Part 36 (1/2)
Now a rule of the house ordained that all doors should be locked and lower windows latched at midnight. A night watchman made certain rounds each hour, pressing a key into indicating-clocks at various points to show that he had been alert. Mortimer Fenley had been afraid of fire; there was so much old woodwork in the building that it would burn readily, and a short circuit in the electrical installation was always possible, though every device had been adopted to render it not only improbable but harmless. After midnight the door bells and others communicated with a switchboard in the watchman's room; and a burglary alarm, which the man adjusted during his first round, rang there continuously if disturbed.
Sylvia, leaving the door of her bedroom ajar, went to the servants'
quarters by a back staircase. There she found MacBain, the watchman, eating his supper.
”I don't feel as though I could sleep,” she explained, ”so I am going out into the park for a while. I'll unlatch one of the drawing-room windows and disconnect the alarm; and when I come in again I'll tell you.”
”Very well, miss,” said MacBain. ”It's a fine night, and you'll take no harm.”
”I'm not afraid of rabbits, if that is what you mean,” she said lightly, for the very sound of the man's voice had dispelled vapors.
”Oh, there's more than rabbits in the park tonight, miss. Two policemen are stationed in the Quarry Wood.”
”Why?” she said, with some surprise.
”They don't know themselves, miss. The Inspector ordered it. I met them coming on duty at ten o'clock. They'll be relieved at four. They have instructions to allow no one to enter the wood. That's all they know.”
”If I go there, then, shall I be locked up?”
”Not so bad as that, miss,” smiled MacBain. ”But I'd keep away from it if I was you. 'Let sleeping dogs lie' is a good motto.”
”But these are not sleeping dogs. They're wide-awake policemen.”
”Mebbe, miss. They have a soft job, I'm thinking. Of course----”
The man checked himself, but Sylvia guessed what was pa.s.sing in his mind.
”You were going to say that the wretch who killed my uncle hid in that wood?” she prompted him.
”Yes, miss, I was.”
”He is not there now. He must have run away while we were too terrified to take any steps to capture him. Who in the world could have wished to kill Mr. Fenley?”
”Ah, miss, there's no knowing. Those you'd least suspect are often the worst.”
MacBain shook his head over this cryptic remark; he glanced at a clock. It was five minutes to twelve.
”It's rather late, miss,” he hinted. Sylvia agreed with him, but she was young enough to be headstrong.
”I sha'n't remain out very long,” she said. ”I ought to feel tired, but I don't; and I hope the fresh air will make me sleepy.”
To reach the drawing-room, she had to cross the hall. Its parquet floor creaked under her rapid tread. A single lamp among a cl.u.s.ter in the ceiling burned there all night, and she could not help giving one quick look at the oaken settle which stood under the cross gallery; she was glad when the drawing-room door closed behind her.
She had no difficulty with the window, but the outer shutters creaked when she opened them. Then she pa.s.sed on to the first of the Italian terraces, and stood there irresolutely a few minutes, gazing alternately at the sky and the black ma.s.ses of the trees. At first she was a trifle nervous. The air was so still, the park so solemn in its utter quietude, that the sense of adventure was absent, and the funeral silence that prevailed was almost oppressive.
Half inclined to go back, woman-like she went forward. Then the sweet, clinging scent of a rose bed drew her like a magnet. She descended a flight of steps and gained the second terrace. She thought of Trenholme and the picture, and the impulse to stroll as far as the lake seized her irresistibly. Why not! The gra.s.s was short, and the dew would not be heavy. Even if she wetted her feet, what did it matter, as she would undress promptly on returning to her room?
Besides, she had never seen the statue on just such a night, though she had often visited it by moonlight.
La Rochefoucauld is responsible for the oft quoted epigram that the woman who hesitates is lost, and Sylvia had certainly hesitated. At any rate, after a brief debate in which the arguments were distinctly one-sided, she resolved that she might as well have an object in view as stroll aimlessly in any other direction; so, gathering her skirts to keep them dry, she set off across the park.
She might have been halfway to the lake when a man emerged from the same window of the drawing-room, ran to the terrace steps, stumbled down them so awkwardly that he nearly fell, and swore at his own clumsiness in so doing. He negotiated the next flight more carefully, but quickened his pace again into a run when he reached the open. The girl's figure was hardly visible, but he knew she was there, and the distance between pursued and pursuer soon lessened.
Sylvia, wholly unaware of being followed, did not hurry; but she was const.i.tutionally incapable of loitering, and moved over the rustling gra.s.s with a swiftness that brought her to the edge of the lake while the second inmate of The Towers abroad that night was yet a couple of hundred yards distant.