter of this mysterious woman in pink
before we can give any further thought to Lady Clavering
and her possible anxiety over her stepson. In
the meantime, will you, as silently and as expeditiously
as you can, steal back through the grounds and show
Dollops the way to the ruin? Afterward, you and
I can meet again here. And you, Dollops, listen
closely to what I say. The chances are that some
one, either man or woman, will secretly visit that
ruin to-night. Keep yourself well hidden and
your eyes wide open. If a woman comes, slip away
from the place as quietly as you can, come round to
the shrubbery near the front entrance to the house,
and hoot like an owl three times in succession; then
lie low until I come out and join you. But if,
on the other hand, it should be a man who puts in
an appearance here, lay hold of this pair
of handcuffs look sharp! At all costs,
at any hazard, get those things on him and then blow
your police whistle as a signal to me. I’ll
be with you like a shot. Now, then, cut along
with you. Show him the way, Miss Lorne, and be
as quiet as you can in your movements, both of you.”
“Mice’ll be fools to us, sir,” whispered
Dollops.
Cleek waited a minute to let them
get well on their way, then stooped in the darkness,
crept to the wall door, opened it cautiously, and went
down on all-fours upon the strip of grass and the row
of furze bushes that flanked that wall upon the outer
side and made a narrow black alley between it and
the crowded mulberry trees.
The moon had ridden farther than ever
into the depths of the thick, slow-moving clouds,
and the darkness was almost opaque. To the left
the great Common stretched out, a thing of gloom and
shadows, blotted here and there with deeper black
where the furze clumps were thickest or the full-leaved
tree reached up above the skyline. On the right,
the blank wall rose, flat, smooth as your hand, so
tall it shut out even the lights in the windows of
the Grange; and between these lay Mulberry Lane, a
black funnel leading on to deeper darkness and the
shapelessness of crowded trees.
In the shadows of that narrow alley
made by the wall and the furze bushes Cleek crouched
a moment and listened before he ventured to move another
inch. Not a sound, not the merest ghost of a sound.
If the woman were in the immediate neighbourhood,
she was keeping extremely quiet; therefore it behoved
him to progress with infinite caution. Inch by
inch, on hands and knees, he moved up that narrow alley,
stopping every now and then to prick up his ears and
listen breathlessly. But upon every occasion
he found the stillness yet unbroken and no sign or
sound of breathing life anywhere about him.
Two minutes passed three five half
a dozen, and still all was as it had been in the beginning.
By this time this slow, cautious creeping had carried
him over two thirds of the distance, and he was now
within ten or eleven feet of the hidden gate; and
still no sound or sign of the woman’s return.
Indeed, no sound of any sort until, with one hand
outstretched and one knee lifted to edge forward yet
a trifle more, he paused abruptly, sucked in his breath,
and huddled softly down, becoming but a mere dark
heap on the damp, dark grass.
A sound had come at last! The
unmistakable sound of some one moving cautiously through
close-pressing branches and crowded leaves.
It was so faint a thing that ears
less keen than his might not have detected it.
Yet, at the first rustle of the first stirred leaf
he caught the hiss of it and knew it was not the woman
that made it; for the prickly foliage of furze makes
no rustling sound when a passing body brushes it,
and there was nothing upon the outer side of the wall
but furze that was low enough to be brushed
in passing.
Clearly, then, the sound was from
the other side of the wall, from within the grounds
of the Grange! Some one was coming to keep the
tryst some one who, evidently, had been
delayed past an agreed time, otherwise the woman would
not have made all those anxious pilgrimages to the
door and been so upset when she found it still locked
and nobody there to meet her.
Well, this was a stroke of good fortune
at all events; for if by any chance the woman did
not return there would at least be the satisfaction
of discovering A sound interrupted:
a cat’s mew to the life. And from the shadow
of a thick furze hedge on the Common side of the lane
it was answered.
“Yes, I am here,” a shrill,
eager voice called out in a sharp, keen whisper.
“Oh, come quickly or I shall go insane!”
Almost instantly there was a rustle
of silken garments, a patter of footsteps, the swift
moving of a figure across the lonely lane, followed
by the rattle and click of a key in a spring lock,
the creak of an in-swung gate moving upon its hinges,
and with these things the sound of an excited man
whispering warningly, “Sh-h-h!” as
the woman swept down upon him in a state bordering
on absolute hysteria.
