Ailsa caught her breath with a faint,
little, sobbing sigh at this, and even if the moon
had not chosen just then to slip out from the screen
of the enveloping clouds and throw a dusk of silver
over everything, so that he could see her face and
the deep look of relief in her uplifted eyes, he still
would have known what a load his declaration of the
General’s innocence had lifted from her mind.
“Oh, I am so glad,” she
said fervently; “so very, very glad! Do
you know, I made sure from the manner in which you
spoke that, horrible as it seemed, it must surely
be he; that you must certainly have discovered something
which left no room for doubt in your own mind; otherwise
you would not have told me all these terrible things
regarding the forged letter and the drugged drink
and his meeting with Lady Clavering at the wall door.
And now to know that you do not suspect him, that you
are sure it was not he that killed De Louvisan, ah,
I can’t tell you how glad I am.”
“How loyal you are to your friends,”
he said admiringly. “You needn’t
assure me of your gladness; I can read it in your voice
and face. No, General Raynor is not guilty, although
I am very positive that he not only was out last night,
but was actually at Gleer Cottage; but I am absolutely
certain his was not the hand that killed De Louvisan.
I will even go further, and say that it would not
surprise me to learn that he was not even present
at the time of the killing, though there is, of course,
always the possibility, in the light of my theory of
the whys and wherefores of the case, that he was.”
“You have a theory regarding it, then?”
“Yes. I had a vague one
in the beginning that became more pronounced when
I heard Lady Clavering speak of ‘letters’
in her interview with the General at the wall door
to-night. She also spoke of Margot, recollect.
And I have said from the first that a woman was in
it.”
“And you think that she that Margot did
it?”
“Did what the murder?
No, I do not. As a matter of fact, I am beginning
to believe that the presence of that crafty female
in England, and in this particular neighbourhood at
this particular time, may possibly have led me to
leap to a conclusion which is a long way from the truth.
That she meant to see De Louvisan, and, with the aid
of her band, deal pretty harshly with him give
him the ‘traitor’s spike,’ in fact I
feel very nearly positive; but I am now beginning
to realize there is a possibility that the scrap of
pink gauze may not have come from Margot’s dress,
and that she may not have been at Gleer Cottage last
night, after all. In other words, that the woman
in the case is not Margot.”
“Who then? Lady Clavering?”
“Possibly. There is, however, a chance
that it is not even she.”
All in a moment Ailsa flamed up.
“You are leaving only Kathie,”
she said with spirit. “And if you were an
angel from heaven you could not make me believe it
is she. I know you declare that she was at Gleer
Cottage last night; that you say Geoff swears he met
her there; but even so ”
“Oh, thank you for reminding
me of that dear boy,” interjected Cleek, whipping
out his watch and glancing at it. “If he
keeps his promise, as he doubtless will, he’ll
be at the lodge gates in exactly twelve minutes, Miss
Lorne. And there is another ‘dear boy’
to consider too, my poor Dollops, who’s probably
waiting at the wall angle for me to explain my change
of tactics with regard to the arrest and release of
Sir Philip Clavering. Will you pardon me if I
rush off and see him for a few minutes? I’ll
be back here to join you as quickly as I can, and then,
if you will honour me, we’ll be off together
to the lodge gates to meet Geoff Clavering.”
He did not wait for her to reply;
did not stop to make any comment upon her remarks
regarding Lady Katharine. Moving off as briskly
as if he were endeavouring to evade that subject,
he slipped soundlessly away through the shrubbery
and was gone before she could speak. He was absent
for something like eight or ten minutes; then, as silently
and as abruptly as he had left her side he issued
from the bushes and returned to it.
“Shall we go to meet Geoff?”
he asked; and again scarcely waiting for her to reply,
led the way in silence.
It was on the tip of Ailsa’s
tongue to ask him if, after so often expressing his
conviction of Lady Katharine’s innocence and
admitting to-night that he had changed his opinion
with regard to one woman’s part in this elusive
riddle, he had suddenly changed it regarding her, too,
when, without preface of any sort, he looked round
at her.
“Rum how we English stick to
precedent, isn’t it?” he said. “Ever
remark how faithfully old footmen cling to their ‘calves’
and old valets cleave to their little black side-whiskers?
And, I say, Miss Lorne! what’s the fashion in
evening petticoats these days? Coloured ones,
I mean. Do they have to match the dress that’s
worn with them or not?”
“Certainly they don’t,”
said Ailsa, looking round at him in surprise.
“Good gracious, Mr. Cleek, whatever in the world
are you thinking about?”
“I? Oh, nothing in particular.
There we are at the lodge gates at last; and here’s
our man. Come in, bonny boy, come in.”
Geoff came up out of the shadow of
the two big trees at the entrance and moved swiftly
toward the gates.
