Cleek covered the distance between
the wall angle and the door of the Grange in a fraction
over a minute, and he had neither heard any one nor
seen any one on the way. He went up the steps
two at a time, and, swinging into the hallway, made
hot foot for the dining-room. An inward push
on the door and all that lay beyond it was in view.
The lights were still burning, the
decanter and the glasses still en evidence,
and, what was still more to the point, there lay Mr.
Harry Raynor with his arms sprawled out over the tablecloth
and his head between them, snoring away in a semi-drunken
stupor, with his mouth wide open and his flushed face
a little less attractive in slumber than it was in
wakefulness.
Not he, then!
Cleek dashed out of the room and flew
upstairs to Lord St. Ulmer’s room. No time
for craft and cunning this. At whatever risk,
at whatever cost, he must assure himself of where
that man was at this particular moment; and,
even if he had to break down the door to get in
The possibility ceased to exist while it was yet taking
shape in his mind.
For he had reached the second landing,
had come within three feet of Lord St. Ulmer’s
room, when he heard a voice from within it say, “Then
if there is nothing more, your lordship, allow me to
thank your lordship and to say good-night” and
was in time to see the door open and Johnston, the
butler, come out. More than that, to look past
him and see the figure of a man lying in bed with
his back to the door, his face to the wall, and one
pajama-clad arm lying outside the bedclothing.
Not St. Ulmer either, eh? Then
who the dickens He turned and made
a bolt for the staircase again.
“Anything I can get you, Mr.
Barch?” inquired Johnston. “I’ve
just returned from town, sir, so if there’s
anything Hamer has neglected to do in my absence ”
“No, thanks, don’t want
anything!” flung back Cleek, not waiting for
him to finish; and then cut downstairs again in such
hot haste that his feet beat an audible tattoo upon
the padded steps and gave such evidence of excitement
that he was not at all surprised when the key of the
library click-clacked sharply, the door opened, and
General Raynor appeared.
“What’s this? What’s
the meaning of all this confounded hubbub when I expressly
said” he began and then,
looking up and seeing Cleek, stopped short and changed
his tone. “Oh, I beg your pardon, Mr. Barch;
I didn’t know it was you! Is there anything
wrong?”
“No, General,” replied
Cleek. “Sorry if I disturbed you. Just
looking for ” Then he, too,
stopped short and changed his tone. For of a
sudden his ear had caught the shrilling note of a distant
police whistle, and excitement swayed him.
“Dollops, by Jupiter!”
he cried unthinkingly. “Got him! Got
him, the little brick!” and without another
word he faced about, ran down the hall, and pelted
off through the grounds in the direction of the ruin.
And all the time the police whistle
was shrilling, and Dollops’s voice was sounding,
and the darkness was full of scuffling sounds.
For the noise of the whistle had disturbed the servants,
and Cleek was hard put to it to get to the scene of
the uproar before them. He did, however; but
they were close upon his heels and as excited as he
when, upon nearing the ruin, they came upon two struggling
figures linked together and careering about like a
couple of fighting tomcats.
“Here yer are, gov’ner;
ketched him foul, the rotter,” sang out Dollops
as his master came scudding up with all that troop
of servants pounding along in his wake. “Look!
See!”
Then an electric torch clicked, and
lo, there he was, with one end of a pair of handcuffs
snapped on his own wrist and the other locked fast
upon that of a distinguished-looking man in a spring
overcoat and evening clothes.
A stranger to Cleek this man, but
not to the servants of Wuthering Grange; and it came
as a shock when he heard them speak his name.
It was Sir Philip Clavering.
The man’s identity had no sooner
been made known than he broke forth with a storm of
indignant protest.
“What is the meaning of this
outrage, and who is this young person?” he demanded
with heat. “As some of you have good enough
eyes to recognize me, perhaps you will have good enough
wits to go for your master and let me get to the bottom
of this extraordinary proceeding as soon as possible.
I should like to know what on earth this means.
Ah, Raynor, is that you?” he added, as he caught
sight of the General forcing his way to the front.
“Glad you’ve put in an appearance.
Perhaps you can throw some light upon this affair.
Who’s this fellow?” twitching his head
toward Dollops. “What’s he doing here?
And what is the meaning of this astonishing business,
if you please?”
“Good heavens above, how do
you expect I am going to know? Never saw him
in all my life,” exclaimed the General in bewilderment.
“Look here, young man, what’s the meaning
of this? Who are you? What are you doing
in this place? Speak up.
