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"Will you not better get out till I'm through with my sweeping?"
Too utterly bewildered to speak, I crept out and rose to my feet.
"You can get under the table again when I'm finished," she observed as she pulled off the cloth.
To such an observation there seemed no adequate reply, or at least I could think of none. I turned in silence and hurried back to my bedroom. And there I sat for a s.p.a.ce too dumfounded for coherent thought.
Gradually I began to recover my wits and ponder over this mysterious affair, and a theory commenced to take shape. Clearly she was insane, or at least half-witted, and was quite incapable of drawing reasonable conclusions. And the more I thought it over, the more did several circ.u.mstances seem to confirm this view. My fire, for instance, with its smoke coming out of the chimney, and the supply of peat and firewood which Tiel or I were constantly bringing up. Had she noticed nothing of that? Also Tiel's frequent ascents of this back staircase to a part of the house supposed to be closed. She must be half-witted.
And then I began to recall her brisk eye and capable air, and the idiot theory resolved into s.p.a.ce. Only one alternative seemed left. She must be spying upon us, and aware of my presence all the time! But if so, what could I do? I felt even more helpless than I did that first night when my motor-cycle broke down. I could only sit and wait, revolver in hand.
When I heard Tiel's step at last on the stairs, I confess that my nerves were not at their best.
"We are betrayed!" I exclaimed.
He stared at me very hard.
"What do you mean?" he asked quietly, and I am bound to say this of Tiel, that there is something very rea.s.suring in his calm voice.
I told him hurriedly. He looked at me for a moment, began to smile, and then checked himself.
"I owe you an apology, Belke," he said. "I ought to have explained that that woman is in my pay."
"In your pay?" I cried. "And she has been so all the time?"
He nodded.
"And yet you never told me, but let me hide up in this room like a rat in a hole?"
"The truth is," he replied, "that till I had got to know you pretty well, I was afraid you might be rash--or at least careless, if you knew that woman was one of us."
"So you treated me like an infant, Mr Tiel?"
"The life I have lived," said Tiel quietly, "has not been conducive to creating a feeling of confidence in my fellowmen's discretion--until I _know_ them. I know you now, and I feel sorry I took this precaution.
Please accept my apologies."
"I accept your apology," I said stiffly; "but in future, Mr Tiel, things will be pleasanter if you trust me."
He bowed slightly and said simply--
"I shall."
And then in a different voice he said--
"We have a visitor coming this afternoon to stay with us."
"To stay here!" I exclaimed.
"Another of _us_," he explained.
"Another--in these islands? Who is he?"
As I spoke we heard a bell ring.
"Ah, here she is," said Tiel, going to the door. "Come down and be introduced whenever you like."
For a moment I stood stock still, lost in doubt and wonder.
"She!" I repeated to myself.
VI.
THE VISITOR.
My feelings as I approached the parlour were anything but happy. Some voice seemed to warn me that I was in the presence of something sinister, that some unknown peril stalked at my elbow. This third party--this "she"--filled me with forebodings. If ever anybody had a presentiment, I had one, and all I can say now is that within thirty seconds of opening the parlour door, I had ceased to believe in presentiments, entirely and finally. The vision I beheld nearly took my breath away.
"Let me introduce you to my sister, Miss Burnett," said Tiel. "She is so devoted to her brother that she has insisted on coming to look after him for the few days he is forced to spend in this lonely manse."
He said this with a smile, and of course never intended me to believe a word of his statement, yet as he gave her no other name, and as that was the only account of her circulated in the neighbourhood, I shall simply refer to her in the meantime as Miss Burnett. It is the only name that I have to call her by to her face.
As to her appearance, I can only say that she is the most beautiful woman I have ever met in my life. The delicacy and distinction of her features, her dark eyebrows, her entrancing eye, and her thoughtful mouth, so firm and yet so sweet, her delicious figure and graceful carriage--heavens, I have never seen any girl to approach her! What is more, she has a face which I _trust_. I have had some experience of women, and I could feel at the first exchange of glances and of words that here was one of those rare women on whom a man could implicitly rely.
"Have you just landed upon these islands?" I inquired.
"Not to-day," she said; and indeed, when I came to think of it, she would not have had time to reach the house in that case.
"Did you have much difficulty?" I asked.
"The minister's sister is always admitted," said Tiel with his dry smile.
I asked presently if she had travelled far. She shrugged her shoulders, gave a delightful little laugh, and said--
"We get so used to travelling that I have forgotten what 'far' is!"
Meanwhile tea was brought in, and Miss Burnett sat down and poured it out with the graceful nonchalant air of a charming hostess in her own drawing-room, while Tiel talked of the weather and referred carelessly to the lastest news just like any gentleman who might have called casually upon her. I, on my part, tried as best I could to catch the same air, and we all talked away very pleasantly indeed. We spoke English, of course, all the time, and indeed, any one overhearing us and not seeing my uniform would never have dreamt for a moment that we were anything but three devoted subjects of King George.
On the other hand, we were surely proceeding on the a.s.sumption that n.o.body was behind a curtain or listening at the keyhole, and that being so, I could not help feeling that the elaborate pretence of being a mere party of ordinary acquaintances was a little unnecessary. At last I could not help saying something of what was in my mind.
"Is the war over?" I asked suddenly.
Both the others seemed surprised.
"I wish it were, Mr Belke!" said Miss Burnett with a sudden and moving change to seriousness.
"Then if it is not, why are we pretending so religiously that we have no business here but to drink tea, Miss Burnett?"