“Wait a bit,” went on
Cleek. “I’ve got a skeleton key handy,
and in two shakes of a ram’s tail Told
you so! In with you, my lad. Miss Lorne’s
here with me; and if Loisette wasn’t a dreamer
and I’m not a fool, you’ll be the happiest
chap in England to-night. Sh-h-h! don’t
speak. Walk on your toes, take to the grass,
keep in the shadow of the hedge, and get over there
to that shrubbery as quickly and as noiselessly as
you can. With you in a minute, my boy.”
He was. Stopping just long enough
to relock the gates and to motion Ailsa to accompany
him, he travelled like a fleet-moving shadow across
the lawn, and was again with Geoff Clavering.
“Well, here I am as you requested,
you see, Mr. Barch,” said Geoff. “I
don’t know what in the world you meant when you
told me that thing over the telephone; but whatever
it is that’s going to make Kathie and me as
happy as you promised, I’m ready enough to hear
it, God knows.”
“Yes, God does know; you’re
right there, my boy. He knows that Lady Katharine
did call you into Gleer Cottage last night, and did
send you into the room where that dead man’s
body hung; and oh, yes, she did, Miss Lorne.
He’ll tell you that just as he told me; won’t
you, Clavering, eh?”
“Yes,” said Geoff, and
did forthwith, giving all the details just as he had
given them to Cleek hours earlier in the General’s
famous ruin.
“Will you believe now, Miss
Lorne?” said Cleek, and then paused and gave
a little, shaky, half-suppressed laugh. For, of
a sudden, a cuckoo’s note had risen softly over
the stillness, sounding thrice in rapid succession,
as if the bird had mistaken the moon’s glamour
for the sheen of day dawn, and had sent forth this
untimely call.
Hearing it, Cleek knew that what he
had so fervently hoped might come to pass really had
come to pass, and that the theory of Loisette was
about to be vindicated.
“Or, if you will not,”
he said, taking up the sentence just where the bird
note had broken off, “come with me and find proof
of it for yourself. Come quickly. Hold your
breath. Walk on your toes. Don’t make
a sound on your lives. This way. Quickly.
Come.”
He took them each by the hand and,
leading the way, passed on tiptoe with them out of
the shrubbery and down the hedged path to the mimic
ruin. The figure of Dollops rose out of the shadow
of it as they came upon the place, moved fleetly and
quietly to Cleek’s side, and then as quietly
slipped round behind him into the shade of the trees.
“All right, gov’ner,”
he whispered softly. “Over to the left there.
Give you the signal the minute I spotted her.
Lie low, all of you. Here she comes!”
“Here who comes?” Ailsa and Geoff spoke
in concert.
“Lord, I dunno, miss,”
replied Dollops in a whisper. “Gov’ner
said, ‘Look sharp for a lady in white, and “cuckoo”
when she appears.’ Dunno no more than that.”
Ailsa flashed round and looked at Cleek.
“Yes, Miss Lorne,” he
said, answering that look. “Lady Katharine
Fordham! She did steal out of the house last night,
and Loisette is right. The mirror
of to-night, reflecting the counterpart of yesterday,
is duplicating events. Her ladyship is stealing
out of the house again, and on the selfsame mission:
to visit Gleer Cottage. She will certainly wear
a cloak, though not an ermine one, to-night. I
looked out to see that one was placed in the anteroom,
to make sure of that. Quiet, quiet, all of you!
Not a sound, not a breath! Look sharp! You’ll
see her presently!”
They saw her even then. Of a
sudden a footstep sounded, the rustle of moved leaves
disturbed the stillness, then the figure of Lady Katharine
rounded the angle of the ruin, and advanced toward
them with great deliberation. A long dark cloak
covered her almost to the feet, the hood of it being
drawn up over her head until its loose frill framed
her face; but it was easy to see, as she advanced,
that under that cloak she wore a gown of white satin
and slippers with sparkling buckles on the toes.
She came into view so suddenly, and was walking so
rapidly, that she was upon them almost as they saw
her, walking straight to them, walking straight by
them, within touch of them, yet seeming not to care
or even to notice, and taking the path which led to
the stable gate, to the waste land beyond, and thence
to Gleer Cottage. It was then, when she had deliberately
walked past them, then, and then only, that Ailsa
understood.
“Dear God!” she said in
a shaking whisper as she plucked at Cleek’s
sleeve. “She does not know, she does not
understand. She is asleep, Mr. Cleek!”
“Yes,” he made answer.
“You know now why she looked so haggard and weary
this morning, despite her assurance that she had slept
well. Poor little woman; poor unhappy little
woman! A sleep-walker, Clavering and
going back where her heart leads her: to the
cottage where she had often spent those happier days
when she was so sure of love and of you!”