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The old woman closed her eyes and sighed.
"G.o.d help us!" she said softly. "Harry, I am getting very weary of my life now; it is so near the end."
"Hush!" said the professor, gently. "There are things which you ought not to see or know. You are weak from the shock and injuries you have received."
"But listen, dear."
"My dear old wifie," he said tenderly, "it is of no use to look in that imploring way at me. You know what Jem is, and I am too old now to set myself in antagonism with him. There, be at rest; I will do all I can.
Don't think me so bloodthirsty as to desire their end. Still, so many interests are at stake. It is a case of burglar against housekeeper.
The scoundrels came armed."
"Armed?"
"Yes, I saw a revolver in the trunk with their burgling tools. If I had come upon them suddenly, and they had had time, they would have fired at me."
"Oh, surely not!"
"Humph! You are a woman, my dear, with a woman's gentle heart, ready to defend and palliate. After the way in which I found you, I do not feel so merciful. Let me ask you one question; If there was nothing to fear from them, why did they come armed?"
The old housekeeper made no reply, but lay back upon the couch weak and trembling, while the professor slowly paced the room, till she opened her eyes wildly, and signed to him to come to her side.
"I am more upset than I thought for," she said feebly. "Help me up to my room; I think I can walk now."
The professor's brow lightened, for it was a relief to him to hear the old woman's words; but she noted the change and sighed as she rose painfully.
"You will wait until they come?" she said, trembling at the thought of that which she dreaded.
"Need you ask?" said the professor, gravely. "Come, you will be better after lying down for a few hours. Try to forget everything in the remembrance that I am doing all for you that I can."
"Yes, Harry," she said softly; "I have never had cause to complain of your want of love for me in these forty years; but for my sake, dear, let there be no more crime."
"For your sake I will do everything I can," said the professor, gravely, as he bent down and kissed her while leading her to the door and then slowly up to a bedroom on the third floor, where he left her at the end of a few minutes, apparently sinking into a doze.
As he stole out softly he silently removed the key, replaced it on the other side, and locked her in, before descending quickly to the hall, where he stood listening for a few minutes, and then went down into the bas.e.m.e.nt and stepped softly forward to listen at the outer door of the plate vault.
A faint muttering of voices could be heard as he placed his ear to the key-hole, but all else was still; there was no sound of an effort being made to escape, and he went back to the hall, where he took out and re-examined his revolver.
"I wonder," he said to himself, "whether a shot or two could be heard in the street. Pish! Absurd! No one heard the reports when poor Bob went down. Ah, here they are. They haven't been long."
For there was a faint rattle of a latch-key in the door, and Robert Clareborough entered, in company with the brothers, the former looking excited and anxious, the two latter stern and as if prepared for the worst.
CHAPTER TWENTY SIX.
GRIM DEATH.
As the door banged to and was locked, Roach uttered a wild cry and threw himself upon the floor, covering the back of his head with his hands, as he thrust it into the corner farthest from where the powder was sputtering and sending up tiny clouds of smoke.
Arthur shrank away against the wall for a moment, glancing wildly at the broken lantern and the lamp-wick, burning still in a little pool of oil, while the powder kept flashing out, darting from grain to grain, where they had been scattered about the floor. Then the tiny flames divided, one set running towards the portmanteau, in which the partially-emptied tin had been thrown, the other going by fits and starts in the direction of the iron entry.
This nerved the younger man to desperation, and he made a dash at the grains upon the floor, to sweep them away before they reached the loaded door, feeling convinced, in his agony of fear, that the little burning train would somehow communicate with the powder with which he had charged the lock. But in spite of his efforts the fire was too quick, the flame running swiftly along by the bottom of the frame, and with a yell of despair he dashed to the other corner of the far side of the lobby, to imitate the butler, expecting to hear the charge explode, and then the iron door driven back to crush them to death.
It seemed long minutes to the two wretched men as they crouched there with their eyes shut, but it was only the matter of a few seconds'
suspense before the little chamber was in total darkness, and filled with the dull, dank reek of the burnt powder.
At last the footman raised his head cautiously, with hope reviving. The charge had not gone off and the tin had not been reached.
He looked in the direction of the great safe, but all was black, and, rising slowly, he felt his way to the door to try if it were really fast; while as his hands glided over it he found that it fitted so closely that he could hardly make out the crack between door and frame.
The main object of his search, though, was for the lock, in the hope that he should be able to force it off with one of the wedges, and then, armed as they were, he and his companion might escape.
But there was no lock to attack, no key-hole. That which he sought was of the mortice pattern, buried in the heavy lining, and wherever he pa.s.sed his hands, the surface was perfectly smooth.
"Curse the old Jezebel!" he muttered. "Here, Roach, old man, rouse up.
We're done, but we can't stay here--we must get out somehow. Did you see her? I wish I'd tied her up a little tighter."
"No, no, no," groaned Roach. "I did not see her. She must have got free somehow. I only felt her hands as she jumped upon me from behind and drove me forward on to you. Is--is the powder going off?"
"No! Get up. There isn't a spark now. Phew! it's enough to stifle a fellow. Where's that wine?"
"I put it somewhere in this corner. Yes, here."
"Give us hold. Be sharp."
There was a clicking noise in the utter darkness and after feeling about for a few moments, the younger man grasped the bottle, drank heavily, and pa.s.sed it to his trembling companion, who s.n.a.t.c.hed at it and drank deeply in turn.
"That's better," cried Arthur, sharply. "Now then, the matches."
"No, no, don't strike a light. Are you mad?"
"Pretty nigh, but we must risk it or we can never get out."
"We never shall get out alive," groaned Roach.
"Well, I mean to," said his companion; "so here goes. I can't use the hammer and chisels and wedges in this blessed darkness."
There was the crackle of a match, and the elder man uttered a cry of horror as he shrank into his corner again, but as the wax taper burned up steadily in Arthur's fingers, and no explosion followed, he obeyed his companion's order and picked up the lamp, which proved not to be utterly drained of oil, and after a little patient effort began to burn again as it was replaced in the broken lantern.
"Now, then, sharp's the word," said Arthur. "Hold the light while I chisel out the wood till I can get at the lock. Mustn't use the hammer, or it will put her on her guard. Wonder whether she's outside listening."
There was not a sound to be heard, and with Roach tremblingly holding the light, Arthur worked away with the sharpest-edged wedge, but made little progress, for a few cuts were sufficient to prove that the door was of the hardest oak, and when the man had been carving away for nearly an hour, with the perspiration streaming down his face, it was to throw down the chisel in despair, for the wood proved to be only the casing of an iron door of great strength.
"Give me the bottle," said Arthur, panting. "Can't you do something beside shivering there?"
Roach groaned as he handed the bottle.
"Man wants a bit o' Dutch courage over a job like this."
"We shall never get out," groaned Roach.