The Closed Book: Concerning the Secret of the Borgias Part 32

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At five o'clock, however, the Captain returned to tell me that he had received an imperative call from Paris, and must be away for several days. As there was nothing to be done until the seventeenth, his absence made no difference with our plans, though I found my patience sorely tried by the long wait. I employed the time in searching the British Museum for more detailed accounts of Threave, but without success. Within less than a fortnight Wyman had rejoined me, and we were making plans for a leisurely trip back to Scotland when I received a telegram from Fred Fenwicke that accelerated our plans. It ran:

"Come back tonight without fail. Go on to Castle-Douglas, and put up at `Douglas Arms.' Will meet you there tomorrow morning."

At ten o'clock on the following morning we were back again in Scotland, breakfasting in a cozy room in that old-fas.h.i.+oned hotel, the "Douglas Arms," at Castle-Douglas, and anxiously awaiting Fred Fenwicke.

We had spent a comfortable if rather warm night in the sleeping-car from Euston, and both of us being constant travellers, neither felt the fatigue of the long railway journey. The urgency of Fred's message caused us the greatest anxiety, and as we sat there together our eyes were watching the window for his arrival.

Outside, the long, broad street, the princ.i.p.al thoroughfare of the town, was already filled with the August suns.h.i.+ne, the roadway almost as white as those glaring roads of Italy, the sky almost as blue as it was in my once-loved Tuscany.



We had engaged that room for ourselves, for there seemed to be a party of London holidaymakers staying in the hotel; at least so we judged them to be by the gorgeous tweeds of the men and the tourist kit of the women. Loud laughter rang in the corridors of the quiet, eminently respectable place, and before the door was a coach upon which the party were slowly settling themselves for a drive through the beautiful Glenkens.

At last, just as the coach drove away, and the old post-house settled down to its normal quiet, Fred Fenwicke opened the door and closed it quickly after him.

"I'm glad you fellows have come," he said in quick excitement. "There's something strange going on here. Yesterday I was cycling through here, and while pa.s.sing down the road along Carlingwark Loch, the same road by which you drove the other day, I overtook Lady Judith. She was walking slowly, talking with an old hunchback."

"A hunchback?" I cried. "Then it must be Graniani."

"He was Italian, that's all I know. I didn't wait to acknowledge her because the fact struck me as very curious, and I thought it would be best if she were unaware that I had discovered her. So I ran on here, and on inquiry found that the lady, who had given the name of Miss Fletcher, had arrived on the previous day, and that the old Italian, who had signed his name in the visitors' book so badly that it could not be read, had arrived that morning."

"And they are both here! I wonder why?" I asked, amazed.

"Well, I suppose their visit has some connection with the search they intend to make over at Threave," Fred said. "At any rate, I thought it best that you should be on the spot, and watch what was happening."

"But the sale of the island?"

"Brooks wired me yesterday that the contract is signed, but the money is not yet paid over. The sale is to be completed on the sixteenth of September."

"Ah, Lord Glenelg, too, evidently thought of the change in the calendar.

Well, we must take our chances of a clash with him. Today is the fifteenth. On the day after tomorrow, at three-thirty, we ought to be at Threave and take our observations by the sun."

"But suppose it's a wet day?" suggested Fred, always practical.

"Ah! suppose it is?" I echoed. "Then all our chance may melt away from us."

Half an hour later, while the Major and the Captain strolled along to have a chat with Mr Batten, at the office of the British Linen Company, of which he was manager, I excused myself and remained behind.

Scarcely had they gone when Graniani pa.s.sed the window with Selby, both well dressed and presenting a prosperous appearance. They were speaking in Italian, in order, I suppose, that those who overheard should not understand their conversation. But I knew from the hunchback's gesticulations that he was excited by some untoward event.

Judith was undoubtedly alone; therefore I rang for the waiter and sent him with my card to "Miss Fletcher."

Five minutes later she entered the room half-timidly, as though fearful of detection. Her hand trembled, her face was pale, and I saw that she was in a highly nervous condition.

"I had no idea you were here, Mr Kennedy," she gasped. "What brings you here?"

