<p><SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XII <br/> HER COUNTRY'S EXAMPLE </h3>
<p>"Do you know, my dear, Cynthia Maxwell
is simply going to die with envy
when she sees me in this!"</p>
<p>The plump little mistress of Government
House, standing before a full-length mirror,
in her boudoir, surveyed herself with intense
satisfaction. Her arms and neck burst startlingly
from the clinging sheath of the incomparable
Doeuillet gown that was Jane Gerson's
douceur for official protection; in the flood
of morning light pouring through the
mullioned windows Lady Crandall seemed a
pink and white—and somewhat florid—lily in
bloom out of time. Hildebrand's buyer, on
her knees and with deft fingers busy with the
soft folds of the skirt, answered through a
mouthful of pins:</p>
<p>"Poor Cynthia; my heart goes out to her."</p>
<p>"Oh, it needn't!" Lady Crandall answered,
with a tilting of her strictly Iowa style nose.
"The Maxwell person has made me bleed more
than once here on the Rock with the gowns a
fond mama sends her from Paris. But,
honestly, isn't this a bit low for a staid
middle-aged person like myself? I'm afraid I'll
have trouble getting my precious Doeuillet
past the censor." Lady Crandall plumed
herself with secret joy.</p>
<p>Jane looked up, puzzled.</p>
<p>"Oh, that's old Lady Porter—a perfect dragon,"
the general's wife rattled on. "Poor old
dear; she thinks the Lord put her on the Rock
for a purpose. Her own collars get higher
and higher. I believe if she ever was presented
at court she'd emulate the old Scotch lady
who followed the law of décolleté, but
preserved her self-respect by wearing a red
flannel chest protector. You must meet her."</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I won't have time to get a look
at your dragon," Jane returned, with a little
laugh, all happiness. "Now that Sir George
has promised me I can sail on the <i>Saxonia</i>
Friday——"</p>
<p>"You really must——" The envious eyes
of Lady Crandall fell on the pile of
plans—potent Delphic mysteries to charm the heart
of woman—that lay scattered about upon the
floor.</p>
<p>Jane sat back on her heels and surveyed the
melting folds of satin with an artist's eye.</p>
<p>"If you only knew—what it means to me to
get back with my baskets full of French
beauties! Why, when I screwed up my courage
two months ago to go to old Hildebrand and
ask him to send me abroad as his buyer—I'd
been studying drawing and French at nights
for three years in preparation, you see—he
roared like the dear old lion he is and said I
was too young. But I cooed and pleaded, and
at last he said I could come—on trial, and
so——"</p>
<p>"He'll purr like a pussy-cat when you get
back," Lady Crandall put in, with a pat on the
brown head at her knees.</p>
<p>"Maybe. If I can slip into New York with
my little baskets while all the other buyers
are still over here, cabling tearfully for money
to get home or asking their firms to send a
warship to fetch them—why, I guess the
pennant's mine all right."</p>
<p>The eternal feminine, so strong in Iowa's
transplanted stock, prompted a mischievous
question:</p>
<p>"Then you won't be leaving somebody
behind when you sail—somebody who seemed
awfully nice and—<i>foreigny</i> and all that? All
our American girls find the moonlight over on
this side infectious. Witness me—a 'finishing
trip' abroad after school days—and see where
I've finished—on a Rock!" Lady Crandall
bubbled laughter. A shrewd downward sweep
of her eye was just in time to catch a flush
mounting to Jane's cheeks.</p>
<p>"Well, a Mysterious Stranger has crossed
my path," Jane admitted. "He was very nice,
but mysterious."</p>
<p>"Oh!" A delighted gurgle from the older
woman. "Tell me all about it—a secret for
these ancient walls to hear."</p>
<p>Jane was about to reply when second
thought checked her tongue. Before her
flashed that strange meeting with Captain
Woodhouse the night before—his denial of
their former meeting, followed by his curious
insistence on her keeping faith with him by
not revealing the fact of their acquaintance.
