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He felt now that another crisis had arisen, yet the past yielded no ray of guidance. He glared at the poor laborer who, all unconsciously, was fate's herald in this new adversity, for he was instantly aware, without other spoken word, that Marguerite Ogilvey had fled. The man's troubled face showed that he feared he had done wrong.
"I'm main sorry, sir," said he, "if I've said owt te vex ye, but, hearin' the talk of Miss Meg, I thought----"
Armathwaite's drawn features relaxed, and he placed a friendly hand on the villager's shoulder.
"You've done right," he said. "I am very much obliged to you. I have a stupid habit of allowing my mind to wander. Just then I was thinking of something wholly unconnected with Miss Garth's disappearance, which will arouse Mrs. Jackson's wrath because of bacon and eggs frizzled to a cinder. I must go and condole with her."
He was turning to re-enter the house, mainly to set at rest any suspicion that Marguerite's absence arose from other cause than sheer forgetfulness, when the clang of the gate stayed him. A youth had dismounted from a bicycle, and was hastening up the path with an air of brisk importance.
"Telegrams for Garth and Whittaker," he said. "Any answer, sir?"
Armathwaite took the two buff envelopes which the lad produced from a leather pouch.
"Have you come from Bellerby?" he inquired.
"Yes, sir."
"Well, wait a few minutes. There may be some reply."
He went into the dining-room. So sure was he that Marguerite had gone away that he had not the slightest hesitation about opening the telegram addressed to "Garth, The Grange, Elmdale." As he antic.i.p.ated, it was from Mrs. Ogilvey. It had been dispatched at seven o'clock from Tavistock, and read:
"Arriving to-night if possible. Don't take any action until I am with you.--MOTHER."
The early hour at which it had been sent off--from a town, too, which he rightly estimated as a good many miles distant from Warleggan, showed that Mrs. Suarez had contrived to get a telegram through to Cornwall the previous night, so Percy Whittaker's mischievous interference had proved quite successful.
Then, with lightning clarity came the belief that Percy Whittaker was responsible for Marguerite's flight. Armathwaite scouted the notion that she had such a thing in her mind when she came to him in the garden. Her nature was incapable of guile. Had she formed some fantastic scheme during the watches of the night she would never have put her troubles aside to share in his light-hearted planning of a new and glorified garden. In fact, he recalled her sudden dismay because of her seeming neglect of the invalid, and now he knew that he had not seen her since she went upstairs, whereas Whittaker himself had sent more than one urgent summons for her subsequently.
Stifling his fury as best he might, Armathwaite hurried to Whittaker's room.
"A telegram has just come for you," he said, and watched the younger man's face as he read. It was a long screed, and evidently bored its recipient.
"Oh, it's only from my sister," came the languid explanation. "By the way, where's Miss Garth?"
"Gone, I think."
"Gone!" Whittaker rose on an elbow and glowered at Armathwaite. "What the devil do you mean by 'gone'? Where has she gone to?" he cried.
"I want you to answer that question," and Armathwaite's voice was strangely harsh and threatening. "She came to you half an hour ago. Did you say anything likely to distress her? Tell me the truth, or I'll pound your face to a jelly."
His aspect had suddenly become so menacing that Whittaker wilted; his head sank back to the pillow, and his eyelids twitched with fright.
"That's no way to talk----" he began, but the other seized him by the shoulder with his left hand and clenched his right fist suggestively.
"You think I ought not to threaten you with violence because you are lying there helpless," was the savage interruption; "but, if you have not forgotten the ways of Ind, you must know that a poisonous snake is never so venomous as when disabled. Speak, now, and speak truthfully, or, as sure as G.o.d is in heaven, I'll strike!"
There was no withstanding the set purpose revealed by those blazing eyes, and Whittaker was so alarmed that he dared not attempt to lie.
"I--I've asked Meg--half a dozen times--to marry me," he stuttered, "and this morning--I told her--she'd have to consent--now."
"Why now?" and the fierce grip tightened, drawing the livid face nearer.
"Because--she must."
