<h2>CHAPTER XLVI<br/> <span class="f8">ARDIFFERY MANSE</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">In</span> the dreary time of waiting I talked with the detective
chief. Everything which he told me seemed
to torture me; but there was a weird fascination in
his experience as it bore on our own matter. I was face
to face, for the first time in my life, with that callousness
which is the outcome of the hard side of the wicked
world. Criminal-hunters, as well as criminals, achieve
it; so I suppose do all whose fortunes bring them against
the sterner sides of life. Now and again it amazed me
to hear this man, unmistakably a good fellow and an
upright one, weighing up crime and criminals in a matter-of-fact
way, without malice, without anger, without
vindictiveness. He did seem to exercise in his habitual
thought of his <i lang="und" xml:lang="und">clientele</i> that constructive condemnation
which sways the rest of us in matters of moral judgment.
The whole of his work, and attitude, and purpose, seemed
to be only integral parts of a game which was being
played. At that time I thought light of this, and consequently
of him; but looking back, with judgment in
better perspective, I am able to realise the value of just
such things. There was certainly more chance of cooler
thought and better judgment under these conditions, than
when the ordinary passions and motives of human life
held sway. This man did not seem to be chagrined, or
put out personally in any way, by the failure of his task,
or to have any rancour, from this cause, in his heart for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</SPAN></span>
those to whom the failure was due. On the contrary, he,
like a good sportsman, valued his opponent more on
account of the cleverness which had baffled him. I
imagined that at first he would have been angry when he
learned how all the time in which he and his companions
had been watching Crom Castle, and were exulting in
the security which their presence caused, their enemies
had been coming and going as they wished by a safe way,
unknown; and had themselves been the watchers. But
there was nothing of the kind; I really believe that,
leaving out of course the possibly terrible consequences
of his failure, he enjoyed the defeat which had come
to him. In his own way he put it cleverly:</p>
<p>“Those ducks knew their work well. I tell you this,
in spite of the softies we have been, it isn’t easy to play
any of us for a sucker. Just fancy! the lot of us on
sentry-go day and night round the castle, for, mind
you, we never neglected the job for one half hour; and
all the time, three lots of people—this push, you and the
girl, and this Dago lord of yours—all going and coming
like rabbits in a warren. What puzzles me is how you
and Miss Drake managed to escape the observation of
Whisky Tommy’s lot, even if you went through us!”</p>
<p>It had been after five o’clock when the party set out
to visit the manses; at six o’clock the reports began to
come in. The first was a message scribbled on a leaf
torn from a note book, and sent in one of the envelopes
taken for the purpose.</p>
<p>“All right at Auquharney.” From this on, messengers
kept arriving, some on foot, some on horseback, some in
carts: but each bearing a similar message, though
couched in different terms. They came from Auchlenchries,
Heila, Mulonachie, Ardendraught, Inverquohomery,
Skelmuir, and Auchorachan. At nine o’clock
the first of the searchers returned. This was Donald MacRae;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</SPAN></span>
knowing the country he had been able to get about
quicker than any of the others who had to keep to the
main roads. His report was altogether satisfactory; he
had been to six places, and in each of them there was no
ground for even suspicion.</p>
<p>It was nearly three hours before the rest were in, but
all with the same story; in none of the manses let to visitors
through an agent, and in none if occupied by their
incumbents, could the fugitives have hidden. The last to
come in were the two trackers, disappointed and weary.