She had promised—why she had promised she
could no more divine than the reason for his
asking; but a promise it was that she would
not betray his confidence. More than once
since that minute in the reception room of the
Hotel Splendide Jane Gerson had reviewed the
whole baffling circumstance in her mind and
a growing resentment at this stranger's
demand, as well as at her own compliance
with it, was rising in her heart. Still,
this Captain Woodhouse was "different,"
and—this Jane sensed without effort to
analyze—the mystery which he threw about himself
but served to set him apart from the common
run of men. She evaded Lady Crandall's
probing with a shrug of the shoulders.</p>
<p>"It's a secret which I myself do not know,
Lady Crandall—and never will."</p>
<p>Back to the o'erweening lure of the gown
the flitting fancy of the general's lady betook
itself.</p>
<p>"You—don't think this is a shade too young
for me, Miss Gerson?" Anxiety pleaded to
be quashed.</p>
<p>"Nonsense!" Jane laughed.</p>
<p>"But I'm no chicken, my dear. If you
would look me up in our family Bible back in
Davenport you'd find——"</p>
<p>"People don't believe everything they read
in the Bible any more," Jane assured her.
"Your record and Jonah's would both be open
to doubt."</p>
<p>"You're very comforting," Lady Crandall
beamed. Her maid knocked and entered on
the lady's crisp: "Come!"</p>
<p>"The general wishes to see you, Lady
Crandall, in the library."</p>
<p>"Tell the general I'm in the midst of trying
on——" Lady Crandall began, then thought
better of her excuse. She dropped the
shimmering gown from her shoulders and slipped
into a kimono.</p>
<p>"Some stuffy plan for entertaining somebody
or other, my dear"—this to Jane. "The
real burden of being governor-general of the
Rock falls on the general's wife. Just slip
into your bonnet, and when I'm back we'll take
that little stroll through the Alameda I've
promised you for this morning." She clutched
her kimono about her and whisked out of the
room.</p>
<p>General Crandall, just rid of the dubious
pleasure of Billy Capper's company, was pacing
the floor of the library office thoughtfully.
He looked up with a smile at his wife's
entrance.</p>
<p>"Helen, I want you to do something for me,"
he said.</p>
<p>"Certainly, dear." Lady Crandall was not
an unpleasing picture of ripe beauty to look
on, in the soft drape of her Japanese robe.
Even in his worry, General Crandall found
himself intrigued for the minute.</p>
<p>"There's a new chap in the signal service—just
in from Egypt—name's Woodhouse. I
wish you would invite him to tea, my dear."</p>
<p>"Of course; any day."</p>
<p>"This afternoon, if you please, Helen," the
general followed.</p>
<p>His wife looked slightly puzzled.</p>
<p>"This afternoon? But, George, dear, isn't
that—aren't you—ah—rushing this young
man to have him up to Government House so
soon after his arrival?" She suddenly
remembered something that caused her to
reverse herself. "Besides, I've asked him to
dinner—the dinner I'm to give the Americans
to-morrow night before they sail."</p>
<p>General Crandall looked his surprise.</p>
<p>"You didn't tell me that. I didn't know you
had met him."</p>
<p>"Just happened to," Lady Crandall cut in
hastily. "Met him at the Hotel Splendide last
night when I brought Miss Gerson home with me."</p>
<p>"What was Woodhouse doing at the Splendide?"
the general asked suspiciously.</p>
<p>"Why, spending the night, you foolish boy.
Just off the <i>Princess Mary</i>, he was. I believe
he did Miss Gerson some sort of a service—and
I met him in that way—quite informally."</p>
<p>"Did Miss Gerson—a service—hum!"</p>
<p>"Oh, a trifling thing! It seemed she had
only French money, and that cautious Almer
fellow wouldn't accept it. Captain Woodhouse
gave her English gold for it—to pay her bill.
But why——"</p>
<p>"Has Miss Gerson seen him since?" General
Crandall asked sharply.</p>
<p>"Why, George, dear, how could she? We
haven't been up from the breakfast table an
hour."</p>
<p>"Woodhouse was here less than an hour ago
to pay his duty call and report," he explained.
"I thought perhaps he might have met our
guest somewhere in the garden as he was
coming or going."</p>
<p>"He did send her some lovely roses." Lady
Crandall brightened at this, to her, patent
inception of a romance; she doted on romances.
"They were in Miss Gerson's room before she
was down to breakfast."</p>
<p>"Roses, eh? And they met informally at
the Splendide only last night." Suspicion
was weighing the general's words. "Isn't
that a bit sudden? I say, do you think Miss
Gerson and this Captain Woodhouse had met
somewhere before last night?"</p>
<p>"I hardly think so—she on her first trip to
the Continent and he coming from Egypt.
