PAGE 7
Keeping His Promise
by
“You hear the breathing now plainly, don’t you?” he said. Greene said he did. “Well, come with me, and we’ll search the room together.” The other, however, did not move from his chair.
“I’ve been in already,” he said sheepishly; “I heard the sounds and thought it was you. The door was ajar–so I went in.”
Marriott made no comment, but pushed the door open as wide as it would go. As it opened, the sound of breathing grew more and more distinct.
“Someone must be in there,” said Greene under his breath.
“Someone is in there, but where?” said Marriott. Again he urged his friend to go in with him. But Greene refused point-blank; said he had been in once and had searched the room and there was nothing there. He would not go in again for a good deal.
They shut the door and retired into the other room to talk it all over with many pipes. Greene questioned his friend very closely, but without illuminating result, since questions cannot alter facts.
“The only thing that ought to have a proper, a logical, explanation is the pain in my arm,” said Marriott, rubbing that member with an attempt at a smile. “It hurts so infernally and aches all the way up. I can’t remember bruising it, though.”
“Let me examine it for you,” said Greene. “I’m awfully good at bones in spite of the examiners’ opinion to the contrary.” It was a relief to play the fool a bit, and Marriott took his coat off and rolled up his sleeve.
“By George, though, I’m bleeding!” he exclaimed. “Look here! What on earth’s this?”
On the forearm, quite close to the wrist, was a thin red line. There was a tiny drop of apparently fresh blood on it. Greene came over and looked closely at it for some minutes. Then he sat back in his chair, looking curiously at his friend’s face.
“You’ve scratched yourself without knowing it,” he said presently.
“There’s no sign of a bruise. It must be something else that made the arm ache.”
Marriott sat very still, staring silently at his arm as though the solution of the whole mystery lay there actually written upon the skin.
“What’s the matter? I see nothing very strange about a scratch,” said Greene, in an unconvincing sort of voice. “It was your cuff links probably. Last night in your excitement–“
But Marriott, white to the very lips, was trying to speak. The sweat stood in great beads on his forehead. At last he leaned forward close to his friend’s face.
“Look,” he said, in a low voice that shook a little. “Do you see that red mark? I mean underneath what you call the scratch?”
Greene admitted he saw something or other, and Marriott wiped the place clean with his handkerchief and told him to look again more closely.
“Yes, I see,” returned the other, lifting his head after a moment’s careful inspection. “It looks like an old scar.”
“It is an old scar,” whispered Marriott, his lips trembling. “Now it all comes back to me.”
“All what?” Greene fidgeted on his chair. He tried to laugh, but without success. His friend seemed bordering on collapse.
“Hush! Be quiet, and–I’ll tell you,” he said. “Field made that scar.”
For a whole minute the two men looked each other full in the face without speaking.
“Field made that scar!” repeated Marriott at length in a louder voice.
“Field! You mean–last night?”
“No, not last night. Years ago–at school, with his knife. And I made a scar in his arm with mine.” Marriott was talking rapidly now.
“We exchanged drops of blood in each other’s cuts. He put a drop into my arm and I put one into his–“
“In the name of heaven, what for?”
“It was a boys’ compact. We made a sacred pledge, a bargain. I remember it all perfectly now. We had been reading some dreadful book and we swore to appear to one another–I mean, whoever died first swore to show himself to the other. And we sealed the compact with each other’s blood. I remember it all so well–the hot summer afternoon in the playground, seven years ago–and one of the masters caught us and confiscated the knives–and I have never thought of it again to this day–“