Chapter Seven
I have to tell of a brief interlude before I got to work in earnest.
The very day after the rediscovery of Rolston I fell ill. The strain had been too much. A severe nervous attack was the result, and my doctor ordered me to the quietest watering place in Brittany that I could find. I protested, but in vain. The big man told me what would happen if I didn't go, so I went, faute-de-mieux, and took Rolston with me.
I acquainted my friends Arthur Winstanley and Pat Moore of my movements by letter, and I engaged the seedy Mr. Sliddim to abide permanently in Richmond and to forward me a full report of all he observed, and of all rumours connected with the City in the Clouds. When I had subscribed to a press-cutting agency to send me everything that appeared in print relating to Gideon Morse and his fantastic home, I felt I had done everything possible until I should be restored to health.
Of my month in Pont Aven I shall say nothing save that I lived on fine Breton fare, walked ten miles a day, left Rolston -- who proved the most interesting and stimulating companion a man could have -- to answer all my letters, and went to bed at nine o'clock at night.
Heartache, fear for Juanita, occasional fits of fury at my own inaction and impotence? Yes, all these were with me at times. But I crushed them down, forced myself to think as little as possible of her, in order that when once restored to health and full command of my nerves, I might begin the campaign I had planned. You must picture me therefore, one afternoon at the end of October, arriving from Paris by the five o'clock train, despatching Rolston to Piccadilly with the luggage, and driving myself to Captain Moore's quarters at Knightsbridge Barracks.
I had summoned a meeting of our league, which we had so fancifully named "Santa Hermandad" -- a fact that was to have future consequences which none of us ever dreamed of -- by telegram from Paris.
Pat and Arthur were awaiting me in the former's comfortable sitting room. A warm fire burned on the hearth as we sat down to tea and anchovy toast.
I had been in more or less frequent communication with both of them during my sick leave, and when we began to discuss the situation we dispensed with preliminaries.
It was Pat who, so to speak, took the chair, leaning against an old Welsh sideboard of oak, crowded with polo and shooting cups, shields for swordsmanship and other trophies.
"Now, you two," he said, "we know certain facts, and we have arrived at certain conclusions. First of all, as to the facts. Miss Morse is as good as engaged to Tom here. Arthur and I are 'also ran.' Fact number one. Fact number two, she has been suddenly and forcibly taken away from the world, and is in great distress of mind. That so, brother leaguers?"
We murmured assent.
"Now for our deductions. Morse has some deadly important reason for this fantastic, spectacular show of his. The public see it as the fancy of a chap who has so much money he doesn't know what to do with it, a fellow that's exhausted all sensation and is now trying for a new one. Let 'em think so! But we know -- here in this room -- a long sight more than the general public knows. Tom and that young fly-by-night, with the red hair and the stained-glass-window ears, he's been cartin' about with him, have got behind the scenes."
Pat's face hardened.
"We alone are certain that the man Morse, for all his equanimity and the mask he has presented to London during the season, has been living under the influence of some dirty, cowardly fear or other!"
Arthur interrupted. "Fear, if you like, Pat, but I don't think it is dirty, or even cowardly. You forget Miss Morse."
"Perhaps you're right. At any rate, if Gideon Morse is really menaced by some great danger, what cleverer trick could he have played? To let the world suppose that it's his whim and fancy to live like a rook at the top of an elm tree, when all the time he's providing against the possibility of annihilation, that's a stroke of genius."
"Good for you, Pat," said Arthur with a wink to me, "you're on the track of it."
"Indeed, and I think I am," said the big guardsman simply, "and here's the cunning of it, the supreme sense of self-preservation. If that man Morse is in fear of his life, and in fear for his daughter's too, he couldn't have invented a more perfect security than he has done. From all we know, from all Tom has told us, no one can get at them now but an archangel!"
Then Arthur spoke. "For my part," he said, "I'm going straight to Brazil and I'm going to find out everything I can about the past life of Gideon Morse. I speak Spanish, as you know. I think I'm fairly diplomatic, and in a little more than a couple of months I'll return with big news, if I'm not very much mistaken. And there's always the cable too. We are pledged to Tom, but beyond that we're united together to save the little lady from evil or from harm. Tomorrow I sail for Rio."
"And I," I said, "have already made my plans. Tomorrow I disappear absolutely from ordinary life. Only two people in London will know where I am, and what I am doing -- Preston, my servant in Piccadilly, and one other whom I shall appoint at the offices of my paper. While Arthur is gathering information which will be of the greatest use, I must be working on the spot. I imagine there isn't much time to lose."
"And what'll I do?" asked Pat Moore.
"You, Pat, will stay here, lead your ordinary life, and hold yourself ready for anything and everything when I call on you. And as far as I can see," I concluded, "there will be a very pressing necessity for your help before much more water has flowed under Richmond Bridge."
There was an end of talking; we were all in deadly earnest. We grasped hands, arranged a system of communication, and then I and Arthur went down the stone steps, across the parade ground, and said goodbye at Hyde Park corner.
"You?" Arthur said.
"You will see in the papers that Sir Thomas Kirby is gone for a voyage round the world."
"And as a matter of fact?"
"I think I won't give you any details, old man. My plan is a very odd one indeed. You wouldn't quite understand, and you'd think it extraordinary -- as indeed it is."
"It can't be more fantastic than the whole bitter business," he said, and his voice was full of pain.
I saw, for the first time, that Arthur had grown older in the last few months. The boyishness in him which had been one of his charms, was passing away definitely and forever. He was hard hit, as we all were, and I reproached myself for my egotism. After all, if there was any hope at all, I was the most fortunate. Arthur and staunch old Pat Moore were giving up their time, their energies, to bring about a conclusion from which I alone should benefit.
We were crossing the Green Park as this was borne in on me. It was a dull, grey afternoon, rapidly deadening into evening. There seemed no colour anywhere. But when I thought of the faithful, uncomplaining, even joyous adherence to our oath, when I understood for the first time how these two friends of mine were labouring without hope of reward, then I saw, as in a vision, the wonder and sacredness of unselfish love.
"Arthur," I said, as we were about to part at Hyde Park corner, "God forgive me, but I believe your love for her is greater than mine."
"Don't say that, Tom. When we threw the dice, if the Queen had come to me you would be doing what I am doing now, or what Pat is ready to do."
Well, of course, that was true, but when we gripped hands and turned our backs on each other, I walked slowly towards my flat with a hanging head.
For one brief moment I had caught a glimpse of that love which Dante speaks of -- that love "which moves earth and all the stars" -- and in the presence of so high a thing I was bowed and humbled.
Let me also be worthy of such company, was my prayer.