But——"</p>
<p>"No matter. I want him here to tea this
afternoon." The general dismissed the
subject and turned to his desk. His lady's
curiosity would not be so lightly turned away.</p>
<p>"All these questions—aren't they rather
absurd? Is anything wrong?" She ran up to
him and laid her hands on his shoulders.</p>
<p>"Of course not, dear." He kissed her
lightly on the brow. "Now run along and play
with that new gown Miss Gerson gave you. I
imagine that's the most important thing on
the Rock to-day."</p>
<p>Lady Crandall gave her soldier-husband a
peck on each cheek, and slapped back to her
room. When he was alone again, General
Crandall resumed his restless pacing. Resolution
suddenly crystallized, and he stepped to
the desk telephone. He called a number.</p>
<p>"That you, Bishop? ... General Crandall
speaking.... Bishop, you were here on the
Rock seven years ago? ... Good! ... Pretty
good memory for names and faces,
eh? ... Right! ... I want you to come to
Government House for tea at five this afternoon....
But run over for a little talk with me some
time earlier—an hour from now, say. Rather
important.... You'll be here.... Thank
you."</p>
<p>General Crandall sat at his desk and tried to
bring himself down to the routine crying from
accumulated papers there. But the canker
Billy Capper had implanted in his mind would
not give him peace. Major-general Crandall
was a man cast in the stolid British mold;
years of army discipline and tradition of the
service had given to his conservatism a hard
grain. In common with most of those in high
command, he held to the belief that nothing
existed—nothing could exist—which was not
down in the regulations of the war office, made
and provided. For upward of twenty-five
years he had played the hard game of the
service—in Egypt, in Burma, on the broiling
rocks of Aden, and here, at last, on the key
to the Mediterranean. During all those years
he had faithfully pursued his duty, had stowed
away in his mind the wisdom disseminated in
blue-bound books by that corporate paragon of
knowledge at home, the war office. But never
had he read in anything but fluffy fiction of a
place or a thing called the Wilhelmstrasse,
reputed by the scriveners to be the darkest
closet and the most potent of all the secret
chambers of diplomacy. The regulations made no
mention of a Wilhelmstrasse, even though
they provided the brand of pipe clay that
should brighten men's pith helmets and
stipulated to the ounce an emergency ration.
Therefore, to the official military mind at
least, the Wilhelmstrasse was non-existent.</p>
<p>But here comes a beach-comber, a miserable
jackal from the back alleys of society, and
warns the governor-general of the Rock that
he has a man from the Wilhelmstrasse—a spy
bent on some unfathomable mission—in his
very forces on the Rock. He says that an
agent of the enemy has dared masquerade as
a British officer in order to gain admission
inside the lines of Europe's most impregnable
fortress, England's precious stronghold, there
to do mischief!</p>
<p>General Crandall's tremendous responsibility
would not permit him to ignore such a
warning, coming even from so low a source.
Yet the man found himself groping blindly in
the dark before the dilemma presented; he had
no foot rule of precept or experience to guide
him.</p>
<p>His fruitless searching for a prop in
emergency was broken by the appearance of Jane
Gerson in the door opening from Lady Crandall's
rooms to the right of the library. The
girl was dressed for the out-of-doors; in her
arms was a fragrant bunch of blood-red roses,
spraying out from the top of a bronze bowl.
The girl hesitated and drew back in confusion
at seeing the room occupied; she seemed eager
to escape undetected. But General Crandall
smilingly checked her flight.</p>
<p>"I—I thought you would be out," Jane
stammered, "and——"</p>
<p>"And the posies——" the general interrupted.</p>
<p>"Were for you to enjoy when you should
come back." She smiled easily into the man's
eyes. "They'll look so much prettier here
than in my room."</p>
<p>"Very good of you, I'm sure." General
Crandall stepped up to the rich cluster of buds
and sniffed critically. Without looking at the
girl, he continued: "It appears to me as
though you had already made a conquest on
the Rock. One doesn't pick these from the
cliffs, you know."</p>
<p>"I should hardly call it a conquest," Jane
answered, with a sprightly toss of her head.</p>
<p>"But a young man sent you these flowers.
