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"He is a beggar, I should say; but has his hat over his eyes."
They waited till the cart had pa.s.sed. Anthony dismounted and went to the entrance of the path and peered out at the man; he was lying, as Mr.
Kirke had said, with his hat over his eyes, perfectly still. Anthony examined him a minute or two; he was in tattered clothes, and a great stick and a bundle lay beside him.
"It is a vagabond," he said, "we can go on."
The whole party crossed the road, pus.h.i.+ng on towards the edge of the high downs over Kemsing; and presently came to the Ightam road where it began to run steeply down hill; here, too, Mr. Kirke looked this way and that, but no one was in sight, and then the whole party crossed; they kept inside the edge of the wood all the way along the downs for another mile or so, with the rich sunlit valley seen in glimpses through the trees here and there, and the Pilgrim's Way lying like a white ribbon a couple of hundred feet below them, until at last Kemsing Church, with St.
Edith's Chantry at the side, lay below and behind them, and they came out on to the edge of a great scoop in the hill, like a theatre, and the blue woods and hills of Surrey showed opposite beyond Otford and Brasted.
Here they stopped, a little back from the edge, and Mr. Kirke gave them their last instructions, pointing out Seal across the valley, which they must leave on their left, skirting the meadows to the west of the church, and pa.s.sing up towards Knole beyond.
"Let the sun be a little on your right," he said, "all the way; and you will strike the country above Tonbridge."
Then they said good-bye to one another; Mr. Kirke kissed the priest's hand in grat.i.tude for what he had done for him, and then turned back along the edge of the downs, riding this time outside the woods, while the party led their horses carefully down the steep slope, across the Pilgrim's Way, and then struck straight out over the meadows to Seal.
Their plan seemed supremely successful; they met a few countrymen and lads at their work, who looked a little astonished at first at this great party riding across country, but more satisfied when Anthony had inquired of them whether they had seen a falcon or heard his bells. No, they had not, they said; and went on with their curiosity satisfied. Once, as they were pa.s.sing down through a wood on to the Weald, Isabel, who had turned in her saddle, and was looking back, gave a low cry of alarm.
"Ah! the man, the man!" she said.
The others turned quickly, but there was nothing to be seen but the long straight ride stretching up to against the sky-line three or four hundred yards behind them. Isabel said she thought she saw a rider pa.s.s across this little opening at the end, framed in leaves; but there were stags everywhere in the woods here, and it would have been easy to mistake one for the other at that distance, and with such a momentary glance.
Once again, nearer Tonbridge, they had a fright. They had followed up a gra.s.s ride into a copse, thinking it would bring them out somewhere, but it led only to the brink of a deep little stream, where the plank bridge had been removed, so they were obliged to retrace their steps. As they re-emerged into the field from the copse, a large heavily-built man on a brown mare almost rode into them. He was out of breath, and his horse seemed distressed. Anthony, as usual, immediately asked if he had seen or heard anything of a falcon.
"No, indeed, gentlemen," he said, "and have you seen aught of a b.i.t.c.h who bolted after a hare some half mile back. A greyhound I should be loath to lose."
They had not, and said so; and the man, still panting and mopping his head, thanked them, and asked whether he could be of any service in directing them, if they were strange to the country; but they thought it better not to give him any hint of where they were going, so he rode off presently up the slope across their route and disappeared, whistling for his dog.
And so at last, about four o'clock in the afternoon, they saw the church spire of Stanfield above them on the hill, and knew that they were near the end of their troubles. Another hundred yards, and there were the roofs of the old house, and the great iron gates, and the vanes of the garden-house seen over the clipped limes; and then Mary Corbet and Mr.
Buxton hurrying in from the garden, as they came through the low oak door, into the dear tapestried hall.
CHAPTER IX
THE ALARM
A very happy party sat down to supper that evening in Stanfield Place.
Anthony had taken Mr. Buxton aside privately when the first greetings were over, and told him all that happened: the alarm at Stanstead; his device, and the entire peace they had enjoyed ever since.
"Isabel," he ended, "certainly thought she saw a man behind us once; but we were among the deer, and it was dusky in the woods; and, for myself, I think it was but a stag. But, if you think there is danger anywhere, I will gladly ride on."
Mr. Buxton clapped him on the shoulder.
