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"You shall not be disturbed here," he said, and the two went in, and the door closed behind them. There was a murmur of voices outside the door, and they heard a name called once or twice, and the sound of footsteps.
Then came a tap, and Hubert stepped in quietly and closed the door.
"I have placed my own man outside," he said, "and none shall trouble you--and--Mistress Isabel--I will do my best." Then he bowed and went out.
The long miserable afternoon began. They watched through the windows the sentries going up and down the broad paths between the glowing flower-beds; and out, over the high iron fence that separated the garden from the meadows, the crowd of villagers and children watching.
But the real terror for them both lay in the sounds that came from the interior of the house. There was a continual tramp of the sentries placed in every corridor and lobby, and of the messengers that went to and fro.
Then from room after room came the sounds of blows, the rending of woodwork, and once or twice the crash of gla.s.s, as the searchers went about their work; and at every shout the women shuddered or drew their breath sharply, for any one of the noises might be the sign of Anthony's arrest.
The two had soon talked out every theory in low voices, but they both agreed that he was still in the house somewhere, and on the upper floor.
It was impossible, they thought, for him to have made his way down. There were four possibilities, therefore: either he might still be in the chimney--in that case it was no use hoping; or he was in the chapel-hole; or in that behind the portrait; or in one last one, in the room next to their own. The searchers had been there early in the afternoon, but perhaps had not found it; its entrance was behind the window shutter, and was contrived in the thickness of the wall. So they talked, these two, and conjectured and prayed, as the evening drew on; and the sun began to sink behind the church, and the garden to lie in cool shadow.
About eight there was a tap at the door, and Hubert came in with a tray of food in his hands, which he set down.
"All is in confusion," he said, "but this is the best I can do."--He broke off.
"Mistress Isabel," he said, coming nearer to the two as they sat together in the window-seat, "I can do little; they have found three hiding-holes; but so far he has escaped. I do what I can to draw them off, but they are too clever and zealous. If you can tell me more, perhaps I can do more."
The two were looking at him with startled eyes.
"Three?" Mary said.
"Yes, three--and indeed----" He stopped as Isabel got up and came towards him.
"Hubert," she said resolutely, "I must tell you. He must be still in the chimney of the little west parlour. Do what you can."
"The west parlour!" he said. "That was where Mistress Corbet was burning the papers?"
"Yes," said Mary.
"He is not there," said Hubert; "we have sent a boy up and down it already."
"Ah! dear G.o.d!" said Mary from the window-seat, "then he has escaped."
Isabel looked from one to the other and shook her head.
"It cannot be," she said. "The guards were all round the house before the alarm rang."
Hubert nodded, and Mary's face fell.
"Then is there no way out?" he asked.
Mary sprang up with s.h.i.+ning eyes.
"He has done it," she said, and threw her arms round Isabel and kissed her.
"Well," said Hubert, "what can I do?"
"You must leave us," said Isabel; "come back later."
"Then when we have searched the garden-house--why, what is it?"
A look of such anguish had come into their faces that he stopped amazed.
"The garden-house!" cried Mary; "no, no, no!"
"No, no, Hubert, Hubert!" cried Isabel, "you must not go there."
"Why," he said, "it was I that proposed it; to draw them from the house."
There came from beneath the windows a sudden tramp of footsteps, and then Nichol's voice, distinctly heard through the open panes.
"We cannot wait for him. Come, men."
"They are going without me," said Hubert; and turned and ran through the door.
CHAPTER XI
THE GARDEN-HOUSE
During that long afternoon the master of the house had sat in his own room, before his table, hearing the ceaseless footsteps and the voices overhead, and the ring of feet on the tiles outside his window, knowing that his friend and priest was somewhere in the house, crouching in some dark little s.p.a.ce, listening to the same footsteps and voices as they came and went by his hiding-place, and that he himself was absolutely powerless to help.
He had been overpowered in the first rush as he pealed on the alarm-bell, to which he had rushed when the groom burst in from the stable-yard crying that the outer court was full of men. Lackington had then sent him under guard to his own room, where he had been locked in with an armed constable to prevent any possibility of escape. In the struggle he had received a blow on the head which had completely dazed him; all his resource left him; and he had no desire even to move from his chair.
Now he sat, with his head on his breast, and his mind going the ceaseless round of all the possible places where Anthony might be. Little scenes, too, of startling vividness moved before him, as he sat there with half-closed eyes--scenes of the imagined arrest--the scuffle as the portrait was torn away and Anthony burst out in one last desperate attempt to escape. He saw him under every kind of circ.u.mstance--das.h.i.+ng up stairs and being met at the top by a man with a pike--running and crouching through the withdrawing-room itself next door--gliding with burning eyes past the yew-hedges in a rush for the iron gates, only to find them barred--on horseback with his hands bound and a despairing uplifted face with pike-heads about him.--So his friend dreamed miserably on, open-eyed, but between waking and the sleep of exhaustion, until the crowning vision flashed momentarily before his eyes of the scaffold and the cauldron with the fire burning and the low gallows over the heads of the crowd, and the butcher's block and knife; and then he moaned and sat up and stared about him, and the young pursuivant looked at him half-apprehensively.
Towards evening the house grew quieter; once, about six o'clock, there were voices outside, the door from the hall was unlocked, and a heavily-built, ruddy man came in with two pikemen, locking the door behind him. They paid no attention to the prisoner, and he watched them mechanically as they went round the room, running their eyes up and down the panelling, and tapping here and there.
"The room has been searched, sir, already," said the young constable to the ruddy-faced man, who glanced at him and nodded, and then continued the scrutiny. They reached the fireplace and the officer reached up and tapped the wood over the mantelpiece half-a-dozen times.
"Here," he called, pointing to a spot.
A pikeman came up, placed the end of his pike into the oak, and leaned suddenly and heavily upon it: the steel crashed in an inch, and stopped as it met the stonework behind. The officer made a motion, the pike was withdrawn, and he stood on tip-toe and put his finger into the splintered panel. Then he was satisfied and they pa.s.sed on, still tapping the walls, and went out of the other door, locking it again behind them.
An hour later there were voices and steps again, and a door was unlocked and opened, and Mr. Graves, the Tonbridge magistrate stepped in alone. He was a pale scholarly-looking man with large eyes, and a weak mouth only partly covered by his beard.
"You can go," he said nervously to the constable, "but remain outside."
The young man saluted him and pa.s.sed out.
The magistrate looked quickly and sideways at Mr. Buxton as he sat and looked at him.
"I am come to tell you," he said, "that we cannot find the priest." He hesitated and stopped. "We have found several hiding-holes," he went on, "and they are all empty. I--I hope there is no mistake."