Part 20 (1/2)
”I can't-it's the boys-the wrong house!” he whispered. ”Curse the fog-it's done me. But you get out, Bunn, while you can; never mind me; it's my turn, old chap.”
His one hand tightened in affectionate farewell. I put the electric torch in it before I went, trembling in every inch, but without a word.
Get out! His turn! Yes, I would get out, but only to come in again, for it was my turn-mine-not his. Would Raffles leave me held by a hand through a hole in a door? What he would have done in my place was the thing for me to do now. I began by diving head-first through the pantry window and coming to earth upon all fours. But even as I stood up, and brushed the gravel from the palms of my hands and the knees of my knickerbockers, I had no notion what to do next. And yet I was halfway to the front door before I remembered the vile c.r.a.pe mask upon my face, and tore it off as the door flew open and my feet were on the steps.
”He's into the next garden,” I cried to a bevy of pyjamas with bare feet and young faces at either end of them.
”Who? Who?” said they, giving way before me.
”Some fellow who came through one of your windows head-first.”
”The other Johnny, the other Johnny,” the cherubs chorused.
”Biking past-saw the light-why, what have you there?”
Of course it was Raffles's hand that they had, but now I was in the hall among them. A red-faced barrel of a boy did all the holding, one hand round the wrist, the other palm to palm, and his knees braced up against the panel. Another was rendering ostentatious but ineffectual aid, and three or four others danced about in their pyjamas. After all, they were not more than four to one. I had raised my voice, so that Raffles might hear me and take heart, and now I raised it again. Yet to this day I cannot account for my inspiration, that proved nothing less.
”Don't talk so loud,” they were crying below their breath; ”don't wake 'em upstairs, this is our show.”
”Then I see you've got one of them,” said I, as desired. ”Well, if you want the other you can have him, too. I believe he's hurt himself.”
”After him, after him!” they exclaimed as one.
”But I think he got over the wall-”
”Come on, you chaps, come on!”
And there was a soft stampede to the hall door.
”Don't all desert me, I say!” gasped the red-faced hero who held Raffles prisoner.
”We must have them both, Beefy!”
”That's all very well-”
”Look here,” I interposed, ”I'll stay by you. I've a friend outside, I'll get him too.”
”Thanks awfully,” said the valiant Beefy.
The hall was empty now. My heart beat high.
”How did you hear them?” I inquired, my eye running over him.
”We were down having drinks-game o' Nap-in there.”
Beefy jerked his great head toward an open door, and the tail of my eye caught the glint of gla.s.ses in the firelight, but the rest of it was otherwise engaged.
”Let me relieve you,” I said, trembling.
”No, I'm all right.”