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PAGE 11

Cleeve Court
by [?]

The Squire saw and interpreted his dismay. “Go on, man,” he said hoarsely; “it’s no ghost.”

Jim’s face cleared. “Your servant, Mr. Walter! A rum mistake I made then, this afternoon; but it’s all right as things turn out. They’re both hereabout, sir, somewheres on the face of the rock, and the one of ’em hurt, I reckon. Macklin’ll keep the top: there’s no way off the west side; and if you and his Reverence’ll work up along the gully here while I try up the face, we’ll have the pair for a certainty. Better douse the light though; I’ve a bull’s-eye here that’ll search every foot of the way, and they haven’t a gun.”

“That’s right enough,” the Squire answered; “but it’s foolishness to douse the light. We’ll set it up on the stones here at the mouth of the gully while Walter and I work up to the left of the gully and you up the rock. It will light up their only bolt-hole; and if you, Father Halloran, will keep an eye on it from the bushes here you will have light enough to see their faces to swear by before they reach it. No need to shoot: only keep your eyes open before they come abreast of it; for they’ll make for it at once, to kick it over–if they risk a bolt this way, which I doubt.”

“Why not let me try up the gully between you and Jim?” Walter suggested.

His father considered a moment. “Very well, I’ll flank you on the left up the hedge, and Jim will take the rock. You’re pretty sure they’re there, Jim?”

“I’d put a year’s wages on it,” answered Jim.

So the three began their climb. At his post below Father Halloran judged from the pace at which Walter started that he would soon lead the others; for Jim had a climb to negotiate which was none too easy, even by daylight, and the Squire must fetch a considerable detour before he struck the hedge, along which, moreover, he would be impeded by brambles and undergrowth. He saw this, but it was too late to call a warning.

Walter, beyond reach of the lantern’s rays, ascended silently enough, but at a gathering pace. He forgot the necessity of keeping in line. It did not occur to him that his father must be dropping far behind: rather, his presence seemed beside him, inexorable, dogging him with the morrow’s unthinkable compulsion. What mad adventure was this? Here he was at home hunting Charley Hannaford. Well, but his father was close at hand, and Father Halloran just below, who had always protected him. At this game he could go on for ever, if only it would stave off tomorrow. To-morrow–

A couple of lithe arms went about him in the darkness. A voice spoke hoarse and quick in his ear–spoke, though for the moment he was chiefly aware of its hot breath.

“Broke your word, did ye? Set them on to us, you blasted young sprig! Look ‘ee here–I’ve a knife to your ribs, and you can’t use your gun. Stand still while my boy slips across, or I’ll cut your white heart out. . .”

Walter a Cleeve stood still. He felt, rather than heard, a figure limp by and steal across the gully. A slight sound of a little loose earth dribbling reached him a moment later from the opposite bank of the gully. Then, after a long pause, the arms about him relaxed. Charles Hannaford was gone.

Still Walter a Cleeve did not move. He stared up into the wall of darkness on his left, wondering stupidly why his father did not shoot.

Then he put out his hand: it encountered a bramble bush.

He drew a long spray of the bramble towards him, fingering it very carefully, following the spines of its curved prickles, and, having found its leafy end, drew it meditatively through the trigger-guard of his gun.

The countryside scoffed at the finding of the coroner’s jury that the last heir of the a Cleeves had met his death by misadventure. Shortly after the inquest Charley Hannaford disappeared with his family, and this lent colour to their gossip. But Jim Burdon, who had been the first to arrive on the scene, told his plain tale, and, for the rest, kept his counsel. And so did Father Halloran and the Squire.