<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
<h2>WRECKAGE</h2>
<p>The four people standing beneath the portico of the police-station
remained as if spell-bound for a full moment after the sudden flash and
the sudden roar. Betty Fosdyke unconsciously clutched at Lord
Ellersdeane's arm: Lord Ellersdeane spoke, wonderingly.</p>
<p>"Thunder?" he exclaimed. "Strange!"</p>
<p>Easleby turned sharply from Starmidge, who, holding by one of the
pillars, was staring towards the quarter of the Market-Place, from
whence the scream of dire fear had come.</p>
<p>"That's no thunder, my lord!" he said. "That's an explosion!—and a
terrible one, too! Are there any gasworks close at hand? It was
like——"</p>
<p>Polke came rushing out of the lobby behind them, followed by some of his
men. And at the same instant people began running along the pavements,
calling to each other.</p>
<p>"Did you hear that?" cried the superintendent excitedly. "An explosion!
Which direction?"</p>
<p>Starmidge suddenly started, as if from a reverie. He put up his hand and
wiped something from his cheek, and held the hand out to a shaft of
light which came from the open door behind them. A smear of blood lay
across his open palm.</p>
<p>"A splinter of falling glass," he said quietly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></SPAN></span> "Come on, all of you!
That was an explosion—and I guess where! Get help, Polke—come on to
the Cornmarket! Get the firemen out."</p>
<p>He set off running towards the end of the Market-Place, followed by
Easleby, and at a slower pace by Lord Ellersdeane and Betty. Crowds were
beginning to run in the same direction: very soon the two detectives
found it difficult to thread a way through them. But within a few
minutes they were in the Cornmarket, and Starmidge, seizing his
companion's arm, dragged him round the corner of Joseph Chestermarke's
house to the high garden wall which ran down the slope to the river
bank. And as they turned the corner, he pointed.</p>
<p>"As I thought!" he muttered. "It's Joseph Chestermarke's workshop!
Something's happened. Look there!"</p>
<p>The wall, a good ten feet high on that side, was blown to pieces, and
lay, a mass of fallen masonry, on the green sward by the roadside.
Through the gap thus made, Starmidge plunged into the garden—to be
brought up at once by the twisted and interlaced boughs of the trees
which had been lopped off as though by some giant ax, and then
instantaneously transformed into a cunningly interwoven fence. The air
was still thick with fine dust, and the atmosphere was charged with a
curious, acid odour, which made eyes and nostrils smart.</p>
<p>"No ordinary burst up, this!" muttered Starmidge, as he and Easleby
forced their way through branches and obstacles to the open lawn. "My
God!—look at it! Blown to pieces!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The two men stood for a moment staring at the scene before them, as it
was revealed in the faint light of a waning moon. Neither had ever seen
the effect of high explosives before, and they remained transfixed with
utter astonishment at what they saw. Never, until then, had either
believed it possible that such ruin could be wrought by such means.</p>
<p>The laboratory was a mass of shapeless wreckage. It seemed as if the
roof had been blown into the sky—only to collapse again on the
shattered walls. The masonry and woodwork lay all over lawns and
gardens, and amidst the surrounding bushes and trees. In the middle of
it yawned a black, deep cavity, from the heart of which curled a wisp of
yellowish smoke. Between these ruins and the house a beech tree of
considerable size had been completely uprooted, and had crashed down on
the lower windows of the house, part of the wall and roof of which had
been wrecked. And on the opposite side of the garden a great gap had
been made in the smaller trees, and the shrubberies beneath them by the
falling in of Rob Walford's old dove-cot, the ancient walls and timber
roof of which had completely collapsed under the force of the explosion.</p>
<p>Over the actual area of the wreckage everything was still as death, save
for a faint crackling where some loose wood was just catching fire.
