Part 41 (1/2)

”If Leggo's story be true,” said Dr. Bonaday, addressing the c.o.xswain abruptly, as though awakened of a sudden from a brown study, ”the accident must have happened just upon high-water; in which case Mr.

Rogers will do best to start searching to westward along the north sh.o.r.e of Brefar, following the set of the ebb.”

”I reckon he'll take that line, sir, if he finds nothing at Piper's Hole,” the c.o.xswain answered. ”But his plan, as he told it to me, was to land Leggo, with two of our men, by the schoolhouse, and send them up the hill with ropes and lanterns, while he pulled round and searched Piper's Hole from seaward.”

The Doctor appeared to digest this plan for a full minute. ”Pope,” he said, abruptly as before, ”do you happen to know if the Lord Proprietor had made his will?”

”Good Lord!” answered Mr. Pope, testily, ”I am not his lawyer.”

”He has relatives?”

”Some distant cousins, I believe; none nearer. Why do you ask?”

”Because,” answered the Doctor, imperturably, ”it occurred to me as a natural question under the circ.u.mstances. Then it would appear, my friend, that Sir Caesar's decease (if we suppose it) is a very serious affair indeed for you?”

”Man alive!” snapped Mr. Pope. ”Of what else do you suppose I have been thinking, ever since I heard this news?”

Dr. Bonaday did not reply in words; but the Commandant--who happened to be gazing just then towards North Island, where the great sea-light seemed to search the outer tides with its monstrous eye--heard, or fancied that he heard, a sound as of a quiet chuckle. Suddenly he remembered Mr. Pope's scornful criticism of old Constable Ward: remembered it, and glanced at the Doctor. But the Doctor was an uncanny fellow, and inscrutable.

Though the coastguardsmen, pulling with a will, overtook and pa.s.sed at least a dozen boats on their way, it cost them close upon an hour to reach the upper end of Cromwell's Sound and open the coast along the north side of Inniscaw. They had no need to search for Mr. Rogers and the jolly-boat. Flares were burning and torches waving in and around the entrance to Piper's Hole, and as the gig drew closer the Commandant discerned the figures of half-a-dozen searchers, roped and moving cautiously with lanterns from ledge to ledge of the dizzy cliff. The jolly-boat lay beached on a bank of fine s.h.i.+ngle left by the receding tide at the entrance of the cave, and beside it stood Mr. Rogers shouting orders.

He hailed the newcomers as soon as he caught sight of them. Leggo and his two men had found Sir Caesar's gun, and recovered it from the bushes overhanging the cave. But of Sir Caesar himself no trace could be found.

It was clear to his mind that the body had rolled down the cliff into deep water, and had been carried out to sea. His fellows up yonder had examined every foot of the descent, and were risking their necks to no purpose. He would give them another ten minutes to make a clean job of the search, and would then call them off and seek along sh.o.r.e to the westward.

Had the cave itself been searched? This was the Commandant's first question as he stepped out upon the s.h.i.+ngle.

Yes; they had begun by searching the cave. They had followed it for fifty yards, and come to a ridge of rock, heaped with ore-weed, beyond which (it was certain) no ordinary tide ever penetrated. The floor of the cave shelved pretty steeply up to this ridge, and beyond it lay a pool of fresh water, about twenty yards long. It was impossible that a human body could have been swept over the ridge into this pool.

Nevertheless they had explored it. But would the Commandant care to satisfy himself?

Mr. Rogers, without waiting for an answer, picked up a lantern and led the way under the great arch. The Commandant followed, his feet at every step sinking ankle-deep in the fine s.h.i.+ngle. He found himself in a pa.s.sage nine or ten feet wide, the walls of which rose about twenty feet above him, and vaulted themselves in darkness. At first this pa.s.sage appeared to him to end, some fifteen paces from the entrance, in a barrier of solid rock, but Mr. Rogers, stepping forward with the lantern, revealed a low archway to the left and a second pa.s.sage, partially choked with ore-weed. Through this they squeezed themselves, crouching and stooping their heads--for the roof in places was less than five feet high--and after a couple of zig-zags drew breath at the entrance of the second chamber, at least as lofty as the first and a full twenty feet wide. Across the entrance the floor sloped up to the rocky ridge, of which Mr. Rogers had spoken; and beyond the ridge lay the pool.

”Taste it,” said Mr. Rogers, and the Commandant, kneeling by the edge of the pool, scooped up a palmful of water to his lips. It was fresh water, undoubtedly; very cold, and not in the least brackish.

”Look down,” said Mr. Rogers, holding his lantern so that the Commandant could peer into the depths. ”You can see every stone at the bottom, and my men have searched it all.” He lifted the light above his head and gazed into the mysterious darkness beyond the pool. ”I must explore this place to the end, one of these days. The chief boatman waded through, and reported yet another pa.s.sage beyond; but of course I wouldn't let my men waste time in exploring it. What a place for seals, hey?”

”Seals?” queried the Commandant.

”Leggo gave me a sort of description of the place on our way here. He tells me that this cave and the next are a favourite haunt of the seals when they visit the Islands. In fact, he used to hunt them here with his father. But of late years, for some reason, they have given the Islands the go-by.”

”You think it possible,” suggested the Commandant, ”Sir Caesar may have seen one, and taken a shot at it?”

”That's not likely; and anyway it doesn't help us. It won't account for his gun being found in the bushes, half-way down the cliff, nor for his disappearing. Among a deal that's mysterious, this much is clear: Leggo left him on the cliff above us; within twenty minutes Sir Caesar's gun went off, whether fired by himself or by someone else; and whether wounded or not, he slid down the cliff and over the ledge above the cave. His body is not in the cave; therefore, presumably, it was sucked out to sea by the time, and presumably has been carried somewhere to the westward. Shall we turn back?”

The Commandant nodded. ”You will have plenty of folk to help your search,” said he, ”to judge from the number of boats we pa.s.sed on our way. By spreading your forces, in less than two hours you can have the whole sh.o.r.e examined, from here to the west of Brefar. By the way, who has possession of Sir Caesar's gun?”

”It was pa.s.sed up to Sam Leggo, on the cliff. But if you wish to take charge of it----”

”It will probably be wanted for evidence.”

”Come, then.” Mr. Rogers led the way back to the entrance, and called up an order to have the gun lowered by a sh.o.r.e-line; which was done, the coast guardsmen on the cliffs fending the line clear of the bushes, and so pa.s.sing it from one to another until it dangled over the ledge within grasp. The Commandant, as the taller, reached up for the gun, took it, and examined it by the light of the lantern which Mr. Rogers held for him.