They had lost the track several times; but had found it
again on some cross road. They had finally lost it in a
dusty road near Ardiffery and had only given up when the
light had altogether gone. They themselves thought their
loss was final, for they could not take up the track within
a quarter of a mile of either side of the spot where they
had lost it.</p>
<p>It was now too late to do anything more for this night;
so, after a meal, all the men, except one who remained on
watch, went to sleep for a few hours. We must start
again before dawn. For myself I could not rest; I
should have gone mad, I think, if I had to remain
the night without doing something. So I determined to
wheel over to Whinnyfold and see how Don Bernardino
had progressed. I was anxious, as I had not heard from
him.</p>
<p>At Whinnyfold all was still, and there was no sign of
light in the house. I had brought with me the duplicate
key which I had given to Marjory, and which Mrs. Jack
found for me on her dressing table; but when I inserted
it, it would not turn. It was a Yale lock; and it was not
likely that it should have got out of order without the
use of some force or clumsiness. I put it down in the
first instance to the inexperience of the Don in such
mechanism. Anyhow, there was nothing to be done<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</SPAN></span>
as to entry by that way, so I went round to the back to
see if I could make an entry there. It was all safe, however;
I had taken care to fasten every door and window
on the previous night. As the front door was closed to
me, it was only by force that I could effect entrance to
my own house. I knocked softly at the door, and then
louder; I thought perhaps, for some reason to be explained,
the Don had remained in the house and might
now be asleep. There was no sound, however, and I
began to have grave doubts in my own mind as to
whether something serious might have happened. If so,
there was no time to lose. Anything having gone wrong
meant that the blackmailers had been there. If I had
to break open the door I might as well do it myself; for
if I should get help from the village, discussion and gossip
would at once begin, if only from the fact that I could
not wait till morning.</p>
<p>I got a scaffold pole from the yard where some of the
builder’s material still remained, and managed by raising
it on my shoulder and making a quick run forward to
strike the door with it just over the lock. The blow was
most efficacious; the door flew open so quickly that the
handle broke against the wall of the passage. For a
few seconds I paused, looking carefully round to see if
the sound had brought any one to the spot; but all was
still. Then carefully, and with my revolver ready in
my right hand and the lamp of my bicycle in my left, I
entered the house.</p>
<p>A glance into each of the two sitting-rooms of the
ground floor showed me that there was no one there; so
I closed the hall-door again, and propped it shut with the
scaffold pole. Quickly I ran over the house from top
to bottom, looking into every room and space where
anyone could hide. The cellar door was locked. It was
odd indeed; there was not a sign of Don Bernardino<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</SPAN></span>
anywhere. With a sudden suspicion I turned into the
dining-room and looked on the table, where the several
caskets which we had taken from the cave had lain.</p>
<p>There was not a sign of them! Some one had carried
them off.</p>
<p>For a while I thought it must have been Don Bernardino.
There came back to me very vividly the conversation
which we had had in that very room only a
day before; I seemed to see the red light of his eyes
blaze again, as when he had told me that he would not
stop at anything to gain possession of the treasure. It
must have been, that when he found himself in possession,
the desire overcame him to take away the treasure to
where he could himself control it.</p>
<p>But this belief was only momentary. Hard upon its
heels came the remembrance of his noble attitude when I
had come to ask his help for a woman in distress—I who
had refused his own appeal to my chivalry only a few
hours before. No! I would not believe that he could
act so now. In strength of my belief I spoke aloud:
“No! I will not believe it!”</p>
<p>Was it an echo to my words? or was it some mysterious
sound from the sea beneath? Sound there certainly
was, a hollow, feeble sound that seemed to come
from anywhere, or nowhere. I could not locate it at
all. There was but one part of the house unsearched, so
I got a great piece of wood and broke open the door of
the cellar. There was no one in it, but the square hole
in the centre of it seemed like a mystery itself. I listened
a moment; and the hollow sound came again, this time
through the hole.</p>
<p>There was some one in the cave below, and the sound
was a groan.</p>
<p>I lit a torch and leaning over the hole looked down.
The floor below was covered with water, but it was only<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</SPAN></span>
a few inches deep and out of it came the face of the
Spaniard, looking strangely white despite its natural
swarthiness. I called to him. He evidently heard me,
for he tried to answer; but I could distinguish nothing,
I could only hear a groan of agony. I rigged up the
windlass, and taking with me a spare piece of rope
lowered myself into the cave. I found Don Bernardino
just conscious; he was unable, seemingly, to either understand
my questions or to make articulate reply. I tied
the spare rope round him, there being no time or opportunity
to examine him as he lay in the water, and taking
the spare end with me pulled myself up again. Then,
putting the rope to which he was attached on the windlass,
I easily drew him up to the cellar.</p>
<p>A short time sufficed to give him some brandy, and to
undress him and wrap him in rugs. He shivered at
first, but the warmth soon began to affect him. He got
drowsy, and seemed all at once to drop asleep. I lit a
fire and made some tea and got provisions ready. In less
than half an hour he awoke, refreshed and quite coherent.