"I am here to be near you, Lady Judith." I answered, holding her small white hand. "You are still in distress. How may I help you?"

"How can you help me?" she echoed. "By leaving here at once. If you remain you will imperil your life. Ah! you don't know the terrible risk you are running."

"But why are you here?" I demanded. "I believed you were in Edinburgh."

"I am not here of my own free will," she said slowly. "It is because I am compelled."

"Compelled! By whom?"

"By your enemies, Allan. Ah! heed me--do heed me, and get away from here at once."

"Why may I not remain as your protector?" I demurred.

"Because I need none; for me there is no protection," and she trembled as she stood before me.

"Where is your father?"

"I don't know," she responded. "Some strange events have happened since we met last."

"But you still trust me, dearest?" I cried pa.s.sionately, bending until my lips touched hers lightly. They were cold, and her features seemed like marble.

"Yes," she murmured. "I still trust you, Allan. My only fear is for your safety, not for mine. Recollect that we are dealing with people who are desperate--who will stick at nothing in order to gain their own sinister ends."

The thought of that weird sign in Bloomsbury crossed my mind, and I fell to wondering.

"If you reciprocate my love, dearest, it is all that I desire in life,"

I said quietly, in deepest earnestness. "You are in peril, you have told me, and I am your protector. You tell me nothing, because a silence is imposed upon you."

"Ah, Allan! I dare not tell you. If I did, you--even you--would hate me; in years to come even you would detest my memory. With me life is now short; but even though surrounded by a thousand perils and pitfalls, I am nevertheless happy because I know that I shall die loved by one upright and honest man."

"Die?" I echoed. "Why do you always speak of death being imminent?

This is a mere morbid foreboding. You should rid yourself of it, for it surely isn't good for you."

"Ah?" she sighed bitterly, "you do not know, Allan, or you would not think so." Then, a moment later, she turned to me and implored me to leave Castle-Douglas and return to London.

This I refused to do, though I said nothing of the presence of Graniani or Selby, for even now I was not quite convinced whether she were playing me false. If Judith were really my friend, if she really loved me as I hoped, why was she not a little more plain and straightforward?

It was this fact that still held me in a turmoil of suspicion. My pa.s.sion for her increased, but my position seemed somehow very insecure.

That a deep and impenetrable mystery surrounded her was apparent; but she seemed determined upon increasing it instead of giving me some clue to its elucidation, however slight.

I suggested that we should walk out of the town and talk, but at first she refused. She evidently feared that those two men might encounter her in my company, although to me she pleaded a headache. The whole affair was so queer and unconventional that I myself became more bewildered.

At length, however, I induced her to go for a stroll, allowing her to chose the way. She evidently knew the direction in which the hunchback and his companion had gone, for she took the road that led across the town and around the end of the beautiful loch towards Whitepark, where we presently struck a quiet, unfrequented path, whereon we strolled slowly in the shadow of the trees.

Since we had last met she and her father had been in Aberdeen, Glasgow, and Edinburgh, and she had left him two days ago at the County Hotel, in Carlisle. He had told her that he was leaving for London that night, and had instructed her to go on to Castle-Douglas and await a letter from him. She was still waiting for it. That was the reason she was there.

She made no mention of the two men also there, beyond her remark about my enemies being desperate ones.

For fully a couple of hours we wandered, heedless of where our footsteps led us, for she seemed thoroughly to enjoy that bright, fresh land of hills, streams, and lochs. In those sweet moments of peaceful bliss beside my love I forgot all my suspicion, all the mystery, all the desperate efforts that I was making to combat those who intended to filch from me the secret that was mine.

Many were our exchanges of affection as we lingered in that leafy glen, where deep below a rippling burn fell in small cascades with sweet, refres.h.i.+ng music. I saw that she wished to tell me everything, but was compelled to silence. I knew only that she loved me, she trusted me, but that she feared for my personal safety.

At last she expressed a wish to return, and with lingering footsteps we went towards the pointed spires of the town that lay beside the loch beneath our feet. Sweet were her words; sweet indeed was her personality, and sweet her almost childlike affection.

The Closed Book: Concerning the Secret of the Borgias Part 32

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