Part 11 (1/2)
”Lawson?”
”I don't fancy you know him, but he was a friend of Arkwright's.”
”And is he going to stay here?” The anxiety was upon Gordon's side now. Everything depended on the answer. For the presence of this interloper, even for a day, would render the accomplishment of his purpose impossible.
”No! He is on his way to b.u.t.termere. I am going with him part of the distance, and we mean to spend an hour or so on the Pillar Rock. If I have time I shall work round to Eskdale afterwards.”
”It will mean a long day.”
”Yes! But I have to leave for London to-morrow. And, by the way, that is what brought me up here. I shall be late back, I expect, and I want to borrow your lanthorn.”
Hawke turned towards the nail on which he had seen it hanging the previous night. Gordon just managed to check an involuntary start from his chair when the other wheeled quickly round.
”Why, it is gone!” he said suspiciously.
”Haven't they any at the Inn?”
The counter-thrust was delivered with a perfect a.s.sumption of carelessness, and Hawke parried it clumsily.
”Only one, and that's broken. So I thought I would borrow yours.”
”I should have been pleased to lend it you, but it belongs to the house. I suppose the farmer has taken it.”
The indifference with which Gordon spoke disarmed Hawke, and the next moment a shadow darkening the doorway effectually prevented any further investigation as to the whereabouts of the missing article.
The newcomer carried a lanthorn.
”I hope you don't mind me intruding,” he said. ”It's rather unceremonious, I know. But Hawke said he was going to borrow your lanthorn. Why, the landlady had two or three,” he went on, turning to Hawke. ”She said she would have lent you one with pleasure. So I brought it for you.”
”Thanks! Thanks!” Hawke interposed in confusion. ”I must have misunderstood her. I never could unravel her dialect.” He abruptly introduced his friend to Gordon, and resumed: ”I was just speaking of you. Gordon, you know, was with Arkwright when he died.”
The conversation drifted into the desired channel, but too late to prevent Gordon realising that the request for a lanthorn had been the merest pretext to enable Hawke to a.s.sure himself that the night's proceedings remained a secret. It was interrupted, however, by the servant, who bustled in with the tray to clear the table, and Gordon thought with a tremor: Suppose she had entered a minute earlier? Hawke would have been certain to question her, and to repeat his request; as it was, however, he was too anxious to cover his slip to risk broaching the subject again.
”That is a good-looking girl,” said Lawson, when she had left the room.
”Is she?” Gordon inquired. ”I have not noticed her.”
Lawson smothered an incredulous laugh, and Hawke broke in: ”Oh, it's true enough! Gordon never notices women's looks. They are too sacred to him.”
”And you nothing but their looks, I am told,” Lawson replied. ”Well, I shall try to strike the golden mean.”
”You will be making a mistake if you do,” Hawke answered.
”Why?”
”Because women are moods. Nothing more. They can cover the distance between Diana and Phryne at a jump. They are mere moods, and always to be construed in the present tense. You must take them as they are.”
”You seem to have made a grammatical study of the subject,” Lawson laughed.
”No! That is exactly what I have not done. It is of no use. For, being moods, they are unintelligble, and the man who tries to solve them usually comes to grief. Besides, the effort is really unnecessary.”