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"Sorry," he gasped. "I was half asleep. How are we to get out?"
Fletcher did not answer immediately, but lay panting in the dust. At last he raised himself to his hands and knees. "This door," he whispered. "It is locked--that is all. You are strong. We must get out!
Quick! Smash it!"
Mr. Banks got to his feet, and found the position of the door. He moved slowly. He laughed softly.
"Stand out of the way--out of the danger zone," he cautioned. "I'm going to kick. I can kick like an army mule."
"Kick! Kick!" croaked Timothy Fletcher, crouching off to one side.
"There's drink downstairs. Food an' drink."
Banks balanced himself, lifted his right knee high against his waistcoat, and shot forward his right heel. With a rending of wood and ripping of dislodged screws, the door flew open, letting a flood of faint moonlight into the black closet. Banks staggered forward, fell flat on the floor outside, then nipped to his feet again as nimble as a cat. Weariness and sickness were forgotten. He felt superior to anything old Wigmore might try to do.
Fletcher staggered up, and reeled against the New Yorker.
"He'll shoot--if he's home," he gabbled. "Get hold of a chair--to let fly at him. Kill him if you see him! He's mad! Kill him like a rat!"
"You bet," replied Banks. "If I see him--then G.o.d pity him! Ah!"
He saw a heavy chair standing by the moonlit window. He ran forward, seized it by the back, and lifted it. He whirled it around his head. He felt strong enough to annihilate a score of maniacs.
"This will do. Come on," he whispered.
They went down a flight of heavily carpeted stairs to the lower hall.
The winter moons.h.i.+ne lit the place faintly. Banks went ahead, with the big chair ready in front of him, and poor old Timothy crawling at his heels. The house was quiet as death. They reached the hall. Banks'
anxious eye caught sight of the shadow of a curtain at the door of the dining room. The big chair hurtled through the air, and burst against the casing of the door.
"My mistake!" he cried, and the next moment had armed himself with another chair. They entered the dining room, found it empty, and closed and fastened the door. They rifled the sideboard of apples, soda biscuits, bread, b.u.t.ter, and a half bottle of sherry. Timothy Fletcher wet his insides with a dozen great gulps of the wine, direct from the bottle, and then crammed fragments of dry bread into his mouth.
"Go easy," cautioned Banks, between mouthfuls. "Dangerous. Chew your food."
At last he got possession of the bottle. The wonder is that the meal did not kill them. As it was, Timothy Fletcher lay down on the carpet, and swore that he would not move another step until he was dashed well ready, and felt a good deal better. Mr. Banks became indignant.
"I save your life, and then you go and eat yourself to death!" he cried.
"It's enough to make any one angry. If you don't get up and come along out of this cursed house, I'll go without you."
Timothy rolled and twisted on the carpet.
"Don't," he whined, changing his tune. "I feel terrible bad, Mr. Banks.
Don't leave me. He may come home soon. What time is it?"
Banks had forgotten that such a thing as time existed. He heard a clock ticking, tracked it to the chimneypiece, and carried it to the window.
The moonlight was strong enough to read the hands by.
"Half-past nine," he said. "Half-past nine at night, of course--but of what night? Can it be only twenty-four hours since I crawled into this infernal house through a back window? I can't believe it! I've been sandbagged, and shot, and starved! Twenty-four hours!"
"I got an awful cramp," groaned Fletcher. "Get me some whisky! Quick!
Cupboard in the corner."
"I told you not to make a pig of yourself," said Banks. But he found the cupboard, brought the whisky, and held the decanter to the old man's lips. He soon withdrew it, in spite of the other's expostulations.
"Half-past nine," he said. "Do you get that? When does Wigmore usually come home?"
"When do he come home?" repeated Timothy. "Blast him! Just when you don't expect him! That's when he comes home. After nine, you say? Then he must be out for the evening. We'd better go--soon. Let's have another drop of that whisky first."
"No more whisky for you. How are the cramps?"
"Bad! Bad! The soda crackers lay on my insides like bits of flint. I was near gone, Mr. Banks. He left me days and days without bite nor sup--may h.e.l.l's flames scorch him!"
"But we must get away! He may be back at any moment. Once outside the house, we're safe."
"He has that pistol in his pocket. We'd soon be back again, if he met us."
"Rot!" exclaimed Banks. "Come along! Buck up!"
"Can't do it, sir. Not just now--anyhow. I feel that bad--I'd like to die."
The New Yorker relented, knelt beside him, and let him drink a little more of the whisky.
"Now, lie quiet until you feel better," he said. "I'll keep a watch out for Wigmore--and if I see him coming, I'll meet him at the door--with a chair. But you let me know as soon as you feel fit to move."
He took his stand at a window beside the front door. The night was almost as bright as day, and he could see clearly for hundreds of yards up the white road. So he stood for fifteen minutes, and n.o.body came in sight.
"Never before in all my life did I put in such a day as this," he reflected.
Then he heard Timothy's husky voice.
"I feel a mite better now. Maybe we'd best get out, Mr. Banks."
CHAPTER XVIII
d.i.c.k GOODINE RETURNS UNEXPECTEDLY
To hark back! After Mr. Banks' departure on his secret mission, Reginald Rayton climbed out of bed and dressed himself as well as he could. As it was hopeless to attempt a coat, he folded several blankets about his shoulders, the red one outside. Then he went down to the sitting room, where a good fire was burning, and shouted for his new stableboy. Bill Long entered from the kitchen and sat down, when requested, on the outer edge of an armchair. He answered a dozen questions concerning the horses and cattle fluently; but when his employer asked him suddenly if he knew of any one who held a grudge against him--Rayton--the youth rubbed one gray-socked foot across the other and scratched the back of his head uneasily.
"You will be helping me out if you say what you think, Bill," encouraged Rayton.
"Well," replied Bill, "they do say as how you an' Doc Nash ain't any too friendly."
"That was nothing, Bill. Just a fit of bad temper. We are on very good terms now. Who else, d'you think?"
"There's Davy Marsh. He's got a mighty sore head. I hear him talkin'
pretty wicked about ye, one day."
"But he don't mean it, you may be sure. It was just his trouble made him talk like that. He and I are on a very friendly footing. He has nothing to be sore at me about."