Starmidge began to make his way towards it.</p>
<p>"The thing is," he said mechanically, "the thing is, the thing is—yes,
is—was—there anybody here—anybody here! We must have lights."</p>
<p>And just then as he came to where the burst of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292"></SPAN></span> flame was growing
bigger, and Polke with a body of firemen and constables came hurrying
through a gap in the lower wall, he caught sight of a man's face, turned
up to the half-light. Easleby saw it at the same time—together they
went nearer. And Starmidge bent down and found himself looking at
Gabriel Chestermarke.</p>
<p>"Him!" he whispered. "Then he came—here!"</p>
<p>"He's gone, anyway," muttered Easleby. "Dead as can be!" He lifted
himself erect and called to Polke who was making his way towards them.
"Bring a lantern!" he said. "There's a dead man here!"</p>
<p>"And keep the crowd out," called Starmidge. "Keep everybody out—while
we look round."</p>
<p>But at that moment he caught sight of Betty Fosdyke, who, with Lord
Ellersdeane in close attendance, had made her way into the garden and
was clambering towards him. Starmidge stepped back to her.</p>
<p>"Hadn't you better go back?" he urged. "There'll be unpleasant sights.
Do go back!—amongst the trees, anyway. We've found one dead man
already, and there'll probably be——"</p>
<p>"No!" she said firmly. "I won't! Not until I know who's here. Because I
think—I'm afraid Mr. Neale may be here. I must—I will stop! I'm not
afraid. Whose body have you found?"</p>
<p>"Gabriel Chestermarke's," replied Starmidge quietly. "Dead!
And—whoever's here, Miss Fosdyke, I don't see how he can possibly be
alive. Do go back and let us search."</p>
<p>But Betty turned away and began to search, climbing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></SPAN></span> from one mass of
wreckage to another. Presently an exclamation from her brought the
others hurriedly to her side. She pointed between two slabs of stone.</p>
<p>"There!" she whispered. "A man's—face!"</p>
<p>Starmidge turned to Lord Ellersdeane.</p>
<p>"Get her away—aside—anywhere—for a minute!" he muttered. "Let's see
what condition he's in, anyway. The other—was blown to pieces."</p>
<p>Lord Ellersdeane took a firm grip of Betty's arm and turned her round.</p>
<p>"That was not—Mr. Neale?" he asked.</p>
<p>"No!" she said faintly. "No!"</p>
<p>"Then leave them to deal with that, and let us look elsewhere," he said.
"Come—after all, you don't know that he would be here."</p>
<p>"Where else should he be?" she answered. "I'm sure he's here, somewhere.
Help me!"</p>
<p>She turned away with him in another direction, and the two detectives,
with some of the firemen helping them, got to work on the place which
she had pointed out. Presently Polke directed the light of a bulls'-eye
on the dead face beneath them. He broke into an exclamation of
amazement.</p>
<p>"Who's this?" he demanded. "Look!"</p>
<p>One of the firemen bent closer, and suddenly glanced up at the
superintendent.</p>
<p>"It's young Chestermarke, sir," he said. "He must have shaved his beard
off. But—it's him!"</p>
<p>They took out what was to be found of Joseph Chestermarke at that
particular spot, and went on to search for the rest of him, and for
anything else. And eventually they came across Neale—unconscious,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></SPAN></span> but
alive. His partial protection by the projecting iron walls of the
furnace had saved him; he had evidently been carried back with them when
the explosion occurred and wedged between them and the outer wall of the
laboratory. He came round to find a doctor administering restoratives to
him on one side, and Betty Fosdyke kneeling at the other. And suddenly
he remembered, and made a great shift to speak.</p>
<p>"All right!" he muttered at length. "Bit knocked out, that's all!
But—Horbury! Horbury's—somewhere! Get at him!"</p>
<p>They got at the missing bank manager at last—he, too, had been saved by
the thick wall which stood between him and the explosion. He was alive
and conscious when they had dug down to him—and his rescuers stared
from him to each other when they saw that the broken links of a steel
chain were still securely manacled about his waist.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></SPAN></span></p>
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