Then he told me all that had passed. He had
opened the door without trouble, and had looked into the
dining-room where he found the caskets still on the table.
He did not think of searching the house. He got a light
and went into the cellar, leaving the door open, and set
about examining the winch, so as to know the mechanism
sufficiently well as to be able to raise and lower himself.
Whilst stooping over the hole, he got a violent
blow on the back of the head which deprived him of his
senses. When he became conscious again there were
four men in the cellar, all masked. He himself was tied
up with ropes and gagged. The men lowered each
other till only one remained on guard. He heard them
calling to each other. After a long wait they had come
back, all of them carrying heavy burdens which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</SPAN></span>
they began to haul up by the windlass. He said
that it creaked loudly with the weight as they worked it.
He had the unutterable chagrin of seeing them pack up
in sacks and bags, extemporised from the material in the
house, the bullion of the treasure which his ancestor had
undertaken to guard, and to which he had committed his
descendants until the trust should have been fulfilled.
When all was ready for departure—which was not for
many hours, and when two of the men had returned with
a cart of some sort, whose wheels he heard rumbling—they
consulted as to what they should do with him.
There was no disguise made of their intent; all was
spoken in his hearing with the most brutal frankness.
One man, whom he described as with grey lips of terrific
thickness, and whose hands were black, was for knifing
him at once or cutting his throat, and announced his own
readiness to do the job. He was overruled, however, by
another, presumably the leader of the gang, who said
there was no use taking extra risks. “Let us put him
into the cave,” he said. “He may break his neck; but
anyhow it does not matter for the tide is rising fast and
if anyone should come they will find that he met his death
by an accident.”</p>
<p>This suggestion was carried out; he was, after the
ropes and gag were removed with the utmost care but
with the utmost brutality, lowered into the cave. He
remembered no more till the deadly silence around
him was broken by the sound, seemingly far away, of a
heavy blow on wood which reverberated.</p>
<p>I examined him all over carefully, but could find
no definite harm done to him. This knowledge in itself
cheered him up, and his strength and nerve began to
come back; with his strength came determination. He
could, however, tell me nothing of the men who had
attacked him. He said he would know their voices again,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</SPAN></span>
but, what with their masks and his cramped position, he
could not see enough to distinguish anything.</p>
<p>Whilst he was recovering himself I looked carefully
round the room and house. From the marks at one of the
windows at the back I gathered that this was the means
by which they had gained admission. They were expert
housebreakers; and as I gathered from the detective that
Whisky Tommy was a bank burglar—most scientific
and difficult of all criminal trades, except perhaps, banknote
forgery—I was not surprised that they had been
able to gain admittance. None of the jewels which Marjory
and I had taken from the cave were left behind.
The robbers had evidently made accurate search; even
the rubies, which I had left in the pocket of the shooting-coat
which I had worn in the cave, had disappeared.</p>
<p>One thing I gathered from their visit; they evidently
felt secure as to themselves. They dared not risk so
long delay had not their preparations been complete;
and they must have been satisfied as to the mechanism
of their escape since they could burden themselves with
such weight of treasure. Moreover, their hiding place,
wherever it was, could not be far off. There were engaged
in this job four men; besides, there were probably
watchers. Marjory had only recorded in her cipher six
engaged in her abduction, when presumably their full
strength would have been needed in case of unexpected
difficulties or obstacles. The Secret Service chief presumed
at least eight. I determined, therefore, that I
would get back to Crom as soon as possible, and, with
the aid of this new light, consult as to what was best to
be done. I wanted to take Don Bernardino with me, or
to try to get a trap to take him on; but he said he would
be better remaining where he was. “I can be of no use
to any one till I get over this shock,” he said. “The
rest here, if I remain longer, will do me good; and in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</SPAN></span>
the morning I may be able to help.” I asked him
if he was not afraid to be left alone in his present
helpless condition: His reply showed great common
sense:</p>
<p>“The only people whom I have to fear are the last
who will come to this place!”</p>
<p>I made him as comfortable as I could, and fixed the
catch of the door so that the lock would snap behind
me. Then I got on my bicycle and rode to Crom as
quickly as I could. As it was now nearly early morning
the men were getting ready for their day’s work. Cathcart
and I discussed the new development with the detective
chief. I did not tell him of the treasure. It was
gone; and all I could do was to spare the Spaniard’s
feelings. It was enough that they knew of the attack
on Don Bernardino, and that they had taken from my
house whatever was of value in it. As I went over the
practical side of the work before us, I had an idea.