“Name’s Dollops,”
replied that youth serenely. “Business:
Scotland Yard. Lay: Doin’ wot I’m
told by my gov’ner. Boss: Mr.
’Amilton Cleek, Es-quire. All other
questions I refers to him.”
Cleek! The name produced universal
excitement. There was not one person present
that had not, at one time or another, heard it and
did not recollect of what it was the synonym.
It stood for the Law and the coming of the Law!
And last night a man had been done to death within
a gunshot of this house.
“It is too absurd, too absurd!”
said Sir Philip, after a moment, speaking with a little
shaky laugh and looking Dollops up and down with half-contemptuous
interest. “I hope, Raynor, that you Good
heavens above! What asinine mistakes the law
does sometimes make. And it is all so easily
explained. Superintendent Narkom of the Yard will
speak for me if it is necessary. There can, by
no shadow of possibility, be anything to connect me
with that abominable case.”
It was here that Cleek chose to take
part in the affair, and with a warning glance at Ailsa,
who had come up and joined the gathering, stepped
forward and addressed Sir Philip.
“My dear Sir Philip Clavering,
allow me to introduce myself,” he said suavely,
serene in the confidence that Dollops, hearing, would
take the cue and act accordingly. “My name
is Barch; I am at present a guest of the General’s,
and I am taking this liberty because I, too, happen
to be a friend of Mr. Narkom’s. I have
heard him speak of you time and again, and always
with the warmest interest. Perhaps, then, if we
question this young man ”
He turned to Dollops, and Dollops looked at him and
never turned a hair! “Boy, what’s
all this thing about? How came you in this place,
and for what reason?”
“Come in by the garden door,
sir, ’arf an hour or so back. Told off by
my gov’ner to lie low and wait for somebody who
might come a-sneakin’ about, meanin’ to
break into the house, I suppose, and with his eye on
the plate.”
“I see! Well, better take
my advice, my lad, and unlock those handcuffs, and
set this gentleman at liberty before they do come,
or you’re likely to have a sharp talking to
from Superintendent Narkom. By the way, what
induced you to snap them on him in the first place?
You surely do not expect us to believe that a gentleman
of Sir Philip Clavering’s standing was acting
suspiciously? What was he doing, if you please,
that you should have gone to such a length?”
“Sneakin’ along and feelin’
about the bushes like he was huntin’ for somethin’,”
said Dollops as he unlocked the handcuffs and put them
in his pocket.
“He is quite right in that,
Mr. Barch. I was looking for something,”
said Sir Philip, wiping his wrists with his handkerchief,
as though to remove something of the infection with
which he felt he had come into contact. “As
a matter of fact, I was looking for my way. I
had come into the grounds from a point where I had
never before entered them, and I was endeavouring
to find a path which would lead me to the house.
As it was as black as a pocket, nothing was left me
but to feel my way. I got hopelessly muddled
up, and was just telling myself that I would have
done better to make my call in orthodox fashion and
by the regular entrance, when, the first thing I knew,
this enterprising young man jumped out of the dark
and pounced on me like a monkey. You see, it was
this way, Raynor,” glancing up at the General,
who was looking at him fixedly, and with a curious
ridge between his brows, as if, for some reason, he
only half believed him, though for years they had been
tried and trusted friends; “I was in such a
dickens of a hurry to see you that when I came off
the Common and found that wall door open ”
“Open? What wall door open?”
interposed the General agitatedly.
“The one at the angle of the
wall, where your boundary flanks the waste land between
here and the right-of-way across the fields.”
“And you found that door open?
Open? Why, man alive, it has been locked and
screwed up for years.”
“Has it, indeed? Well,
it was open to-night, then. As I was saying, when
I found that open, I thought that, possibly, it might
be a short cut to the house, so I dashed in and got
into this abominable fix.”
“But why did you wish to take
a short cut to the house, Clavering? Was there
any reason for such a thing?”
“None but that I was anxious;
that I am anxious still, when it comes to that.
About my boy, Geoff, you know.”
“About Geoff?”
“Yes, you know how foolish Marise
and I are over him. He left to come over here
early this afternoon, and said he would not be long,
but he did not return even for dinner. Of course
Marise was disappointed, for she had said that after
so much gloom and depression we must do all that we
could to brighten him up and to appear merry, and even
went to the length of getting out a pink silk frock
which he had always admired, when she dressed for
dinner to-night. She was distressed when he didn’t
come, and anxiety brought on a splitting headache,
so bad, in fact, that she went to her room to lie
down and rest. Later, Celine came down to tell
me she had taken a sleeping draught and there was every
likelihood of her sleeping until morning. I was
glad when I heard that, for I knew how she would worry
if she were awake and the boy did not return at a
reasonable hour; and when it crept along to be nine
o’clock and after, I don’t mind confessing
that I began, myself, to worry.”