Come—confess!" The general's tone was
bantering, but his eyes did not leave the
piquant face under the chic summer straw hat
that shaded it.</p>
<p>"Surely. One of your own men—Captain
Woodhouse, of the signal service." Jane was
rearranging the stems in the bowl, apparently
ready to accept what was on the surface of
the general's rallying.</p>
<p>"Woodhouse, eh? You've known him for
a long time, I take it."</p>
<p>"Since last night, General. And yet some
people say Englishmen are slow." She
laughed gaily and turned to face him. His
voice took on a subtle quality of polite
insistence:</p>
<p>"Surely you met him somewhere before Gibraltar."</p>
<p>"How could I, when this is the first time
Captain Woodhouse has been out of Egypt for
years?"</p>
<p>"Who told you that?" The general was
quick to catch her up. The girl felt a swift
stab of fear. On the instant she realized that
here was somebody attempting to drive into
the mystery which she herself could not
understand, but which she had pledged herself
to keep inviolate. Her voice fluttered in her
throat as she answered:</p>
<p>"Why, he did himself, General."</p>
<p>"He did, eh? Gave you a bit of his history
on first meeting. Confiding chap, what! But
you, Miss Gerson—you've been to Egypt, you
say?"</p>
<p>"No, General."</p>
<p>Jane was beginning to find this cross-examination
distinctly painful. She felt that already
her pledge, so glibly given at Captain
Woodhouse's insistence, was involving her in
a situation the significance of which might
prove menacing to herself—and one other.
She could sense the beginnings of a strain
between herself and this genial elderly
gentleman, her host.</p>
<p>"Do you know, Miss Gerson"—he was speaking
soberly now—"I believe you and Captain
Woodhouse have met before."</p>
<p>"You're at liberty to think anything you like,
General—the truth or otherwise." Her answer,
though given smilingly, had a sting behind it.</p>
<p>"I'm not going to think much longer. I'm
going to <i>know</i>!" He clapped his lips shut over
the last word with a smack of authority.</p>
<p>"Are you really, General Crandall?" The
girl's eyes hardened just perceptibly. He took
a turn of the room and paused, facing her. The
situation pleased him no more than it did his
breezy guest, but he knew his duty and
doggedly pursued it.</p>
<p>"Come—come, Miss Gerson! I believe you're
straightforward and sincere or I wouldn't be
wasting my time this way. I'll be the same
with you. This is a time of war; you understand
all that implies, I hope. A serious question
concerning Captain Woodhouse's position
here has arisen. If you have met him before—as
I think you have—it will be to your advantage
to tell me where and when. I am in command
of the Rock, you know."</p>
<p>He finished with an odd tenseness of tone that
conveyed assurance of his authority even more
than did the sense of his words. His guest, her
back to the table on which the roses rested and
her hands bracing her by their tense grip on
the table edge, sought his eyes boldly.</p>
<p>"General Crandall," she began, "my training
in Hildebrand's store hasn't made me much of
a diplomat. All this war and intrigue makes
me dizzy. But I know one thing: this isn't my
war, or my country's, and I'm going to follow
my country's example and keep out of it."</p>
<p>General Crandall shrugged his shoulders and
smiled at the girl's defiance.</p>
<p>"Maybe your country may not be able to do
that," he declared, with a touch of solemnity.
"I pray God it may. But I'm afraid your
resolution will not hold, Miss Gerson."</p>
<p>"I'm going to try to make it, anyway," she
answered.</p>
<p>Gibraltar's commander, baffled thus by a
neutral—a neutral fair to look on, in the
bargain—tried another tack. He assumed the
fatherly air.</p>
<p>"Lady Crandall and I have tried to show you
we were friends—tried to help you get home,"
he began.</p>
<p>"You've been very good to me," Jane broke in
feelingly.</p>
<p>"What I say now is spoken as a friend, not
as governor of the Rock. If it is true that you
have met Woodhouse before—and our conversation
here verifies my suspicion—that very
fact makes his word worthless and releases
you from any promise you may have made not
to reveal this and what you may know about
him. Also it should put you on your guard—his
motives in any attentions he may pay you
can not be above suspicion."</p>
<p>"I think that is a personal matter I am perfectly
capable of handling." Jane's resentment
sent the flags to her cheeks.</p>
<p>General Crandall was quick to back-water:
"Yes, yes! Don't misunderstand me. What I
mean to say is——"</p>
<p>He was interrupted by his wife's voice calling
for Jane from the near-by room. Anticipating
her interruption, he hurried on:</p>
<p>"For the present, Miss Gerson, we'll drop
this matter. I said a few minutes ago I
intended shortly to—<i>know</i>. I hope I won't have
to carry out that—threat."</p>
<p>Jane was withdrawing one of the buds from
the jar. At his last word, she dropped it with
a little gasp.</p>
<p>"Threat, General?"</p>
<p>"I hope not. Truly I hope not. But, young
woman——"</p>
<p>She stooped, picked up the flower, and was
setting it in his buttonhole before he could
remonstrate.</p>
<p>"This one was for you, General," she said,
and the truce was sealed. That minute, Lady
Crandall was wafted into the room on the
breeze of her own staccato interruption.</p>
<p>"What's this—what's this! Flirting with
poor old George—pinning a rose on my revered
husband when my back's turned? Brazen miss.