"My dear friend," he said, "take care you do not offend me. I am a slow fellow, as you know; but even my coa.r.s.e hide is p.r.i.c.ked sometimes. Do not suggest again that I could permit any priest--and much less my own dear friend--to leave me when there was danger. But there is none in this case--you have shaken the rogues off, I make no doubt; and you will just stay here for the rest of the summer at the very least."
Anthony said that he agreed with him as to the complete baffling of the pursuers, but added that Isabel was still a little shaken, and would Mr.
Buxton say a word to her.
"Why, I will take her round the hiding-holes myself after supper, and show her how strong and safe we are. We will all go round."
In the withdrawing-room he said a word or two of rea.s.surance to her before the others were down.
"Anthony has told me everything, Mistress Isabel; and I warrant that the knaves are cursing their stars still on Stanstead hills, twenty miles from here. You are as safe here as in Greenwich palace. But after supper, to satisfy you, we will look to our defences. But, believe me, there is nothing to fear."
He spoke with such confidence and cheerfulness that Isabel felt her fears melting, and before supper was over she was ashamed of them, and said so.
"Nay, nay," said Mr. Buxton, "you shall not escape. You shall see every one of them for yourself. Mistress Corbet, do you not think that just?"
"You need a little more honest worldliness, Isabel," said Mary. "I do not hesitate to say that I believe G.o.d saves the priests that have the best hiding-holes. Now that is not profane, so do not look at me like that."
"It is the plainest sense," said Anthony, smiling at them both.
They went the round of them all with candles, and Anthony refreshed his memory; they visited the little one in the chapel first, then the cupboard and portrait-door at the top of the corridor, the chamber over the fireplace in the hall, and lastly, in the wooden cellar-steps they lifted the edge of the fifth stair from the bottom, so that its front and the top of the stair below it turned on a hinge and dropped open, leaving a black s.p.a.ce behind: this was the entrance to the pa.s.sage that led beneath the garden to the garden-house on the far side of the avenue.
Mistress Corbet wrinkled her nose at the damp earthy smell that breathed out of the dark.
"I am glad I am not a priest," she said. "And I would sooner be buried dead than alive. And there is a rat there that sorely needs burying."
"My dear lady!" cried the contriver of the pa.s.sage indignantly, "her Grace might sleep there herself and take no harm. There is not even the whisker of a rat."
"It is not the whisker that I mind," said Mary, "it is the rest of him."
Mr. Buxton immediately set his taper down and climbed in.
"You shall see," he said, "and I in my best satin too!"
He was inside the stairs now and lying on his back on the smooth board that backed them. He sidled himself slowly along towards the wall.
"Press the fourth brick of the fourth row," he said.
"You remember, Father Anthony?"
He had reached now what seemed to be the brick wall against which the ends of the stairs rested; and that closed that end of the cellars altogether. Anthony leaned in with a candle, and saw how that part of the wall against his friend's right side slowly turned into the dark as the fourth brick was pressed, and a little brick-lined pa.s.sage appeared beyond. Mr. Buxton edged himself sideways into the pa.s.sage, and then stood nearly upright. It was an excellent contrivance. Even if the searchers should find the chamber beneath the stairs, which was unlikely, they would never suspect that it was only a blind to a pa.s.sage beyond.
The door into the pa.s.sage consisted of a strong oaken door disguised on the outside by a facing of brick-slabs; all the hinges were within.
"As sweet as a flower," said the architect, looking about him. His voice rang m.u.f.fled and hollow.
"Then the friends have removed the corpse," said Mary, putting her head in, "while you were opening the door. There! come out; you will take cold. I believe you."
"Are you satisfied?" said Mr. Buxton to Isabel, as they went upstairs again.
"What are your outer defences?" asked Mary, before Isabel could answer.
"You shall see the plan in the hall," said Mr. Buxton.
He took down the frame that held the plan of the house, and showed them the outer doors. There was first the low oak front door on the north, opening on to the little court; this was immensely strong and would stand battering. Then on the same side farther east, within the stable-court, there was the servants' door, protected by chains, and an oak bolt that ran across. On the extreme east end of the house there was a door opening into the garden from the withdrawing-room, the least strong of all; there was another on the south side, opposite the front door--that gave on to the garden; and lastly there was an entrance into the priests' end of the house, at the extreme west, from the little walled garden where Anthony had meditated years ago. This walled garden had a very strong door of its own opening on to the lane between the church and the house.