“Oh, if you could but know what
agonies I have suffered, what horrors of suspense
I have endured!” she said in a wailing sort of
whisper, “I feared that you might not be able
to come, after I have risked so much to be here; but
when I heard the cat’s mew, I wonder that I did
not scream.”
And again the man’s whispered
“Sh-h-h!” sounded, but fuller than
ever of excitement and fear.
But Cleek scarcely heard it.
Other and more startling things were claiming his
thoughts. A scent of violets was in his nostrils;
a sting of bitter recollection was in his memory.
What was it the dying Common keeper had said?
“All shiny pale green satin, sir, with sparklin’
things on her bosom, and smellin’ like a field
of voylits in the month of May!”
He did not need Ailsa Lorne to point
her out to him after this. He knew without anybody
telling him; knew in that first moment, as surely as
he ever lived to know in moments yet to come, that
this veiled and night-hidden woman who stood there
by the garden door keeping tryst with a man was she
who had been out on the Common last night: Sir
Philip Clavering’s wife!
And the man she was meeting, this
crafty fellow who hung back in the shadow of the solid
gate, who and what was he? What part was his in
this grim riddle of death?
It was Lady Clavering herself who gave the answer.
“Oh, it is so easy to say that,”
she went on, answering his warning “Sh-h-h”
in a whisper that was shrill with agony and despair,
“but the dread of shrieking will be on me forever
after this, the horrible dread that if I do not cry
out in my waking moments I may unconsciously do so
in my sleeping ones. I know it was mad of me to
do this thing, to take this dreadful risk in coming
here; but I couldn’t sleep until I saw you,
until I had told you that I know! I think I knew
it yesterday; I think I foresaw it when you wrote
and warned me, and if I had not been a coward, if
fate had not sent him to Clavering Close last night
and let me see that it was written he should come
back into my life again ”
Her voice snapped off and failed her
for an instant, sinking down to a dull, whimpering
sound like the wail of an animal that is beaten; then
it came back to her and she spoke again.
“I knew you would kill him,
I knew that you would!” she said in that horrible,
excited whisper. “I felt it in my soul the
moment he looked up and recognized me, and I knew
what I what you had to dread.
It was that that drove me out on the Common.
I wanted to find you; I wanted to stop you. But
it was too late, too late! I know that you did
it for my sake as much as for your own, but the thought
of the thing, the thought of it! If anything
can palliate that, if God can in any way excuse it,
it will be that you got the letters; that you tore
them up, burnt them, did anything in the world but
let them fall into that woman Margot’s hands!
Oh, did you? I cannot sleep until I know.
For if you did not ”
Here her voice snapped again, but
for quite another reason this time, a reason which
made Cleek groan inwardly.
Far down at the other end of the dark
alley where he lay breathlessly listening, a faint
rustling sound had suddenly risen the sound
of some one creeping gently toward him. He knew
and understood what was happening, what an unkindly
blow fate had dealt him. Ailsa was returning.
She had taken his expression, “Afterward you
and I can meet here again,” to mean after she
had conducted Dollops to the ruin, not after Cleek’s
own work was done; and lo! here she was returning at
this inopportune moment. She was creeping along
on tiptoe, it was true, and moving as stealthily and
as silently as she knew how, but in that utter stillness,
with silk skirts that brushed the wall as she advanced
The end came abruptly. There
was just one second of breathless listening, then
without a word the two people at the open doorway
parted. Lady Clavering jumped back, darted across
the lane, and vanished in the blackness of the Common;
the wall door closed, the spring lock clicked, and
the sound of a man’s running echoed faintly from
the other side. No time this for craft and finesse.
Here was a call for action, a demand for muscle, not
brain. If that man was a member of this household,
if fleet running could do it, if any man who should
be under that roof was not there
Cleek was on his feet like a flash.
He scudded down the lane openly, he ducked into the
door and vanished into the gardens without so much
as a word to Ailsa, he struck through the plantation
and made a short cut for the lawn and the front door,
and with jaw squared and teeth shut, ran and ran and
ran.