Part 10 (1/2)

He was much alone, questioning the oracles in the dells or in his study; and Miss Emily and I were much with each other.

She at least knew little quietness in those days, I think: I would spy her hanging about the door behind which her brother paced, and her fever about his state of mind became chronic. ”The visits of this man must be terrible to him,” she said of some sort of police-official from London who called about the happenings at Hallam Castle on the Sunday night of the miracle; Robinson had left no trace behind: so poor Langler was plied with questions, without having the least faith probably that the man with the note-book would see light where he himself saw none. And ”it is so distressing,” Miss Emily said to me during the third of the visits; ”he keeps Aubrey closeted an hour, and he is not pretty, his boots creak. I only wish that Aubrey could be coaxed into some change of scene; you ought to be able to get him to Paris, if you try. Have you noticed that for four days he has burned no incense at all in his rooms?”

”I wonder why?” I said.

”Perhaps he thinks it unbecoming now--I don't know; and he hasn't once played the usual chants since we have been back from Goodford. The old att.i.tude to everything has to be all changed, twisted, readjusted, now.

Deus meus! in what foreign world have we suddenly waked up?”

”Patience!” I said: ”in time the new way will be seen to be the best.”

”But the old pleases Cato all the same,” she muttered, with a nod of stubbornness which belonged to her; ”it is to be desired at least that the new way was not complicated by officers of the law.”

As to this officer, Langler himself spoke to me that same evening when I happened to be in his study, saying: ”you saw, Arthur, the officer who called to-day?”

”Yes,” I answered, ”I am afraid he must have bored you to death.”

”Well, he means well,” he answered, ”and we are none of us perfect in grace and wisdom. This man in particular must be very impressed just now with the limitations of our human intelligence, for he stands almost ludicrously dumfoundered before the facts which we know about Robinson; dumfoundered, above all, before the fact that Robinson should have been shown to me in an unconscious state at Hallam Castle at the hour of seven-fifteen, and in that state should have been conveyed away through a peopled countryside without being seen, though by eight P.M. the constabulary had been warned by me, and have been searching for him ever since. Before the failure to find _some_ trace the mind stands as staggered as if in the presence of unearthly agents. To the questions Where is Robinson now? in a house? in the grave? conscious? still unconscious? why can he contrive to give no sign? our minds can begin to form no guess. Well, we are a small infantry, just wise enough to learn to be meek, and of few days, and full of trouble. But what I wanted to tell you as to this officer is that I took occasion to lay before him all we know about Father Max Dees in his Styrian dungeon, and to ask what I could do for this poor man.”

I had forgotten Max Dees in the excitement of what had lately happened!

”Well, what did the officer advise?” I asked.

”He seemed unreceptive of the whole matter,” was the answer: ”to people of stolid minds the unique is apt to seem unreal; and the mere fact that our knowledge of Dees was brought us by a wren appeared to obstruct this man's concern in the case. However, he remarked with truth that we had no evidence that, of the three Barons Gregor, the one whom we suspect is really the gaoler of Dees; that, in any case, the English police have nothing to do with the incident; but that, with regard to the Austrian authorities, my best course before approaching them is to 'make sure of the facts.' In truth, he doesn't half believe in Dees--the wren being to blame. The man actually recommended me, with a smile, to go myself to Styria in order to 'make sure of the facts.'”

”Well, that might be done,” I said: ”by all means let us go, for I would go, too.”

Langler looked at me, and smiled, hardly taking me seriously, I fancy.

But this question of ”going to Styria” was destined, alas, to arise again. The very next (Sunday) morning, in the breakfast-room, Miss Emily, to my surprise, said to me: ”who, then, is Max Dees?”

As I knew that nothing had been told her of the wren's message, I could only think that she had overheard Langler's talk with me on the Sat.u.r.day evening, and, anyway, had now to tell her all--of Dees'

imprisonment, of his prayer ”_for G.o.d's sake_,” of our almost certainty that Baron Kolar was his gaoler, of the paper found at the inn at Mins stating that ”Dr Burton is another Max Dees,” of the disappearances, like Robinson's, which Langler had found to have been going on over Europe, and so on. That morning Langler had not risen from bed--he had flutters of the heart--so I had time to tell a long tale, to which Miss Emily listened without comment, and remained museful throughout the day.

In the evening we were all at Ritching church to hear Dr Burton's farewell before his departure for Lincoln, and I don't know who took care of Swandale during the office, for Langler was now most strict in having every soul about the place at each church-service. He had risen from bed, and we three walked somewhat ahead, with the knot of retainers following. I have an idea that in some recess of Miss Emily's mind these church-goings were not regarded with emotions quite utterly saintly; but whatever resentment rankled in her she breathed no word of it, but went meekly in the pilgrimages with her brother.

We had started out early, so as to secure seats, and far off, as we walked down the road to Ritching, out broke the shambling brogue of the chimes. I thought then how, when Langler and I last heard those bells together, he had said that we heard them for ”about the last time,” and thenceforth all the evening there were ringing in my head like a sing-song the words: ”[Greek: kai pulai adou, kai pulai adou]--and gates of h.e.l.l shall not prevail against it.” When we reached the church it was already full; but in the end I fancy that seats were found for all the Swandale party, though we were all separated throughout the office.

Dr Burton was a.s.sisted in the duty by his diocesan and two others, but spoke the address in person. His manner, I judged, was most meek, his throat choked, as of a man who has been struck dumb and has not yet recovered himself: I, in a seat far back, could hardly hear his words, though once, twice, as it were, the lion's voice lifted and vaunted a little, threatening wraths. However, one had little need to hear, in order to feel, Dr Burton that night, for his holiness by itself was as a focus of fire, pouring forth its power into all.

When it was ended, and our set met once more beyond the crowd, Miss Emily said to me: ”three-quarters of these folk have never seen Ritching before; half are from London: I saw Lady Agnew, the President of the Academy, and Dr Gootch, who has Aubrey's heart in his keeping. What do you say brought all these good people here?”

Her manner of speaking, I must say, seemed to me rather dry, and I answered shortly: ”a pious need, no doubt.”

”Not a hope to see in Dr Burton's church a repet.i.tion of the 'miracle'?”

she asked: ”not the l.u.s.t of a new thrill?”

”How you can be cruel!” I whispered.