It was evident that these men had some secret hiding
place not far away; why should it not be an empty house?
I made the suggestion to my two companions, who
agreed with me that we should at once make search for
such a place. Accordingly we arranged that one man
of the force should go into Ellon, as soon as it was possible
to find any one up, and another into Aberdeen to try
to find out from various agents what houses in the district
were at present unoccupied. In the meantime I
looked over the list of Manses and found that there were
two which were open for letting, but had not yet been
occupied, Aucheries and Ardiffery. We determined to
visit the latter first, as it was nearer, amid a network of
cross roads on the high road to Fraserburgh. When we
were arranging plans of movement, the two trackers who
wanted to resume their work said that we might put them
down on our way, as the spot they aimed for lay in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</SPAN></span>
same direction. We left two men behind; the rest of
us kept together.</p>
<p>As we drove along in the brake, the trackers showed
us how they had followed the carriage. It brought an
agonising hope to me to think that we were actually
travelling on the same road as Marjory had gone. I had
a secret conviction that we were going right. Something
within me told me so. I had in former days—days
that now seemed so long ago—when I realised that I
had the Second Sight, come to have such confidence in my
own intuition that now something of the same feeling
came back to me as a reality. Oh! how I longed that the
mysterious gift might now be used on behalf of her
I loved. What would I not have given for one such
glimpse of her in her present situation, as I had before
seen of Lauchlane Macleod, or of the spirits of the Dead
from the Skares. But it is of the essence of such supernatural
power that it will not work to command, to
present need, to the voice of suffering or of prayer; but
only in such mysterious way and time as none can predicate.
Whilst I thought thus, and hoped thus, and prayed
with all the intensity of my poor breaking heart, I
seemed to feel in me something of the mood in which the
previous visions had come. I became lost to all surroundings;
and it was with surprise that I became conscious
that the carriage had stopped and that the trackers
were getting off. We arranged with them that after
our visit to the Manse at Ardiffery we should return for
them, or to see how they had got on with their task.
They were not hopeful of following a two-day-old trail of
a carriage on these dusty roads.</p>
<p>The cross road to Ardiffery branched off to our left,
and then to the left again; so that when we came near the
place, we were still within easy distance, as the crow
flies, from where we had left our men.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The Manse at Ardiffery is a lonely spot, close to the
church, but quite away from the little clachan. The
church stands in its own graveyard, in a hollow surrounded
with a wall of considerable dimensions. The
garden and policies of the house seem as though carved
out of the woodland growth. There is a narrow iron
gate, sheer in the roadway, and a straight path up to the
front of the house; one arm branches to the right in a
curved lane-way through fir trees leading to the stable
and farm offices at the back of the house. At the gateway
was a board with a printed notice that the house,
with grounds, gardens and policies, was to be let until
Christmas. The key could be had from, and details supplied
by, Mrs. MacFie, merchant at the Ardiffery cross
roads. The whole place had a deserted air; weeds were
growing everywhere, and, even from the roadway, one
could see that the windows were fouled from disuse.</p>
<p>As we drew near, the odd feeling of satisfaction—I can
hardly describe it more fully—seemed to grow in me.
I was not exultant, I was scarcely hopeful; but somehow
the veil seemed to be lifting from my soul. We left the
brake on the road, and went up the little avenue to the
front of the house. For form’s sake we knocked, though
we knew well that if those we sought should be within
there would be little chance of their responding to our
call. We left one man at the door, in case by any chance
any one should come; the rest of us took the other way
round to the back of the house. We had got about half
way along it, where there was an opening into the fields,
when the detective chief who was in front of us held
up his hand to stop. I saw at a glance what had struck
him.</p>
<p>Whilst the rest of the rough roadway was unkempt
and weed-grown, the gravel from this on, to the back
of the house, had been lately raked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>The only answer to the unspoken query of each of us
was that Marjory had made some marks, intentionally or
unintentionally—or some one had; and the gang had
tried to efface them.</p>
<p>Fools! their very effort to obliterate their trace was a
help to us.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</SPAN></span></p>
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