"Explain yourself, you dog!"
"I--I was afraid of your influence, so I warned her--that if--she wanted to save her father.... Ah! Let go! Curse you, let go! You're breaking my bones!"
That eldritch scream restored Armathwaite's senses. It startled the men in the garden. It brought Mrs. Jackson and Betty running from the kitchen. Happily, Armathwaite struck no blow. He flung off Whittaker's limp body as though he were, indeed, one of the vicious reptiles to which he had compared him.
"You _sug_!" he breathed, using the bitterest term of contempt known to the East, for the Persian word means all that the Anglo-Saxon implies when he likens a fellow-creature to a dog, with the added force of an epithet which signifies "dog" in that despicable sense, and in none other.
Striding down the stairs, his fire-laden glance met the ghastly smile of the painted figure. With an active bound, he was on the window ledge, and the clenched fist which had ached to scatter some of the hapless Percy's features fell heavily on the scowling face in the window. The gla.s.s, which proved exceedingly thin and brittle, shivered into countless fragments within and without, and the inner sheet of transparent paper was so dry and tense that it shriveled instantly when exposed to the air. Indeed, Armathwaite, despite his rage, was aware of a peculiar sensation. It seemed as though he had struck at something impalpable as air. His hand was not cut. It appeared to have touched nothing. He thrust straight and hard, and the only evidence of his destroying zeal was a quant.i.ty of powdered gla.s.s on the landing, some curled wisps of paper adhering to the leaden frame, and an oval of blue sky shining through the visor.
As he leaped to the floor again, Mrs. Jackson reached the center of the hall. She screeched frantically, thinking that the Black Prince himself was springing from the window. But she was a stout-hearted old woman, and quickly recovered her wits when she saw what Armathwaite had done.
"They've long wanted a man i' this house!" she cried, in a voice that cracked with excitement, "and it's glad I am te see they've gotten yan at last! Eh, sir, ye med me jump! Ye did an' all! But ye'll never rue t' day when ye punched a hole in t' feace o' that image of Owd Nick!"
By this time Smith and his helpers, aware that something unusual was going on inside the house, were gathered at the front door, which had remained wide open since the early morning.
"Listen, all of you!" said Armathwaite, addressing the two women and five men as though they were an army and he their emperor. "I am master here, and I expect you to obey my orders. I am going out now, and I may be away some hours, possibly all day. You, Smith, must put a padlock and chain on the gate and refuse to open it for anyone except Dr. Scaife and a nurse. You, Mrs. Jackson, must keep the doors locked while I am gone, and let no one enter, excepting, as I have told Smith, Dr. Scaife and the nurse who will accompany him. Do you understand?"
"Yes, sir."
"And you, Smith?"
"Yes, sir."
"Betty, put some thin slices of bread and meat between two small plates, and tie them in a napkin. Fill a bottle with milk. Quick! I have no time to lose."
He turned to the gaping boy who had brought the telegrams from Bellerby.
"Did you ride here on your own bicycle?" he asked.
"Yes, sir."
"Is it a strong machine?"
"Yes, sir."
"Lend it to me for the day, and I'll give you a sovereign."
"Right you are, sir!" came the hearty response. "Is there anything to go back to the post office?"
"Nothing. Raise the saddle of your bicycle, and see that the tires are in good order. Here's your money."
In an incredibly short time Armathwaite was pushing the bicycle up the steep road to the moor. He walked with long, swinging strides, and was soon lost to sight, because the trees behind the Grange hid the highway from any part of the house or grounds, and no one dared risk his wrath by going out into the road to watch him.
He climbed swiftly yet steadily, and conquered the worst part of the hill in fifteen minutes. Then he mounted the bicycle, and got over the ground rapidly. Thus, within less than an hour after Marguerite Ogilvey had escaped from the Grange--in the first instance by taking refuge in her bedroom, and, while Betty was talking to Whittaker, by slipping downstairs and climbing through a window in the library--Armathwaite saw her--a lonely figure in that far-flung moorland, walking in the direction of Leyburn.