“Why?” said Cleek, dropping in an unexpected
query.
“My dear Mr. Barch, you wouldn’t
ask that if you knew what a bond of affection exists
between my son and me,” Sir Philip replied.
And Cleek heard, or fancied that he heard, the General
give a sort of sigh, as if he were contrasting this
man’s heir with his own. “Besides,
after that mysterious and abominable affair last night after
a man had been murdered in this identical neighbourhood,
to have my boy out and alone Oh,
well, you can understand. I got a bit nervous a
bit dotty, if you like. I imagined all sorts
of things, and when it got to be half-past nine I
set out to walk across the Common to meet him.
I didn’t, however, so I suppose he is still
here; and in the enjoyment of Lady Katharine’s
society and the hope that has so unexpectedly returned
to them both, has forgotten all about the time and
the probable worrying of his silly old dad. That’s
why I was so anxious to get to the house as quickly
as possible, Raynor, and why I was foolish enough to
take what I fancied might be a short cut. I wanted
to be certain that the boy is still here; I wanted
to walk back with him when he goes home. No harm
can possibly come to him then.”
Not once during all this had General
Raynor’s eyes left the man’s face, nor
had the faint pallor and the curiously tense look departed
from his own. He stood looking at Sir Philip
in intense and unbroken silence, his lips tightly
set, a worried look in his fixed eyes, as if he were
trying to believe this thing and found it difficult
to do so. Now, however, he turned to the assembled
servants, ordered them back to the house, made one
or two uneasy turns up and down for a distance of three
or four yards, then halted suddenly and looked into
Sir Philip’s face again.
“Clavering,” he said in
his abrupt, direct manner, going straight to the point,
as was his custom. “Clavering, are you sure
that you are telling the truth about this? Are
you sure? Will you swear, will you give me your
word of honour, that it was to seek your boy, that
and that alone, which brought you to this place to-night?”
“Raynor! By the Lord Harry, sir ”
“No, don’t fly into a
passion. Anger is no answer, and an answer is
what I want. A man of honour responds promptly
to an appeal to that honour; and I am asking you on
yours if you are telling the truth?”
“On my word of honour, then,
I am!” said Sir Philip indignantly.
“And you will swear by it that
you came only to meet your son? That you had
no other purpose in coming whatsoever?”
“Yes, decidedly I will swear
it. Are you taking leave of your senses, Raynor?
What other reason could I have?”
An expression of intense relief drove
that other and darker look from the General’s
face and eyes.
“I don’t know,”
he said, fetching a deep sigh; “but I am glad
to have your word for it, glad to say that I accept
it. Still, why should I not ask? Why should
I not question everything, any statement, in the face
of to-night?”
“I don’t know what you are driving at,
I am sure.”
“Don’t you? Then
let me tell you: your boy is not here. He
left this afternoon; came and stayed but a little
time, and left so early that there has been time and
to spare for him to get back to Clavering Close a
dozen times over. On the top of that, you tell
me that a door in my garden wall, a door that has
been locked up, and screwed up, and even rusted up,
for years was found standing open. And on top
of that again, an emissary of the police, of Scotland
Yard, of that man Cleek, is here in these grounds.
Who opened that door? What brings the police to
Wuthering Grange? That is what mystifies me; that
is what I want to know. What brings the police
here, of all places in England? Do you know,
Clavering? Do you know, Miss Lorne? Do you
know, Mr. Barch?”
“Not the ghost of an idea, I
assure you, General,” said Cleek serenely.
“Never knew the beggars were here until this
young person declared himself. But, yes, by Jove!
We’ll have ’em here in full force presently,
I’m afraid, if those sounds go for anything.
Coming in answer to that blessed whistle, I’ll
lay my life. Here, boy!” this
to Dollops “nip off as quickly as
you can, and head them off. Tell ’em it’s
a mistake; tell ’em you didn’t mean to
blow that whistle for assistance. Move sharp;
we don’t want that lot in here, or
Hullo! I say, what’s the matter, Sir Philip?
A bad turn, is it? Upon my soul, you look as white
as a sheet!”
It was no exaggeration. The moon,
coming suddenly out from behind the clouds at that
moment, showed him leaning heavily against a tree and
looking pale as a dead man.