I'm here to take you off to the gardens at once,
where you can find somebody younger—and not
near so dear—to captivate with your tricks.
At once, now!"</p>
<p>She had her arm through Jane's and was
marching her off. An exchange of glances
between the governor and Hildebrand's young
diplomat of the dollar said that what had passed
between them was a confidence.</p>
<p>Jaimihr Khan announced Major Bishop to
the general a short time later. The major, a
rotund pink-faced man of forty, who had the
appearance of being ever tubbed and groomed
to the pink of parade perfection, saluted his
superior informally, accepted a cigarette and
crossed his plump legs in an easy chair near the
general's desk. General Crandall folded his
arms on his desk and went direct to his subject:</p>
<p>"Major, you were here on the Rock seven
years ago, you say?"</p>
<p>"Here ten years, General. Regular rock
scorpion—old-timer."</p>
<p>"Do you happen to recall this chap Woodhouse
whom I sent to you to report for duty in
the signal tower to-day? Has transfer papers
from Wady Halfa."</p>
<p>"Haven't met him yet, though Captain Carson
tells me he reported at my office a little
more than an hour ago—see him after parade.
Woodhouse—Woodhouse——" The major
propped his chin on his fingers in thought.</p>
<p>"His papers—army record and all that—say
he was here on the Rock for three months in
the spring of nineteen-seven," General Crandall
urged, to refresh the other's memory.</p>
<p>Major Bishop stroked his round cheeks, tugged
at one ear, but found recollection difficult.</p>
<p>"When I see the chap—so many coming and
going, you know. Three months—bless me!
That's a thin slice out of ten years."</p>
<p>"Major, I'm going to take you into my
confidence," the senior officer began; then he
related the incident of Capper's visit and repeated
the charge he had made. Bishop sat aghast at
the word "spy."</p>
<p>"Woodhouse will be here to tea this afternoon,"
continued Crandall. "While you and I
ask him a few leading questions, I'll have
Jaimihr, my Indian, search his room in barracks. I
trust Jaimihr implicitly, and he can do the job
smoothly. Now, Bishop, what do you remember
about nineteen-seven—something we can
lead up to in conversation, you know?"</p>
<p>The younger man knuckled his brow for a
minute, then looked up brightly.</p>
<p>"I say, General, Craigen was governor then.
But—um—aren't you a bit—mild; this asking
of a suspected spy to tea?"</p>
<p>"What can I do?" the other replied, somewhat
testily. "I can't clap an officer of his
majesty's army into prison on the mere say-so
of a drunken outcast who has no proof to offer.
I must go slowly, Major. Watch for a slip from
this Woodhouse. One bad move on his part,
and he starts on his way to face a firing squad."</p>
<p>Bishop had risen and was slowly pacing the
room, his eyes on the walls, hung with many
portraits in oils.</p>
<p>"Well, you can't help admiring the nerve of
the chap," he muttered, half to himself.
"Forcing his way on to the Rock—why, he might as
well put his head in a cannon's mouth."</p>
<p>"I haven't time to admire," the general said
shortly. "Thing to do is to act."</p>
<p>"Quite right. Nineteen-seven, eh? Um——"</p>
<p>He paused before the portrait of a young
woman in a Gainsborough hat and with a
sparkling piquant face. "By George, General,
why not try him on Lady Evelyn? There's a
fair test for you, now!"</p>
<p>"You mean Craigen's wife?" The general
looked up at the portrait quizzically.
"Skeleton's bones, Bishop."</p>
<p>"Right; but no man who ever saw her could
forget. I know I never can. Poor Craigen!"</p>
<p>"Good idea, though," the older man
acquiesced. "We'll trip him on Lady Evelyn."</p>
<p>Jaimihr Khan appeared at the double doors.
"The general sahib's orderly," he announced.
The young subaltern entered and saluted.</p>
<p>"That young man, General Crandall, the one
Sergeant Crosby was to escort out of the lines
to Algeciras——"</p>
<p>"Well, what of him? He's gone, I hope."</p>
<p>"First train to Madrid, General; but he left
a message for you, sir, to be delivered after
he'd gone, he said."</p>
<p>"A message?" General Crandall was perplexed.</p>
<p>"As Sergeant Crosby had it and gave it to
me to repeat to you, sir, it was, 'Arrest the
cigar girl calling herself Josepha. She is one of
the cleverest spies of the Wilhelmstrasse.'"</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
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